The Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society
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Registered Charity No. 202014 |
Established 21 April 1876 |
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From: John Loosley M.A. Cantab. |
Stonehatch Oakridge Lynch Stroud GL6 7NR Tel. 01285 760460 |
RESEARCH GRANTS
(see below for Awards from 2006 onwards ) Home
Click here for Research Grant Application Form [14 KB PDF file]
Note of guidance for applicants
The Society has limited funds to support archaeological and historical research in Bristol, Gloucestershire and South Gloucestershire, arising from bequests from the late Miss Irene Bridgeman, Mr. H Gordon Williams and Mrs S C F Wills. Applications for grants should be made to the research committee, care of the Honorary General Secretary. Grants are normally awarded in April; applicants will be advised of the result during May. Grants will not normally exceed £500 but may be larger in exceptional circumstances. The grants are intended to cover out-of-pocket expenses such as travel, photography or a contribution towards specialist reports. Grants will not be awarded for expenses already incurred and will normally be payable in two equal instalments at the beginning and end of the project.
Applicants will be asked to supply receipted invoices on completion of the project. Applications will only be accepted if they are made on the official application form which may be obtained from the Honorary General Secretary. Each application must be accompanied by details of the project and written estimates of the costs to be met by the grant. In the case of applications relating to archaeological projects the accompanying details should include an 8-figure national grid reference and a summary of known information from, for example, the Historic Environment Record. The accompanying details should not exceed 600 words in length and should be supplied on single-sided A4 paper.
It is a condition of the award of a grant that the results of the research shall be offered for publication in the Society's Transactions. The article or report must conform to the house style of the Transactions as set out in the Editor's Note of Guidance. The article or report must be submitted to the Editor of the Transactions within 12 months of the completion of the project. If, however, the research forms part of a wider project for which another form of publication is preferable this condition may be waived at the discretion of the Research Committee. In whatever form the report is published it is an absolute condition of an award that the assistance of the Research Fund is acknowledged on the title page of the article or report. Each grant will be made in the name of one of the donors and the acknowledgement should record this.
Applications must be received by the Research Committee not later than 1 February in each year. Applications received after 1 February will be considered in the following year.
John Loosley
Research Grants awarded for 2007
WWII Anti-invasion defense network
During excavations at Berkeley in 2005 an important assemblage of late Saxon pottery was recovered. Dr Stuart Prior of the Department of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Bristol wishes to establish the source of this pottery and thin section analysis and inductively-coupled plasma spectroscopy will enable comparisons to be made with samples from Gloucester and from Wiltshire. The grant will contribute towards the cost of this analysis.
Research Grants awarded for 2006
Northleach Parish Church
Mrs Selina Balance has been awarded a grant to help her publish her new findings on how and when Northleach parish church was built. She has been researching Northleach parish church for several years. Her work will explain the building sequence of the church by careful examination of the masonry and from contemporary descriptions by visitors. She will also describe the various ways in which the furnishings and internal layout of the church have changed over the last four hundred years.
Clay Pipes in the Stroud area
Dr. Allen Peacey aims to establish a typology for some clay
pipes whose origins can be identified. This will enable many
previously unidentifiable pipes to be recognized for the first
time. In the late 17th century pipes were being supplied
to the Stroud area from various Wiltshire makers and from Bristol,
Gloucester and Broseley. The aim of the project is to sample
products known to come from these centres, collected from the
Stroud area. The grant will be used towards the chemical analysis
and thin section tests to establish if possible a definitive
character for each.