After
World War II, Grant King was employed by Keiller’s archaeological successor
Dr Isobel Smith on her site at
Windmill Hill, Avebury. After this, he went on to lead excavations of his own. In 1959 Grant King headed an excavation at
Bury Camp, an Iron Age Hill Fort located just outside North Wraxall, Wiltshire. His work as a teacher for the Extramural Department at the University of Bristol, as well as other outdoors groups, enabled him to source a team of volunteers dubbed the “Bury Wood Excavation Club”. He published a series of excavation reports for
Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine. Another project was Lanhill Long Barrow (known locally as
Hubba's Low). The barrow had been recorded by
John Aubrey in 1647, but was subsequently largely obliterated through quarrying and invasive excavation. In 1954 the
Ministry of Works gave permission for Lanhill to be cleared of brambles. Grant King wrote several letters of complaint to the Ministry and other heritage organisations, highlighting the damage caused by using a bulldozer to undertake the clearance. Ultimately, King lead an excavation in 1963 to record the barrow. He called upon his Bury Wood Excavation Club to assist in rebuilding many of the damaged areas. Through painstaking investigation he was able to construct a plan of the barrow. ==Later work==