Skip to main content

News

Archaeologists at Sansome Street, Worcester

  • 14th June 2018

A couple of our archaeologists have been down at the Hanbao/former Toby Tavern site, Sansome Street, Worcester, over the past couple of weeks. It’s attracted a lot of interest. Work is still in progress; here’s a brief summary of what we’ve found so far.

This site is just outside the Foregate and in a medieval suburb which lay outside the city walls. The suburbs were destroyed during the Civil War and new defences built, especially around the gates. Both in the medieval period and later, the suburbs were the location for industries, including tilemaking, metalworking and tanning.

“An archaeological watching brief is underway during groundworks for the new construction, to ensure that archaeological remains are recorded and that significant archaeological remains are identified and preserved.”

– James Dinn, Archaeological Officer, Worcester City Council

Laura Griffin, one of our Senior Finds Archaeologists, has had a preliminary look at some of the finds. “It appears to be the wall of a tile kiln of late medieval to early post-medieval date. This is one of a number of tile kilns known in the Sansome Street/Lowesmoor area, identified both from documentary evidence and as a result of archaeological works. Tiling was an important industry in medieval and early post-medieval Worcester, with kilns producing large quantities of both roof and floor tiles.”

Upon completion, we’ll be writing it up as an archaeological report to be added to the Worcester City Historical Environment Record so the results will be available for future archaeologists and historians.

One response to “Archaeologists at Sansome Street, Worcester”

  1. rita roberts says:

    Sounds Interesting I shall look forward to hearing more of this site. Thanks for sharing. Please say hello to James Dinn for me.

Post a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related news


  • 10th April 2026
Bickmarsh Hoard – Life in 9th century Bickmarsh

Imagine walking along a quiet country lane in rural Worcestershire. Fields stretch away on either side, and the landscape feels peaceful and timeless. Yet over 1,100 years ago this same landscape may have been a place of uncertainty, where someone buried a small collection of coins in the ground and never returned to reclaim them....

  • 8th April 2026
Bickmarsh Hoard -The Coins

This is the second post in a three-part series exploring the remarkable ninth-century Bickmarsh Hoard discovered in Worcestershire. Catch up on part one. The discovery of the Bickmarsh Hoard in 2022 revealed a small but remarkable collection of ninth-century coins buried in the Worcestershire countryside over 1,100 years ago. In this second blog in our...

  • 6th April 2026
Uncovering the Bickmarsh Hoard

A quiet field in south east Worcestershire. No visible traces of the past. No reason to expect what lay beneath. And then, a signal. Within hours, silver coins began to emerge from the soil, one after another, until it became clear that this was no isolated find, but part of a much larger story. By...