More information : The town walls of Oswestry were built in 1272 by order of King Edward I, although the first murage grant was received in 1257. They originally ran from the castle along Arthur Street, Welsh Walls, English Walls and King Street. Leland said that the walls were one mile in circumference and contained no towers, although a deed of agreement of 1782 states that "the Towne was formerly walled round and had several strong towers ... and four gateways". (See SJ 22 NE 29 - 32 for gates)
The walls were destroyed after the Civil War, but the gates survived. (1-3) A section of the town walls was observed in 1973 on English walls at SJ 29012947. The wall was reported as being seven feet thick. (4) Part of the walls was uncovered in June 1973 by excavations for new premises for Messrs Mumford near the Golden Tankard public house. The wall was plotted on the OS 1:500 town plan (1874). The plan shows the line of the wall as found, and what the position of the wall would have been if it had continued on the same line towards the New Gate. This line seems to show that the buildings inside the wall were set out parallel to the wall and not, as one would have expected, at right angles to the street. (5) No trace of the town walls or of the gates survive. The site of the walling observed in 1973 is now occupied by a modern building housing a hairdressing salon. (6)
Murage grants to meet the cost of fortifying towns were first recorded in 1230 but it was not until 1257 that a `muragium' or `wall tax' was obtained for five years to build a wall around Oswestry. It is unlikely that a stone wall could have been built in five years. In 1283, the wall was either damaged in raids or still incomplete, a further twenty years of murage was allowed to complete the wall. (7) An excavation of part of the wall in December 1983 and Jan 1984 was conducted by the Border Counties Archaeological Group and Civic Society with assistance from the Manpower Services. An eight metre length of wall and moat was uncovered, together with a substantial amount of Medieval pottery. (8)
This location falls within the area mapped by RCHME's Marches Uplands Mapping Project, but no traces of the town defences were identified on aerial photographs. (10) |