Bibliography - David Wyatt Crossley B.A., F.S.A.
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The Management of a Sixteenth-Century Ironworks, by D. W. Crossley, published August 1966 in The Economic History Review (vol. 19 issue 2, article, pp.273-288)   View Online

Wealden Iron Research Group: First Series Bulletin No. 1, Spring 1969, edited by Henry Cleere and David Crossley, published Spring 1969 (Wealden Iron Research Group) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF

Excavations: Panningridge, by D. W. Crossley, published Spring 1969 in Wealden Iron Research Group (First Series No 1, article, pp.4-7) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF
Abstract:
Documents in the De l'Isle and Dudley Collection show that Panningridge (Nat. Grid Ref. TQ 687 175) was built in 1542 for Sir William Sidney to smelt the ores of the Ashburn Valley, mined in the area now known as Pannelridge Wood. Pig iron was carried, probably along the existing hollow way towards Netherfield, to be converted into wrought iron at the finery forge at Robertsbridge. Between 1542 and 1546 this forge was also supplied by a furnace near Robertsbridge, built in 1541, but this fell into disuse during 1546 and Panningridge was the sole supplier until 1563. After 1563 less is known of the furnace; in that year the Sidneys relinquished the lease of the site, and thereafter it was run by William Relfe and Bartholomew Jeffrey, two ironmasters with widespread local interests in the industry. The length of their tenure is not known, and by 1574 the site was in the hands of John Ashburnham, who is also recorded as holding it in 1588. Whether it was still in use at these dates is uncertain, but by 1611 its existence seems to have been no more than a local memory.

Excavations: Chingley, by D. W. Crossley and D. Ashurst, published Spring 1969 in Wealden Iron Research Group (First Series No 1, article, pp.7-9) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF
Abstract:
A scheme is under consideration to dam the River Bewl, near Old Forge Farm, Lamberhurst, in order to create a reservoir for the provision of water for the Medway towns. This proposal threatens two ironmaking sites, the late 16th century blast furnace at TQ 684 327 and the 17th century finery forge at TQ 682 335.
Excavations began in August, 1968 with the aid of a grant from the Ministry of Public Building and Works through the Society for Post-Medieval Archaeology to attempt the precise location of these sites as a preliminary to full-scale excavation.

Excavations 1970: Pippingford 'Steel Forge', Ashdown Forest, by D. W. Crossley, published March 1971 in Sussex Archæological Society Newsletter (no. 2, article, pp.3-4) accessible at: S.A.S. library   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: First Series Bulletin No. 2, 1971, edited by Henry Cleere and David Crossley, published Spring 1971 (Wealden Iron Research Group) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF

Chingley Forge and Furnace - Summer 1970, by David Crossley, published Spring 1971 in Wealden Iron Research Group (First Series No 2, article, pp.10-11) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF
Abstract:
Considerable progress was made with this site, the main furnace structure was cleared down to the level of the bellows area floor, and the major features are now clear.

A Sixteenth-Century Wealden Blast Furnace: A Report on Excavations at Panningridge, Sussex, 1964-1970, by David Crossley, published 1972 in The Society for Post-Medieval Archaeology (vol. 6, article, pp.42-68) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/502347]   View Online
Abstract:
The excavation recovered evidence for two periods of iron smelting; there were substantial surviving structures from a blast furnace thought from documentary sources to have produced pig-iron from 1542 until at least 1563 and, superimposed, indications of a later furnace built with major changes in layout at some time after 1563 but abandoned well before 1611. It was possible to compare, in particular, the application of water-power in the two periods and to sample ore and cast iron. The features of the first furnace could be related to references in surviving account books, and thus a yardstick may be offered for future fieldwork on undocumented furnaces of the period.

Excavations 1971: Chingley Forge, Kent, by D. W. Crossley, published June 1972 in Sussex Archæological Society Newsletter (no. 6, article, p.2) accessible at: S.A.S. library   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: First Series Bulletin No. 5, Winter 1973, edited by David Crossley, published 1973 (Wealden Iron Research Group) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF

Chingley Furnace, by David Crossley, published 1973 in Wealden Iron Research Group (First Series No 5, article, pp.8-10) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF
Abstract:
The furnace, sited at (N.G.R.) TQ 684 327 is known from documentary references to have been in operation in 1565 and 1574, and to have been derelict in 1588. It is doubtful whether it was subsequently rebuilt. It smelted iron ore from the adjacent Furnace Pit Shaw with charcoal from local woodlands. This year's excavation completed work begun in 1969-70, and the site will be flooded when the Bewl Dam is built.

Wealden Iron Research Group: First Series Bulletin No. 6, Summer 1973, edited by David Crossley, published Summer 1973 (Wealden Iron Research Group) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF

Ralph Hogge's Ironworks Accounts, 1576-81, by David Crossley, published 1974 in Sussex Archæological Collections (vol. 112, article, pp.48-79) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 5960] & The Keep [LIB/500317] & S.A.S. library
Review by C. F. T. [C. F. Tebbutt] in Wealden Iron Research Group: Bulletin 9 Spring 1976:
Philip Henslowe's notebook, recording his financial involvements with theatrical companies in the early 17th century, was deposited by his stepdaughter in the library of Dulwich College, founded by her husband Edward Alleyn. This MS book has long been familiar to theatre historians, but until recently no one interested in Wealden ironworks appears to have known, or been informed that at the back were some accounts of Ralph Hogge the famous Buxted ironmaster. He had married Philip Henslowe's sister Margaret, and John Henslowe, another brother kept his accounts.
The accounts are unfortunately very incomplete but they do throw a little more light on this rather mysterious and almost mythical local character. Their incompleteness makes them almost useless to calculate the economics of his famous cannon casting business, but they do suggest the scale of his enterprises and the names, activities, and working methods, of the sub-contractors, who made, cut, dug, and carted his raw materials.
The author has written a masterly introduction to the Accounts and all that they reveal. Many members of W.I.R.G., as members also of Sussex Archaeological Society, will have received copies of this article. For others it is available in public libraries.

Excavations 1973: Wealden Iron Research Group: Hartfield - Pippingford Furnace, by D. W. Crossley, published January 1974 in Sussex Archæological Society Newsletter (no. 12, article, p.47) accessible at: S.A.S. library   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: First Series Bulletin No. 7, Winter 1974, edited by David Crossley, published Winter 1974 (Wealden Iron Research Group) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF

Medieval Bloomeries: a comment, by Editor, published Winter 1974 in Wealden Iron Research Group (First Series No. 7, article, pp.4-7) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF
Abstract:
The Chairman's note in the last Bulletin raises a number of problems about the occurrence of late bloomeries in the Weald, over which the Group has made little progress. Compared with the satisfactory recording of Romano-British bloomeries, and the rather unexpected growth in the number of recorded sites for the blast-furnace period, progress for the medieval industry has been limited. There are several reasons why this should be so.

The Bewl Valley Ironworks, c.1300-1730, by David Crossley, published 1975 (112 pp., London: Royal Archaeological Institute, ISBN-10: 0903986035 & ISBN-13: 9780903986038) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/502217] & West Sussex Libraries & East Sussex Libraries

Sidney Ironworks Accounts 1541-1573, by David Crossley, published 1975 (259 pp., Royal Historical Society, ISBN-10: 0901050253 & ISBN-13: 9780901050250) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/507455] & West Sussex Libraries & East Sussex Libraries
Abstract:
The Robertsbridge and Panningridge ironworks in Sussex were built by Sir William Sidney who had purchased Robertsbridge Abbey at the Dissolution; they passed to his son in 1553, and it was under him that the steelworks and ironworks in Glamorgan were built. This volume reproduces 22 documents with accounts for various years, and a useful interpretative introduction.
Review by C. F. T. [C. F. Tebbutt] in Wealden Iron Research Group: Bulletin 9 Spring 1976:
All students of the wealden iron industry owe a debt to David Crossley for his excavations at Panningridge, Chingley, and Pippingford (all published) and the light they throw on the layouts and technical processes of this industry in the pre-Industrial Revolution period. The author, rightly not content with fieldwork alone, has also devoted much time to documentary research, where material was available.
The publication of the Sidney Ironworks Accounts relates to Sir Henry Sidney's interests in establishing, running, and maintaining a furnace and forge at Robertsbridge, a furnace eight miles away at Panningridge (excavated by the author, see Post-Medieval Archaeology Vol.6 (1972) pp.42-68), and a furnace in Glamorgan, S. Wales. This latter he rented to secure a supply of cast iron plates for his steel works at Robertsbridge Abbey and Boxhurst, nearby. The local Welsh haematite ores were found to produce iron more suitable for this purpose than those in the Weald. In a scholarly introduction, with many footnotes, the author has squeezed every bit of information from the detailed accounts to piece together the methods and materials used to build and maintain this industrial complex. For example the labour employed, which included skilled furnace and forge men, miners, charcoal burners, timber cutters, carpenters, stone masons, and carters, etc., and their wages, is all analysed, compared and date tested to see if their employment was seasonal or permanent. Much information from other sources, consulted by the author, is used for a final analysis, which makes a fascinating story.

Wealden Iron Research Group: First Series Bulletin No. 8, Spring 1975, edited by David Crossley, published 1975 (Wealden Iron Research Group) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF

Cannon-Manufacture at Pippingford, Sussex: The Excavation of Two Iron Furnaces of c. 1717, by David Crossley, published 1975 in The Society for Post-Medieval Archaeology (vol. 9, article, pp.1-37) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/502341]   View Online
Abstract:
Two blast furnaces produced iron at Pippingford Park, Sussex (TQ/4503l6) in the early 18th century. At the first to be built (the west furnace) guns were cast; this was excavated in 1974, although its surroundings remain to be explored. A boring mill was sited close to the east furnace, the wheels of the boring carriage being in situ on their tracks. The east furnace was construded during the life of the west site, and the surviving casting beds showed that pig iron had been produced. Robbing of stone had been severe in the case of the east furnace, in contrast to its predecessor, whose rubble core survived 1-1.5 m. in height, and whose gun-casting pit was in good order.

The Lists of Furnaces and Forges of 1664, by David Crossley, published 1975 in Wealden Iron Research Group (First Series No. 8, report, pp.2-7) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF
Abstract:
Straker's table of furnaces and forges in 1653 and 1664, (Wealden Iron, p.61) is derived from documents published by M. A. Lower in Sx. A. C. XVIII (1866) pp.15-16, and J. L. Parsons in Sx. A. C. XXXII (1882) - not XXXI, as cited by Straker - pp.21-23.

Wealden Iron Research Group: First Series Bulletin No. 9, Spring 1976, edited by David Crossley, published 1976 (Wealden Iron Research Group) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: First Series Bulletin No. 10, 1976, edited by David Crossley, published 1976 (Wealden Iron Research Group) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: First Series Bulletin No. 11, 1977, edited by David Crossley, published 1977 (Wealden Iron Research Group) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: First Series Bulletin No. 12, 1977, edited by David Crossley, published 1977 (Wealden Iron Research Group) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF

The Pippingford Cannon: New Data, by D. W. Crossley, published 1977 in The Society for Post-Medieval Archaeology (vol. 11, article, p.106)   View Online

Ashburnham Furnace, Penhurst, by David Crossley, published 1977 in Wealden Iron Research Group (First Series No. 12, report, pp.7-8) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF

Antonio Averlino Filarète: description of a 15th-century ironworks, by David Crossley, published 1977 in Wealden Iron Research Group (First Series No. 12, article, pp.10-12) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: First Series Bulletin No. 13, 1978, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1978 (Wealden Iron Research Group) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: First Series Bulletin No. 14, 1978, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1978 (Wealden Iron Research Group) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: First Series Bulletin No. 15, 1979, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1979 (Wealden Iron Research Group) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: First Series Bulletin No. 16, 1979, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1979 (Wealden Iron Research Group) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: First Series Bulletin No. 17, 1980, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1980 (Wealden Iron Research Group) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506558]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 1, 1981, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1981 (Wealden Iron Research Group) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506559]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 2, 1982, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1982 (Wealden Iron Research Group) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506559]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 3, 1983, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1983 (Wealden Iron Research Group) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506559]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 4, 1984, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1984 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506559]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 5, 1985, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1985 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506559]   Download PDF

Iron industry of the Weald, by Henry Cleere, D. Crossley and B. C. Worssam, published 31 December 1985 (367 pp., Leicester Uniersity Press, ISBN-10: 0718512138 & ISBN-13: 9780718512132) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 9491] & West Sussex Libraries & East Sussex Libraries

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 6, 1986, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1986 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506559]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 7, 1987, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1987 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506560]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 8, 1988, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1988 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506560]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 9, 1989, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1989 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506560]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 10, 1990, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1990 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506560]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 11, 1991, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1991 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506560]   Download PDF

The Fuller Letters, 1728-1755, by David Crossley and Richard Saville, published 29 April 1991 (vol. 76, 345 pp., Sussex Record Society, ISBN-10: 0854450378 & ISBN-13: 9780854450374) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 13074][Lib 11098] & The Keep [LIB/500453][Lib/507859] & West Sussex Libraries & East Sussex Libraries   View Online
Abstract:
"I am afraid you do not keep copyes of your letters; if you do not it will be impossible to keep up a Regular Correspondence. And you being entrusted with so many People's Business you ought to do so" wrote John Fuller of Brightling to his son, Dr. Rose Fuller of Jamaica in 1734.
This letter book is one of the most important collections of business and social correspondence from a leading eighteenth century county family to be published in recent years, It records the rise to wealth and influence of the Fuller family of Brightling Park. Originally from humble beginnings in an inhospitable and forested part of the Weald of Sussex, they had in the eighteenth century - diversified into slave owning in Jamaica, expanded their iron founding and gun-casting in the Weald and greatly enlarged their Sussex estates, and by mid-century held significant holdings in London stocks. The letters explain how these business interests worked, and give the reader unique insights into the life of an eighteenth century landowner.
The letters also contain the only major surviving record of the charcoal iron industry to include substantial comment on the technical problems, how furnaces were operated, how guns were cast, and where they were sold. The Fullers were one of the major gun producers for the Navy and the Army at this time; their products were in demand as far away as Sardinia and the Austro-Hungarian - Empire.
There is much information on Wealden weather and road conditions, on the difficulty of running a Jamaica sugar plantation, and the problems of involvement in the London sugar-refining trade. There is extensive comment on Wealden agriculture, based as it was on one of the more intractable soils in southern England, on how tenants were dealt with, and the crops they grew. As befitting a county family there is material on political affairs - the Fullers were Tories - on social and educational questions and the arrangements made for sons to go into business. Of interest to all who want to know more about Sussex history, this volume will also stand on its own as an important contribution to our knowledge of gun casting and ironworking, Wealden agriculture, the Jamaica sugar trade, and how eighteenth century landowners organised their estates.
Review in Wealden Iron Research Group: Bulletin 11, 1991:
The Letterbook of the Fuller family is the single most important document relating to the Wealden iron industry in the eighteenth century. In it is correspondence on all aspects of the Fullers' business in casting; supply of raw materials, technical aspects of gunfounding, letters to agents, purchasers and other ironfounders. In addition, though of less relevance to the study of the Wealden iron industry, are the other subjects covered by this volume, namely the management of the family's estates in Sussex and in Jamaica. Also there is much family correspondence, and letters which give insights into the political scene in Sussex during the first half of the eighteenth century; the Fullers were Tories although, towards the middle of the century, economic expediency made their views less extreme.
. . .
This excellent volume deserves to find a home on the bookshelf of any serious student of the Wealden iron industry, and all who want to partake of a unique view of eighteenth century life. It is a pity that the opportunity was not taken, however, to complete the picture, at least as far as the iron industry was concerned, with the publication of the letters which form part of the Fuller papers but which were written after the end of the Letterbook.

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 12, 1992, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1992 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506560]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 13, 1993, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1993 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506560]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 14, 1994, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1994 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506561]   Download PDF

The Wealden Glass Industry Revisited, by David Crossley, published 1994 in Indutrial Archeology Review (vol. 17, issue 1, article, pp.64-74) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 12761]

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 15, 1995, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1995 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506562]   Download PDF

Iron industry of the Weald, by Henry Cleere, D. W. Crossley and edited by Jeremy Hodgkinson, published 7 April 1995 (revised edition, 424 pp., Merton Priory Press Ltd., ISBN-10: 1898937044 & ISBN-13: 9781898937043) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 12860] & The Keep [LIB/502218] & West Sussex Libraries & East Sussex Libraries   Download PDF
Abstract:
The Weald of Kent, Surrey and Sussex form the site of the major concentration of ironmaking in Britain during two distinct periods of the island's history; during the Roman occupation of AD43-400 and in the 16th and 17th centuries. This book surveys the evidence derived from excavation, fieldwork, documentary studies and experimental archæology carried out by the Wealden Iron Research Group. It includes chapters on geology and topography of the region, the iron industry during the successive periods of operation, and the technology of the direct and indirect ironmaking processes, together with a detailed gazetteer of sites.

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 16, 1996, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1996 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506563]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 17, 1997, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1997 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506564]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 18, 1998, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1998 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506565]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 19, 1999, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 1999 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 16400] & The Keep [LIB/506566]   Download PDF

Iron and Glass Industries, by David Crossley, published 1 January 1999 in An Historical Atlas of Sussex (pp.62-63, Chichester: Phillimore & Co. Ltd, ISBN-10: 1860771122 & ISBN-13: 9781860771125) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 14026][Lib 18777] & The Keep [LIB/501686][LIB/508903] & West Sussex Libraries & East Sussex Libraries

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 20, 2000, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 2000 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/506567]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 21, 2001, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 2001 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/506568]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 22, 2002, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 2002 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/506569]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 23, 2003, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 2003 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/506570]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 24, 2004, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 2004 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/506571]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 25, 2005, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 2005 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/506572]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 26, 2006, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 2006 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/506573]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 27, 2007, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 2007 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/506574]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 28, 2008, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 2008 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/506575]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 29, 2009, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 2009 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/506576]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 30, 2010, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 2010 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/506577]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 31, 2011, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 2011 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/506578]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 32, 2012, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 2012 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/506579]   Download PDF

Wealden Iron Research Group: Second Series Bulletin No. 33, 2013, edited by D. W. Crossley, published 2013 (Wealden Iron Research Group, ISSN: 0266-4402) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/507841]   Download PDF