Noonans Mayfair will be selling the Littlebrook Hoard of 213 coins, with 200 dating from the reign of King Henry VII, on Tuesday, February 10, 2026.
-Garrett
It was 22 years ago when Peter Gray was called by the builders who were working on a new
extension to his house, Littlebrook Farm in Belchalwell Street, near Blandford Forum in Dorset,
to say that they had discovered a pottery vessel containing 213 coins!
200 of the coins, the majority dating from the reign of Henry VII (1485-1509) will be offered
in an auction at Noonans Mayfair (16 Bolton Street) on Tuesday, February 10, 2026. The coins
will be sold individually and are expected to fetch in the region of £30,000.
Peter, who is now 79-years old, and a retired international bank inspector is selling the coins
because he and his wife Jackie are moving house. He recalled: "The builders were removing the
parking area with a mechanical digger when they discovered some terracotta tiles, and when
they removed them, they unearthed the pottery vessel. The cottage dates from the 1500/
1600s and it was a wonderful surprise when I was told about them – you never expect to find
a hoard of coins! Who they belonged to, we don't know, but the cottage isn't too far from the
Dorset Gap which was a route that linked the South Coast to Dorchester and Salisbury, so it
is possible that they were hidden by a smuggler!"
Mr Gray went through the Treasure Trove process, and 13 coins were bought by Dorset
Museum. He also bought out the builders, who were eligible to half the proceeds.
As Jim Brown, Coin Specialist at Noonans explains: "The Littlebrook Hoard was originally called
the Okeford Fitzpaine Hoard, when it was discovered in May 2004 at the grade 2 listed dwelling.
The hoard comprises 213 silver coins, consisting of 176 groats and 37 half groats in varying
condition with the bulk dating from the reign of Henry VII (1485-1509). The coins are all English
silver issues and of the official sterling silver standard. The fact that the coins were discovered
in a container is clear evidence that they were deposited on a single occasion and they represent
a selected body of higher value silver coins from the currency of the early sixteenth century,
before the new weight standard of 1526 was introduced. The earliest coin recorded was a half
groat from the reign of Edward III, dated c. 1351-2, and the latest a half groat issued from York
after Wolsey was appointed bishop in 1514. The coins are thought to have been deposited
probably c. 1514-1520."
He added: "The pottery jug, which sadly was broken during the lifting, is of simple design with
a crimped edge and was confirmed by the British Museum as dating from the late fifteenth
century and originating from the Ruhr area of Germany – this is also at the Dorset Museum."
Highlights include five rare coins that all date from the reign of Henry VII:
A Tentative issue Groat with an excellent portrait carries an estimate of £400-500 [lot 237]
Groat with double mintmark (cross-crosslet and pheon) on reverse is estimated at £300-400 [lot 262]
An extremely rare Halfgroat from York is expected to fetch £200-300 [lot 365]
A Groat with mintmark pheon which is estimated at £200-300 [lot 369]
Another groat with mintmark portcullis over T that is expected to fetch £300-400 [lot 396]
Wayne Homren, Editor
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