Buckton Castle
Buckton Castle was a medieval enclosure castle near Carrbrook in Stalybridge, a town in Tameside, Greater Manchester, England. Historically part of Cheshire, it was surrounded by a stone curtain wall and a ditch wide and deep. Buckton is one of the earliest stone castles in North West England and survives only as buried remains overgrown with heather and peat. It was most likely built and demolished in the 12th century. The earliest surviving record of the site dates from 1360, by which time it was already derelict. The few finds retrieved during archaeological investigations indicate that Buckton Castle may not have been completed.
In the 16th century, the site may have been used as a beacon during the Pilgrimage of Grace. In the 18th century, the castle attracted treasure hunters following rumours that gold and silver had been discovered at Buckton. The site was later used as an anti-aircraft decoy during the Second World War. Between 1996 and 2010, Buckton Castle was investigated by archaeologists as part of the Tameside Archaeology Survey, first by the University of Manchester Archaeological Unit and later by the University of Salford's Centre for Applied Archaeology. The project involved community archaeology, with more than 60 volunteers taking part. The castle, close to Buckton Vale Quarry, is a scheduled monument.
Location
Buckton Castle lies above sea level on Buckton Hill, a steep sandstone ridge. To the south and west are the valleys of the Carr Brook and the River Tame respectively. Buckton Vale Quarry is close to the east of the castle, while the town of Stalybridge is about south-west of the site. To the north and north-east of the castle are areas of moorland with heather and peat. The site may have been chosen to allow the castle's garrison to guard the Tame Valley.During the Middle Ages, Buckton Castle was at the eastern end of Cheshire. The county shares its western border with Wales. Both the castle and the valley were in the medieval manor of Tintwistle. A manor was a division of land administered by a lord of the manor or his representative; in Tintwistle's case, it formed part of the larger lordship of Longdendale.
Compared to Herefordshire and Shropshire, which were also on the Anglo-Welsh border, Cheshire has far fewer castles per square kilometre. Most of the county's castles are close to the western border, where the historically richer parts of Cheshire are concentrated. The county is mostly lowland, and Beeston is the only other castle in the area that rises as prominently above the surrounding landscape. According to archaeologist Rachel Swallow, hilltop castles in the area—including Buckton, Beeston, Halton and Mold—are "predominantly a symbol of significant offensive and elite personal power in these landscapes".
File:Bodleian Libraries, The Countie Palatine of Chester.jpg|alt=A map showing an area with a coastline at its west end and hills at its east. Buckton Castle is located in the north-east of the county.|A late 16th-century map of Cheshire; Buckton Castle lies in the north-east of the county.
File:Buckton Castle .jpg|alt=Heather-covered hillslopes in the foreground, with a plain in the background.|The view north-west from Buckton Castle. The castle is on a hill above sea level.
History
Construction and use
The earliest castles in England were typically constructed from timber, at least when first built, as building in stone was more expensive. Paleoenvironmental evidence shows that between the 9th and 11th centuries the area where Buckton Castle would later stand was cleared of woodland. This left little timber and may partly explain why stone was used as a building material. Stone construction became more common in 12th-century castles, and Buckton is among the earliest masonry castles in North West England.Buckton Castle was probably built in the 12th century, and there are three identifiable periods of medieval activity at the site: the initial construction phase, in which the ditch was dug and the curtain wall and gatehouse were built; the re-cutting of the ditch and further building work behind the curtain wall; and finally deliberate demolition. Little datable material has been recovered from the site – four sherds of Pennine Gritty Ware pottery broadly date to the late 12th century.
As with many castles—especially those of the 12th century—there is no record of how much it cost to build Buckton Castle. Based on comparison with Peveril Castle in Derbyshire, where construction of the great tower in 1175–1177 cost £184 according to the Pipe Rolls, it is estimated that the work at Buckton would have cost around £100. This was close to the median annual income for a baron in 1200.
Partly because of the cost and partly because Cheshire was a palatine county in which the earl had authority over who was permitted to build castles, it is likely that Buckton Castle was built by one of the earls of Chester. Compared to other English counties along the Anglo-Welsh border, Cheshire has fewer castles per square kilometre, suggesting that the earl may have limited castle building. The construction of Buckton Castle may have been prompted by the earls' involvement in the Anarchy—a civil war during King Stephen's reign in the middle of the 12th century—or the Revolt of 1173–74 against Henry II.
During the Anarchy, David I of Scotland gained control of most of northern England, including the parts of Lancashire, prompting the construction of Buckton Castle to safeguard Cheshire. After the conflict, many castles were slighted to restore England to its pre-war state, which may explain why Buckton was demolished. Alternatively, it may have been slighted after the revolt of 1173–74 to punish the earl of Chester for taking part in a rebellion against the king. While it is likely the earls of Chester built the castle, it is also possible that it was constructed by William de Neville when he held the lordship of Longdendale under the earl between 1181 and 1186, although he may not have had the financial means to do so.
The dearth of artefacts recovered from Buckton Castle and the lack of finely finished stonework indicate that the site was never completed, but the re-cutting of the ditch suggests either an extended period of occupancy or abandonment followed by repairs to the fortifications.
Later history and investigation
An estate survey from 1360 recorded that "there is one ruined castle called Buckeden and of no value"; this is the earliest surviving reference to the castle. At the time, the lordship of Longdendale was the property of Edward, the Black Prince, and the castle was derelict. The site may have been used as a beacon in the 16th century, first during the Pilgrimage of Grace of 1536–37, and later in the 1580s when the country was under threat of invasion from Spain, particularly during the Spanish Armada in 1588. This use may have been repeated in 1803, when a beacon hut is recorded near Mossley, a settlement less than a mile west of the castle.In the 18th century, people began treasure hunting at Buckton Castle. Although the searches were largely unsuccessful, in 1767 one such venture discovered a gold necklace and a silver vessel, though these artefacts have since been lost. This activity prompted the interest of local antiquarians, several of whom visited in the 18th and 19th centuries, often drawing plans of the castle. Since 1924, the castle has been designated as a scheduled monument, a status intended to protect important archaeological sites from change; this was probably to safeguard the castle from the expanding Buckton Vale Quarry. During the Second World War, Starfish sites were built as decoys for bombing raids. Nine were constructed around Manchester, including one close to Buckton Castle. At this time a brick hut was built over part of the castle ditch. The Starfish site went out of use in 1943.
In the 20th century it was suggested that Buckton Castle may have been an Iron Age hillfort, but a study of hillforts in Cheshire and Lancashire found that Buckton was topographically different from these sites and therefore unlikely to have been built in the Iron Age. Excavation in 1998 demonstrated that the site was medieval, with no sign of earlier activity. The archaeologists D. J. Cathcart King and Leslie Alcock suggested that the castle was a ringwork—a type of fortification in which earthworks formed an integral part of the defence. This was before excavation established that the first phase of the castle was a curtain wall and the earthworks seen today are the result of the collapse of the structure and the accumulation of soil above it. Buckton is now understood to be an enclosure castle, with stone walls forming the key defence.
The Tameside Archaeology Survey began in 1990, carried out by the University of Manchester Archaeology Unit with more than £500,000 of funding from Tameside Council; £300,000 of this was directed towards the excavations at Buckton Castle. A topographical survey and trial excavations were undertaken in 1996 and 1998 to record the castle earthworks and examine a possible outer bailey. The latter was revealed to be a 20th-century feature, probably related to nearby mining activity. Illegal digging by unknown parties in 1999 and 2002 necessitated remedial work and test pitting. In 2007 full-scale excavations at Buckton Castle began with the aim of establishing the date and history of the site. Across three seasons—2007, 2008, and 2010—trenches were opened across the ditch, the northern entrance, the gap in the circuit of earthworks on the south side, the interior, and the curtain wall.
The University of Manchester Archaeological Unit closed in July 2009, and the Tameside Archaeology Survey, along with the work at Buckton Castle, was transferred to the new Centre for Applied Archaeology at the University of Salford. Brian Grimsditch directed the excavations throughout. More than 60 volunteers were involved in the excavations between 2007 and 2010, including members of the Tameside Archaeological Society, the South Trafford Archaeological Group, the South Manchester Archaeological Research Team, and students from several universities.