Newcastle, medieval galley
Newcastle, medieval galley
HER Number
              13532
          District
              Newcastle
          Site Name
              Newcastle, medieval galley
          Place
              Newcastle
          Map Sheet
              NZ26SE
          Class
              Maritime
          Site Type: Broad
              Marine Construction Site
          Site Type: Specific
              Shipyard
          General Period
              MEDIEVAL
          Specific Period
              Medieval 1066 to 1540
          Form of Evidence
              Documentary Evidence
          Description
              In 1294 Edward I commissioned galleys from various English ports and the accounts for that built at Newcastle survive. The keel was 135 feet long and the ship was to be propelled by 60 oars and a sail. The timber cost £50 8s 4d. The nails cost £22 16s 7.5d. Pitch, tar and caulking material cost £11 2s. The carpenter's wages cost £66 4s 1.75d. Work lasted 41 weeks. Some 21 men were employed, including a master shipwright, his assistant, carpenters, hammer-men, 'holders-up', painters, a squad for launching the ship, berthing, rigging, smiths, sawyers and a watchmen. Archaeological excavations on the site of the law courts suggest that the building yard lay beside the Pandon Burn. This is the only surviving account for medieval shipbuilding on the River Tyne.
          Easting
              425400
          Northing
              563900
          Grid Reference
              NZ425400563900
    Sources
              Constance M. Fraser, 2009, The Economic Growth of Newcastle upon Tyne 1150-1536 in Diana Newton and AJ Pollard (eds), 2009, Newcastle and Gateshead before 1700, page 63; RJ Whitwell and C Johnson, 1926, The Newcastle Galley AD 1294, Archaeologia Aeliana, 4th Series, vol. 2, pp 142-93; RJ Carlton and J Catling, 2006, The Great Storm of 1901 Information and Education Pack produced by Maritime Archaeology Project 2006