Images

Image of King’s Clump (Long Barrow) by pure joy

Richmond Park – possible round barrow near King’s Clump – 2.3.2003 – virtually impossible to see on photograph (and not exactly easy to see in real life!)

Image credit: Martin Bull

Articles

King’s Clump

King’s Clump Mound – 2.3.2003

The OS Explorer mar 161 shows the word ‘mound’, very close to what looks like a small enclosed hump of ground. The general Richmond Park info board often uses a symbol for ‘ancient heritage’ but this time it doesn’t show anything in the area of the mound. When you go there, there is a very small hump covered in pine and oak trees and enclosed by metal railings with a locked gate. Not sure what it is, or was! As I had approached from the south I came across a few things that seem more interesting than the pretty innocuous tiny enclosed mound.

There is a suspiciously long barrow shaped mound about 20 metres long right on the edge of the hill – this is about 50 metres south of the enclosed mound. It is marked by 3 trees on its west side and a silver birch at the possible south of the possible barrow. Lots of possibles! Maybe I just like seeing possibles, but I also thought there was a suspicious possible round barrow almost at the foot of the possible longbarrow, just to the south of the silver birch tree. It’s a pretty innocuous piece of ground, with a grass path running straight through it, but the small humps and bumps on either side of the path (in an area of no other such bumps) give the impression that it could be a very worn down round barrow.

Living in London makes you desparate for heritage!

Miscellaneous

King’s Clump
Long Barrow

‘There is a fenced mound here, planted with conifers in 1910 (GLSMR 030059),
but interestingly the mound extends both north and south beyond the fence. It
has approximate total dimensions of 45-50m x 20m wide x 1m max height and must
be considered a possible long barrow.‘
From “Richmond Park, London. Archeological Survey 1992 by Tom Greeves”

Sites within 20km of King’s Clump