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Historical coin hoard found buried under floor

A buried hoard of coins dating back to the 16th and 17th Centuries has been found during renovation work on a cottage. The cache of more than 1,000 gold and silver coins was discovered under an earth floor at South Poorton, Dorset. One of the property’s new owners, Robert Fooks, was digging with a pickaxe by torchlight when he found the trove in a pottery bowl.

Auctioneers hope to sell the collection for between £15,000 and £30,000. Mr Fooks’ wife Becky said her husband was spending evenings in the cottage after work to increase the height of the room and install underfloor heating before they moved in.

She said: “He came across a mass of coins covered in mud and put them in a bucket. He didn’t stop and study them. He’s a worker – when he’s intent on something he cracks on.”

Mrs Fooks said it was only the following day that she examined the coins and realised how old they were. You can clearly see the date. Some of the gold coins were easy to read, really clean,” she said.
The hoard, discovered in October 2019, was returned to the couple this year after expert analysis and legal work.

The British Museum guessed they were deposited early in the English Civil War (1642-51) by a landowner trying to keep his wealth safe.

The collection, including James I and Charles I gold coins and Elizabeth I silver shillings, is being sold by Duke’s Auctions in Dorchester on Tuesday.Mrs Fooks said the property’s previous owners came close to finding the hoard.

She said: “They had removed the flooring on top of the earth and stopped work. The coins were about 10 inches (25cm) further down

Source: BBC

In other news – Children used as guinea pigs in clinical trials

The true scale of the number of medical trials using infected blood products on children in the 1970s and 80s has been revealed by documents seen by BBC News. They reveal a secret world of unsafe clinical testing involving children in the UK, as doctors placed research goals ahead of patients’ needs.

Infected blood scandal

 

They continued for more than 15 years, involved hundreds of people, and infected most with hepatitis C and HIV. One surviving patient told the BBC he was treated like a “guinea pig”. Read more

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