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SE17 Elephant and Castle, Kennington, Walworth



Bone rule

Give a carpenter a bone


This hand-made ruler was found in an old fireplace in Walworth in 1991. It is made out of bone. The bone is probably the long bone of a cow.

A long history

Walworth is first mentioned almost a thousand years ago in the Domesday Book of ad 1086. The area probably started life as an agricultural settlement. By the 17th century there was a manor of Walworth. In the 18th century, the manor leased some of its land for the development of new housing.

Whose ruler was it?

The ruler was found in the remains of a fireplace during excavations on a site proposed for the new Walworth Police Station. The fireplace seems to have been in the kitchen of a 19th-century house. The ruler may have belonged to an occupant of the house, or possibly a carpenter, who worked in the nearby builder's yard that existed during that time.


Museum number WPS91[6]<6>

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Adjacent postcodes


Property marker
SE1
'Vauxhall Gardens, shewing the Grand Walk ...', by I.S. Muller after Samuel Wale, c.1751
SE11
Programme for the Festival of Britain celebrations, Camberwell
SE5


  Stories from SE17  
 
My Mother
by Dianne Hinds, 17/12/2009


Write a story view all SE17 stories

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