The Work of the Wealden Iron Research Group

Jeremy Hodgkinson, MA, FSA SpeakerNet Sponsor


Regions:
Surrey, Kent, East Sussex, West Sussex
Notice Period:
Emergency (maybe less than one week's notice)
Type:
Professional
Fee:
Paid: £60 + 25p/mile
Category:
Humanities
Updated:
16th August 2024

Founded in 1968, the Group set itself the task of examining the iron industry that flourished in the Weald from pre-Roman times until the early 19th century. The talk explores its discoveries, its methods and the range of the projects it undertakes.

Views: 535 | Enquiries: 0

About Jeremy Hodgkinson, MA, FSA

I am a retired school teacher and, for more than 40 years, have lectured, primarily about the Wealden iron industry, at conferences and to local societies and adult education audiences. I have also appeared occasionally in a specialist role on radio and television. I gained my MA in Regional and Local History from the University of Brighton in 1993. I am a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London and until recently was an Honorary Research Fellow of Exeter University. I was Chairman of the Wealden Iron Research Group for 24 years and am now the editor of its annual journal. I am the author of two books: The Wealden Iron Industry, published in 2008, and British Cast-Iron Firebacks, published in 2010.


Send a message to the speaker

If you are interested in this talk and wish to contact the speaker, please complete the following form:

 
Please provide your contact name
 
Please provide the name of your group
 
Your phone number so that the speaker can contact you
 
Your email address so that the speaker can contact you
 
Give details about the event, time of day and location
Prove you are human please.
Use the slider to drag the puzzle so that the top and bottom are aligned , or use an alternate text based challenge by clicking here.
David's name is?
 

Site Search

Search across all speakers, topics and tags. Put your search term in the box and press enter or hit search

Use quotes around exact multiple word searches, eg "winston churchill".