cheshire map

The Roman Road from Chester to the Wirral

Margary Number: 670

Distance: unknown

Included for completeness but is this really a Roman road? It all comes down to less than 3 km of possible road at Street Hey, near Willaston. That name of course is a big clue and Jermy in the 1960s excavated the road there and was convinced he had found and proved a Roman road (see reference below).

The problems are all away from Street Hey. No one has found a convincing route back to Chester and even Lidar has not really helped. In the other direction it is a similar story with suggested destinations of Meols and/or Birkenhead also producing no likely road.

 

 

 

Historic Counties: Cheshire

Current Counties: Cheshire

HER: Cheshire

 

routemap

cheshire map


>

Route Map 1 - Chester to Huntington

Jermy was the biggest protagonist for this road and his findings are recorded in Journal of the Chester Archaeological Society 1961 & 1963. His location map is shown right with other previously suggested clues as to where the rood was heading added in red.

Taking them in distance order:-

The so-called Roman Road at Prenton can safely be discarded - it has no Roman characteristics.

Watkin (Roman Cheshire) records a very substantial bridge at Birkenhead. So massive and old that he concluded it must have been built by the Romans. If this were the road's destination a route via Storeton Hill and Mount Road would seem logical. There have been suggestions of an agger east of Hargrave Lane but not convincing ones in the Lidar data.

Meols (pronounced Mells) - there can be no doubt this was a Roman site - there have been so many finds there. But again a connection back to Street Hey has not been forthcoming. For a route to Meols then the A540 looks more logical.

Click for larger view
jermy map

Oblique 3D Lidar Image - Street Hey

This does look promising - well it is certainly straightish!

 

 

 

Click for larger view

 

3D lidar

Jermy's Map & Lidar Image

Jermy's two maps have been joined and overlaid on the Lidar image.

Jermy cut two trenches and an off line control pit between the B5133 and the house "Girston". The results are given in his figures 6 & 7. What is shown is not a full cross section but what looks like pits. He found cobbles on sand. But he added "no agger in the construction of the road" was evident.

Jermy was convinced he had proved a Roman road and in 1963 in a second paper added aerial photographs which he suggested supported what he had proposed. Having said that the aerials are not that convincing, at least to my eyes.

On the basis of what he shows in his papers it is hard to be convinced. One can only assume he saw more than he reported.

 

Click for larger view
jermy lidar

Lidar Image & Route Map - Street Hey Detail

So what does Lidar show?

Well there is something to the east of the hedge between Girston and the B5133 where Jermy excavated but is it a Roman road? On the basis of what is visible I am not sure we can say yes or no - a definite maybe.

Click for larger view
lidar

Lidar Image & Route Map - Street Hey full length

This was the route as far as Jermy proposed and matches the scale of his map above.

 

Click for larger view
street hey

Lidar Image & Route Map - Mollington

I attempted to find a route back to Chester from Jermy's stretch at Street Hey. There are features visible along a possible route with perhaps the most likely at Mollington. This is west of where Cheshire HER place the line of the road. There is nothing visible in the Lidar to support the HER route.

 

Click for larger view
mollington

Route Map & Lidar Image - Possible route to/from Chester

Not a lot of other evidence so the route depicted is probably regarded as a good working hypothesis.

 

So is Margary 670 a definite Roman road? At the state of our current knowledge then it is perhaps best considered somewhere between probable or possible.

Click for larger view

posible route

Back to homepage

Last update: July 2018

© David Ratledge