In October 1902, the groundskeeper of
John Gray Hill's estate on Mount Scopus discovered a burial cave complex in a field just north of his winter home. As Gray Hill was abroad at the time, the groundskeeper reported the discovery to the British Consul, John Dickson, whose daughter Gladys Dickson, an amateur archaeologist, inspected the cave and its contents. They found seven ossuaries – six ordinary ones and one with a bilingual
Hebrew/
Greek inscription. The ossuaries were removed from the cave by the groundskeeper, and Dickson was unable to ascertain their original position within. Three days later,
R. A. Stewart Macalister, excavating at
Tel Gezer at the time, was forced back to Jerusalem by a
cholera outbreak and was able to inspect and authenticate the newly discovered cave and inscription, a photograph of which was presented to
Charles Simon Clermont-Ganneau. The following year saw two articles published in the
Palestine Exploration Quarterly– Clermont-Ganneau's article on this and other inscriptions, and Gladys Dickson's detailed report on the tomb complex illustrated with plans by Macalister. Gray Hill gave the ossuary to the Palestine Exploration Fund, which transferred it to the
British Museum, where it is still to be found. ==Site description==