Pitt, K. and Goodburn, D. M. (2003). 18th- and 19th-century shipyards at the south-east entrance to the West India Docks, London. Internat J Naut Archaeol 32 (2). Vol 32(2), pp. 191-209. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1095-9270.2003.tb01444.x.

Title
Title
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Title:
18th- and 19th-century shipyards at the south-east entrance to the West India Docks, London
Issue
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Issue:
Internat J Naut Archaeol 32 (2)
Series
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Series:
International Journal of Nautical Archaeology
Volume
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Volume:
32 (2)
Page Start/End
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Page Start/End:
191 - 209
Biblio Note
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Publication Type:
Journal
Abstract
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Abstract:
Archaeological fieldwork in 1997 on the Isle of Dogs, at the south-east entrance to the West India Docks, recovered evidence of seventeenth- to nineteenth-century shipyards, associated activities and foreign trade. Reused timbers may be the remains of the seventeenth-century Rolt's yard. Reclamation along the natural inlet was accompanied by the construction of a timber dry dock probably in the late eighteenth century. This soon fell out of use and was filled in with the construction of new dry docks to the south in 1806 by Thomas Pitcher. Much of the debris dating to the first half of the nineteenth century from ship repairing and building and from a range of ancillary crafts, together with ceramics from Iberia and the Far East, probably came from Pitcher's yard.
Author
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Author:
Ken Pitt
Damian M Goodburn
Year of Publication
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Year of Publication:
2003
Locations
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Subjects / Periods:
Late Eighteenth Century (Auto Detected Temporal)
Timber (Auto Detected Subject)
Ceramics (Auto Detected Subject)
1806 (Auto Detected Temporal)
Nineteenth Century (Auto Detected Temporal)
Pitchers Yard (Auto Detected Subject)
Post Medieval (BIAB)
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Source:
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BIAB (The British & Irish Archaeological Bibliography (BIAB))
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1095-9270.2003.tb01444.x
Created Date
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Created Date:
09 Jun 2004