Eastminster (The Abbey of St. Mary de Graces) was a Cistercian abbey on Tower Hill in London, founded by Edward III in 1350 immediately outside the Roman London Wall and thus today in the E1 postcode district. Among its endowments was the reversion in 1350 given by King Edward which he owned of one of the four manors of Shere in the hamlet of Gomshall, Surrey which acquired the name Towerhill, due to its patronage of the abbey.
In 1375, Sir Nicholas de Loveyne bequeathed to the Abbot and Convent the reversion of the mills of Crash Mills to endow the perpetual singing of masses for the donor. Crash Mills were situated on the River Thames, near East Smithfield.
The abbey was dissolved in 1538, and the site has for centuries been occupied by the London part of the Royal Mint.
Eastminster was an iron emigrant vessel built in Glasgow in 1876. She was seen after departing Maryborough, Queensland after ignoring a warning from the pilot, heading out to sea in a rising gale on 17 February 1888, bound for Newcastle, New South Wales. Eastminster was presumed lost during a cyclone. Her wreckage was reported on a coral reef approx. 100 miles East of Rockhampton.