24 Hour Museum - official guide to UK museums, galleries, exhibitions and heritage
Gateway to Over 3,000 UK museums, galleries and heritage attractions
Skip to navigation

News

Tudor Era Warders' Gatehouse Discovered At Tower Of London

By Graham Spicer

12/06/2007

Image: photo of an archaeological dig with several people in hard hats and reflective jackets and a small mechanical digger

Tower Green works area from above. © HRP/newsteam.co.uk

Extensive archaeological remains of an old guard house dating to the Tudor and Jacobean periods have been uncovered at the Tower of London.

Staff were relaying a cobblestone path across Tower Green to conform with disability regulations when they found evidence of walls, which turned out to be the remains of a substantial building.

“The work we were doing was resurfacing for compliance with the Disability Discrimination Act,” explained Jane Spooner, Historic Buildings Curator at the Tower.

Image: photo of a wide cobbled footpath leading to a fort

Tower Green before the repaving unearthed the remains. © HRP/newsteam.co.uk

“There were some 19th century cobblestones put down in a crazy paving style so we were taking them out and relaying them in a more even way, so we were doing very shallow excavations.”

“On day two we found a wall at a very shallow level, about 20cm below the old surface. Whilst we knew about it from discoveries made in 1975 we hadn’t anticipated finding it so close to the surface.”

Historic views and plans of the Tower show a building in this location from at least 1570, variously known as the ‘Old Main Guard’, the ‘Warders’ Guardhouse’ or the ‘Warders’ Houses’, likely to have been used by soldiers and the predecessors of today’s Beefeaters.

Image: photo of someone in a reflective jacket cleaning a part of a broken pot with a brush

An archaeologist cleaning a find from the works on Tower Green. © HRP/newsteam.co.uk

The foundations, floors, drains and cellar walls uncovered show at least two distinct building phases, the first probably late medieval and the second from the late 17th century.

Accounts from the 17th century describe how the structure was demolished in 1684 and quickly rebuilt only to be taken down again shortly after.

“It was one of those very rare cases in archaeology where you can match the actual visual evidence with the cartographic evidence from the past,” added Jane.

Elizabethan prisoners like the disgraced Catholic Earl of Arundel, Phillip Howard, held in the adjacent Beauchamp Tower, would have been able to see the building from their prison windows.

Image: photo of a man in a red and blue tower of london beefeater uniform stood in front of an archaeological dig

Chief Yeoman Warder John Keohane viewing the excavations. © HRP/newsteam.co.uk

As well as the remains of the buildings the archaeologists made other finds like clay pipes, oyster shells, animal bones and even a nearly whole Bellamine jar with a detailed bearded face carved on it, providing insights into Tudor and Jacobean life.

“The finds reflect the daily life of ordinary people who worked in the tower,” said Jane. “It is quite nice because we get an idea of their tastes – drinking from Bellamine jars, eating oysters, which were much cheaper then, and lots of clay pipes some of which were very old.”

After investigations are finished the cobblestones will be re-laid and the archaeology backfilled so that the remains are fully protected. Further excavations are possible in the future.

The Tower of London
The Tower of London, London, EC3N 4AB, England

T: 0844 482 7777
Open: 1 November - 28 February: Tuesday - Saturday: 09.00-16.30 Sunday - Monday: 10.00-16.30 Last admission: 16.00 1 March - 31 October: Tuesday - Saturday: 09.00-17.30 Monday - Sunday: 10.00-17.30 Last admission: 17.00
Closed: The Tower is closed 24-26 December (inclusive)and 1 January.

Related Articles

MGM 2008 - From Fine China To Tank Rides - TopLots Kick Off
MGM 2008 - Win A Cultural Experience With TopLots Auctions On eBay From May 15
23 Metre Artwork Unveiled At Tower Of London White Tower As Restoration Begins
News In Brief - Week Ending March 30 2008
Tower Of London To Get A Clean-up And Conservation Job
Massive Drawing Competition Launched At Tower Of London
Hampton Court Palace To Open Up Its Corridors For Ghostly Tours

E-news registration
E-mail story to a friend
Tell us what you think

Mountain Rescue Gear Moves Star Mummy To Leeds' New Museum

News In Brief - Museums, Galleries And Heritage News

Holocaust Survivors Help Imperial War Museum Launch New Holocaust Art Exhibition

Museums Libraries And Archives Get Cultural Olympiad Off To Flyer

Volunteers Looking For Stone Circle Uncover Roman Fort In Cumbria

New Darwin Centre Set To Welcome 2,500 Visitors Per Day

County Durham Launches Peace And Tranquility Week

Disability And Deaf Arts Get A Boost At 2008 DaDaFest International

3,500 Properties Open Doors To Public For Heritage Open Days 2008

British Library Acquires Dering Roll - A Who's Who Of Medieval Arms

The Rolling Stones Tongue And Lips Logo Acquired By The V&A

Nominations Open For Art Fund Prize For Museums And Galleries 2009

Belfast's Ulster Museum On Track For Dramatic New Rooftop Gallery

Brighton Art Gallery Stunned As US Artist Broken Crow Is Deported

Treasures Of National Media Museum To Be Posted On Flickr

Missing Brontë Letter Returns To The Brontë Museum In Haworth

Danish Artists Create Life-Size Walking House For Wysing Arts Centre Near Cambridge

South London Gallery Helps Residents With Pedal Power Protest

Search this site

Advanced Search
Map Search

Home Page
News Page
Exhibition Page
What's On
Trails Page
Website of the Week
Letters Page
Welsh Home
Graphical Version

Skip to body

Copyright © 24 Hour Museum
Information published here was believed to be correct at the time it was prepared. Welsh language pages developed with CYMAL: Museums Archives and Libraries Wales, funded by the Welsh Assembly Government.

Skip to navigation
Go to top