Images

Image of Summer Down (Round Barrow(s)) by Chance
Image credit: Environment Agency copyright and/or database right 2015. Open Source Environment agency LIDAR
Image of Summer Down (Round Barrow(s)) by Chance

Came across this stone in the front garden of “Rosedene” just down from the site. Only sarsen stone I saw when in these parts. None of the buildings showed any stone, only flint or modern brick. Even Ludgershall Castle was flint.

Image credit: Chance - Aug 2011

Articles

Summer Down

Fieldnotes – Visited Early Aug 2011

Came past this site and the crop had just been harvested so went to investigate. You can just see the twin barrows from the road as they stand out from the stubble. I would imagine that this is the only time of the year they are visible as they have been ploughed down so much in the past. The current plough boy seems to show some respect for them which is more than can be said for the animal that has dug into one side of them. Clearly this would not have happened if the dreaded black hound was still about. Guess the dog gone when the MOD moved in. Went up to see the single barrow behind the wood but the field was still in wheat, so decided against destroying a valuable crop for my antiquarian curiosity. Site made a good example for the drive-by TMA.

Folklore

Summer Down
Round Barrow(s)

If you were travelling from Everleigh to Collingbourne Kingston, you’d come this way. You might well go through the strip of woodland between the barrows. But I hope you’d have a clear conscience.

You see, there was once a pair of highway robbers who terrorised the Bath road – they were no Robin Hoods and would take from rich and poor alike. That was bad enough, but when they killed an old farmer and his wife with an iron bar, and then set fire to the farmhouse to disguise their crime – well the local men had had enough. Everyone was after them and the murderers had to hide up by day where they could, moving on under the cover of night.

This night they were crossing the Downs between Everleigh and Collingbourne Kingston. Luckily (so they thought) there were some woods which they could take a rest in – but they forgot that nobody ever went that way after dark if they could help it – especially those with evil consciences. They heard the distant shouting of their pursuers and headed deeper between the trees. But – what was that strange green light ahead? Two green saucer-like eyes were watching them! They stumbled away down another path in panic – but there the eyes were again shining right by their shoulders.

Screaming they ran out of the wood and straight into the hands of the men – who took them straight to Devizes Jail. “We knew we’d get them when they ran down into the woods. All we had to do was wait and let the Black Dog send ‘em back,” the villagers said.

The robbers were hanged back in the eighteenth century, but it’s said the (crime fighting?) Black Dog was seen in the twentieth.

Story from ‘Forgotten folk tales’ by Ruth Tongue (1970).

Elsewhere (like the Wambarrows) Black Dogs are associated with barrows – so I don’t see why these barrows shouldn’t be his home.

Miscellaneous

Summer Down
Round Barrow(s)

There are two bowl barrows here, only 15m apart, N-S; another lies the other side of the strip of woods. The pair are now less than a metre high but the lone barrow is 1.5m. All would have had 3m wide ditches though you can’t see them now.

Sites within 20km of Summer Down