The Close

In Cathedral Close, thanks to careful stewardship, little has changed over the years except for the better. Wartime raiders left few permanent scars, perhaps the most obvious being the site of No 63, now a car park. Here, until burned down in the raid of 27th June 1942, was a commodious house (right), built in the nineteenth century to the south of the Cloisters, on part of the site of the old monastic Infirmary. Three massive pillars, of late twelfth century style, standing in the garden in front of this house, were then the chief visible remains of that earlier edifice. They had previously been incorporated in a workhouse that was pulled down in 1804. Etchings made by the Reverend Andrew Gooch and David Hodgson just after demolition had started clearly show how much of the fabric of the Infirmary had formed part of this later building. After the war, when the ruins of the house were cleared away, two further pillars were brought to light and allowed to remain along with the others open to view.

Text and photographs Copyright © G.A.F.Plunkett 2001

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