THE
by
CHARLES JOHN PALMER, F.S.A.
An Honorary Member of the Genealogical and Historical Society of New York.
" I pray you—satisfy your mind
With the memorials of the things of fame
Which do renown this Borough."
VOL. II.
Great Yarmouth
Printed and published by subscription, by
GEORGE NALL, 182, KING STREET, MARKET PLACE.
1874.
All Rights Reserved,
L IST
of
P LATES
1 Portrait of Sir Robert Walpole 4-
2 Portrait of Rev. Richard Turner 26
3 Arms of Robert Cory, jun., Esq. 32
4 Congregational Church ................. 3 4
5 Portrait of Rev. William Bridge 33
6. Staircase—House in King Street 50
7. Portrait of William Worship Esq. 52
8 Arms of Worship ....................... 54
9 Portrait of John Ives, sen. ., Esq. 72
10 View of Hurry’s warehouses 104
11 Portrait of John Hurry 128
12 Dwelling house, no 13 South Quay 129
13 Arms of Hurry 130
14. Arms of Laird 132
15 Portrait of T W King, York Herald 138
16. Arms of King, York Herald 140
17. Arms of Steward 154
18. Arms of Penrice 164
19. Arms of Nichols 176
20. Arms of Patteson 190
21. Arms of Cooper imp. Durrant 204
22 Shaddingfield Lodge ............. 257
23 Arms of Palgrave ....................... 232
24 „ Marsh ............................. 234
25 Tolhouse Hall ... .......................... 240
26 Portrait of Mr. William Barber 268
27 Arms of Paine ........................... 292
28 House, No. 133, King Street ... 836
29 Ceiling of House in Row no. 117 344
30 Portrait of the Bishop of Chester 366
31 St. Peter's National Schools ... 374
32 House, no 65 Middlegate Street 380
33 Arms of Great Yarmouth ... 384
34 Arms of Palmer ..................... 394
35 House, No. 69, South Quay ... 396
36 Arms of Paget ............................... 400
37 Portrait of John Ives, jun. ... 406
38 James' Houses .. .. ... ... 408
39 Arms of Reave ... ....................... 420
40 Arms of Frost ................................. 426
41 Carved Stone— Blackfriars ... 428
42 Seal of Blackfriars ...................... 430
43 Stalls in St. Nicholas' Church ...
440
in V OL II
W OOD E NGRAVINGS IN Volume TWO
page
page
Archway in Row No. 117 ............... 343 Arms of Kemp ................ ... 234
Arms of Abdy ..................................... 284 „ L UCAS with Crest 299
„ Alderson ................................. 342 „ Luson quart. Hewling 303
„ Astley imp. Bransby 201 „ Manning: .... 386
„ Baker .............................. ... 152 „ Meadows 283
„ Baker ................. .......... 187 „ Muskett ... 364
„ Barber ................................. 58 „ Norgate ... 417
„ Batchelor ... ......................... 329 „ Palmer 76
„ Bell .......................................... 160 „ Pitt ........................................ 366
„ Borrett ................................. 284 „ Robinson ... ......................... 73
„ Bracey ........................ ... 332 „ Sayers ... ............................ 87
Bransby imp. Paston 198 Scottowe .................................. 367
Burton ................................ 394 „ Spurgeon ................. .............. 309
„ Church. .............................. 328 „ Symonds ................. 414
„ Clifton ................................. 36o „ Taylor ............................. 80
„ Cooper imp. Bransby 197 „ Tolver ... .......................... 24
„ Costerton ... .......................... 392 „ Travera ... ... ... 313
„ Cowper ................................ 62 „ Tryon. ........................ 270
„ Cufaude ... ............................ 271. „ Wakeman ............................... 411
„ Dade....................................... 170 „ Wakeman w ith Symonds 414
„ England... 225 „ Watte .................................... 184
„ Fellows ............................... 386 Wilde .................. ............ 398
„ FeIton ............................... 418 Crest of Fisher , ...................... ........... 372
„ Fielding - ..................................
112
321
„ Tolme .................................. ... 440
Fish ........................................
Decorated Ceiling- Row 117
344
„ Fisher with Crest ....................
119
74, Middlegate
Street ,...................................... 381
„ Frere ................................. I79 Doorway (external) of' Tolhouse .. 240
„ Frost ................................ 425 „ (internal} „ 240
„ Gerbridge................................ 80 near Friars Lane 425
„ Godfrey ................................ 397 „ Row No. 105.......................... 197
„ Gooch ............................... 98 Gateway ......................... „ .................. 428
„ Goodeve ............................... 439 Grey Friars' Cloister ........................... 128
Grenside ... ......................... 310 Hedingham Castle ............................ 206
„ Grenside imp. Spurgeon 310 Kitty Witches' Row .... ... ... 145
Greenwood ........................ 410 Masons' Marks .............................. 281
„. Hardcastle ......................... 439
Merchant Mark—St. George's Guild 120
,, Heryson. .............................. 351
243
„ Ingram .................................
283
72 Monogram —John Ives, jun.
Merchant mark -Palmer .................... 395
,, Ives ................. ... ... ...
408
„ Jacobson ..........................
Seal of St. Nicholas ... ... ... 405
„ Johnson .................... ...
366
370
„ Fowler ................................
 
CHAPTER VI.
Secundis usque laboribus. —HoR. CAR . iv. 4, 45.
The Town Hall.
HEN, at the commencement of the eighteenth century,
the old Guildhall at the Church gate (ante, vol, i. p. 64)
fell into decay, the corporation determined to erect a
spacious and more commodious edifice in a central
position; and for this purpose selected a site on the quay at the Furlong's
end. The N EW H ALL was completed in 1713; and long went by that
name. It was designed to afford better accommodation for dinners, balls,
and other entertainments.* The principal “Feast” given here was that on
Michaelmas day by the newly-inaugurated mayor f to which he usually
invited upwards of two hundred guests. It was generally attended by the
high steward, the recorder, the members for
* The hospitality exercised by the corporation for centuries was of a profuse
character. Not only were royal, noble, and eminent persons sumptuously entertained, but
the corporation were in the constant practice of making presents to their lord high steward,
the bishop, the recorder, the members, and others filling public positions in connection
"with the town; and no services ever went unrewarded in tins respect. Thus we find that
Mr. Secretary Pepys 1 had for some years an annual present " for attending to our admiralty
business," which consisted in sending a vessel of war to guard the fishing boats ; or in
occasionally providing a convoy for the Mediterranean. The corporation were fully alive
to the advantages resulting, in those times, from having " a friend at court." See Notes to
Manship, p. 263.
f Nothing less than death could prevent the dinner taking place. Notwithstanding the
serious illness of Mr. Bernard, the newly-elected mayor in 1740, the customary feast was
not postponed, for Ives has this entry, " Sept, 29—Father and I dined at the hall without
the new elect, he being so bad could not swear him in as mayor;" and " Sept. 30—Mr.
Bernard died this morning at two o'clock; about the time when revellers were going
home. 1 Palmer’s Addenda: a family of this name, sometimes spelt Pepis and Peapes,
flourished in Norfolk in 16 th century. George Peapes of Yarmouth died in 1624. See
pedigree in Norfolk Visitation. They bore sa ., a bend, or., between two nag’s heads
erased, arg . Three fleur-de-lys of the field, and for a crest, a camel’s head or., ringed
and gorged with a ducal coronet sa. In the parish church of Mileham in Norfolk, is
the following quaint epitaph:
In memory of Mr Fermor Pepys, sometime of the Parish, of a worthy descent most
happy nature, choicest educationa tried faith to God, a persecuted church, a
banished Prince and his old friend. He was born and bred a gentleman, baptisedand
lived a Christian, died a believerand lives a Saint. Ob. Sept. 22 nd , 1660, aged 79.
2
THE PERLUSTRATION OF
the county and borough, some of the neighbouring nobility and gentry, the
principal inhabitants, and such military and naval officers as happened to be in
the town. The high steward was accustomed to send a buck, and the members for
the borough a turtle.* Another buck was usually presented by Lord Wodehouse,
and sometimes a third from some other noble lord, while presents of game and
fruit were received from Rainham, Holkham, f Wolterton, Kimberley, and other
seats in the county. The corporation of Norwich frequently sent a cygnet. j It is
said that until 1803 the wine (of which an enormous quantity was consumed)
was placed on the table in the bottles in which it came from the cellar (what
would Lord Cardigan have said?); but after that year it was decanted, " which not
only added to the appearance of the table but saved a great deal of wine." It was
the custom for the gaoler, who was the mayor's sword-bearer, to bring up the
first dish, a large silver one filled with broiled herrings, unless a sturgeon could
be procured, and place it before the mayor. The decoration of the tables was the
province of the mayoress elect, who invited a number of her friends to assist,
and they were frequently thus engaged for a week before the feast, dining every
day at the hall and playing cards, with other diversions, in the evenings. These
old customs gradually fell into disuse before the "feasts" finally ceased, which
they did in 1834.
* " I have taken the liberty," writes Admiral Sir Thomas Trowbridge addressing the
mayor elect in 1803, "of sending you a fine green turtle just arrived from the West Indies.
Although it will reach you a few days before your dinner, a little salt water from the river
will keep it in good order."
t "Mr. Coke presents his compliments to the Mayor Elect of Yarmouth, and requests
his acceptance of a "basket of pine apples. Holkham, Sept. 1803."
j At these feasts the Michaelmas goose was never omitted. The custom of serving a
goose for dinner on Michaelmas day, whether it arose from the accidental circumstance of
Queen Elizabeth feeing in the full enjoyment of that savory bird when she was informed
of the victory gained by Sir Francis Drake over the Spanish Armada, or from what other
cause, was and still is very prevalent throughout Norfolk, where the goose for the table
attains to a high degree of perfection. Alderman Partridge of Norwich, who died in 1816,
by his will directed that a goose should be provided on Michaelmas day, annually for ever,
for every four inmates of the Old Man's Hospital there. This was done in consequence of
the economists of the day having proposed to discontinue the customary annual goose-
feast.
GREAT YARMOUTH.
3
When the dinner hour was three o'clock,* it was the custom for Mr.
Charles Townshend (afterwards Lord Bayning), who during the thirty
years he represented the borough usually attended the Michaelmas feast,
at the close of the entertainment to invite the mayor and a large number
of his supporters to sup with him at the Wrestlers, " and make a night of
it;" but in more modern times a ball was held at the Bath rooms.
The old character of the town for hospitality was kept up not only
on Michaelmas day but on other occasions. In 1719 the lord chief baron
(Sir Thomas Bury) was entertained; f and in 1732 a dinner was
* At the commencement of the present century the usual dinner hour -was two
o'clock, and .it was customary to ask a casual acquaintance to take " pot luck," without
fear of the consequences which now attend "taking a friend home to dinner." After dinner
the guest was expected to depart; and as we see by the diaries of Dean Davies and Sylas
Neville, he frequently drank tea in one place and supped at another, Occasionally
however there were "drinking bouts." Hone, in his Every Day Book, mentions a drinking
custom at Yarmouth, which certainly was in use forty years since (Teste me ipso). "When
the glass had already gone freely round, one of the company began the game by singing—
" A pie sat on a pear tree,
" A pie sat on a pear tree,
" A pie sat on a pear tree,
"Heigh oh! Heigh oh! Hcigh oh!
The next person continued the strain by saying—
"And once so merrily hopped she," &c,; during which the first
singer had to empty his glass. If he neglected or failed to do so, which was frequently the
case from inexperience or laughter, he had to drink a bumper, and so the absurdity went
round the table.
In 1730 the corporation hospitably entertained Joseph Abaisir and John Hammer,
"two Princes of Libanon." and sent them away rejoicing. They produced an "authentic
document that they and their predecessors had been christian princes, and had possessed
part of the Turk's country for 700 years, and had erected many churches whereby several
thousand Turks had been converted to the christian faith," which so enraged the Bashaws
of Damascus, Sidon, and Tripoli, that they with "their forces surprised and burnt those
churches and the princes' palaces, and destroyed their lands, so that these princes were
utterly ruined and compelled to ask relief from christian countries." The corporation
presented them with ten guineas, and paid the expenses of these "noble princes" and their
servants from the time of their arrival in the town, and also their coach hire to Norwich
and then expenses thither, and sent an officer with them to introduce them to the Mayor of
Norwich where they stayed two days and then departed for Lynn. At Newcastle
4
THE PERLUSTRATION OF
given to the "Right Honorable Arthur Onslow, Speaker of the House of
Commons,* and Sir Charles Turner; and in the same year Sir Robert Walpole
was entertained, on the occasion of his "being sworn in as High Steward of the
Borough, f The freedom of the borough had in 1728 been presented to him and
Sir Charles Turner in silver boxes. This sagacious minister greatly deprecated,
as is well known, the war against Spain, forced on him by the clamour raised
throughout the nation in which "Jenkins' ears" played a prominent part. The
supporters of the Walpole family were not warm in the cause. The Rev. Francis
Turner, in a letter to the Craftsman under the signature of Garionensis t thus
describes the Proclamation of War against Spain. "It was evening when the
mayor received his majesty's declaration, and the next morning he summoned
some of the members of the corporation to meet him at the Town hall, in order
to the publication of it." Thence they proceeded in no sort of form, and without
their gowns, "to the market, where it was read by the town clerk, neither music,
drums, or anything of the usual companions of their cavalcade being allowed on
the occasion. After a second reading of it at the bridge foot, the company all
dispersed to their several habitations, nor was his majesty's health or success to
his arms any where publickly drank," except by some gentlemen at a tavern
who, ashamed of their magistrates' behaviour, and more loyal to their king than
to his minister, "supplied, as far as they were able, what was wanting elsewhere,
and toasted the welcome health of the day to a point of war from the drums of
the militia, whose proffered service the mayor had refused, "The drummers were
next day summoned before the mayor, and though neither his nor the
corporation's servants, were severely reprimanded and menaced never to be
more employed by him, unless they would submit to ask pardon. If people
should ask for the
the mayor "gave them a handsome entertainment and a purse of twenty guineas;" and at
Leicester they were passed on to Coventry with a purse of ten guineas, besides payment
of their hotel charges. E xtracts from Corporation Books.
* He was presented with the freedom of the borough in a silver box.
t There is a half-length picture of Sir Robert Walpole, adorned with the blue ribbon of
the Bath, in the Record room, The annexed portrait is from an old print.
GREAT YARMOUTH.
5
"reasons of this extraordinary behaviour, it has been rumoured here that
this is not Sir Robert's war." It must be borne in mind that at this time
the son of the pacific minister was one of the Members for the Borough.
The merchants of Yarmouth had soon good reason to lament over the
miseries which war always produces. Their peaceful occupations were
interrupted, their ships were frequently captured, and their townsmen
imprisoned; and they called to remembrance the warning words of their
high steward when he said, "They ring their bells now; but they will
soon wring their hands."
When Samuel Killett was mayor in 1746 the Earl of
Buckinghamshire dined at the feast, and was presented with the
freedom of the borough in a silver box.*
For many years after the erection of the New Hall it was customary
to hold evening assemblies there during the winter season, which were
attended by most of the families in the town and immediate neighbour-
* The family of H OBA R T , one of the most illustrious in Norfolk, was long connected
with the borough. Sir James Hobart, when Attorney General to Henry VII. settled and
allowed the ordinances then made for the good government of the town. Sir Miles Hobart,
in. 1588, busied himself about the fortifications and the means to be taken by the town to
repel the Spanish Armada. In 1593 Sir Henry Hobart interceded with the queen for some
relief in consequence of the extraordinary expenses to which the town had been put. He
had been made under-steward in 1589, and in 1596 he was returned to parliament for the
borough; and in that year he purchased the Clippesby estate, which is now in the
possession of the Rev. J. H. Musket*. He died in 1600. Sir John Hobart, his son, built
Kidding hall, Norfolk, one of the moat perfect and interesting specimens of the
architectural taste of the reign of James I. remaining in the kingdom. As one of the
Deputy-Lieutenants for Norfolk he inspected the fortifications in 1625. It was Sir Miles
Hobart who in 1629, foreseeing a dissolution, forcibly held the speaker in the chair until
the doors of the house were locked and some strong resolutions were passed: and in 1642
he came to Yarmouth to advise as to putting the town, in a posture of defence. In 1728 Sir
John Hobart of Blickling was created Baron Hobart, and in 1740 Earl of
Buckinghamshire. He was the father of the above-named earl, who dying without heirs
male in 1793 the Blickling estate, after the death of his daughter, Caroline, widow of the
second Lord Suffield, passed to her nephew, the Marquis of Lothian, whose father had
married Lady Harriet Hobart, the other daughter of the earl; in whose family it continues,
but the present Earl of Buckinghamshire is the representative of the Hobarts of Norfolk,
They bore sa- an estoile of eight rays or. betw. two flaunches erm.; and for a crest, a bull
passant per pale sa., and gu. bezantée, in the nose a ring or, P. C, pp. 201, 340.
6
THE PERLUSTRATION OF
hood; the young people dancing and the others amusing themselves with
conversation and cards; tea and coffee being the only refreshments provided.
Mrs. Bridget Bendish, the daughter of General Ireton and the granddaughter of
Oliver Cromwell, who then resided in Southtown, was a constant attendant.
In 1787 a curious incident occurred. A young and handsome man, of
gentleman-like appearance and good address, named Benjamin Gregson, came
to Yarmouth, and was "received by the best families;" and among other houses
he found his way to the Parsonage, where he was entertained by Dr. Cooper
with his usual hospitality. Dancing one evening with a lady at the Town hall, he
was, to the astonishment of all present, taken into custody on a charge of
forgery, a crime then visited with certain death. He was committed to gaol.
About nine o'clock one morning, in the absence of the keeper, Gregson, not
without suspicion of connivance, wrenched the keys out of the hands of a
woman to whom they had been entrusted, let himself out of prison, locked the
door and put the keys in his pocket. His legs being ironed he could only walk
with difficulty, but he managed to elude observation until he saw a gentleman
coming to whom he was known, upon which he turned down a row. The
gentleman seeing him disappear, quickened his pace in order to follow him, but
meanwhile Gregson had entered a house, where falling upon his knees he
prayed a woman to save the life of an unfortunate man. She, compassionating
the handsome young fellow, took him upstairs, and secreted him beneath a
feather bed with his face downwards to enable him to breathe between the
cordage. Scarcely had this been done before the gentleman reached the house,
and disregarding the denial of the woman, went upstairs, but could find no one.
The escape from prison now became known, and a crowd of people gathered
about the house. Many went upstairs and saw the bed, which had the appearance
of having been slept on and was unmade, but there was no discovery, and at last
it was believed that the man was not there. "When all was quiet Gregson got off
his irons, put on a sailor's dress, disfigured his face, and with a pipe in his
mouth, and a "south-wester" on his head, sauntered out of the house, listened to
the tales of his own escape, and in this disguise got safely over to
GREAT YARMOUTH
7
Holland. After visiting Russia he went to Paris, where he had an
intrigue with a married lady. The husband removed his wife to London
whither the infatuated man followed, but in consequence of information
which the former was able to give, Gregson was apprehended and
committed to Newgate, where he was tried, condemned, and left for
execution. Whilst lying under sentence of death he was visited by Mr.
Cooper (afterwards Sir Astley), who had met him at his father's table.
Gregson was then labouring under an infectious fever which, owing to
the defective state of prisons at that time, was very prevalent in such
places; and young Cooper, in consequence, contracted a dangerous
illness. Having been furnished with, a change of apparel, Gregson
sawed off his fetters and again escaped; but only to be retaken and
hanged.
A scurrilous writer of " poetry " in the last century thus describes the
above-mentioned Reunions at the Town hall:—-
" Soon as the sun descends the western shies, " And
night's dark shadows gradually arise, " When all the
world from daily toil are freed, " And taper lights to
solar foams succeed, u Drawn from all parts by
pleasure's cheerful call, " To join the warm diversions of
the hall, " The gay, the vain, the aged, and the young, "
As fancy prompts, in various parties throng; " Some in
sedans, in coaches others move, " But chief to walk, the
general part approve.
* * * * *
" The doors are op'd, the rooms are quickly filled, "And all to pleasure's mild
suggestions yield; '' Some taught by art, in mazy steps advance, " And lead with
graceful ease the mystic dance ; "In senseless prattle others most delight, " Or join
the gay amusements of the night; " Some are more deeply bent to gain rewards, "
And spend their moments o'er adventurous cards." The writer then proceeds to
describe the "chief characters," but in language so insulting as to make it a
matter of wonder he had a whole
8
THE PERLUSTRATION OF
" the muse shall not thy virtues slight,
" But owns thee cheerful, lovely, and polite." He
praises Miss Luson, but on others is coarse and severe.
On the 28th of August, 1812, a public ball took place at the Town hall,
"Vice-Admiral Murray and Major Sibthorpe, stewards, "to celebrate "the most
glorious victory (at Salamanca) obtained by the forces under " the Earl of
Wellington." "Music to commence at eight o'clock, and " dancing at half-past."
The dominant party in the corporation did not hesitate to use the Town hall
as an election committee room. This was done in 1796, when an attempt was
made to upset the Townshend influence which had so long prevailed. Mr.
Charles Townshend, the sitting member, having been promised a peerage,
which was soon after conferred upon him, retired in favor of his relative, Lord
Charles Townshend, fourth son of the Marquis Townshend. This young man
was duly elected; and on the following evening he and his brother, Lord
Frederick Townshend, posted to London in a carriage and four, travelling all
night. At six o'clock, in the morning the postillions pulled up in Oxford street to
enquire where the Bishop of Bristol lived, to whose house they
1 Another example of Victorian and modern American English being the
same.
bone left in his body, and even at this distance of time it is not meet to repeat
the libels on the persons alluded to, viz., Dr. Hunt, Abel Clifton, Scratton,
Dade, Lacon, Symonds, Spurgeon, Rev. C. Taylor, the Urquharts, and the
young Mr. Fishers,” as William and James Fisher were long called. The latter
are however more favorably described. " Simply good-natured, neither dull nor
wise, " Th' Adelphi heaves next strike my wandering eyes r " Th' Adelphi beaux
are ever of a mind, " Both to one object mutually inclin'd, "Both in their
gardens their chief pleasure find. Their gardens only formed for pleasure,
where They cultivate with unremitting care” Heaven's last best gift, which
Adam valued most, "The loveliest plant that paradise could boast." The ladies
find more favor with the poet; and he applies to them his "softest numbers."
To Miss Barney (afterwards Countess of Home)
he says—
GREAT YARMOUTH,
9
had orders to drive. Lord Frederick jumped out of the carriage, struck
one of the post boys, and offered to fight with the persons attracted to
the spot; but being unable to provoke a contest he walked away towards
Hanover Square. Upon looking into the carriage, the lifeless body of the
newly-elected member was found shot through the head. Lord Frederick
was immediately pursued and taken into custody. From the evidence of
the postillions it was proved that when within about seven miles of
London they heard a report, and Lord Frederick was seen to throw a
pistol out of the window. Lord Frederick declared that his brother had
shot himself, and that he had endeavoured to do the same, but failed. A
pistol, which appeared to have been recently discharged, was found in
the carnage. It appears that the conduct of these young men at
Yarmouth had been so extraordinary that Sir Edmund Lacon followed
them to town, fearing some accident would happen. Nothing further
could be elicited, and the coroner's jury found "that the deceased had
been killed by a pistol-ball, but from whose hands unknown."*
Sir Edmund Lacon was desirous that the vacant seat should be filled
by Mr. Robert John Buxton of Shadwell lodge, with whom he had a slight
family connection; f and the proceedings which then took place afford
us an amusing example of how election matters were managed at that
time. A committee was formed which met daily at the Town hall, from
the 37th of June to the 18th of July, the number present varying from
six to fourteen j and four young men attended as clerks (viz.), Abraham
Preston, Thomas Rising, John Reynolds, jun., and Samuel Tolver, jun.
Their first care was to dispatch William Smith, the hall-keeper, to
Shadwell lodge, to secure the attendance of Mr. Buxton, for which
service he received five guineas; t and on the same day some of the
* Lord Frederick survived this catastrophe forty years, He was Rector of Morston
with Stiffkey in Norfolk, and died in 1836, aged 68.
f He married Juliana Mary, second daughter of Sir Thomas Beevor, Bart. The
present Sir Robert J. Buxton, Bart., M.P., is his grandson.
t He was also paid two guineas for canvassing with Mr. Buxton; probably to point
out the voters. The "mayor's officers'' were paid five guineas for their services. "Old Billy
Smith" had been butler in a nobleman's family, and his racy anecdotes of what he had
seen in high life were extremely amusing.
VOL II.
10
THE PERLUSTRATION 0F
committee journeyed to Hethel hall to consult with Sir Thomas Beevor. Mr.
Buxton's address was printed and circulated; and great efforts were made to
arouse popular feeling in his favor. A scarlet ensign was purchased of Mr,
Travel Fuller, ship chandler, for £1. ls.; and James Sandcroft was paid 6s. for
'lettering' the same. One thousand placards were printed by Downes (ante. vol. i.
p. 310) and ten handbills, of which 5,500 copies were distributed; the church
bells were rung "by order of Mr. Mayor," drums were beat, and colour men
engaged, and a man was paid "for chalking." The outvoters were carefully
canvassed; Mr. W. D. Palmer and Mr, Dover Colby, two of the committee,
going for this purpose to Lowestoft. Mr. Richard Miller was allowed £9 10s. 6d.
for "coach hire to and from Norwich and for canvassing the Yarmouth" freemen,
and treating them to suppers at the Waggon and Horses and " King's Head." Mr.
Richard Harley was paid ten guineas for horse hire to various places in Norfolk,
and for "sundry expenses with different freemen;" and Mr. Samuel Paget, sen.,
was allowed £3. 2s. 3d. for expenses on a journey to Loddon, and for "liquor to
the freemen there." Tea and coffee were the only refreshments indulged in at the
Town hall; but this abstemiousness was amply compensated-for elsewhere.
Thomas Brooks, of the Half-Moon, charged for beef-steaks and porter supplied
to "the gentlemen on canvas;" and also for one hundred and twenty-one bottles
of wine and fifteen bowls of punch which they had consumed to keep up their
spirits. He had the audacity to charge 12 S . for "glasses broken," but this was
deemed an imputation upon the sobriety of the party, and was disallowed. At the
King's Arms, ale was supplied to the freemen to the extent of £8 11s. Mr.
Eldridge at the Duke's Head sent in a bill amounting to £20. 1s. for "red port"
and punch, supplied on two days only; and Mr. Suckling at the Wrestlers
charged £10. 14s. for dinners, wine, and "cyder cup." Mr. Shreeve at the Star
and Mr. Robert Breeze at the Fishing Boat had bills of more moderate
dimensions. In the midst of these proceedings, news arrived of the death of
Colonel Stephens Howe, the sitting member, which caused both seats to be
vacant. A compromise then took place. Sir Edmund Lacon and his friends
withdrew Mr. Buxton, and substituted Mr. Joddrell, and agreed to support
Lieut.-
GREAT YARMOUTH.
11
General Loftus , who had married Lady Elizabeth. Townshend, and thus the
influence of the Townshend family was, for some time longer, partially
established; and in the election of 1812 the general was again returned, having
Mr. Lacon, the eldest son of Sir Edmund Lacon, for his colleague. The expenses
of this six weeks' canvas for Mr. Buxton amounted to £157. 17s. 2d., nearly all
of which was expended in eating and drinking, no lawyer's bill having been
incurred with the exception of one guinea paid to the town cleric, ''for numerous
searches after freedoms."*
The Town hall has, daring the century and a half of its existence, been used
for public meetings, and for political, social, or benevolent purposes. Here in
1843 Cobden declaimed against the corn laws; and here Joseph Hume held his
court as a commissioner to enquire into the state of harbours, f In the area, to
the west, of the hall were placed two large brass pieces of ordnance, taken by
Nelson from the crown batteries at Copenhagen. f The illuminated clock on the
north front of the Town hall was placed there in 1862; and a bell from the "Old
Dutch Clock," removed from the Port Dues office, is suspended at the back of
the Police court as an alarm bell.
* Freemen alone were at this time entitled to vote. They were dispersed oyer the
country, many of them being shipwrights a.t Deptford, Sheerness, and other dockyards.
There was no register of voters, and consequently great uncertainty prevailed as to the
numbers entitled to the franchise.
f Joseph Hume, for nearly forty years an active and useful member of the British
parliament, became acquainted with the inhabitants of Yarmouth in consequence of having
acquired, in 1824, the Somerton estate. The hall, which was thenceforth called Burnley
(the maiden name of Mrs. Hume), was built early in the 18th century, and was at the time
of the above purchase in the occupation of Admiral Stephens, who succeeded for life to
the estates of Sir Philip Stephens, (Some-time Secretary to the Admiralty, with remainder
to the present Lord Ranelagh. Colonel Stephens Howe, who was the son of "William
Howe, Esq,., of Mistley Thorne in Essex, by Millicent his wife, second daughter of the
Rev. Nathaniel Stephens and sister of Sir Philip Stephens, was returned to parliament for
Yarmouth in 1795 in the Townshend interest. He died unmarried at Jamaica in 1796, when
Brigadier-General of the Forces in the "West Indies. Joseph Hume died in 1856", aged 78,
and was: buried at Kensall G reen, where a monument to his memory bears this
inscription:—. "Keep innocency ; and take heed unto the thing that is right ; for that shall
bring a man peace at the last,"
t They were afterwards sold and the money distributed among the captors.
12
THE PERLUSTRATION 0F
Adjoining the hall at the north-east corner, and now forming part of the
building, is the P OLICE C OURT , where the magistrates hold Petty Sessions; the
Police station being beneath.* It stands upon the site of a smaller building,
formerly called the town clerk's office, which communicated with the hall
parlour, where the mayor formerly sat to hear whatever cases might be brought
before him, seldom assisted, by any other justice unless the law required, two;
and although the public could not legally be excluded, very few insisted upon
the right of being present unless personally interested in what was going on.
An office for the Town C LERK was provided in the Convent of the Grey
Friars when those buildings came into the possession of the corporation; and
when that property was sold, one of the church houses at the Furlong's end was
hired for the purpose. Up to the year 1651 it had been customary for the town
clerk to "read prayers" before the corporation proceeded to business, as is done
in the House of Commons to this day; but in that year it was "forborn," being "
offensive to divers members," and instead thereof four "ministers of the gospel"
were called in "to pray with the members." At the restoration the corporation
determined to revert to the ancient custom, and ordered Mr. Benjamin Bends,
then town clerk, to read "the prayer to be used before assemblies," which he
refused to do, and was dismissed. The corporation consulted their recorder, Sir
Robart Baldock, as to his successor, and he named Mr. Ralph Pell, who
produced letters of recommendation from Chief Justice Richardson and Sir
William D'Oyley. Pell was elected, and presented with his freedom and also
elected a member of the corporation. f
In 1739, when Robert Perrier was elected town clerk, the office above
named, adjoining the Town hall, was erected for his use, and
* Upon the organization of the police force in 1836, Captain Benjamin Laverock Love was
appointed the first superintendent. He was the only child of Mr. Love, surgeon, of East
Dereham and afterwards of Norwich. At an early age he entered the royal navy, and gave fair
promise of future distinction; but his health failing, he quitted the service. He was subsequently
for many years a Captain in the East Norfolk Regiment of Militia. Engaging in business for
which he was unfit, the rapid loss of an ample fortune compelled him to accept the above
situation, and that of High Bailiff when the County Court was first established. He died
in 1863, aged 71.
f He was of a Suffolk family, who bore erm. on a canton org., a pelican vulning
herself, or.
GREAT YARMOUTH.
13
continued to be occupied by his successors until the passing of the Municipal
Corporation Act in 1834, when it was pulled down. A list of town clerks from
the earliest times will be found in P. C, p. 354. One name has to be added—Mr.
Charles Diver, appointed in 1869.
Dr. Alexander Carlyle gives an amusing account of having been "ordered
up before the mayor,' ' then sitting in the Hall parlour. He had landed from a
vessel in the Roads, on his way from Scotland to the Continent in 1745, and
lodged at a small public house kept by a man named Robin Sad, and was
suspected by the authorities of being a Jacobite attempting to escape. "I waited,"
says the doctor, "a little while in an anti-chamber, and overheard my landlord,
Sad, under examination. He was very high and resentful in his manner, and had
a tone of contempt for men, who, he said, were unfit to rule as they did not
know the value of any coins but those of England," for Sad had been several
years in the merchant service, had seen foreign countries, and was "vain,
boastful, and presumptuous." When the mayor asked what expenses the doctor
had incurred, Sad "answered, with a still more saucy pride, and told them
exultingly that I had ordered him to buy "the best goose in the market for
tomorrow's dinner," which confirmed their suspicions. The doctor was then
called in and examined. "The mayor was an old grey-headed man of a mild
address. After my examination, in which I had nothing to conceal, they told me
as I was going abroad they were obliged to tender me the oaths or detain me. I
objected to that, and offered to show them my diploma as Master of Arts of the
University of Edinburgh, and a Latin letter from the University of Glasgow to
any foreign university where I might happen to go. They declined looking at
them, and insisted on my taking the oaths, which were administered and I was
then dismissed."*
Rough justice sometimes met with coarse rebuffs. In the last century a
mayor, who was by trade an anchor smith, caused a baker to be "ordered up"
because he had disturbed the slumbers of two old ladies by his morning "hot-
bread " horn. " What business have you
* Dr. Alexander Carlyle, better known from his good looks as Jupiter Carlyle, had
witnessed the battle of Preston Pans from a church steeple; "but was no Jacobite. He was
afterwards Minister of Inveresk near Edinburgh.
14
THE PERLUSTRATION OF
to blow your horn?" asked the mayor when the baker appealed before him. "As
much business as you have to blow your bellows," was the surly reply. "Smith,"
said his indignant worship to the officer of the court, "hold that there fellow till
I come and give him a kick."*
One of the most remarkable instances of the frustration of an intended
fraud happened in 1855. A young man having the appearance of a commercial
traveller, and giving his address at the Angel, called upon a firm of solicitors a
and instructed them to write to a person in London for the payment of a debt of
about £70. He was asked for a "particular of demand," which he promised to
furnish, but said he felt sure it would not he required as the debtor would
probably pay as soon as he was threatened with proceedings, and that he, the
creditor, would call within a week to learn the result. The letter was accordingly
written, and in the course of a few days the money was sent down to the
solicitors with an indignant reply from the debtor. The solicitors then wrote a
note to the creditor informing him of their success, which they left for him at the
Angel. It appeared that the young man was not staying there, but was
accustomed to call for his letters, and this note was exhibited in the bar to be
claimed. There it was seen and the handwriting recognized by another solicitor
who had called at the Angel to speak with the creditor, and who had been
surprised to learn that no such person, was there. He therefore applied to the
first-named solicitors to know the address of their client, and they were
mutually struck with the singularity of two firms of solicitors being employed in
a similar manner by a stranger; and upon comparing notes it was found that
although the applications were made to different persons stated as residing at
distant parts of London, the answers were in the same handwriting and couched
in the same language. The suspicion which this created was increased by its
having transpired that a third solicitor had been employed by the same person in
a similar-manner. It was then concluded that a fraud of some sort was intended
which it was their duty to discover. They gave instructions that when the young
man called for his letters at the Angel he should be followed, which was done,
and it was discovered that he had for some weeks been.
* The noise of horns and the cry of "fresh fish this morning" still continue 1 .
1 In 2007, there is fish on sale from a van on the Caister bypass. The sign
proclaims “fresh cod, and mackerel” Fresh they seem indeed, but the vendor
charges the full supermarket price, and I doubt notes the sale to the revenue.
In September 2007, there is a campaign against the Supermarkets,
led by “Friends of the Earth”, against monopolistic practices and
price fixing by the Giant supermarket chains, Tesco , Sainsburys and
Asda. It seems that they have a secret agreement to keep fix food
prices low in the shops, such that milk prices for the dairyman are at
zero profit except for very large enterprises with many thousand
head of cattle. Most worrying is the effect on developing countries,
where those producing the food are paying literally slave wages
because the supermarkets have forced purchase prices at source so
low, yet they make a profit themselves. This is similar to the supply
of petrol, where virtually every non-supermarket petrol outlet,
certainly all small independents throughout the UK have now been
completely forced out of business by the buying and selling power
of those same supermarkets.
GREAT YARMOUTH
15
living with a woman in an obscure lodging. When therefore the pretended
creditor applied to the solicitors first named for his money, the bold step was
adopted of giving him into custody; and upon his person were found various
papers, one of which contained the names of several firms of eminence in
Norwich, who had been employed by him to apply for the payment of debts in
like manner. The prisoner's lodgings were searched, and whilst this was going
on another man was observed lurking about the house, looking in at the
window, and making signs to the woman. He was questioned, and required to
attend the Police court; but on his way thither he so satisfied the policeman that
he knew nothing of the prisoner, that he was allowed to go. He was a short,
stout, middle-aged, jovial-looking man, dressed as and having the appearance
of a farmer. He and his wife had been living at respectable lodgings for some
weeks. On coming to Yarmouth, he lodged several hundreds of pounds at one
of the local banks, drew cheques and referred to - the bankers. He expressed
himself so pleased with Yarmouth as to have some intention of buying property
in the neighbourhood, and made many enquiries as to where a purchase could
be made. The solicitors sent a description of the two men to Mr. Mullens, acting
for the Association of London Bankers, and mentioned the suspicious
circumstances; and he immediately informed them that these men were, as he
believed, two of the most accomplished bank swindlers in London, for whom
he had long been in search; especially the elder one, whom he desired to have
apprehended at all hazards. The latter had not left Yarmouth, and was taken into
custody on his return from his customary afternoon drive. "When brought
before the magistrates he vehemently protested against the indignity put upon
him, and asked whether that was the way in which respectable strangers were
treated in Yarmouth. His bald head fringed with white hair, his round red face,
honest appearance, and plausible address, won the hearts of the audience, who
would at once have set him free; but the magistrates determined to detain him.
His letters had been intercepted. They were written in slang, and the writer of
one said he had heard that something had "gone wrong," and requested to be
informed how it was. Mr. Mullens came down and explained the mystery.
These
16
THE PERLUSTRATION 0F
two men, with a notorious forger called "Jerri the penman," formed a gang of
swindlers. The two former had been sent to Norwich and Yarmouth for the
purpose of obtaining, by some means or other, blank cheques on bankers. The
younger man then employed various attornies to apply for imaginary debts j
whilst the other supplied the money and sent it down in each case. It was
arranged that the amount should be more than a solicitor would keep in his cash
box, so that when the money was called for he would give a cheque on his
bankers. By these means the gang would, have possession for a time of the
cheques, and all the money advanced would be returned. These, before
presentation, would be sent to Jem the penman with the blank cheques
previously obtained, and he would fill up the latter for such amounts as upon
enquiry it was found would likely to be honored 1 without suspicion; forging the
signatures of the several attornies. When all was ready the forged cheques
would be presented simultaneously by the three men, who would then make off
with the proceeds. These two men were sent to London, tried at the Old Bailey,
and convicted. Jem the penman escaped for a time , but at last was captured; and
at his trial the other two men gave evidence against him, and he also was
convicted. The evidence upon the two trials proved the whole plot. Jem the
penman was a man of education and talent, and it is said had been a barrister.
Concealed in a bed at the lodgings occupied b y "the major," as the elderly man
was called, an exchequer bill for £1,000 was discovered and claimed by him. Sir
Frederick Thesiger, afterwards Lord Chancellor Chelmsford, was counsel for
the prosecution.*
At the southeast corner of the Town hall a Record Room has been erected,
from a design by Morant, having a fire-proof apartment in which the most
valuable of the muniments belonging to the town council are deposited. In this
room now stands the H UTCH , already mentioned (ante. vol. i. p. 269). The
corporation had been accustomed to use a chest of this description for the safe
custody of their money (when banks were unknown), charters, and valuable
effects, from a very early period, but the one above mentioned, of which an
engraving is given, was, as we have seen, presented to them in 1601. It is of
oak, completely covered
* See Facts, Frauds, and Fictions, p. 484.
1 More Victorian/American spelling
GREAT YARMOUTH
17
and "banded with iron; and admeasures 5 feet 6 inches in length, 2 feet 5 inches
in breadth, and 2 feet 8 inches in depth. It is secured in front by seven iron
hasps, four of which cover as many locks; and they are kept down by an iron
bar running across them. Its four keys are very good specimens of mediaeval
Iron-work.* Upon removing*, some years since, the thick coats of paint with
which this Hutch had from time to time been covered, it was found that the
Trinity banner was engraved on one of the hasps, and sacred symbols on the
others; and it clearly appeared that the chest had originally been painted with
bright colours in bands of a diaper pattern. The original painting was too
obscure to be accurately restored; and the present decorations, by "Winter, are
taken from ancient rood screens remaining in Norfolk churches, f
In 1612 Manship complained that many of the charters, evidences, and
writings belonging to the town had "of longe tyme been in the custody of sondry
psons," and had by that and other means been lost; and for their better
preservation in future, he obtained the appointment of a committee by whom all
the muniments then remaining were examined and a repertory made of them. In
1853 another committee was appointed to examine the charters, rolls, records,
and muniments then belonging to the town, when it was found that a large
majority of the documents mentioned in Manship's Repertory had been lost or
destroyed ; nor was this a matter of surprise for at that time some of them were
kept in open drawers placed in the Hall kitchen, and others in closets where they
were fast mouldering away. They had been
* Prints of all these keys appear in the Notes to Manship, p. 212. By an ordinance
made in 1631 the churchwardens were to keep one key, the chamberlains another, the
treasurer of the plate and money a third, and the town clerk held the fourth, go that all
must be present whenever the Hutch was opened: and a "committee of the Hutch " was
annually appointed.
f A further account of this Hutch will be found in Norfolk Archaeology,
t At Hereford, in 1329, the woman employed to light the fires at the Guildhall used the
town records for that purpose, they being within easy reach. Emboldened by the impunity
with which this was done, she began to dispose of them to the shopkeepers as waste
paper, which led to the discovery of her proceedings. Nearly three sacksfull were
recovered; but the loss was irreparable.
VOL. II.
18
THE PERLUSTRATION OF
kept in the Guildhall up to the time of its demolition. It is believed that many
documents were lent to Blomefield when compiling his History of Norfolk, and
were never returned.* Indeed it is said that some mischievous magpies once
entered the open window of the historian's library at Fersfield, and made off
with many of them. f In some respects the corporation were very careful, for
Ives, writing to the Rev. Mr. Thomas in 1773, says "our foolish corporation will
not permit me to take an impression of their seal, for fear I should make a bad
use of it—and notwithstanding I endeavoured to explain my design (to have it
engraved) and adapt it to their comprehension, they refused my request, not
having found a precedent among their papers." J Some of the town documents
were sold by auction in London 1809., and were purchased by Mr. Bentham
who offered them to the corporation, and Mr. Joddrell (then, recorder)
recommended their re-purchase.
* Blomefield married Mary, daughter of the Rev. Lawrence Womack, Rector of
Caister next Yarmouth, cousin and heir to Dr. Lawrence Womack, Bishop of St. David's.
She died in 1796, in her 90th year. The bishop was a native of Norfolk, and the son of the
Rev. Lawrence Womack, Rector of Lopham and Fersfield in that county, who died in
1642. Soon after the restoration Dr. Womack was made Archdeacon of Suffolk and a
Prebendary of Ely. He died in 1685. The arms of Womack are arg., a lion ramp, gu. A
sister of William Womack of Somerton married Mr. Branford of Caister, who built a good
house there. They had three sons— William Womack Branford of Godwick, who died
unmarried in 1870; Benjamin Branford of Flordon, who married Elizabeth, youngest child
of Nathaniel Palmer; and Richard Branford,
f Probably they made their nests with them, as did the jackdaws of a cathedral town,
the chapter of which had allowed their muniment room to fall into decay, heedless of its
valuable contents. At last one spring-time a person looking through a crack in the outer
wall, saw mysterious black objects flitting about; and having reported the circumstance,
an examination of the long-neglected apartment was made, when a number of jackdaws
ware found helping themselves to fragments of charters and title deeds. The destruction of
M.S.S. in former times is irreparable. Most of the waste books of the Yarmouth
corporation have for covers leaves taken from illuminated missals and church books.
J This curious seal is a large oval one, bearing the figure of St. Nicholas on one side
and a ship on the other; and is believed to be of a date anterior to the reign of Edward III.,
as the bishop is seated literally on a bench without any canopy, and the ship has no
rudder, but is steered by a paddle. It is still preserved but disused. Engravings of it are
given in F, p. 136, and in the Appendix to Manship, p. 336.
GREAT YARMOUTH
19
A Repertory of all Documents then in the Record room, was compiled
in 1855, and one hundred copies were printed, prefixed by copies of
Manship's Repertory. Notwithstanding their many losses, the present
town council possess a collection of municipal records almost
unequalled by any other in the kingdom; which is especially rich in a
series of rolls* commencing in 1273, comprising the following—
1. The Borough Court
2. The free fair court
3. Fines and amercements
4. Customs
5. Leet Courts
6. Sessions and Gaol Delivery
7 Deeds, Wills, &c.
8. Kings’ writs &c.
6.
9. Chamberlains and other
accounts.
Those of the Borough court, which commence with the reign of Edward 1.,
form the largest and most important division. Every action at common
law is there entered, and can be traced step by step from the commence-
ment to the close. Many of them are of considerable interest on account
of the position of the parties engaged in the dispute, the subject matter,
the then state of the law, and the changes which from time to time have
taken place in it. They all afford a vast fund of information regarding
the manners, customs, and habits of the people at a very early period,
their laws and usages, their dress and food, the prices of commodities,
their early intercourse with foreign nations, the gradual growth of
commerce, and their struggles to maintain their free institutions, some of
which were as old as the Saxons. They also contain a rich mine for
genealogical purposes and for the study of the origin of names rarely to
be met with elsewhere. f The proceedings of the
* They are better entitled to be called volumes than are modern, books, because the
word is derived from volvere, the Romans having been accustomed to roll their writings
round a wooden cylinder.
f Surnames were occasionally assumed before the Normans came into England, but
they did not become general until nearly three centuries later. Originally every surname,
assumed OR imposed, had a meaning derived from, its supposed fitness, or was applied
from some accidental circumstance or mere caprice. As mentioned at p.5 , vol. I, a large
proportion of our ancient local names was derived from the neighbouring villages and
other localities. Various occupations also furnished a distinguishing title, some of which
are not now met with, such as Wyndrawer,. Heymonger, Glasswright, and Blo dleter.
Nicknames were also applied and used as surnames, such as Cakehead, Driefoot,
Thickpeny, Pluckfarthing, Lickbeard, Pudding-
20
THE PERLUSTRATION OF
Free Fair Court, when for forty days in every year the Bailiffs of the Cinque
Ports exercised a concurrent jurisdiction with the Bailiffs of Yarmouth, are of
peculiar interest, and afford much information as to those places in some
instances prior to their own records. The Rolls of Customs give a true and lively
picture of the trade of the port at different periods. The Records of the Court Leet
give us information as to presentments for nuisances and encroachments j whilst
the Enrolments of Deeds and Wills make us acquainted with names and
localities, and the latter especially exhibit proofs of ecclesiastical influence. The
Chamberlains and the Churchwardens' Accounts present a minute and curious
record of their receipts and expenditure from a very early period; and in the
matter of Kings' Writs we find the determination of the inhabitants to preserve
their rights of self-government at all hazards. These documents were all carefully
examined by the late Mr. Henry Harrod, FSA.,* and to him we are indebted for
their elucidation so far as the same has taken place. They afford ample materials
for a most interesting and valuable publication.
Beneath the Record room is a building erected in 1811 for the reception of
the fire engines; previous to which they had been kept on, Hog-Hill. The
application of science to social improvement is exemplified by the means used
from time to time to extinguish fires, formerly this could only be done with
water obtained in buckets from wells or the river, and passed from hand to hand.
In 1583 every alderman was required to provide himself with two leather
buckets, and every substantial householder with one leather bucket to he used in
ease of fire; and in 1650 the number for each alderman was increased
wives, Fourapenny, Shangleman (1719), and others now lost or modernized, Fantastical
compounds were also introduced and other names the origin of which it is difficult to
guess, as Allbird, Culpeek, Harridance (1692), G oscor, Doubleday, Vivens, Rain-morter
(1682), Goodyear (1726), and many others. It was formerly considered that a man could
have but one christian name; and it was not until late in the last century that more were
introduced. See Bowditch's Suffolk American Surnames, published privately at Boston in
1861.
* He was a native of Aylsham, and for some time practised as a solicitor at Norwich.
He was one of the promoters of the Norfolk and Norwich Archaeological Society, and
became one of the first secretaries. He published a valuable work entitled The Castles and
Convents of Norfolk; and died in 1871, aged 53,
GREAT YARMOUTH.
21
to four, and for every common councilman to two buckets, "to keep in
their houses in case of fire," and the chamberlains had to provide
twenty-four "for the use of the town." This number, in 1671, was
increased to four dozen, " with, the town's arms painted on them ;" and
in 1697 "an engine for quenching fire was first introduced;" and in 1744
an, improved engine was purchased. Until recently the care of the fire
engines was imposed upon the churchwardens. There was no brigade —
but a few "firemen" were scattered about the town, who generally had
their name and designation painted on their doors, one of whom, being
of a poetical turn of mind, added—
"If your chimney be on fire,
"I'll put it out, at your desire.*
Now an efficient fire brigade is established, with the Superintendent of
Police at its head. A fire escape is kept near the station, f the engines are
of considerable power, and water is plentifully supplied from the Water-
Works Company's mains free of charge.
Row No. 73 from Howard Street to King Street, formerly called the
Boatswain and Call South Row. In 1680 Mrs. Judith Wilde devised a
considerable amount of property in this and the adjoining rows to her
son-in-law, Richard Ferrier, Esq., who sold some portion of it to John
Cotman, Esq. At the north-east corner is a house which in the 18th
century belonged to the Mitchell family. In 1804 it was, with other
property extending westward, in the possession of Miss Frances Sarah
Mitchell, who, in 1814, married Charles William Barlee, Esq., eldest son
of the Rev. Charles Barlee then residing at Southtown. The
eccentricities of this lady and her love of litigation were afterwards
notorious. J
* Ives, sen., in. his diary, mentions a primitive but not very humane way of extinguishing a fire in a
chimney. Writing in 1736 he says, "Mr. Joseph Baker's chimney being on fire, they put a cat up
which brought down a great quantity of soot."
f A policeman, named Shreeve, having ascended this escape (in 1870) in order to
cleanse some windows, and omitting to block the wheels effectually, the machine rolled
from under him, And he fell and was killed on the spot.
t William Pell of Thurlton in Norfolk, who died in 1790, married Anne, daughter of
John Clarke of Henstead in Suffolk, by Honor, daughter and co-heir of Robert Hamond of
Keswick in Norfolk, of which marriage there was issue one surviving
22
THE PERLUSTRATION OF
Row No. 75 from the Hall Quay to Howard Street; being the last row
leading from this part of the quay. The house at the south-west corner was
occupied by Jonathan Poppy, a broker and auctioneer,* who died in 1844, aged
70.
Row No. 76, from South Quay to Middlegate Street., being the first row
in this direction. All the houses on the north side of this row are built upon
what, in former times, was called the South Foreland or Furlong's End. In 1568
The houses (except the Royal Oak) were given by William Garton to the town,
for the use of the church; and the rents are to this day received by the
churchwardens, and applied by them towards the support of the fabric. In 1622
the "bricks and stuff" obtained by taking down the old castle were used in
building up the west end of the South Foreland houses;" and in 1674 the other
houses were rebuilt, f The only house which remains unaltered in external
appearance is the second from the west end, now a public house called the
Royal Oak. Until recently a painted sign exhibited King Charles II. In the
branches of a tree, wearing of course his crown and royal robes. t This house
with another house on the north side
child, Frances, who married George Mitchell (only child of Richard Mitchell), and was
the mother of the above-named Frances Sarah Barlee. The fondly of Clarke were of long
standing at Henstead, descending from John Clarke who purchased lands there in 1575,
and bore arg., on a bend gu., three swans of the first, between three roundlets sa. The
arms of Mitchell are a chev. between three swans close. Suckling's Suffolk, ii. p. 376.
* He was a tall man (6 feet 3 inches), good tempered, not rashly courageous, and
was sometimes sworn in as a special constable. This happened on the occasion of the
" Queen's riots,” when those who did not illuminate on the withdrawal of the Bill of Pains
and Penalties against Queen Caroline had their windows broken. A large and noisy
crowd, bent on mischief, assembled on the Church plain, when Poppy went amongst them
with his staff as special constable. Towering over their heads and stretching out his arms,
he exclaimed, "If you don't be quiet I'll take you all in custody." The effect was so
ludicrous that the mob became good humoured.
f One was a public house called the Keel, afterwards, in 1769, the Freemason's
Arms, and lastly the Town Arms.
t To the king's escape at Boscobel we owe the Royal Oak, which became a popular
sign after the restoration; and which, notwithstanding the lapse of two continues and a
change of dynasty, still continues a favorite.
GREAT YARMOUTH
23
of Row No, 76, with which it was connected by a chamber jutting over
the same, was in the 17th century the property of William Hardware,
merchant, and was in 1668 conveyed by his two daughters and co-heirs
to John Hall, whose only daughter and heir, Lady Buckworth, sold it to
Augustine Collyer, whose executor, Richard Ferrier, in 1726 conveyed
it to Robert Ward., and it followed the fortunes of his brewery.
The house at the north-west corner of Row No. 76 was for many
years in the occupation of Samuel Tolver, Esq.. mayor in 1789, who died
in 1804, aged 69. He was succeeded as lessee by his son, Samuel Tolver,
Esq., for many years town clerk, upon whose death the residue of the lease
was purchased by Mr. Jeremiah Barnes, solicitor, who died in 1871,
aged 50. One parlour is still lined with oak.* This family of T OL V ER
came from Diss. Samuel Tolver, baptised at Diss in 3763, settled in
Yarmouth. He married Martha Bailing, and died in 1746, aged 73.
Samuel Tolver, his son, married Mary Thirkettle, and died in 1772, aged
65, leaving a son, the first-named Samuel Tolver, who, while following
the business of an anchor smith, bound himself apprentice to Nathaniel
Symonds to learn the art of a Baking merchant, and rendered him
occasional services during the legal term of seven years. The corporation
refused to admit him, alleging that the service was colourable. Tolver
obtained a writ of Mandamus against the corporation, under which an
issue was tried at Norwich in 1773, when Justice Ashton laid down,
what appeared to the corporators, the astounding doctrine that a man in
one branch of trade might desire to acquire knowledge in another, that
restrictive and partial privileges in trading were injurious to the public,
and that it was reasonable that all men carrying on business in the same
borough should he allowed to do so with equal advantages. Tolver was
sometime afterwards elected a member of the corporation; and, as we
have seen, filled the office of mayor. He married, for his first wife,
Martha Symonds, who died in 1763, aged 27; and secondly, Sarah, only
daughter of John Miles of Burgh Castle, by Margaretta Maria his wife,
daughter of Robert Palgrave by Hannah Bacon his wife, by whom he
had issue the town clerk, who married
* In 1764 as Jeremiah Barnes, butcher, was returning home, he fell off his horse
into a ditch at Hopton, and dislocating his neck, was found dead next morning.
24
THE PERLUSTRATION OF
Harriet, only daughter of John Watson, Esq. In 1822 Mr. Tolver succeeded his
father-in-law in the above office, which he held until the passing of the
Municipal Corporation Act in 1835. His political opponents, who then obtained
the supreme power in the borough, were so impressed with a conviction of his
legal knowledge, sound judgment, and personal probity, that they re-appointed
him (thereby saving the town the considerable annuity to which he would have
been entitled if dispossessed), and Mr. Tolver continued to fill this important
office until increasing years and their concomitant infirmities induced him to
resign in 1848. In 1827 he had a piece of plate presented to him; and in 1834 he
was presented with a service of plate by his fellow towns-men. He lived to
attain the age of 85, and died in the above-mentioned house in 1865, when the
name became extinct , Anthony, his son, having died unmarried in 1843, aged
29; and George Edward, his only surviving son, having died
in 1848, aged 18. On the death of his sister, Sarah, the
widow of Edward Dewing, Esq:, of Guist in Norfolk,* he
became possessed, by devise, of a considerable landed
estate. The arms used by this family were arg., a cross gu,
between four oak leaves, vert.
At the south-west corner, having a frontage to the quay, is an old house
depicted in Corbridge's Map as being then occupied by Richard Brightin, Esq.
As originally built it was spacious and hand-some. The principal parlour facing
the quay, lighted by three windows, was wainscotted throughout in panels,
divided by pilasters, with a good pendant ceiling. The carved wooden chimney
piece has been removed. In the upper front room the wainscotting is also gone,
but the
* He married in 1791, and died in 1827, aged 59; his widow died in 1938, aged 69.
There is an engraved portrait of him. Mr. Dewing was a great huntsman; and an elegy,
written on his death, says—
" Now that his gallant spirit's gone,
" No more will yonder Tales rejoice,
"Nor answer to his echoing horn
" and trumpet voice."
Dewing of Norfolk bore gu., on a chev. ar g,, three cinquefoils sa . Papworth's Ordinary,
p. 485.
GREAT YARMOUTH.
25
original ceiling remains. In a back chamber, looking south, there is an
original carved chimney-piece; and the walls are panelled with wainscot
in the usual style of the period. All the woodwork has been painted. At
the back of this house are large yards, forming what apparently had been
an open court and communicating with Row No. 83. In the wall of the
inner yard, fronting west, part of an arcade of pointed arches in brick
may still be traced.
In the early part of the 17th century the above-mentioned house
was in the possession of Major Thomas Wilde, who was of a family of
old standing and great respectability at Lowestoft.* In 1648, when a
troop of horse was raised for the defence of Yarmouth, Major Wilde was
appointed lieutenant; and in 1665 he was "slayn by the Dutch, in the
defence of his king and country," being then in his 58th year, and was
buried at Lowestoft. His widow, '' Mother Wilde," (as she was termed
without any disrespect) survived him until 1680, when she died leaving
two daughters—Judith, who married Richard Ferrier, Esq., and
Elizabeth, who married Thomas Godfrey, Esq., twice bailiff and many
years town clerk, who died in 1704, aged 63. In 1706 this property was
conveyed to Samuel Wakeman, Esq., who had married Judith, daughter
of the town clerk. Samuel Wakeman died in 1737, aged 72, leaving the
above-mentioned house to his son, Brightin Wakeman.
In 1773 the above-mentioned house was conveyed to uses in favor
of Mary, the wife of William Downes 1 , an eminent surgeon, who
resided in it for many years, having his surgery next the row. It was
subsequently purchased by the late Isaac Preston, Esq., and was
occupied by the Rev. Richard Turner from the time he resigned his
incumbency in 1831 (after having held it for 31 years) ‘till his death in
* He was among the Disclaimers at the Herald's Visitation in 1664.
t He was the eldest son of the Rev. James Downes (see vol. i. p. 310). He died in
1808, and was buried at Filby, where his epitaph, in the church records that he was "
beloved by his professional brethren, and respected by all classes of the community, for
the urbanity of his manners and the excellency of his skill." His widow survived till 1817,
when she died, aged 80. Mr. Downes was a fine, tall, striking looking man, commonly
wearing a long plum-coloured coat, with the wig and cane usual in those days,
1 Palmer’s Addenda: 27 th July 1774, Doctor Downes married to Miss Lucas, a portion of
£10,000 or 12,000. Youell’s Diary.
26
THE PERLUSTRATION OF
1835, aged 84.* He was the youngest son of the Rev. Francis Turner already
mentioned (vol. 1, p, 305). When his elder brother, the Very Rev. Joseph
Turner, was Master of Pembroke College, Cambridge, he entered himself at that
college and proceeded to Holy Orders. On quitting the university he settled in
Yarmouth where he continued to reside till his death. In 1779 the corporation
revived the office of lecturer, which had been for some time discontinued, and
confered it on Mr, Turner, f On the death of Dr. Cooper in 1800 he was, as
already stated (vol. 1, p. 169), presented by the Dean and Chapter of Norwich to
the Incumbency of Great Yarmouth, and in 1813 they bestowed upon him the
Vicarage of Ormesby with Scratby annexed. J Of Mr. Turner's literary abilities
mention has already been made. He published nothing but he made
considerable collections towards a history of his native town. In politics, Mr.
Turner pursued a consistent and undeviating course. Sylas Neville calls him "a
high church tory parson;" a designation of which he would probably be rather
proud than otherwise. On his retirement the Dean and Chapter expressed "their
strong sense of the ability, zeal, and fidelity with which, during a long series of
years, Mr. Turner had discharged his duties." He was buried in the chancel of the
Parish Church, § which also contains a mural monument to his memory. By his
first wife, whose maiden name was Kentish, Mr. Turner had no family. He
married, secondly, Elizabeth, eldest daughter of Thomas Rede, Esq., of Beccles,
by Theophila his wife, one of the two daughters and co-heirs of William Leman
of Beccles ; ¶ and by her, who died in 1805,
* Some account has been given of this family of Turner in vol. 1, p. 304. They voted at the
Norfolk County Elections from 1714 to 1858 in respect of their estate at Keninghain, which after
having' been in the family for three centuries was sold in 1865 to the late J. S. Muskett, Esq.
f See vol. 1, p. 39. ' For an account of this office and of the successive lecturers see
Swindon p. 88 6, M, p. 59, and P. C. p. 160.
t Residence was not required; and in fact there was no vicarage house at Ormesby
until the present one was erected in 1870.
§ There is a beautiful miniature of Mr. Turner when a young man, and several oil
paintings, one by the younger Beechey, and another by Lane, from which the annexed
engraving is taken. Also a drawing by Wageman, when more advanced in life, which has
been lithographed.
Sarah, second daughter of Thomas Rede, married the Rev. Samuel Lovick
Cooper, of whom we shall have occasion to speak; as also of the Leman family.
GREAT YARMOUTH.
27
aged 44, had twelve children. Mr. Turner married, thirdly, Sarah, eldest
daughter of the Rev. Henry Parish, who died in 1828, aged 60, s.p.
Richard Turner, the eldest son, was a judge at Agra. He died near
Allahabad in 1816, aged 32, and in him the East India Company lost a
valuable servant.'' He left several children, one of whom, Henry Scott
Turner, Esq., of Acton Lodge, Middlesex, filled the office of High Bailiff
of Westminster, and died in 1868, leaving a son, Major Henry Scott
Turner, late of the 69th Regiment, who died in. 1871, aged 34. Francis
Turner, the second son of the Rev. R. Turner, an eminent conveyancer
and a Bencher of the Inner Temple, married the eldest daughter of James
Sayers, Esq., by whom he had a numerous family. * Joseph Turner, the
fourth son, disappeared when travelling abroad, and his fate was never
ascertained. Charles Robert Turner, the fifth son, married the second
daughter of Charles Savile Onley, Esq., sometime M. P. for Norwich. He
was for many years a Master in the Queen's Bench, and after retiring from
that office in 1871 received the honor of knighthood. William Turner, the
sixth son entered the Foreign Office, under the patronage of Mr. Canning,
and rose to be Minister Plenipotentiary to Columbia. He published
Travels in Albania, f The eighth and youngest son, was the Right
*There is a portrait of Mr. Francis Turner, by Hardie, engraved by Scriven. A mural
monument has been erected to his memory in St. Nicholas' Church by soma of his former
pupils, " in graceful remembrance of his kindness towards them; and in testimony of their
respect for his private worth and high legal attainments."
f He brought to England, as a servant, George Pardoli, a native of Rhodes, who died in
1818, aged 32 : and Mr, Turner placed the following verses on a sepulchral stone still
standing near the parsonage wall in Yarmouth churchyard :—
" Early he left his native shore " O'er many a land to roam,
" And entered, to return no more,
" A foreign master's home.
" The parents, Mends, that lov'd him most,
" Caught not his latest "breath, "
But pity fill'd abjection's part;
"And smooth'd his bed of death. "
"What recks it where his ashes hide ? "
He who his soul receiv'd
" Enquires not where the wanderer died,
"But how the Christian lived."
Mr. Robert Andrews, Fellow of Queen's College, Cambridge, while taking a stroll on
1 Palmer’s Addenda: Rev. George Richard Turner of Kelshall, Royston, eldest son of Lord
Justice Turner, died 10 th April 1875, aged 50.
28
THE PERLUSTRATION OF
Honourable Sir George James Turner, Knt., who died Senior Lord Justice of the
Court of Appeal in Chancery. He was born at Great Yarmouth in 1798, and was
educated at the Charter House, then and for many years afterwards a favorite
school for Yarmouth boys, and of which he was afterwards a governor. He
graduated at Pembroke College, Cambridge, and being ninth wrangler was
elected a fellow, his uncle, the Dean of Norwich, being then master. In 1821 he
was called to the bar,* and soon obtained considerable practice in the Court of
Chancery, In 1840 he became a Q.C.; and in 1847 was returned to Parliament
for Coventry on liberal-conservative principles, and continued to represent that
borough until 1851, when he was appointed a Vice-chancellor, and was sworn
of the Privy Council; as a member of the judicial committee of which, he
constantly sat to hear appeals during the rest of his career. In 1853 he became a
Lord Justice of the Court of Appeal in Chancery; which court is understood to
have been created under his advice. When in Parliament he procured the passing
of the act known as Sir George Turner's Act which effected several important
improvements in the practice of the Court of Chancery. Lord Justice Turner had
the reputation, which his numerous printed judgments fully sustain, of being “a
most able and profound lawyer” j and Lord Chancellor Chelmsford spoke of
him as a "most amiable man and upright judge." He married in 1823 Louisa,
daughter of Edward
the sands at Great Yarmouth in 1848, rendered this epitaph into the following latin:—
" Multa vagibundo pressurus litora gressu
" Linquebat patrium jam puer ille solum; "
Quodque erat in fatis, alios subit inde Penates,
"Additus externo, nec rediturus, hero.
" Illius haud gemitus moribundaque vota, parentes,
" Haud maesto arripuit pectore fidus amor, "
Sola sed Officii Pietas suprema peregit,
" Munera lethalem composuitque torum.
" At quid enim refert cineres qua in sede quiescant ?
" Nempe hominum manes qui capit emeritos, "
Haud rogat Ille—Vago qua mors obrepserit ?—unum id—
" Quatenus ex Christto vixerit ? Ille rogat."
A portrait of Mr. W. Turner, by Phillips, was engraved by Mrs, Dawson Turner.
GREAT YARMOUTH.
29
Jones,Esq., of Brackley in Northamptonshire, by whom he left a
numerous family. Sir George Turner died in 1867, having a short time
previously paid a visit to his native town, and was buried at Kelshall
near Royston, Herts.* His features bore a marked and strong
resemblance to those of his uncle, the dean. On the mother's side, Sir
George Turner descended from William Naunton, brother of Sir Robert
Naunton, Secretary of State to James I. and author of Fragmenta
Regalia; from Sir Edward Coke, Lord Chief Justice of England; and
from the Pastons, of whom William Paston was an eminent Judge of the
Common Pleas, temp. Henry VI. so that he had good legal blood in his
veins, f
After Mr. Turner's death the above-mentioned house was occupied
for about thirty years by the N ATIONAL P ROVINCIAL B ANK , whose first
manager at Yarmouth was Mr. Frederick Paget. On the removal of that
establishment to the Hall plain, part of it was taken as an office by the
H AVEN C OMMISSIONERS . t
All the ground on the south side of Row No. 76, extending from
the Quay to Middlegate street, was in the 15th century in the possession
of John Peers, a man of considerable local importance, who filled the
office of bailiff in 1463 and upon five subsequent occasions. In 1492 he
conveyed this property to Robert Moore (heir to his brothers, Nicholas
and Simon), who in 1502 conveyed it to John Garton and Cecilia his
wife and Henry Bemond to hold to them, their heirs, and assigns " of the
chief lord, &c." John Garton was bailiff in 1509 and 1517, and Henry
Bemond filled that office in 1501 and 1509. John Garton was succeeded
by John Garton, his son and heir, who conveyed this property
* There is an excellent portrait of him by Richmond, which has been engraved.
f Arthur "William Turner, youngest son of Lord Justice Turner, a Captain in the 56th
Regiment, died at Poona in 1871, aged 35. Lady Turner died in 1872, aged 76.
J In the Notes to Manship's History, p. 287, there is some account of the legislation
which has taken place respecting Yarmouth harbour. In 1868 an Act of Parliament was
passed reconstituting the commission and giving powers to raise a further sum of money
for the improvement of the haven. The commission now consists of thirteen persons, two
elected by the Town Council of Great Yarmouth three by the Norwich Corporation, three
by the Norfolk Justices, three by the Suffolk Justices, one by the Yarmouth Shipowners,
and one by the Yarmouth Fishing-boat owners. The present income is about £10,000 a
year
30
THE PERLUSTRATION OF
to his brother, William Garton, bailiff in 1550 and 1560.* He died in 1571 j and
the property was then sold by his executor, John Gostling, to John Bacon and
Beatrice his wife; and in 1576 it was conveyed to Henry Ebbott, who built a fine
house upon the site fronting Middlegate street, some remains of which were to
be seen until about the middle of the present century. One of the apartments on
the ground floor, latterly used as a kitchen, was panelled in wainscot and lighted
by one of those long windows peculiar to the period in which the house was
erected. Above the wainscotting was an elegant border of pomegranates and
vine leaves in high relief. The ceiling was divided by graceful ribbon
mouldings, with pendants at the intersections, into compartments, within which
appeared the arms of Yarmouth, the date 1585, the rose and fleur de lis, each
surmounted by an imperial crown, the portcullis, and other devices all in high
relief. The same date appeared on the leaden water spouts. Ebbott probably out-
built himself, for he first mortgaged this house to William Gooch and then sold
it in 1608 to George Hardware, bailiff in 1612 and 1621, who settled it upon his
wife, Margaret, the trustees being John Southwell, Esq., and John Bedingfeld,
Esq. In 1658 these trustees sold the property to John Hall, Esq., a wealthy
merchant, who was bailiff in 1663 and 1673. In 1664 Mr. Bailiff Hall received
an intimation that the Lord High Steward, accompanied by his son, Lord
Cornbury, intended to sup with him on the following day, whereupon the
corporation requested him to give there lordships "as noble a reception "as could
be; and ordered four barrels of gunpowder to be expended on the occasion. He
died in 1684, aged 61, f intestate, leaving a widow, already mentioned, and an
only child, Elizabeth, his sole heir, who married Sir John
* At a period when much importance was attached to official costume, Mr. Garton's
indifference on the subject was displeasing to the corporation, who fined him for not
wearing a velvet doublet with his scarlet gown; but allowed him time to provide himself
with one, and permitted him to wear satin in the meantime.
f There is a mural monument to his memory in the Parish Church with a remarkable
Latin inscription (given by Swinden), surmounted by his coat of arms— sa., three talbot's
heads, two and one, erased arg, impaling a shield of ten billets 4, 3, 2, and 1; and for a
crest, a talbot's head erased.
GBEAT YARMOUTH.
31
Buckworth, Knt. and Bart.,* by whom in. 1707 the property was conveyed to
Augustine Collyer, Esq;. In 1726 Richard Ferrier, Esq., his executor, sold the
property to Francis Saul, Esq., who took down the old Elizabethan mansion
(except the part already mentioned) and built a new house on the site; and
recorded his work on a beam in the north parlour. Saul died in 1769, and
Thomas Pitt and John Bell, his executors, sold the house to Charles Hall, who
died the following year, and John Smith and John Love, his executors, then sold
the house to Francis Richards and Mary his wife. The latter survived her
husband, and in 1796 sold the house to John Danby Palmer, Esq., who in 1799
conveyed it to Robert Cory, Esq., Jun. Sometime after Mr. Cory's death, the
above-mentioned house was sold by his representatives for the purposes of a
M EAT M ARKET . The house erected in 1726 and the remains of the old house
were then cleared away. The Meat Market did not succeed, and the premises
have since been purchased by the Town council and a portion thrown into the
street.
The CORY S of Norfolk derive their name from the village of Corie (or as
in Domesday Book, Chori) near Launceston in Cornwall, where some of the
family still remain. In the reign of Richard II., Robert Corie came into Norfolk,
and circa 1399 purchased an estate at Bramerton near Norwich, where his
descendants resided in the old hall there until 1682, when, on failure of the
direct line, the estate passed by devise to the Houghtons. A branch of the
Bramerton family settled at Norwich, where some of them filled important civic
offices, f Thomas Cory of
* Lady Buckworth died in 1737. Her husband “was a person of extraordinary parts
and spoke Latin as fluent as he did English, though few spoke English better”. "Having
been," says "Wetton, "well grounded in classical learning, he travelled into Turkey and
other places, where he unproved his natural and acquired abilities, and returning from
abroad a complete gentleman, was universally esteemed by all that knew him." Lady
Buckworth married, secondly, John Hiccocks, Esq., a Master in Chancery. By her first
husband she was the mother of Sir John Buckworth, second baronet. The arms of
Buckworth are— sa., a chev. between three crosslets fiché az.
f Thomas Corie, who died in 1590, was Town Clerk of Norwich and a benefactor to
that city. Thomas Cory was an Alderman of Norwich in 1636. When Oliver Cromwell, at
the head of his troop of horse, entered Lowestoft at the commencement of the civil war,
he made prisoners of all the leading royalists there, among whom was Thomas Cory, and
brought them away with him to Norwich where they were
32
THE PERLUSTRATION OF
Yarmouth died a prisoner of war at Havre de Grace in 1761.* Robert Cory, his
eldest son, was Registrar of the Yarmouth Admiralty Court from 1787 to 1823.
He filled the office of Mayor in 1803 as has been already stated ; and died at
Ormesby in 1840, aged 91. f Robert Cory, his eldest son, succeeded him in the
office of registrar. He took an active part in municipal affairs, entering the
corporation at an early age, J and serving most of the corporate offices until
1815 when he was elected mayor, not however without a contest, the inquest
having been shut up for fifty-seven hours before they could agree. Through his
exertions, and the influence of the Esher family, Viscount Sydney, who being a
Townshend was "connected by blood and affinity to a noble family long and
justly endeared to the town," was elected high steward, and he, accompanied by
his daughters, paid a visit to the mayor. § Mr. Cory was a Fellow of the Society
of Antiquaries, and much attached to archaeological pursuits. He published a
Narrative of the Festival held
detained; as we learn by a letter addressed by John Cory to Sir John Potts of Mannington.
Francis Cory, recorder of that city and one of its representatives in Parliament, died in
1678, and was buried at Bramerton. Francis Cory of Bramerton married Anne, one of the
two sisters and co-heirs of Sir Thomas Corbet of Sprowston, the last baronet of that name,
who, unlike his nephew the regicide, was a determined royalist, and suffered much on that
account. He died s. p. m., and was buried at Ranworth, having sold his ancestral estate to
Sir Thomas Adams, Bart,, who descended from a Shropshire family, tilled the office of
Lord Mayor of London in 1645, and died in 1667, aged 81. His four sons all dying s. p. m.
the title became extinct; and the Sprowston estate was sold to Sir Lambert Blackwell,
Bart. Adams bore— erm., three cats passant az; and Blackwell, paly of six arg. and az., in
a bordure, on a chief., a lion passant of the first. (See vol. i. p. 39). The Rev. James Cory,
for sixty-seven years Rector of Kettlestone and of Shereford in Norfolk, died in 1864,
aged 92.
* He married Ann, daughter of John Crosskill by Sarah his wife, daughter of John
Ebbetts of Norwich.
f Caroline, his daughter, married Philip Augustus Hanrott, Esq., of Great Ormond
Street, London. Hanrott bears *, an eagle displayed or.
J He was also a Captain in the Local Militia in 1803.
§ When Lord Sydney came down to be sworn into office as high steward, he gave a
dinner to fifty-four gentleman at the Wrestlers; where Lord and Lady Charles Townshend
took up their quarters; and on this occasion Lieut.-General Loftus, then, one of the
Members for the Borough, gave a ball at the Town. Hall.
1 Palmer’s Addenda: Lord Sondes, died 17 th Decemmber 1874, aged at Elmham Hall
having nearly attained his 80 th year. He entered the Royal Horse Guards, served with the
British Army in the peninsular, and was presented at the crowning victory at Waterloo. In
1854, he was elected High Steward of Yarmouth.
GREAT YARMOUTH.
33
at Yarmouth in 1814, and he issued proposals for publishing by
subscription, in two volumes quarto, the History and Antiquities of that
borough, towards which he had made considerable collections. During
the last few years of his life he resided at Burgh Castle, in a house which
had long been the property and the occasional residence of the Fisher
family; but died in London in 1840, aged 64, and was buried in Lambeth
Church, where there is a monument to his memory, as there is also in
Yarmouth Church. There is a portrait of him (full length cabinet size) by
J. P. Davies, representing him in his robes as mayor. There is also an
engraved portrait, private plate. He bore sa. on a chev. betw. three
griffins' heads, erased or ., as many estoiles gu . He married Anne, one of
the three daughters of Isaac Preston, shipbuilder, of Southtown, by his
first marriage. She died in 1840, aged 63, leaving a numerous family.
Isaac Preston Cory, the eldest son, a distinguished scholar, was a Fellow
of Caius College, Cambridge, and the author of many learned works.*
He died at Blundeston Parsonage in 1842, aged 40, unmarried. f Horace
Cory, the second son, was a physician practising in London, where he
died in 1867, aged 65 . J Charles Cory, the sixth son, was chosen town
clerk of Great Yarmouth in 1851, and after filling that office with credit
to himself and much benefit to the town for eighteen years, died at
Lugano in Switzerland, while on a pleasure tour, in 1869, aged 56, and
was buried there (see vol. 1, p. 54).
* Among these are Ancient fragments of the Phoenician, Chaldean, Egyptian,
Tyrian, Carthaginian, Indian, Persian, and other writers, in Greek with English
translations; Mythological Inquiry into the Theology of the Heathens; a Metaphysical
Inquiry ; and a Treatise on Accounts.
f He quartered— erm., three annulets for Riches, and gyronny- of eight sa. and or.,
on a chief. sa , two leopards' heads or. for Crowe, as may he seen in the annexed plate. He
was interred in the family vault beneath the south porch of St. Nicholas' Church, Great
Yarmouth, where his mother was buried; emulating those of old, who according to
Chrysostom desired to be buried, that "although taken away from the holy service they
were wont to love, their bodies even in the grave might be as door keepers for ever in the
house of God."
J The widow of Dr. Cory married Thomas Woodthorpe, Esq., of Carlton Colville. See
note at the bottom of page 155.
VOL. II.