Saturday 26 November 2016

Hooton Roberts Village


A view up Holmes Lane

In Hooton Roberts, my observations of the dip and strike of the strata – and the erosion of the small valley that runs down to a stream that continues towards Kilnhurst - indicates that there could be a small fault bound anticline, and/or a horst like geological structure here.

A general view of Hooton Roberts

My old paper BGS map marks a fault on the north-west side of the village and further research of other old maps describes the south-east side as possessing topographic features that have names such as Hooton Cliff and Burr Cliff, which suggests that the rock here was readily accessible for quarrying. I continued my investigation of the “Hooton Roberts Rock”, by surveying some of the old buildings that can be found in this village.

The Earl of Strafford

The Earl of Strafford public house, built around the turn of the 17th century and considerably enlarged in the later part of the 18th century, is the oldest listed building in Hooton Roberts – apart from St. John the Baptist's church – and its walls are built out of “Rotherham Red” sandstone, with the quoins and dressings made from a buff/brown variety of sandstone.

Sandstone dressings at the Earl of Strafford public house

When undertaking a survey of the geological sites in Rotherham for the South Yorkshire RIGS Group, back in 1989, I very briefly visited the Hooton Roberts Quarry, which is excavated into a buff/brown variety of Mexborough Rock – 1 km to the west of the village – and this is probably the source of these dressings.

The Coach House

Many of the agricultural and vernacular buildings of a later date are wholly built using this stone but several others use this together withRotherham Red” sandstone, and it also appears in some of the boundary walls that run alongside the main road.

Boundary walling in Hooton Roberts

No evidence of old quarry faces has yet been seen in the village, which would show the extent of the colouration of the rock here, but the abundance of red sandstone - and the general practicalities of building vernacular architeture using locally extracted stone - would suggest that the deep blood red stone used to build houses next to the church of St. John the Baptist was quarried nearby.

Vernacular architecture in Hooton Roberts

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