(taken from The Victoria History of the County of Durham, 1905)
Around and about us there are
layers of history buried beneath our feet. The vast majority of it remains
hidden and undiscovered, a good deal has been wiped out completely – and just
here and there can be found tantalising glimpses into the world of our
ancestors. Only by tapping into the archives can we begin to make a little sense
of these faint ghosts from our distant past.
South Durham has many such spots.
The Romans drove Dere Street through these parts, of course, and much of the
human activity that followed during the Dark Ages was wiped from the face of
the earth during the Norman ‘Harrying of the North’ and other such cleansing
operations. Later still creations, such as the remarkable lost village of
Ulnaby (13th-16th centuries) as well as that at Walworth
(among others), provide evidence aplenty of the fluctuating fortunes of local
life. And at the little village of Summerhouse, a few miles NW of Darlington,
lies another odd little example of our mysterious past.
At the southern extremity of the
settlement’s north-south village green can be found an area of apparently open
countryside – but which, in fact, contains a series of winding earthworks. As
can be seen from the image above, the small, central section encloses an area
of land (about 15m or so square), with a southern ‘feed-off’ into a larger
moated area. Towards the west there is a sluice-gate which regulated the flow
of water into the system from a small lake. The lake is now a wood.
Not a lot is known about exactly
what the system of moats was protecting, but the faint remains of a tower
within the smaller enclosure suggest that there was a fortified manor house on
the spot. Adjacent and to the south lie remains of another, larger building –
then there is the even more expansive and partly-moated area further to the
south. All very mysterious, and abandoned long, long ago – though it is likely
that the earthworks may hint at a connection to the Raby estate (their ‘summer
house’?), and the monks of Durham City also had interests hereabouts.
By way of further illustration,
here is a splendid aerial shot (taken from the west, facing east).
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