12th August 1785
Dolmen discovered on Le Mont de la Ville
The dolmen below Le Mont de la Ville would have lain undiscovered had the area not been cleared for the construction of a parade ground. A plaque depicting it and commemorating its discovery was erected close to the site, now home to Fort Regent, in 1985.
Dolmen are common across the Channel Islands. They are Neolithic constructions erected (or dug) between around 5000BC and 2200BC, many of which incorporate burial chambers for important tribal leaders. The dolmen at Le Mont de la Ville was a stone circle built of local granite in around 3000BC.
Far from home
Although it’s still possible to visit the stones, you’ll have to travel from Jersey to Henley-on-Thames to do so and be invited to visit the private estate where they’re now sited. Upon its discovery, the dolmen was presented to the governor, field-marshal Henry Seymour Conway, who had it dug up in 1788, transported to his Oxfordshire estate, Templecombe House, and reconstructed there. Although there have been requests to return it to the island, it remains on the mainland and is now a listed monument.
Templecombe House and estate was put on the market for £7m in 2017, and sold the following September, complete with its dolmen, for £6,500,000. The property details, written by Savills, remarked that, “originally forming part of what we believe to be a listed parkland setting, the Druids Altar is a collection of ancient stones that is Grade II Listed.”
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Other events that occured in August
The first Battle of Flowers takes place
- Jersey staged its first ever Battle of Flowers in 1902, to celebrate the coronation of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandria.
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Napoleon lays into Jersey in the French press
- Napoleon accused Jersey of granting asylum to criminals condemned to death, then sending them on raiding missions back into France.
- Read more…
The National Trust for Jersey holds its first formal meeting
- The Very Reverend Samuel Falle, the Dean of Jersey, chaired the National Trust for Jersey’s first official meeting.
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St Helier burned by a huge fire
- Dense clouds of smoke billowed above Fort Regent when commercial buildings caught fire in St Helier in August 1891.
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