In January 2020, Westminster Abbey embarked on an exciting project to uncover the foundations of the medieval Great Sacristy on the North Green.
4 minute read
Built in the 1250s by Henry III during his reconstruction of St Edward the Confessor's Abbey, the Sacristy was where the monks kept vestments, altar linens, and other sacred items used in the mass. Once an integral part of the Abbey, it is the only part of Henry’s church to have been lost.
The excavation involves the removal of up to a metre of material by a team of 15 archaeologists from Pre-Construct Archaeology who are working to record and understand the archaeology remaining beneath the North Green.
The excavation is due to be completed in the summer and aims to:
In the 13th century, the late 11th-century church built under Edward the Confessor was completely rebuilt under the reign of Henry III. The masons constructed massive lime-concrete raft foundations to build most of the church that stands today. Prior to the 13th-century rebuilding, the site of the North Green was used as a burial ground for monks. In 1251, as part of Henry III’s work, an L-shaped building known as the Great Sacristy was constructed here.
In 1869, under the direction of Sir George Gilbert Scott, who was then Surveyor of the Fabric, the Abbey’s mason Henry Poole was instructed to 'remove from the North Green the earth and rubbish which had accumulated there for several centuries'. During the removal of this material the remains of the Great Sacristy were revealed. Poole recorded the remains and illustrated them as an L-shaped structure.
The plan shows that the building had a square room at its eastern end. It is believed that access to this room was via a door from the North Transept, and that access to the remainder was via the extant North Door in the Abbey’s nave.
The work also revealed stone-lined graves of early medieval burials, and a Roman sarcophagus, excavated in 1869 and now on display in The Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Galleries, which had been reused for a medieval burial, most likely in the 11th century.
The Great Sacristy is thought to have had several functions. Vestments and other precious objects may have been stored in the square room at the eastern end, and the building’s distinctive L-shape provided a space where the clergy could prepare before processing into the church. Maintenance sheds, used for laundry and candle making, were located in the enclosed yard to the rear of the building.
Records show that a second floor was added to the Great Sacristy in the 1380s when many other new buildings were erected across the wider monastic complex.
After the monastery was dissolved c.1540, the Great Sacristy was repurposed as a domestic dwelling for Prebends (administrative staff of the Abbey). However, by 1616 the Sacristy building was described as 'very ruinous and standeth in very great need of present reparations'.
A further period of repair work was enacted in the 1710s and 20s and at this time the Surveyor of the Fabric, the famous Sir Christopher Wren, reported that 'the houses on the North side are so close [to the Abbey], that there is not room left for the raising of scaffolds and ladders'.
The decision to demolish the former Great Sacristy and the other buildings in this area was taken in the 1740s, for a number of reasons including the cost of their upkeep and because they impeded much needed repairs to the Abbey's nave and northern transept.
Many interesting archaeological features have been revealed during the excavation, including the masonry wall foundations of the Great Sacristy and the Abbey, evidence of post-medieval structures and numerous burials dating from the 10th to the 19th century.
Looking north from the roof of the Abbey, the foundations of the L-shaped building Great Sacristy can be seen (below). The southern wall foundation is much narrower than the external wall foundation to the north. This suggests that the southern wall of this building was probably half-timbered, requiring a less substantial foundation, whereas the outer northern wall may have been built entirely from stone.
The grey square on the right-hand side is the roof of a 19th century underground chamber, which is accessed via an entrance which can be seen immediately to the south of the chamber’s concrete roof. Built under George Gilbert Scott, Surveyor of the Fabric from 1849-78, the chamber housed plant for the functioning of the Abbey. It was, for unknown reasons, later in-filled.
A lead pipe has been discovered protruding from the wall of the nave. This pipe would have supplied water to the monastery and may date to the 13th century.
The archaeological works have revealed that masonry from an earlier building, probably Edward the Confessor’s church, was reused to build the foundations of the 13th century Abbey.
A highly significant find has been a fragment of an upturned stoup, reused within a 13th century buttress. This important feature would originally have been a basin containing holy water at the entrance to the pre-Henrician church, and may have served to wash the hands of the monks as they entered.
A brick post-medieval cess pit was found located between two of the nave buttresses. The backfill of the cess pit contained a large assemblage of early 18th-century domestic objects including china plates, chamber pots, glass drinking vessels and an assortment of combs and brushes. The cess pit would have served a latrine associated with townhouses located to the west of the Great Sacristy building.
Many fragments of medieval painted wall plaster have been found. These fragments may suggest that the internal walls of the Great Sacristy were decorated with hand painted red, white and black flowers.
The North Green excavations are the first stage of a longer-term project to transform the welcome we offer to visitors and restore the Abbey to the very many people who come from around the world each year to enjoy one of the world’s great churches.
Planning permission has been granted for the construction of a new building on the site of the former Sacristy to house welcome, ticketing and security facilities, allowing all visitors to follow in the footsteps of kings, queens and royal brides and enter by the Great West Door.
The single-storey, L-shaped design by Ptolemy Dean, Surveyor of the Fabric, complements the Gothic architecture of the Abbey, incorporating plain walling, castellation and a series of buttresses. The use of materials including English stone, oak and lead will allow the building to sit discreetly in front of the much larger elevation of the Abbey which towers above it.
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At different times of the day, or in different seasons, the light falling in the Abbey will light up something that you have walked past a million times and never seen before.