Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Human remains found under bomb-hit church

- DAVE DOYLE wdp@reachplc.com

HUMAN remains have been found in a ruined church at the heart of Castle Park following a three-day survey by archaeolog­ists.

Their find has shed light on the history of Bristol’s oldest place of worship – as well as uncovering new mysteries to solve.

The team from Wessex Archaeolog­y was on site at St Peter’s Church from Wednesday until yesterday, digging trenches to learn what lies beneath the ruin’s floor as part of efforts to restore the bomb-blasted site. St Peter’s dates back to 1106, when its stone tower was constructe­d. The rest of the building has been dated to the 15th century.

But it was consumed by fire during the Bristol Blitz of November 1940, leaving only its exterior walls standing. These walls were shored up after the war, preserving the building’s remains as a memorial to the victims of the bombing. The church has remained locked for years, with no one allowed inside for safety reasons.

The current concrete floor was added during the 1970s but this is now beginning to subside. Bristol City Council hopes to restore the building to public use but first the crumbling floor must be replaced.

“Our ground-penetratin­g radar survey discovered earth-filled graves throughout,” said Cai Mason, senior fieldwork archaeolog­ist.

“There were also tantalisin­g hints of other structures, perhaps an Anglo Saxon church below this one.”

The team dug trenches across the site, exposing burial places dating back to the 18th and 19th centuries.

“The inside is full of brick and stone-lined graves and burial vaults,” said Cai, “but it looks like these were mostly emptied after the war. That’s what’s causing subsidence; they were filled with soil and rubble, which is now settling. It’s possible that it was done as part of developmen­t plans which never came to be.

There may be paper records detailing the reasons somewhere but we haven’t found them.”

Diggers discovered a small number of human bones as well as medieval tiles and stonework in the test pits. The human remains will be reinterred where they were found.

Radar surveys also revealed hints of a structure predating the 15thcentur­y stone church – perhaps an earlier Anglo-Saxon building – but the trenches were not quite deep enough to say for sure.

“We haven’t quite got deep enough to see what these structures are at depth. It’s really a quick survey to see how the engineers can bring the building back into use,” said Cai. “For the time being, it remains a bit of a mystery.”

As things stand, there are no plans to delve deeper into the church’s foundation­s.

“We’ve got the informatio­n engineers need to start thinking about how they make the floor safe, so it’s over to them to see where to take it next,” said Cai.

Bristol Museum and Art Gallery holds sketches of the church’s formerly grand and ornate interior, which included decorated oak altar screens (reredos) and at least three chapels. Something of this former grandeur could be restored in future if plans by the council and Friends of Castle Park for an immersive, multimedia exhibition go ahead.

As part of their three-day project, archaeolog­ists also invited members of the public to visit the site and learn more about what was going on.

“We got an incredible response,” said Cai. “Whenever we get to open excavation­s to the public there’s a huge appetite and it’s a great way for people to engage with the history.

“They can see new things being discovered and we always relish the opportunit­y to do that sort of engagement with the public.”

He added: “Most of our work is on commercial constructi­on sites where it’s not safe for people to go, so when we can open up a site like this, we always take it.”

 ?? Pictures: Wessex Archaeolog­y ?? Wessex Archaeolog­y staff at work inside the church, which was destroyed by fire during the Bristol Blitz of 1940
Pictures: Wessex Archaeolog­y Wessex Archaeolog­y staff at work inside the church, which was destroyed by fire during the Bristol Blitz of 1940
 ?? ?? > Medieval stonework recovered from under the floor of St Peter’s Church
> Medieval stonework recovered from under the floor of St Peter’s Church

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