One of the reasons to stay in Haydon Bridge was its proximity to ancient Roman archaeological sites and to Hadrian’s Wall.
Housesteads Roman Fort, Military Road, Haydon Bridge, Hexham, Northumberland, England UK
Housesteads Roman Fort was an auxiliary fort on Hadrian’s Wall,at Housesteads, Northumberland, England. It is dramatically positioned on the end of the mile-long crag of the Whin Sill over which the Wall runs, overlooking sparsely populated hills. It was called the “grandest station” on the Wall and is one of the best-preserved and extensively displayed forts. It was occupied for almost 300 years.
The name of the fort has been given as Vercovicium, Borcovicus, Borcovicium, and Velurtion. An inscription found at Housesteads with the letters VER, is believed to be short for Ver(covicianorum), the letters ver being interchangeable with bor in later Latin.
The 18th-century farmhouse of Housesteads provides the modern name.
A Local Visitor, Military Road, Haydon Bridge, Hexham, Northumberland, England UK
Shaded Seating Area, Vindolanda Museum and Archaeological Site, Hexham, Northumberland, England UK
The seat supports are from the archaeological excavations.
Vindolanda was a Roman auxiliary fort (castrum) just south of Hadrian’s Wall in northern England, which it pre-dated. Archaeological excavations of the site show it was under Roman occupation from roughly 85 AD to 370 AD. Located near the modern village of Bardon Mill in Northumberland, it guarded the Stanegate, the Roman road from the River Tyne to the Solway Firth. It is noted for the Vindolanda tablets, a set of wooden leaf-tablets that were, at the time of their discovery, the oldest surviving handwritten documents in Britain.
Vindolanda Archaeological Site, Bardon Mill, Hexham, Northumberland, England UK
“The Way Home to Rome”, Roman Army Museum, Pennine Way, Greenhead, Brampton, Northumberland, England UK
Exhibits, Roman Army Museum, Pennine Way, Greenhead, Brampton, Northumberland, England UK
Majestic Tree, Roman Army Museum, Pennine Way, Greenhead, Brampton, Northumberland, England UK
Countryside View, Roman Army Museum, Pennine Way, Greenhead, Brampton, Northumberland, England UK
Crindledykes Lime Kiln, Bardon Mill, Hexham, Northumberland, England UK
“Crindledykes Lime Kiln” stands beside a minor road running from the Military Road, west of Housesteads Roman Fort, to Bardon Mill. It is one of several limekilns built in this area in the C19th to turn locally quarried limestone into quicklime. Coal was brought from the nearby Barcombe Coal Mine via a waggonway. It is the only kiln in Northumberland which had four draw arches supplied from a single upper pot, although two were later blocked up to reduce production in the early 1900s.