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Ulcombe poor in the late eighteenth-early nineteenth century
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DISCOVERY OF A THIRTEENTH-CENTURY
HOARD OF SILVER COINS IN THE CHAPEL OF
ST. BARTHOLOMEW'S HOSPITAL,
SANDWICH
CHARLES A. WANOSTROCHT
SUMMARY
During a routine check of the contents of a small cupboard in the
Sandwich Guildhall early in 1991, a small tin was found which
contained forty silver coins together with a manuscript note, dated
1882, detailing the circumstances of the discovery of the hoard,
unearthed during the second part of a major restoration of the
chapel. On submitting these coins to the British Museum for identification
they were found to date from between 1180 and 1242.
INTRODUCTION
The Hospital of St. Bartholomew in Sandwich was founded in 1190 to
provide shelter for sixteen poor people of the town, and as a
resting-place for travellers and pilgrims. In 1217, following a successful
battle against the French fleet off the Goodwin Sands, a large
proportion of the booty was set aside for the benefit of the hospital.
As a result sixteen separate dwellings for the hospitalians, and a
chapel, were subsequently erected.
Although the dwellings were adequately maintained over the
centuries, the chapel itself was badly neglected (at one stage being
used as a shed for farm implements) until 1821, when some attempt
was made to repair the fabric and return it to a place suitable for
rgular worship. However, these superficial repairs did not sufficiently
halt the deterioration of the building and a major restoration,
under the direction of the eminent Victorian architect, Sir Gilbert
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