, one of the sites visited during the first excursion on 29 May 1884 at Heston Brake in
Portskewett,
Monmouthshire, 1888 It was also decided at the first meeting of the club that two excursions would be held every year. Women were allowed to attend as the guests. The group then inspected
Long Ashton Church and the Ashton Cross. Later, the club ventured to churches and houses in
Somerset, including
Barrow Gurney,
Stanton Drew,
Chew Magna, and
Dundry. Women not only accompanied men on the day trips; sometimes they actively participated in the investigations. On 20 July 1889, the club undertook an excursion to
Tintern Abbey and Monmouth. Bagnall-Oakeley and her husband served as guides for the Monmouth portion of the excursion. The group visited
St Thomas Church, the
gatehouse on the Monnow Bridge, the ruins of
Monmouth Castle, the Church of St Mary, and "Geoffrey's" Window. Another example of this was the project sponsored jointly by the Clifton Antiquarian Club and the Monmouthshire and Caerleon Antiquarian Association on 22 August 1888. The excursion is described in editor Alfred Edmund Hudd's postscript to the 1888 paper authored by the Reverend William Oakeley, "The Chambered
Tumulus at Heston Brake,
Monmouthshire", found in Volume 2 of the Proceedings of the Clifton Antiquarian Club. On that day, the tumulus at the site Heston Brake in
Portskewett was opened and examined under the direction of the members of the two associations. There was evidence that the tumulus had been previously disturbed. The few relics which remained, fragments of pottery and human bones and teeth, are now in the Caerleon Museum, the
National Roman Legion Museum. At the time of that 1888 excavation, Bagnall Oakeley made measurements of all the components of the tumulus. Her illustration
(pictured), which accompanies her husband's paper, is entitled, "Plan of Chambered Tumulus at Heston Brake, nr Portskewett, Mon." ==Original
Proceedings==