Stunning remnant from Thomas Jefferson’s favorite wine, plus Victorian children’s scribbles found in dig

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Archaeologists digging in the East End of London recentlydiscovered compellingsigns of luxury in a neighborhood long labeled poor — including a seal from a bottle of French wine. 

The wine seal was of particular interest, as it came fromChateau Margaux,a prestigious French vineyard once favored by President Thomas Jefferson as well as British Prime Minister Sir Robert Walpole.A release on Jan.12 from the Museum of London Archaeology (MOLA) shared the details. 

“Remarkably, the MOLA team uncovered a seal from one of these prized wine bottles during their excavations,” the organization said. 

ARCHAEOLOGISTS UNEARTH SECRETS OF LANCASTER COUNTY’S OLDEST TAVERN, BURIED FOR CENTURIES BENEATH PASTURE

The excavations took place ahead of SEGRO Park Wapping, an industrial development in the Wapping area of East London, in the borough of Tower Hamlets.

The seal from the bottle of French wine was found along with the floor of a chapel, terrace house foundations, and “wells, soakaways and rubbish pits full of pottery and clay pipes in the gardens.”

French wine seal next to excavation site

French wine bottles were among the unexpected luxury items discovered during a recent archaeological dig.(MOLA, Andy Chopping)

Archaeologists also found numerous artifacts left behind by Victorian children, including a slate school tablet “covered with children’s scribbles and handwriting.”

In addition, archaeologists found “alleys” — ceramic marbles designed to resemble alabaster stone — that children once played with.

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“They were found inside a covered, brick-lined drain, perhaps lost during a particularly enthusiastic match,” the release added.

Excavators knew the site was home to a school datingback to the 1530s,as well as alms houses that lasted on the site from the 1550s to the late 19th century, according to MOLA’s release.

Split image of excavation site, Blanks holding marbles

Archaeologists in London uncovered Victorian-era artifacts linked to children, including school materials and toys, during a recent excavation in Wapping.(MOLA, Andy Chopping)

The houses “provided homes and a monthly stipend forolder local peoplein need,” the release noted.

“Together these help build a picture of the everyday lives of the people who once called this area home,” the release added.

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