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Gorley Hill

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Gorley Hill
Gorley Hill is located in Hampshire
Gorley Hill
Shown within Hampshire
StandortHampshire
History
PeriodsIron Age
Site notes
ConditionDestroyed
Public accessYes

Gorley Hill is the site of a former Iron Age promontory hillfort located in Hampshire. The fort once occupied the southwestern corner of Gorley Common on Gorley Hill, a gravel-capped spur that points southwest into the Avon valley between Fordingbridge and Ringwood. The earthworks were destroyed in the 1950s and 60s when the common's new owners carried out large-scale gravel extraction works, effectively "scalping" the hill. The tall linear earthen banks present on the hill are a relic of the quarrying process and not prehistoric in origin.[1] The site is now grass, with some gorse and silver birch. The area is now owned and managed by Hampshire County Council.

The site is mentioned in the Hampshire Treasures online resource, and Heywood Sumner carried out some excavation at the site which was published in his 1917 book "Ancient Earthworks of the New Forest".[2]

Standort

The site is located at grid reference SU164113, and lies between the villages of South Gorley and North Gorley, in the county of Hampshire. Immediately to the South lies Huckles Brook, a tributary of theRiver Avon, which itself lies to the west. The hill has a summit of 70m AOD.

References


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