Dig Diary

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Battle of the Buttons

2019 Excavation In the summer of 2019 we excavated at several sites from the Battle of Waterloo including Mont-Saint-Jean, Frischermont and Hougoumont with a group of archaeologists, veterans and serving military personnel. In the latest in our series of short films, Professor Tony Pollard gives us a run down of last summer’s activities, including searching for the lost remains of Frischermont Chateau and discovering a plethora of buttons at Hougoumont.

Dig Diary Day 1: Waterloo Uncovered Rides Again

Battlefield Beginnings On Sunday 7th of July, the Waterloo Uncovered team gathered at the main museum on the Waterloo battlefield, Memorial 1815, to officially kick off the fifth season of the project. As always, an international team of veterans, serving military personnel, archaeologists and students from a variety of backgrounds have joined us in Belgium. A series of briefings and talks on Sunday gave the whole team the opportunity to meet each other, and to get a better understanding of the day to day practicalities of the dig to come. After lunch, Professor Tony Pollard took the group on a short walking tour from the base of the Lion’s Mound to Hougoumont Farm, where Phil Harding summarised the results of our previous four seasons of excavation. Members of the team who were visiting the Waterloo area for the first time had the chance to see the iconic gates that slammed shut on attacking French forces, which Wellington said turned the tide of the battle, and the famous sunken lane described by Victor Hugo in Les Miserables which was used to transport ammunition to the defending troops holed up inside the farm. Professor Tony Pollard takes the team on a walking tour in front of the Lion's Mound. Photo by Chris van Houts. Mont-Saint-Jean Farm For the past four years, Waterloo Uncovered has focused its work on one of the most famous sites of the Battle of Waterloo: Hougoumont farm, where Allied forces held out against repeated French attacks on the 18th of June 1815. This year, the team will begin exploring the site of Mont-Saint-Jean for the first time. Northeast ...

Dig Diary Day 2: Musket Balls at Mont-Saint-Jean

Evidence of Evacuation? In our freshly dug trenches along the east edge of the Mont-Saint-Jean orchard, an exciting discovery is in progress. The farm of Mont-Saint-Jean, which served as a field hospital during the fighting, is widely considered to have been several hundred yards behind the front lines of fighting, safely out of harms way. But recent discoveries by our veterans and students could completely change our understanding of Mont-Saint-Jean's role in the Battle of Waterloo... On our second day of digging, the team have unearthed several musket balls of both British and French origin, indicating that Mont-Saint-Jean farm was not, as previously thought, a safe retreat for wounded troops behind Allied lines. In fact, it may have been the site of a previously unknown confrontation between French and Allied troops - or even the victim of a French cavalry attack which forced the staff and patients of the hospital to evacuate. The team were not expecting to find evidence of a French attack so close to the farm itself - there is, after all, no record of French infantry approaching Mont-Saint-Jean farm, let alone mounting an attack. But the attackers may not have been infantry - Professor Tony Pollard suggests that some of the ammunition found may be carbine shot, which would indicate a cavalry attack. The ammunition discovered so far may constitute evidence of the attack on the Mont-Saint-Jean field hospital described by Major George Simmons, in which French cannonballs "riddled the walls" of the farmhouse and the walking wounded were forced to evacuate or risk becoming French prisoners. While Major Simmons' account of his time in Mont-Saint-Jean ...

Dig Diary Day 3: Of Reading, Remembering and Ridges

Reading to Remember 2019 When Private John Peter Leonhard first laid eyes on Hougoumont farm, he recounted the utter hopelessness the sight instilled in him; “The doors were open, one could see the freshly broken loopholes in the wall. Ha, I thought to myself, here you’ll settle in but leave nevermore. Good night world.”Private John Peter Leonhard Private Leonhard’s evocative account is one of many moving descriptions of the events of June 1815, which would change, and take, tens of thousands of lives and shape the 19th century as we know it. 204 years later, the Waterloo Uncovered team sat down in the same farm that Private Leonhard described so vividly to remember the victims and victors of the Battle of Waterloo, in their own words. The team begin their marathon Reading to Remember event in the chapel of Hougoumont farm. Photo by Chris van Houts. During the Reading to Remember event, members of our team including veterans, students, archaeologists and staff sat down in the chapel of Hougoumont farm where wounded soldiers took refuge on the 18th of June 1815, to read personal accounts of the horrors and triumphs of the Battle of Waterloo. Taken from a variety of Allied, Prussian and French memoirs and letters, participants have been reading contemporary accounts of gruelling marches, homesickness, heroic acts and devastating injuries; of loss, suffering, friendship and hope. As always, we have brought a diverse team to Belgium, and we were lucky enough to have native speakers of a variety of languages, meaning participants could read accounts in their original Dutch, French and English. The team have been reading continuously for ...

Dig Diary Day 4: Behind the Scenes

As the first fantastic week of Waterloo Uncovered 2019 nears its end, we're taking you behind the scenes of the dig and shining a light on two often overlooked parts of the team: the specialists who help us discover our finds, and the photographers who record them. Meet the Metal Detectorists Dutch army engineer Moos Raaijmakers gives British veteran Shaun Stocker a crash course in metal detecting. Photo by Chris van Houts. The Waterloo Uncovered team contains a number of specialist metal detectorists who work closely with our archaeologists to aid in the discovery of metal objects on site. Today, our metal detectorists have taken a number of veterans under their wing to teach them some core skills in a crash course on metal detecting. Alastair Eager is a former Royal Marine, who served for 15 years before returning to civilian life around 2 and a half years ago. He has always had an interest in history and archaeology and was 'eager' to get involved in the Waterloo Uncovered project: "It seemed like the perfect fit, as a former serviceman, and it's been great meeting like-minded people and learning new skills." Former Royal Marine Alastair Eager, who tried his hand at metal detecting today. Photo by Chris van Houts. In particular, Alastair has always had an interest in metal detecting, but has never had an opportunity to give it a try before. This morning, Alastair managed to get his hands on a metal detector for the first time. After a few disappointing finds that turned out to be bottle caps, Alastair was lucky enough to find two musket balls. Handling ...

Dig Diary Day 5: Bringing History to Life

Redcoats Return As the first week of Waterloo Uncovered 2019 draws to a close, the sites of Hougoumont and Mont-Saint-Jean have once more been been overrun by British redcoats. Two members of Coldstream Guards 1815 in Hougoumont farm. Photo by Chris van Houts. Today's visitors are members of the Coldstream Guards 1815 group, a military and living history society dedicated to the Coldstream Regiment of Foot Guards. The Coldstream Guards are the oldest infantry regiment in continuous service in the British Army and are fiercely proud of their role at the Battle of Waterloo. Coldstream Guards 1815 aim for complete historical accuracy in their reenactment, and intend to create an exciting and realistic experience for members of the group and those who come to watch the demonstrations. The group endeavour to recreate all aspects of military life, including the living conditions of the soldiers - they camp outside during their events and cook their meals over an open fire, and no electronic devices are allowed during reenactments. Coldstream Guards 1815 are an inclusive group and have roles for men, women and children - they recognise that people of all ages and genders would have been present around the battlefields of the era, with women and children following the regiments on campaigns, and often looking after the wounded after a battle; their lives and vital work should not be forgotten just because they weren't soldiers. Clive Jones is held up by a member of the Waterloo Uncovered team. Photo by Chris van Houts. Clive Jones, who runs Coldstream Guards 1815, always had a passion for history but decided to become a ...

Dig Diary Day 6: Mass Musket Balls and Scots Guard Buttons

It's the first day of our second week here at Waterloo Uncovered! After a weekend of recovering from their exhausting hard week last week, the team are back and ready to do it all over again. Waterloo Uncovered: Live! You might have seen Waterloo Uncovered live this morning on BBC Breakfast, where Professor Tony Pollard and Waterloo Uncovered co-founder Mark Evans were interviewed by Europe reporter Gavin Lee, alongside several of our veteran participants. BBC Breakfast ran three fantastic pieces throughout the morning, in which veterans digging with Waterloo Uncovered gave their insight into the struggles of coming home from war, transitioning into civilian life, and recovering from injury and PTSD. They discussed how archaeology, and Waterloo Uncovered in particular, can aid in physical and mental recovery, as well as working as a method of discovering new interests, building new skills, and pursuing new educational or vocational paths. If you missed it, you can check out the BBC's video on Waterloo Uncovered below. It was the second most watched video on the BBC's website this afternoon - even above the Cricket World Cup final! A Cornucopia of Cornfield Finds In a cornfield in the vicinity of Mont-Saint-Jean, our team of archaeologists, veterans, students and metal detectorists have begun a large-scale metal detecting survey. The cornfield sits along the reverse slope where Wellington commanded British soldiers to lie down to protect themselves from incoming French fire. Later in the battle it was the scene of intense fighting between infantry and cavalry as the French sought desperately to break through the British and Allied line. The survey of this area has only ...

Dig Diary Day 7: Military Medicine and Well Diving

Military Medicine at Mont-Saint-Jean This morning, retired consultant,  curator of the Royal College of Surgeons and curator of the Military Surgical Museum at Ferme de Mont-Saint-Jean Dr Mick Crumplin kindly gave our veterans, archaeologists and students a tour of the Ferme de Mont-Saint-Jean museum, which houses his personal collection of medical artefacts relating to the era of the Battle of Waterloo. In Mick’s collection are several sets of surgical instruments that he is particularly fascinated by. One such set from 1830 is made of shear steel, and includes an amputating saw with an ebony handle that would not have been sterilized between patients, forceps for removing bullets and gouging out bone, scalpels and amputating knives, a trephine for trepanning (drilling holes in the skull to relieve the pressure of compound fractures), and a urethral syringe for treating venereal diseases. “When you look at instruments like this you realise that surgery may have been crude without any anaesthesia or pain relief, without any idea of sepsis, but they are so well-made there must have been something to surgery more than just crude butchery.”Dr Mick Crumplin One of Mick's collections of surgical tools in the Military Surgical Museum at Ferme de Mont-Saint-Jean. Photo by Chris van Houts. Another of Mick’s most interesting objects is a vertebra set in silver which had been damaged by a piece of shrapnel. The vertebra belonged to Captain Holmes of the 27th Inniskillings; when he was killed at Waterloo, his wife had his body boiled and removed the damaged bone as well as the missile in his chest that had killed him. She kept it by her ...

Dig Diary Day 8: Poignant Proof of the Human Cost of Battle

A Possible Amputation Pit? In the orchard of Mont-Saint-Jean, Waterloo Uncovered’s metal detectorists picked up a signal that indicated the presence of a large metal object, which was promptly excavated by a team of archaeologists, students and veterans. Although it is too degraded to identify at this time, it may be the remains of an ammunition box, or simply a collection of metal scraps. While excavating around the metal pieces, our archaeologists made an amazing discovery - a human leg bone. Waterloo Uncovered liaised with the local authorities here in Belgium, as well as with forensic anthropologists, to determine that the remains were not related to a modern burial, and work was able to continue swiftly. One of the human leg bones being excavated at Mont-Saint-Jean. Photo by Chris van Houts. As the trench was expanded, another leg bone was uncovered, and several days later yet another was found. This morning, a fourth leg bone was discovered: we now have at least four lower leg bones concentrated in a small area of the orchard. The location they were found in appears to be an area where amputated limbs would have been thrown, associated with the field hospital. One limb shows possible evidence of trauma caused by a catastrophic wound, while the most recently discovered limb appears to bear the marks of a surgeon’s amputation saw above the knee. This is the first time the Waterloo Uncovered project has encountered human remains, which are an exciting and relatively unusual find on the battlefields of Waterloo. While there were an estimated 7000 Prussian, 15,000 Allied and 25,000 French casualties at the Battle ...

Dig Diary Day 9: Bombs and Buttons

An Explosive Discovery In a field in the vicinity of Mont-Saint-Jean farm, an earth-shaking find was discovered yesterday afternoon. Serving Coldstream Guardsman Oliver Horncastle, whom you may remember as the lucky man who discovered both the first find of the 2019 season and a Coldstream Guards button at Hougoumont, picked up a large signal while metal detecting in a cornfield on the reverse slope where Allied troops were stationed during the Battle of Waterloo. As our team of archaeologists and veterans dug down, they discovered an enormous metal ball deep in the earth. Initially, the find was thought to be a 12-pound cannonball, twice the weight of the cannonball discovered at Mont-Saint-Jean last week – you can read more about that in our dig diary: https://www.waterloouncovered.com/dig-diary-day-3-of-reading-remembering-and-ridges/ The 'cannonball' in situ at Mont-Saint-Jean. Photo by Chris van Houts. But when the ball was excavated, it appeared to be far larger than first thought, leading our archaeologists to consider the possibility that this was a 24-pound cannonball. But a French 24-pound cannonball has no place on the battlefields of Waterloo, as there is no record of the French using a 24-pound cannon in this period. Professor Tony Pollard, Waterloo Uncovered Archaeological Director, decided to examine the ball further due to this discrepancy. He made a startling discovery: as he turned the ball over, he saw the hole where a fuse would once have been. Our cannonball was actually a bomb! “To say that the battle raged most furiously the ground was actually covered with the dead and dying […] and that the terrors of the scene were heightened by the constant bursting ...

Dig Diary Day 10: 2019 Recap

A Cornucopia of Cornfield Finds Where have we been? A large cornfield near Mont-Saint-Jean farm. What did we find?  A large amount of musket balls, a 6-inch unexploded howitzer shell and coins and buttons likely dropped by soldiers on the reverse slope of the battlefield. Many of the musket balls discovered in the cornfield being catalogued by the finds team. Photo by Chris van Houts. We were lucky enough to visit Waterloo when the crops in the nearby cornfield had been recently harvested, allowing our metal detectors and surveyors to examine what lies beneath.  Our team have found a large amount of musket balls in the cornfield – 58 in the first half a day of surveying, and dozens more since. In amongst the musket balls, our metal detectorists discovered several small objects which may have been dropped by soldiers during the fighting including a French revolutionary period coin which would have still been in circulation, and several buttons from soldier’s uniforms. Towards the end of the second week, we discovered a large metal ball around a metre below the ground in the cornfield. Initially thought to be a 12-pound cannonball, it became clear that the object was far too heavy and was most likely a 24-pound cannonball. But as Professor Tony Pollard examined the ‘cannonball’ further, he found a fuse hole, indicating that our ‘cannonball’ was in fact an explosive 6-inch howitzer shell! The howitzer shell in situ. Photo by Chris van Houts. What does it tell us? The musket balls and howitzer shell are most likely related to Wellington’s ‘reverse slope defence’. The cornfield in which they were discovered sits along the ...

Winter Dig Diary

Welcome to the latest edition of Waterloo Uncovered's Dig Diary. By Hattie Ford In this edition: Get all the details on our highly successful fundraiser;Our veterans collaborate with the British museum;Learn about life after the dig and how our participants are making a difference;A focus on finds and spreading the word about WU! In the months since our 2019 excavation at the battlefield of Waterloo ended, our veterans, serving personnel and archaeologists have been as busy as ever. In fact, so many interesting things have happened since the summer that we’ve decided to keep our Dig Diary going throughout the year. We’ll keep you updated with all the latest on our projects, events and finds, our archaeological programme for the coming years, our programme of welfare and support, and how we’re making an impact. So from now on, make sure you check our website or social media every couple of months to stay up-to-date with our work and with all the exciting things members of the Waterloo Uncovered team have been up to. We hope you enjoy! A Night to Remember in the historic Middle Temple Hall. Photo by Tucker Images. A Night to Remember On the 11th of November, Waterloo Uncovered hosted our annual fundraising event: ‘A Night to Remember’ – and it certainly was. Hosted by Gyles Brandreth, the fundraiser took place in the historic Middle Temple Hall in London and brought together veterans and serving personnel, archaeologists, members of the Waterloo Uncovered team and many of our biggest supporters. Guests were treated to a cocktail party, entertaining anecdotes from Gyles and a thrilling auction. This year, thanks ...

Spring Dig Diary

Welcome to the latest edition of Waterloo Uncovered’s Dig Diary. By Hattie Ford In this edition: We’re honoured with an award from the Prime Minister;Archaeological finds give up their secrets (and be warned, some are quite grisly!);Meet some of the Waterloo Uncovered team of Veterans and Serving Personnel. Points of Light Award Waterloo Uncovered co-founders Captain Mark Evans and Major Charles Foinette have just been honoured with a Points of Light award by the Prime Minister, recognising their valuable work in veteran welfare and recovery. Points of Light awards are given to outstanding volunteers and initiatives that are making lasting and substantial changes in their communities. Prime Minister Boris Johnson described Waterloo Uncovered as “a wonderful testament to our nation’s history” and praised Mark and Charlie for “helping those who have bravely served our country to find purpose and wellbeing through your incredible archaeological project, preserving our heritage while supporting our fine veterans” in personal letters to the charity’s two founders. In their acceptance statements, Mark and Charlie described themselves as “delighted” to receive the prestigious award, and paid homage to the role of our amazing team of archaeologists, veterans, staff and students in making Waterloo Uncovered the successful and valuable initiative it is today. To read more about WU’s Points of Light award, including Mark and Charlie’s statements, please see the Points of Light website. Captain Mark Evans and Major Charles Foinette, Waterloo Uncovered co-founders & Points of Light award recipients. But this may not be the only award bestowed upon Waterloo Uncovered’s team this year. Waterloo Replayed: The Great Game has been shortlisted for the University of Glasgow’s ...