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FEATURES<br />

Digging War Horse<br />

Project team and<br />

from ‘The Garrison’ stand next to a WWI 18lb artillery piece © Harvey Mills<br />

Within the shadows of the great<br />

prehistoric monument of Stonehenge<br />

lies an altogether less well-known site;<br />

a site which, even though it was only<br />

established one hundred years ago,<br />

has now all but disappeared. In 1914 at<br />

the start of the Great War, the ‘Horse<br />

Isolation Hospital’ was established at<br />

Fargo on Salisbury Plain. The site was<br />

only in place for a very short while<br />

before being superseded by a hospital<br />

for humans and only cr yptic<br />

references to its presence lie within<br />

the historic records.<br />

A Phase 2 recruit excavates the hospital area © Harvey Mills<br />

Larkhill played a vital role in the<br />

training of artillery and infantry during<br />

WWI but surprisingly little is known<br />

about how and where much of this<br />

training took place. During the War,<br />

huge numbers of horses and mules<br />

were required to not only pull the<br />

guns, but were also employed pulling<br />

horse drawn wagons and carrying<br />

supplies. The peak in relation to<br />

numbers of horses and mules<br />

employed was in 1917 when there<br />

were 869,931 recorded as working for<br />

the Army.<br />

The summer of 2014 saw the start of a<br />

community project to try to locate this<br />

hospital and to link in with local school<br />

studies of Michael Morpurgo’s literary<br />

phenomenon ‘War Horse’. With funding<br />

from the Heritage Lottery Fund and<br />

Wiltshire Council in place, a team began<br />

their mission of investigation.<br />

Geophysical sur veys by Wessex<br />

Archaeology and the Defence<br />

Academy on the ploughed farmland<br />

soon yielded tantalising traces of<br />

buildings, of ser vice trenches and<br />

vestiges of W WI. This enabled the<br />

excavations to take place under<br />

the exper t tutelage of renowned<br />

archaeologist Julian Richards. Julian<br />

has huge fieldwork experience in<br />

the Stonehenge environs but for<br />

this projec t was simply tasked to<br />

recover material which would relate<br />

to the hospital sites and the militar y<br />

presence. Seven local schools,<br />

Phase 2 recruits from Larkhill,<br />

local volunteers and par ticipants<br />

from Operation Nightingale<br />

(using heritage for recover y post<br />

Operational Tours) all worked<br />

together on the dig.<br />

The results were fascinating. Traces of<br />

the horse hospital were elusive,<br />

perhaps the structures were simply<br />

posts and thus fairly ephemeral and<br />

certainly something tricky to pick up<br />

with test-pits.<br />

What did come to light that could<br />

be easily identified were a number<br />

of items that demonstrated the<br />

existence of the buildings that were<br />

once located there and to<br />

individuals that were based here.<br />

Whilst the struc tures had been<br />

comprehensively removed, a mass<br />

of material was uncovered<br />

dem ons trating their e xis tence,<br />

indicated by the presence of brick ,<br />

roof covering and general building<br />

rubble. The in-situ remains of a<br />

drainage s ystem were also<br />

uncovered. A mass of small ar tefac ts<br />

12<br />

Sanctuary 44 • 2015

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