George Willmot

George Francis Willmot
Born 1908
Died 14 February 1977 (1977-02-15) (aged 68)
Residence York
Nationality British
Occupation Archaeologist and Curator

George Francis Willmot BA FSA (Born 1908)[1] was a British archaeologist and curator based in York

Biography

George Willmot was the son of solicitor from Bournemouth. He undertook archaeological fieldwork from an early age, as at age 19 he discovered an Anglo-Saxon cemetery site at Abington, Berkshire.[1] He attended Oxford University before teaching in Bedford and, later, Ampleforth before the War.[1][2] From May 1950, Willmot was employed by the Yorkshire Philosophical Society as Keeper of the Yorkshire Museum; a position he held until his retirement through ill-health in 1970.[2] He was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London on 3 May 1951.[3]

Keeper of the Museum

As Keeper of the Yorkshire Museum from 1950 to 1970 he worked on various aspects of the collection, including redisplay of the Bird Gallery[1] in 1951 and the Roman Gallery in 1958 (after a £350 grant from the Carnegie Trust,[4] and opened by Sir Ian Richmond), and research and improved storage of the important Geological 'type and figured' specimens.[1]

Excavation and research

Academically, Willmot undertook important and pioneering work on Bronze Age beakers that was never fully published[1][2] as well as directing numerous excavations of prehistoric sites in Britain and Ireland.[3] In 1963, Willmot excavated All Saints Church (High Ousegate, York).[5]

Perhaps most famously, George Willmot undertook a series of excavations in the western part of St. Mary's Abbey in the period 1952-56 (continuing previous excavation on the site by Charles Wellbeloved and Walter Harvey-Brook, although the results of these excavations were also never formally published[6] and exist only as unpublished notes and short reviews.[7] The excavations in the abbey utilised volunteer excavators drawn from the members of the Yorkshire Philosophical Society and students of Bootham School and extended beneath the abbey to include Pre-Norman and Roman levels.[8]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Pyrah, B. 1988. The History of the Yorkshire Museum and its Geological Collections. York: North Yorkshire County Council. pp125-133
  2. 1 2 3 Ramm, H.G. 1978. "Obituary - George Francis Willmot", Yorkshire Philosophical Society, Annual Report for the year 1977". York: YPS. pp5
  3. 1 2 1977. 'Obituary of George Francis Willmot, BA', Antiquaries Journal Vol.57 part II. pp455
  4. 1959. "Report of the Council of the YPS for 1958".Yorkshire Philosophical Society, Annual Report for the year 1958". York: YPS. pp3
  5. Gem, R. and Keen, L. 1981. "Late Anglo-Saxon Finds from the site of St. Edmund's Abbey" Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology & History Vol.35. pp:24 Gem and Keen, 1981. Article Online
  6. Norton, C. 1997. The buildings of St Mary's Abbey, York and their destruction. Oxford: Oxford University Press
  7. Willmot, G. F. 1953. "Interim Report on the 1952 Excavation in St. Mary's Abbey"Yorkshire Philosophical Society, Annual Report for the year 1952". York: YPS. pp22-3
  8. 1954. "Report of the Council of the YPS for 1953".Yorkshire Philosophical Society, Annual Report for the year 1953". York: YPS. pp3
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