Meet the man who found stash of coins worth around £30,000 from Henry VIII's reign
![Peter Astley who found a hoard of coins dating back to Henry VIII's days. (Photo: Deborah Bowyer/Nub News) . Peter Astley who found a hoard of coins dating back to Henry VIII's days. (Photo: Deborah Bowyer/Nub News) .](https://storage.googleapis.com/nub-news-files/nub-news-file-storage/484180/conversions/9fGfnUkWQsGdfabpsZIJ4UR7W212bR-metacGV0ZXIgbWFpbi5qcGc%3D--article.jpg)
A software developer who works in Congleton is poised to take part in more metal detecting days - after unearthing a hoard of gold coins worth around £30,000, dating back to Henry VIII's reign.
Peter Astley who lives in Haslington near Sandbach, has only been metal detecting for a year and puts his luck into finding nine immaculate half-sovereign pieces partly down to an 1800s horseshoe hanging on the outside of his house which he found on a local search.
Mr Astley, who works at Datastor Systems at The Bromley Centre, found the horseshoe and a bronze age axe head during a local walk a while back and has also found a variety of other things from rings to buckles as well.
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He says his greatest find is the hoard of gold coins he came across during a rally with the Midlands Detecting Days at Ashcombe Park Hall near Cheddleton in Staffordshore.
The coins range from the last issue of Henry VIII (1544 – 1547) to the second phase of his son Edward VI (from 12th April 1549).
"We'd been there a while when I decided to have a look at another area. There were a couple of mounds and I went over to one. I got a signal and then found two gold hammered coins in a clump of soil," he said.
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"I got another signal and found the others. I've never found anything quite like this before. One idea we have is they were a payment for a job."
Years ago, the hall was called Botham Hall and someone in the family was linked to the church, so Mr Astley says there is a possibility that due to religious upheaval in the 16th century, the coins may have been hidden.
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Another thought is that the coins were stolen by a highwayman as there was a coaching house, cobbled pathways and a roadway leading away from the main hall.
Mr Astley took the coins home and registered them with the coroner. They are now with a museum in Liverpool until their fate is decided.
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"It's amazing to think how old the coins are," said Mr Astley. "We're waiting to hear what will happen to them and whether a museum will want to buy them."
Mr Astley sometimes goes twice a week on local detecting sprees and researches coins and history to help him with his finds.
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He has made a Boots photo book of the Ashcombe Park Hall hoard so people can see it. The link is here
He said: "I've never found anything like this before. I knew they were something special when I found the first two."
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