
Excavations on the Site of St. Mary's Hospital, Strood
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Rise and Decline: Dover and Deal in the Nineteenth Century - Part I
The Pumphouse on Cobham Hall Estate
EXCAVATIONS ON THE SITE OF ST. MARY'S HOSPITAL,
STROOD*
By A. 0. fuRRIS?N, B.A., F.S . .A.
NEW ARK Y AJ:tD, Strood, has long been known as the site of the hospital
founded by Bishop 9"ilbert de Glanville in 1193-indeed the name
'Newark' is a corruption of the 'new work' (novum opus) of the Bishop.
When, therefore, in the summer of 1966 the area was cleared of the
existing buildings, which were possibly of seventeenth-century date,
the Lower Medway Archreological Research Group undertook an
excavation at the suggestion of Mr. S. E. Rigold, M.A., F.S.A., with
the object of establishing, if possible, the plan of the building . .As
time was limited, a mechanical excavator was used to remove the later
floors and foundations which overlaid the medieval remains.
Permission for the excavation was given by the landowners,
Messrs. Second Covent Garden Property Co., and financial help was
given by the Ministry of Public Building and Works, the City of
Rochester and the Kent Archreological Society, to all of whom grateful
thanks are due. The work of the excavation was carried out by members
of the Lower Medway Arohreological Research Group and by boys
of Sir Joseph Williamson's Mathematical School, and my thanks are
due to them, and in particular to the following for their sustained
support: Mrs. P. Day, Miss M. Webster, Messrs. I. J. Bissett, R. E.
Couves-Clark, J. Cruse, D. Leech, H. V. Summerton and M. J. E.
Syddell. I am especially grateful to Mr. A. P. Detsicas, M.A., F.S..A., for
drawing Figures 3 and 4, Mr. R. G. Foord for undertaking much of the
photography and supplying the prints, Miss R. Powers of the SubDepartment
of Osteology, British Museum (Natural History}, for
supplying information on the human remains, and Mr. S. E. Rigold,
M.A., F.S.A., for reading through the original draft of this paper and
making many valuable suggestions. Above all, thanks are due to Messrs.
T. Ithell, B.Eng., and P. J. Tester, F.S.A., who not only undertook all
the survey work but gave invaluable help in every way throughout the
excavation. Mr. Tester was also responsible for Figures 1 and 2.
HISTORY
. The Hospital of the New Work of St. Mary was founded by Gilbert
de Glanville, Bishop of Rochester, and the foundation must date from.
* The Ministry of Publio Building and Works contributed to the cost of
printing this paper.
139
EXCAVATIONS ON THE SITE OF ST. MARY'S HOSPITAL, STROOD
ll92-3, as he states in his foundation-charter that he had in mind the
restoration of Christianity in Jerusalem and the liberation of King
Richard.l He granted to it the churches of Aylesford, Halling, Strood
and St. Margaret's in Rochester and a liberal endowment from tithes
in the nearby villages.2 The foundation was confirmed by Richard I
in 1193, who, the following year, himself made it a grant of woodlands
in Malling, and again by Edward III in 1332. According to the original
constitution there was to be a Master, two priests, two deacons and two
sub-deacons.
From the start there was hostility between the Hospital and the
monks of Rochester Priorya who resented the diversion to it of what
had been part of their revenues. During the thirteenth century they
made several attempts to recover these, and in 1256 the church of
Aylesford was restored to them by a decision of Pope Alexander IV.
This hostility was the cause of what was virtually a pitched battle
in 'the Archyard' of the Hospital. An amusing account of this fracas,
which occurred in 1291, is given by Lambarde.4
The Hospital seems to have suffered during Simon de Montfort's
attack upon Rochester in 1264 as this was advanced, in 1277, as an
excuse6 when a complaint was lodged against the Master and Brethren
of failure to repair their portion of Rochester Bridge. Damage was said
to have been done to houses owned by the Hospital near the west end
of the Bridge, and to the Chapel.
During the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries there seem increasingly
to have been abuses in the administration. In. 1320 Bishop Hamo de
Hethe visited the Hospital and subsequently in 1330 issued stringent
new rules to remedy the many defects that he found.6 He ordained
that henceforth the Master was to be appointed by the Bishop and
was to profess the rule of St. Benedict, as were the Brethren, whose
number was now reduced to four. In spite of this attempt at reform,
the condition of affairs in 1402 was such that the administration was
taken over by the Bishop who placed his own Registrar in charge7
and t,he same thing happened in 1443.8 Finally on 26t,h June, 1540, on
1 .Re!£istrum R?jfen,e, 631. The survivin&" d<0 :umen are arized in
J1.0.H. Kc-11t, Vol . u, 22S, nndm ostare transcribed m full m.RegS11trum .Rojfense,
631-52. All references to them are as given there .
1 There were also some temporal endowments, e.g. 1/6 of Knight's fee in
Aylesford (Arch. Oant., b:xx (1965), 3, n ote 7).
a Smetham, Henry, History of Strood (1S99), 13 0. Bishop Gilbert seems t-o have
been an anti-Benedictine, l ike h is oontmporary Archb ishop Baldwin .
' Lrunbarde, Perambulation (1676), 2 90-2.
' Inq. p.m . 5 Edw. I. No. 31.
• .Rtgistrum Rojfe11e, 637. These reforms must, in effect, have reduced the
Hospital t o the positi on of a cell of the Benedictine Priory of Rochester.
1 .Roch. Epis • .Reg., Vol. 2, fol. 176 d.
a Ibid., vol. 3, fol. 187 d.
140
EXCAVATIONS ON THE SITE OF ST. MARY'S HOSPITAL, STROOD
the orders of Henry VIII, the last Master, John Wyldbore, surrendered
the Hospital and all its possessions to the Priory of Rochester and, in
1541, these became pa.rt of the endowments of the newly appointed
Dean and Chapter . .At that time its annual income is given as
£52 19s. l0½d.o
THE ExoAVATION'
Stratification. Fig. l shows a section across the east end of the
Chapel paraUel to the east wa.U and 4 ft. 6 in. from it. The lowest
level reached at about 5 ft. 6 in. below the present surface was a layer
of sandy yellow gravel of alluvial origin and was almost completely
waterlogged (16) . .A piece of a mortarium of third- or fourth-century
date was recovered from this . .Above it was a layer (15) of clayey earth
containing . much occupation material. Thls layer varied in colour
from grey to black and in depth from a mere 6 in. at the ea!lt end to
more than 2 ft. further west. The pottery from thls included fragments
of flanged bowls and is also suggestive of a third- or fourth-century
date. Layer 15 is interpreted as being domestic refuse derived from
buildings along the line of Watling Street some 75 ft. further south.
The walls of the Hospital had cut through layer 15 and into layer 16
to a considerable depth (beneath the floor of a cellar we found them
9 ft. below the modern surface and still above foundation level),
which suggests that the water-table must have been considerably
lower in the thirteenth century. The building debris and earliest floor
of the Hospital Chapel (layers 14 and 13) lay directly on top of the
Romano-British occupation material, so evidently the surface had
been levelled and any later material removed prior to the building
of the Hospital. In this earliest medioval layer were several complete
roofing-slates (Plate IV, B), measuring 6 in. by 10½ in., and with a
single peg-hole.
On top of the chalk-ffoor (13) was a mass of debris (II) containing
many architectural fragments as well as pieces of plaster, slate and both
floor- and roofing-tiles. A knife-blade and a bronze buckle (Fig. 6 A and
B), were also found. To thls a further layer (10) of similar rubble mixed
with lumps of chalk had been added and then several inches of brown
mortar (8) which formed the bedding for a tiled floor . .A few of these
tiles were found in situ at the west end of the chapel but most of the
sound ones had been removed at the time of the final destruction of
the building. The debris (7) of the second demolition which contained
a sixteenth-century Nuremberg jetton of Hans Schultes10 was covered
by a mass of grey clay containing roofing-tiles and clay pipes of c. 1640.11
• Valor Eccl 1. 1535, Hasted, iii. 536.
It I am indebted to Mr. H. Brand for this identification.
u Oswald type 4.
141
SOUTH NORTH
SCALE OF FEET
ACH & PJT 1966
FIG. 1. Section, across Pa.Th of East End of Chapel. 1. Modern concrete Floors. 2. Accumulation of modern Material.
3. Chalk Floor. 4. Domestic Refuse. 5. Grey Olay containing Tiles and seventeenth-century Tobacco Pipes. 6. Yard
Floor, composed of Clay and domestic Refuse. 7. Demolition Debris. 8. Brown Mortar. 9. Cldad Chalk. 10. Chalk
Floor. 11. Demolition Debris from Period I Building. 12. Soil with Tiles and Chalk. 13. Floor. 14. Debris
from Construction of Period I Walls. 15. Clay. 16. Waterlogged sandy Gravel containing Roman Pottery.
EXCAVATIONS ON THE SITE OF ST. MARY'S HOSPITAL, STROOD
ST. MARY'S HOSPITAL · STROOD
PLAN AS REVEALEQ BY PARTIAL EXCAVATION
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