LAARC VIP10: Volunteer Profile – Graham

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Each week during our current Visitor Inclusion Project celebrating 10 years of the archaeological archive, we’re posting volunteer profiles letting you find out a little more about our excellent volunteers. Today it’s Graham:

1) When did you join the volunteer programme and why?
Long term volunteer from the days of the minimum standards project, though my first VIP project was VIP7, which was also in the galleries here at the museum

2) What was your most memorable day whilst volunteering?
Too difficult to choose as there’s been quite a few of them.

3) What was your favourite object you discovered whilst volunteering?
Fragments of Victorian Wallpaper from Whitehall

4) What’s your favourite part of the museum?
LAARC

5) Upper galleries of lower?
Upper galleries

6) Favourite year in London’s history?
1666

7) Favourite Londoner?
Samuel Pepys

8) Mortimer Wheeler or Indiana Jones
Mortimer Wheeler

9) If you could dig anywhere in the world where would you excavate?
London

VIP7 in the Archaeology in Action Gallery Sorting pots in the Seminar Room

10) What’s next for you after this project?
Who knows!

Did someone call a Doctor?

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Well hello again dear readers of this Museum of London Blog. For those who have never met me before my name is Dr W and I usually help out the osteologists at the museum’s Centre for Human Bioarchaeology. Recently however, I’ve been volunteering on Tuesdays in Archaeology in Action.

Chris in action Andy in action

We’re celebrating the 10th anniversary of the Museum of London’s Archaeological Archive and on Tuesdays I get to work with two of the most fantastic people you’ll get to meet at the museum – my dear fellow volunteers Chris & Andy. All three of us first worked together back in 2010 on the archive’s first Visitor Inclusion Project and you can read our volunteer profiles by clicking on their names in the previous sentence, and mine by clicking on my name here: Dr W

Dr W helps us set up Dr W preparing for another day of volunteering

My volunteer day starts a little before the museum opens. At around 9.30 I work my way up to the foyer with the carefully packed boxes of human remains from 1975’s excavations at Newgate Street. Chris and Andy usually arrive just before 10am and to be honest I leave it up to them to set things up. After all, these guys know their stuff – did you know that both volunteers have previously been nominated in the the London Volunteers in Museums awards, Andy was highly commended in 2009 and Chris was a runner up in 2011.

Skull with Sword Wound

They set up the amazing artefacts we have on display, such as one of Andy’s favourites,  the arthritic hip joint, or my personal favourite, the skull fragment with a sword wound. To think what these poor people must have gone through whilst they were alive. It’s amazing to think that way beyond their deaths they are helping to share knowledge about life in their London with people of the 21st Century. Brilliant.

We also have some incredible images on display such as the the layout of the burials from the site and the poor lady who died in childbirth. Some of these people’s stories are so very sad but at the same time fascinating insights into 11th & 12th Century London life. You can read more about these skeletons here: Skeleton Blog

 

I love this period of history, as does Chris. Andy’s still very much prefers the lower galleries with their more recent events, though we’re trying to persuade her otherwise. In fact despite being such a great team the two of them rarely agree on things; I was having the usual debate of “Mortimer Wheeler or Indiana Jones” and Chris always sides with Morti whilst Andy always gets behind Indy. (I have to say I tend to favour dear Mortimer myself - I do like a good moustache…)

Andy, Dr W and visitors discovering osteology Dr W looks on as the school group learn about bone

However, there’s one thing we all agree on – of the three of us, I’m definately the most photogenic. It seems like visitors just love having their photo taken with me. And I love having my photo taken, so it’s win win!

The Bones Team

Right then, better sign off, but just to say, I’ve thoroughly enjoyed my volunteer experience so far, working with the marvelous Andy & Chris, and it’s been a pleasure meeting so many of you fabulous visitors. If you get the time, you can still come and meet me tomorrow, Tuesday 13th March and one last time next Tuesday, 20th. Toodle-pip!

Giving up their time

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Every now and then this job gives me an enormous sense of well-being. This week, as our current project heads towards its finishing line, I’ve been able to step back a little and observe the excellent work our volunteers do at the museum.

Half Term Archaeology in Action kids learn about the people from the past X-rays in Archaeology in Action Visitors at our records table

Our volunteers are amazing. Week after week, they give up their time to work on improving our collections. And over the past eight weeks they’ve taken it to another level by packing pottery, animal bone and building material in front of everyone, whilst talking to visitors about what they’re finding at the same time. Each day, there’s new boxes with new finds, so they never really know what they’re going to discover and get to talk about until that day, and each day is different. Yet each volunteer has risen to this challenge and performed brilliantly.

 Volunteers packing textiles Wed's YAC team Object Handling in the foyer

But our volunteers have always been brilliant. Since the LAARC (London Archaeological Archive & Research Centre) opened in 2002, we have had over 800 people join us. Some for just a week of work experience, some for a few months, some for our 10 week projects and some have been here for almost as long as we have. All of them have packed finds, all of them have contributed in some way or another to improving the storage and accessibility of London’s archaeology.

Participants from The Mulberry Centre Half Term Hands-On Archaeology Tuesday's Workshop - Week 3 Stapling the bag shut

And now the museum visitors are joining in too as participants in our hour long Hands-On Archaeology workshops. If you fancy joining us for a workshop there’s still a couple more weeks to go. For the next two Mondays, Tuesdays and Fridays, you can come and learn how we store our archaeology whilst handling real roman pottery. Workshops are from 15.15 – 16.15.

In the meantime, check out our Volunteer Profile pages to find out more about the current team.

LAARC VIP10: Volunteer Profile – Maria

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Each week during our current project celebration the archaeological archive’s 10th Anniversary we’re posting volunteer profiles letting you find out a bit more about our excellent volunteers. Today’s it’s Maria:

1)    When did you join the volunteer programme and why?
VIP6 in 2009 due to an interest in archaeology

2)    What was your most memorable day whilst volunteering?
Holding a medieval skull of a plague victim

3)    What was your favourite object you discovered whilst volunteering?
A piece of bone hiding in a box of building material

Monday's team during week 2

4)    What’s your favourite part of the museum?
Medieval

5)    Upper galleries of lower?
Don’t know

6)    Favourite year in London’s history?
1381 – the peasant’s revolt – and all the plague years

7)    Favourite Londoner?
Chaucer

8)    Mortimer Wheeler or Indiana Jones
Both?

9)    If you could dig anywhere in the world where would you excavate?
Tower of London

Friday's finds packing team Visitors in the Hands-On Archaeology workshop

10)    What’s next for you after this project?
Theatre volunteer at the Rose, Bankside

10 Years of LAARChaeology:2008-2012

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Part 3 : Volunteer Inclusion / Visitor Inclusion

Welcome to the third part in a look back over the first 10 years of the Museum of London’s Archaeological Archive & Research Centre. Part 1 looked at how the archive was set up and its first projects, whilst part 2 looked at how the LAARC expanded its community engagement programme. This part brings things up to date.

Building on previous successes, 2008 saw the start of a brand new Volunteer Inclusion Programme (nicely abbreviated to VIP) funded by Renaissance London . Its aim was to improve the storage and accessibility of our collections whilst involving an inclusive mix of volunteers.

Bad box of bone Beautifully Repacked Animal Bone

The programme saw immediate results. Objects that had been stored in disintegrating bags and crumbling boxes were now packed into high quality containers. Our volunteers were sourced from a wide range of organisations, with a mixture of ages, backgrounds and social situations all working together.

Week 4 - Iron finds YACS & E-learning Thursday's Flint workshop Wednesday's VIP6 Team

Over the course of 6 projects the programme developed to include intergenerational groups, e-learning projects, a wide range of specialist-led workshops and an ever expanding network of volunteer contacts.

City of London Girls School get involved in VIP7 Looking at Medieval Pottery

The 7th project took inclusion to a whole new level. How can we make the most inclusive project possible we wondered? Let anyone get involved was the answer. From Oct-Dec 2010, the project relocated to the Museum of London itself, with a core team of ex-volunteers, gathered from previous VIP projects working on collections in the galleries whilst simultaneously engaging with visitors. It worked on three levels: visitors were learning about archaeology via handling and interaction with volunteers; volunteers were developing new skills in public presentation and engagement; the archive was getting lots of essential collections care work completed at the same time. The Visitor Inclusion Project was born.

Hands On Archaeology - Week 2 Hands-On Archaeology week 7

The key factor was our Hands-On Archaeology workshops, where any member of the public, any museum visitor, could have a go at packing finds themselves.

The project was a huge success and in 2011 was awarded the prestigious national award for Best Educational Initiative at the  Museum & Heritage Awards.

volunteers and sheep vertabrae Monday's team getting involved with pottery

The VIP returned home to LAARC for the next two projects before once again heading to the Museum of London to run the Visitor Inclusion Project again, this time, celebrating LAARC’s 10th anniversary and expanding to include handling tables focusing on LAARC’s main remits, conservation, osteology and archaeological records.

Meanwhile, our Long-Term Volunteers, many of whom joined in LAARC’s early days, steadfastly work through major archives week in, week out, back in the stores transforming the conditions of early archived material.

And every month, new archives are deposited by the many archaeological units that excavate London; many researchers come in to find out about sites, areas, objects and the lives of Londoners past; many members of the public visit each week on our public volunteer led tours (each Friday and 1st & 3rd Saturdays!); and volunteers are currently working on creating a full set of themed learning collections which can be used for outreach and educational purposes.

As with everything, one never know where we’ll exactly be heading next, but the first 10 years have been a blast and with London’s archaeology speaking for itself, here’s to the next decade.

The Calm After the Storm

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LAARC VIP10: Weeks 6 and 7

Foyer Folk

I sometimes wonder if the world is secretly spinning around faster each year – we’re already in March and 7 weeks of our Visitor Inclusion Project celebrating 10 years of the London Archaeological Archive & Research Centre have already passed.

Object handling in the foyer

It’s usually the Calm Before The Storm, but in our case things have become a little more sedate since week 5’s half term onslaught of visitors. However, that’s not to say things have stopped. Our various tables of finds and activities have attracted over 2000 people in the past two weeks; adults and children, men and women, young folk and elders, Londoners, UK residents and many overseas tourists too.

Week 7 - volunteers in action Visitors at our records table

Indeed, it’s been great to chat to so many different people from all over the world. There’s been visitors from Spain, France, Italy, Germany, Greece, Poland, South Africa, Argentina, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, Brazil, Canada & the USA. As fate would have it, we’ve also seen many Russian visitors who tend to turn up on Mondays when our Russian speaking volunteer is in the galleries and Russian conversation flows. I too have been inspired to recall my A-Level French and chat away to our Gallic friends on occasions…

Participants from The Mulberry Centre Hands-On Archaeology Week 6 Roman eyepiece? Spotting a piece of stamped roman samian

In our Hands-On Archaeology workshops we’ve hosted special groups like our friends from the Mulberry Centre , the National Autistic Society, the Home Education network and the University of the 3rd Age. These groups have worked on pottery from the GPo75 excavation at Newgate Street alongside many visitors who have joined in on the day. Some visitors have liked our workshops so much that they’ve come back several times to handle even more pots.

So things are going well and it’s not over yet – there’s still three more weeks for you to join in. Come find us in the Museum of London foyer and Archaeology in Action ever Monday, Tuesday & Friday from 10.00 – 16.00 and in for Hands-On Archaeology, each of these at 15.15.

LAARC VIP10: Volunteer Profile – Yulia

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Each week during our current Visitor/Volunteer Inclusion Project, celebrating 10 years of the London Archaeological Archive & Research Centre, we’re posting volunteer profiles, letting you find out a little more about our excellent volunteers. Today it’s Yulia:

1) When did you join the volunteer programme and why?
VIP 8 (2011), passion for archeology and curiosity about museum work

Friday Volunteer Julia Auditing

2) What was your most memorable day whilst volunteering?
Induction day, it was love from the first sight

3) What was your favourite object you discovered whilst volunteering?
Roman ring!

4) What’s your favourite part of the museum?
everything is great

5) Upper galleries of lower?
both

6) Favourite year in London’s history?
2010 – my first year in London

7) Favourite Londoner?
Florence Nightingale, a pioneer of modern nursing

 

8) Mortimer Wheeler or Indiana Jones
Reality & fiction… I always come along with former – Wheeler

9) If you could dig anywhere in the world where would you excavate?
Historic centers of the modern metropolises

Half term finds packing table

10) What’s next for you after this project
I’m sure there will be something interesting!

A History of London in 10 Archaeological Objects: Object 2

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We’re now three weeks away from the end of the LAARC’s residency in the Museum of London’s galleries, promoting London’s archaeology, and where you can still join in yourself through our curator-led Hands-on archaeology sessions.

Continuing a year’s exposure of some of the Museum’s hidden archaeological treasures, our second object of the year sees us skip forward several millennia to the early Iron Age – an age where we still fundamentally rely on archaeology to interpret and understand ‘London’ and ‘Londoners’:

Object 2

Prehistoric (Early Iron Age) Iron Dagger & Sheath

 

 

The second object in our top 10 has moved us from the Palaeolithic to the early Iron Age. And what better an object to explore the archaeology of the Iron Age than an iron dagger! Known as the Bermondsey dagger, this well preserved object was unearthed by a Thames mudlark in 2003, in front of Chambers Wharf. Consequently it was donated to the Museum where our conservation department have stabilised and investigated the object. Just as our artefact last month represented one of the earliest examples of a London-made object; this dagger also belongs to some of the earliest iron-made objects in Britain dating to this period. Using the magic of science (that is, radiocarbon dating) the wooden sheath has produced a date range of 810-500BC – a slightly earlier date than other similar daggers that normally fall between the 6th and 4th centuries BC.

The dagger and accompanying sheath (made of ash wood) was essentially found by chance, but its original deposition may have been quite purposeful. The river Thames continued to be treated as a sacred river throughout prehistoric times and this dagger may have been ritually deposited as part of a funeral offering. This dagger adds to a small group, all of a similar type, that have been found in the Thames bed at sites such as Westminster and Mortlake. They would have been highly prestigious items and perhaps hint to Iron Age aristocracy based in the Thames valley.

Although the dagger is of good preservation it is missing much of its decorative construction that would emphasise its high status. A similar dagger in the Museum’s collection and currently on display shows the dagger is missing a copper-alloy outer sheath of overlapping, metal strips. Another missing element is the ‘twin loop suspension system’ which marks this dagger as particularly British-made, as opposed to similar Continental daggers of the same period.

As a tidal river the Thames is slowly excavating objects, some of which are thousands of years old, under its own will. This dagger is a perfect example of the amazing preservation the river bestows upon its dedications. It also highlights the importance of finders, such as the Mudlarks, in recognising, reporting and, in this case, allowing the Museum to share some of the river’s most treasured possessions.

Next month object number 3 – where we move into the Roman period and the beginnings of ‘history’, but showcasing an unusual object that represents a major branch of archaeology that has only burgeoned in the last few decades…

Something fishy’s going on…

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fish!

Every week as part of our archive’s 10th anniversary celebrations we post volunteer profiles to let you know a bit more about our excellent team of volunteers. But sometimes, our excellent objects also want to be heard. So here’s one of our most popular catches, the fish fridge magnet:

1)    When did you join the volunteer programme and why?
I’ve been around since day one. Actually I’ve been around since even before this. I was around before the archive even opened. I used to show volunteers what to do, how things should look. And did this from the first time they put me in this box.

2)    What was your most memorable day whilst volunteering?

Every day on this current project is awesome. As I’m bang in the foyer where everyone who comes up to us can see me, I get loads of attention. And as I’m not even a proper archaeological artefact, but I still like serve a useful purpose ‘cos I show people how you should look after things, I like it when the people come up to me and look at me all weird like before they realise I’m just a fake and I’m there for another reason. And just when they get the reason why I’m there, one of the staff will say “that’s our Red Herring” and I swear, I crack up laughing every time they say it.

Fishy! guess the object

3)    What was your favourite object you discovered whilst volunteering?
I like the other animal bones that the volunteers are packing in Archaeology In Action. The fish bones are good as it’s always interesting to see what you look like under your scales. But then I also like the iron objects. I feel like I’ve got some kind of connection between those things and even when it looks like there’s nothing to them, just an old lump of rock or something, they do the x-ray and bang, there it is, all hidden underneath like.

4)    What’s your favourite part of the museum?
Actually, in the summer I like being outside with the bees in the garden, but now when it’s all cold I like it indoors down in the Sackler hall with all the lights and the massive telly.

5)    Upper galleries of lower?
Forget all them, the archive’s where it’s at. The galleries, yeah, they’re all good, but it’s like a tiny tiny percentage of what the museum actually has and in the archive, it’s all a bit mystical ‘cos you don’t know what’s in them boxes.

fish in the foyer

6)    Favourite year in London’s history?
Tough one. But I’m going for 1860, when that bloke Joseph Malin opened London’s first fish and chip shop.

7)    Favourite Londoner?
Sir William Walworth and if you don’t know who he is then go check him out.

8)    Mortimer Wheeler or Indiana Jones
Hmm… probably Indiana Jones.

9)    If you could dig anywhere in the world where would you excavate?
I’m a fish! I can’t dig!

10)    What’s next for you after this project?
The Olympics! But then I’ll be back at LAARC helping out future volunteers, showing them how to store other finds.

Thhanks Fish! And you can come visit him for yourself every Monday, Tuesday & Friday until 23rd March, in the Museum Foyer, from 10am -4pm.

LAARC VIP10: Volunteer Profile – Solange

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Every week as part of our current Volunteer / Visitor Inclusion Project celebrating 10 years of the archaeological archive, we’re posting volunteer profiles allowing you to find out a little more about our excellent teams of volunteers. Today it’s Solange:

1) When did you join the volunteer programme and why?
October 2011 – the VIP9 project

2) What was your most memorable day whilst volunteering?
Day 1

Tuesday's team working on Reg Finds

3) What was your favourite object you discovered whilst volunteering?
I didn’t discover them, but I liked the roman sandal rosettes

Leather Roman shoe rosette

4) What’s your favourite part of the museum?
Roman galleries

Our younger visitors get to handle 2000 year old pottery

5) Upper galleries of lower?
Upper

6) Favourite year in London’s history?
1666 and the great fire (and 1969 – the year I was born)

7) Favourite Londoner?
Dr Johnson

8) Mortimer Wheeler or Indiana Jones?
Mortimer Wheeler

9) If you could dig anywhere in the world where would you excavate?
Dura Europos

 

10) What’s next for you after this project?
Vindolanda

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