Dead Woman's Ditch Explained

Dead Woman's Ditch is an earthwork which has been scheduled as an ancient monument in Over Stowey, Somerset, England situated on the Quantock Hills.

A linear earthwork consisting of a bank with a ditch along the west side running for approximately from a spring known as Lady's Fountain across Robin Uprights Hill and down into Ramscombe. The earthwork is presumed to be of prehistoric origin and is of unknown purpose, but has been linked to Dowsborough.[1]

The long earthwork has been cut through by later tracks and a road. It is badly eroded in places and is on the Heritage at Risk Register.[2] Part of the earthwork is on land owned by the Forestry Commission.[3]

Dead Woman's Ditch is sometimes associated with the murder of Jane Walford by her husband John in 1789 but the name predates the murder, appearing on an earlier map.[4] In 1988 the body of Shirley Banks was found 1 mile from the site; John Cannan was found guilty of her murder.[5]

References

51.1336°N -3.2°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Trewin. Jane. Dead Woman's Ditch and the Exmoor National Park. Everything Exmoor. 28 September 2016.
  2. Web site: English Heritage. Heritage at Risk Register. Historic England. 28 September 2016.
  3. Web site: Dead Woman's Ditch. Some Quantock Items. 28 September 2016.
  4. Book: Grinsell. Prehistoric Sites in the Quantock Country. 1976. 19.
  5. News: Prison breaches human rights, says killer of Bristol newlywed. 28 September 2016. Bristol Post. 5 June 2009.