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Stourbridge Town Gates

Also known as, or recorded in historical documents as;
Heath Gate

In the civil parish of Stourbridge.
In the historic county of Worcestershire.
Modern Authority of Dudley.
1974 county of West Midlands.
Medieval County of Worcestershire.

OS Map Grid Reference: SO900842
Latitude 52.45580° Longitude -2.14837°

Stourbridge Town Gates has been described as a Urban Defence although is doubtful that it was such.

There are no visible remains.

Description

Bond list under 'New urban defensive circuit of 16th/early 17th century' ?Stourbridge (Worcs) ?C16 Gates only Position largely or wholly unknown Documentation circumstantial or secondary evidence only.
Comments

In the introduction to his listing Bond writes "Another primary function of ramparts and walls- arguably for most of the time an even more important one- was the control of people and goods entering the town. The gates served as points of collection of tolls and could be an aid to policing and the exclusion of undesirable or diseased persons. Indeed, a number of small towns had gates without and additional linear defences other than the rear boundaries of their burgage plots."
The description of the gates of Stourbridge in the mid C17 (VCH) as being readily opened and shut by a boy suggests these were little more than simple gates between post with no defensive quality.
Given map reference is for parish church. Heath Gate will have been south of this. The northern entrance to the town was the bridge.
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This record last updated 26/07/2017 09:21:27

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