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The Alderney Society
The Museum, High Street
Alderney GY9 3TG
Channel Islands
+44 1481 823222

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Museum Exhibits

Alderney Prehistory
Roman and Mediaeval Alderney
The Elizabethan Wreck
Alderney Breakwater
The Quarrying Industry
German Military Occupation 1940 - 1945
Island Life
Geology
The Alderney Cow

Alderney Prehistory
Mesolithic 'flint floors' have been discovered on the island, evidence of human habitation from the time the Island broke away from the continent. In 1991, an assessment of the Museum's flint collection revealed that that flint tool production would have been greater than needed for local use and therefore would have been intended for trade.

Evidence of Late Neolithic culture, characterised by the beginning of settled farming, has been found in the peat at Longis. Some of the peat is well below the present high tide level and would have been formed at a time when the sea was perhaps half a mile further out, several metres lower, and the Island several times larger than today.

By the early Bronze Age, the rise in sea levels and encroaching sand dunes reduced areas of cultivation, and threatened it with inundation by sand. A tradition of terrace building to protect and increase cultivation areas may have have begun at this time.

The earliest Bronze Age artefact found to date on the Island is a copper-bronze axe-head-shaped ingot which analysis suggests came originally from Ireland. Bronze and Iron Age artefacts have been found on Longis Common, and an Iron Age Pottery site has been identified immediately west of Longis Bay.

Roman and Medieval Alderney
Alderney has been identified as the 'Arica' referred to by Antoninus, though this is disputed. Coins, pottery, fragments of high-status glass, and other Roman artefacts have been found in the Longis area, some of which are in the Museum. Finds suggest that in about the fourth century a Roman military unit was stationed in the Longis area, with a building on the site of The Nunnery, as part of their system to control the growing menace of piracy. Roman building material is found scattered on and around Longis Bay.

In 911, the Viking leader Rollo and his Norsemen, having laid siege to Paris, was allowed to settle in what became known as Normandy. His son, William, annexed the Channel Islands as part of the Duchy of Normandy. In 1204, when France reclaimed Normandy, Alderney and the other Channel Islands remained loyal to the English Crown (Our Duke of Normandy). As a reward for their loyalty, in 1341, Edward III issued a Royal Charter which ensured the independence of the Channel Islands and granted them special trading and tax privileges that continue to the present day.

The Elizabethan Wreck
This yet-unnamed vessel, foundered on a shallow reef north-east of Braye Bay in the early 1590s. Dendrochronology dates some of the ship's timbers to 1575. The Museum houses the ships' rudder and artefacts lifted from the wreck. Some of these are unique or very rare for the period, such as metal charge flasks (called 'Apostles') for measured charges of gunpowder. Also on display is a cannon which was found with its original gun-carriage, the latter a unique survival from the Elizabethan period.

The Alderney Breakwater
Between 1847 and 1864, The British Admiralty built the Alderney Breakwater to protect Royal Navy ships. At the same time the Board of Ordnance built a series of forts to protect it from the threat of French Invasion. Plans and drawings relating to the construction of the breakwater are on display, including George Reynold's lithograph (1852) and the Jersey artist Ouless’s sketches (1854) of the harbour works.

The Quarrying Industry
The extensive quarrying in the 19th century for the harbour and fortifications was continued in the 20th century until 1939, supplying southern English county councils with stone for building roads.

German Occupation 1940 - 1945
On 23rd June 1940, the entire population of some 1,400 residents of Alderney was evacuated, nine days in advance of the German arrival. Between July 1940 and December 1945, the Island was extensively fortified by the German military. It was used by the Nazi government to house three forced labour camps and an SS Concentration camp, holding up to 1,500 prisoners each, over four hundred of whom are known to have died.

When the Islanders began returning in December 1945, they found their homes stripped of everything, many containing not a scrap of wood. The winter of 1944 – 45 had found two thousand German soldiers, sailors and airforce gunners without fuel, so that many houses that had been habitable until then were lost by the time of the surrender. The Museum’s 'Issue Room' displays some of the basic supplies which the British Government issued to Islanders on their return to help them reinstate their homes.

Island Life
Exhibits of domestic equipment, items relating to the garrisons from before 1800 until 1930, the lighthouses, and tools from the days when the Islanders were more self-sufficient, give an insight into everyday Alderney life in the past.

Geology
The oldest rocks at the western end of the island – the granodiorites - solidified over 2200 million years ago in the southern hemisphere; since then plate tectonics and continental drift have brought them to their present position. The central section of the island is also composed of igneous rocks, namely diorite and granite and, although more than 1000 million years younger, are still very ancient; these can be seen with many associated dykes at Roselle Point and Chateau À L'Étoc.

The eastern, and much of the southern cliffs are composed of the attractive Alderney sandstone, which was laid down by turbulent streams flowing from a landmass, which had been raised to the northwest after the intrusion of the granites. The islets of Casquets, Ortac and Burhou to the northwest of the island are also composed of this same sandstone

The Alderney Cow
The term "Alderney Cow", found in literature from Tobias Smollet to A.A.Milne, indicates a small, fawn, dairy cow, once popular in England with the landed gentry and prosperous farmers, often used as a house cow and yielding delicious rich milk and yellow cream. These animals were probably known as "Alderneys" because all Channel Island cattle , whether transported for sale from Jersey, Guernsey, Alderney or even France, arrived in England from the last port of call - Alderney- in what was known in the ports as the Alderney Boat. In fact, not more than 4% of the cattle known as "Alderneys" in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries were actually from this Island. All Channel Island cattle and some French were so similar that English buyers could not distinguish between them.
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