Offerton Haugh log-boat

Offerton Haugh log-boat

HER Number
340
District
Sunderland
Site Name
Offerton Haugh log-boat
Place
Offerton
Map Sheet
NZ35NW
Class
Maritime Craft
Site Type: Broad
Watercraft
Site Type: Specific
Watercraft
General Period
PREHISTORIC
Specific Period
Bronze Age -2,600 to -700
Form of Evidence
Find
Description
A log-boat was found in 1888, at a depth of 2.1 m, in the bed of the River Wear at Offerton Haugh. Of oak, it was 3.5 m long, with "a flat bottom rising slightly at either end and tapering in plan and elevation. The broader end is rectangular in plan, the other rounded. A group of four holes near the sheer on the broader end are interpreted by McGrail as for thwartship strengthening. A rectangular hole on one side may have been for joining the vessel to another". It is reported to have contained human bones; stone implements "like chisels" and deer horns were said to have been found on the bottom of the stream near the same spot.
The Ordnance Survey 3rd edition 1:2500 map is marked 'Canoe, Human Remains &c. found A.D. 1888'. The find was reported in the Notes of Archaeologia Aeliana some time later in 1968. The canoe had been presented to Sunderland Museum in 1910 by the River Wear Commissioners, having been found in the bed of the River Wear at Hylton during the removal of the Brixons (Brigg Stones).
Easting
434300
Northing
556630
Grid Reference
NZ434300556630
Sources
<< HER 340 >> Sunderland Public Library Circular, 1910, no. 45, IV, pp. 364-5; W Mitchell, 1919, History of Sunderland, p. 128; N R Whitcomb, 1968, Two Prehistoric Dugout Canoes from the River Wear at Hylton... Archaeologia Aeliana, 4, XLVI, pp. 297-301; S McGrail, 1978, Logboats of England and Wales, British Archaeological Report, No. 51, pp. 218-19, no. 68; R Miket, 1984, The Prehistory of Tyne and Wear, pp. 56-7 no. 8, and fig. 18.8