People -
Staff at Archaeology South-East

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General contact details:
Institute of Archaeology, UCL
Direct telephone:
+44 (0)1273 426830
Mobile telephone:
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E-mail:
j.clubb@ucl.ac.uk
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Jane CLUBB
– B.A., M.A.
• Historic Buildings Officer
Research Interests
• Post-medieval and early modern vernacular architecture in South-East England
• 19th-century industrial workers’ housing
• The development of historic buildings in the modern world
Professional Skills
• Building recording, analysis and interpretation
• Measured and photographic survey of historic buildings
• Advice relating to the conservation and the sympathetic, non-destructive re-use and adaptation of historic buildings
Career Summary
2010 - Present - Archaeologist (Historic Buildings), Archaeology South-East
2009 – 2010 - Assistant Archaeologist (Historic Buildings), Archaeology South-East
2007 - 2009 - Historic Buildings Trainee at ASE (joint-funded by English Heritage)
Qualifications
• 2007 - MA in Cultural Heritage Studies, University College London
• 2006 - BA in Archaeology, University of Durham
Membership of Learned Societies and Professional Recognition:
Member of the Vernacular Architecture Group (Committee)

Key Projects
Pembury Hospital, Kent: Recording of 19th-century workhouse and hospital buildings
Rape of Hastings Architectural Survey: The study of vernacular buildings across the eastern part of Sussex
Sissinghurst Castle, Sissinghurst, Kent: Recording of the historic structures forming the castle and surrounding farm buildings in order to compile a detailed historic development of the site as part of the National Trust’s Conservation Management Plan.
Scotney Old Castle, Lamberhurst, Kent: A detailed interpretative study of the Old Castle, from its earliest Medieval remains to its nineteenth-century deliberate ruination Westenhanger Castle Outbuildings, Westenhanger, Kent: Detailed recording of the 15th-century barn, stable and stableyard as part of the barn's programme of restoration

Recent Publications
Goulding, R. and Clubb, J. 2010. ‘Castle in the Garden: An architectural history of Scotney Old Castle’, National Trust Historic Houses and Collections Annual 2010. Published in association with Apollo
Martin, D. and Martin, B. with Clubb, J. and Draper, G. 2009. Rye Rebuilt: Regeneration and Decline within a Sussex Port Town, 1350-1660. Burgess Hill: domtom publishing. |