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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Story of the East Riding of Yorkshire, by
-Horace Baker Browne
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Story of the East Riding of Yorkshire
-
-Author: Horace Baker Browne
-
-Release Date: June 18, 2016 [EBook #52367]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF THE EAST RIDING ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by KD Weeks, MWS and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Note:
-
-This version of the text cannot represent certain typographical effects.
-Italics are delimited with the ‘_’ character as _italic_. Bold and
-blackletter fonts, used for inscriptions, are delimited with ‘=’.
-
-Illustrations and maps are indicated as [Illustration: caption], and
-have been positioned to fall between paragraphs. On several occasions,
-the order of the illustrations is reversed, to better follow the text.
-
-The footnotes, which were marked using the typical symbols (e.g.,
-asterisks), have been numbered consecutively for uniqueness, and placed
-following the paragraph where they appear. On several occasions (44.8,
-48.10, 59.13, 259.59), a single footnote is referenced multiple times in
-the text.
-
-Minor errors, attributable to the printer, have been corrected. Please
-see the transcriber’s note at the end of this text for details regarding
-the handling of any textual issues encountered during its preparation.
-
- THE STORY OF THE
- EAST RIDING OF YORKSHIRE
-
- _A COMPANION VOLUME._
-
- _304 Pages, Crown 8vo, with 56 Illustrations._
- _Cloth Boards_, =1/8= _net_.
-
-
- YORK
- IN ENGLISH HISTORY
-
- BY
-
- J. L. BROCKBANK, M.A.,
-
- AND
-
- W. M. HOLMES.
-
-
- _A typical Press Opinion._—"We have nothing but praise for this
-charming book. It has well been said that ‘to master thoroughly the
-story of the city of York is to know practically the whole of English
-history,’ and the authors of this new history have demonstrated the
-truth of this opinion. No pains have been spared by the publishers to
-give the letterpress a perfect setting; binding, paper, illustrations,
-and general finish are alike admirable."
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- LONDON: A. BROWN & SONS, Ltd., 5 Farringdon Av., E.C.
- And at Hull and York.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE PRIDE OF THE EAST RIDING.
- BEVERLEY MINSTER FROM THE SOUTH-EAST.
-]
-
- THE STORY OF
- THE EAST RIDING OF
- YORKSHIRE
-
- BY
-
- HORACE B. BROWNE, M.A.
-
- _WITH ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTY
- ILLUSTRATIONS_
-
-
-
-
- LONDON
-
- A. BROWN & SONS, LTD., 5 FARRINGDON AVENUE, E.C.
- AND AT HULL AND YORK
-
- ---
-
- 1912
-
-
-
-
- PRINTED AT BROWNS’ SAVILE PRESS,
- SAVILE STREET AND GEORGE STREET, HULL.
-
-
-
-
- TO THE
- BOYS AND GIRLS
- OF THE EAST RIDING OF YORKSHIRE,
-
- IN THE HOPE THAT THE STORY OF THE LIVES OF THEIR
- FOREFATHERS MAY INSPIRE THEM TO HELP IN
- ROLLING ONWARDS THE WHEELS OF
- PROGRESS THAT HAVE BEEN IN
- MOTION EVER SINCE THE
- FIRST LIVING BEING
- CAME INTO
- EXISTENCE.
-
-
-
-
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
-
-
- The author wishes herein to acknowledge his indebtedness:—
-
- (1) To the published works of local historians, and to the
-publications of local learned societies, into all of which he has
-delved, and from many of which he has ‘lifted’ such local records as it
-served his purpose to use.
-
- (2) To MR. JOHN BICKERSTETH, of the East Riding County Council, for
-valuable help in the chapter on _How the East Riding Governs Itself_,
-and in the general planning of the book; to MR. JOHN SUDDABY, for much
-information that is embodied in Chapters XXIV.-XXVII.; to the WARDENS OF
-THE HULL TRINITY HOUSE, and MR. E. J. HESELTINE for extracts from the
-records of the Trinity House; to MR. J. H. HIRST, Hull City Architect,
-for the draft of the illustration on p. 167; and to MR. W. G. B. PAGE,
-for revising the proofs of _The East Riding Roll of Honour_.
-
- (3) To COL. MARK SYKES, M.P., CANON GRIMSTON of Stillingfleet,
-ALDERMAN JOHN BROWN, DR. J. WRIGHT MASON, MRS. WATSON, of Hedon, MR. W.
-MORFITT of Atwick, the CURATOR of the Hull Museums, and others, for
-permission to take photographs of objects in their possession.
-
- (4) To the EDITOR of the Transactions of the East Riding Antiquarian
-Society, the Hull Scientific Club, and the Hull Museum Publications, for
-the loan of several blocks; to PROFESSOR COLLINGWOOD and the EDITOR of
-the ‘Yorkshire Archæological Journal’ for the loan of blocks for the
-illustrations on pp. 55, 63, 64; to MR. T. A. J. WADDINGTON of York, and
-the EDITOR of the ‘Port of Hull Annual’ for that of the blocks used on
-pp. 236 and 248; and to the HEAD-MASTERS and HEAD MISTRESSES of the East
-Riding Schools for that of the blocks used in Chapter XXX.
-
- (5) To his friend, MR. E. HAWORTH EARLE, and to his colleagues, MR. C.
-BAZELL and MR. J. V. PUGH, for reading the proofs of the entire book and
-correcting many errors that would otherwise have escaped detection.
-
- (6) To his friend and old pupil, MR. C. W. MASON, for the great amount
-of time and care which he has bestowed upon the taking of special
-photographs.
-
- (7) To the PUBLISHERS of the book, who have placed in his hands every
-possible facility for enriching its pages with whatever illustrations
-they thought would prove of interest, and who have thereby produced a
-book which it is hoped will reach the high-water mark of excellence in
-artistic production.
-
-HYMERS COLLEGE, HULL,
-
-1912.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAP. PAGE
-
- I. WHAT THE EAST RIDING IS 1
-
- II. HOW THE EAST RIDING WAS MADE 3
-
- III. MEN OF THE STONE AGE 8
-
- IV. MEN OF THE BRONZE AGE—THE ANCIENT BRITONS 20
-
- V. MEN OF THE IRON AGE—THE ROMANS IN EAST YORKSHIRE 29
-
- VI. OUR ANCESTORS 40
-
- VII. HOW THE MEN OF THE NORTH BECAME CHRISTIANS 47
-
- VIII. THE COMING OF THE NORTHMEN 56
-
- IX. IN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD 892 65
-
- X. TWO FAMOUS BATTLES OF LONG AGO 74
-
- XI. HOW THE NORMANS CAME TO YORKSHIRE 85
-
- XII. HOW OUR ANCIENT PARISH CHURCHES WERE BUILT 95
-
- XIII. THE BIRTH OF HULL AND THE ROMANCE OF THE DE LA POLES 111
-
- XIV. MONKS, NUNS, AND FRIARS 123
-
- XV. SAINT JOHN OF BEVERLEY AND HIS MINSTER 135
-
- XVI. SANCTUARIES 145
-
- XVII. HOW TWO KINGS OF ENGLAND LANDED AT SPURN 155
-
- XVIII. LIFE IN A MEDIÆVAL TOWN 162
-
- XIX. THE TRADE UNIONS OF THE MIDDLE AGES 179
-
- XX. THE SUPPRESSION OF THE MONASTERIES AND THE PILGRIMAGE 188
- OF GRACE
-
- XXI. HOW THE GREAT CIVIL WAR BEGAN AT HULL 202
-
- XXII. HOW HULL WAS TWICE BESIEGED 212
-
- XXIII. SOME ANCIENT EAST RIDING FAMILIES 223
-
- XXIV. STAGE COACH AND RAILWAY 238
-
- XXV. ENGLAND’S THIRD PORT—THE MODERN GROWTH OF HULL 253
-
- XXVI. FAMOUS SONS OF THE EAST RIDING 269
-
- XXVII. SHIPS OF THE HUMBER 284
-
- XXVIII. FOLK-SPEECH OF THE EAST RIDING 301
-
- XXIX. HOW THE EAST RIDING GOVERNS ITSELF 311
-
- XXX. EAST RIDING SCHOOLS 321
-
- XXXI. THE EAST RIDING ROLL OF HONOUR 344
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- THE PRIDE OF THE EAST RIDING _Frontispiece_
-
- THE THREE RIDINGS OF YORKSHIRE 2
-
- ONE OF THE FIRST INHABITANTS OF THE EAST RIDING 4
-
- RELICS OF THE ICE AGE 6
-
- SKULL AND ANTLERS OF A RED DEER 7
-
- BONE IMPLEMENTS AND WEAPONS FROM BARROWS ON THE WOLDS 9
-
- SECTION OF HOWE HILL, DUGGLEBY 12
-
- POLISHED FLINT KNIFE FOUND IN DUGGLEBY HOWE 14
-
- FLINT IMPLEMENT AND WEAPONS 15
-
- UNFINISHED STONE ADZE HEAD AND WHINSTONE AXE HEAD 16
-
- FOOD VESSEL FROM A BARROW ON ACKLAM WOLD 17
-
- THE RUDSTONE MONOLITH 18
-
- THE EARLIEST KIND OF AXE USED IN EAST YORKSHIRE 19
-
- BRONZE CELT OR AXE HEAD FOUND AT SWINE 21
-
- PLAN OF A BARROW ON CALAIS WOLD, AND IDEAL RESTORATION
- OF THE SITE OF BURIAL 23
-
- BRITISH GOLD COIN FOUND AT ATWICK 24
-
- HOW A BRITISH CHIEFTAIN’S WIFE WAS BURIED IN GARTON
- SLACK 25
-
- A BRITISH WAR CHARIOT 26
-
- EARTHWORKS AT SKIPSEA BROUGH 28
-
- STATUE OF A ROMAN SOLDIER IN THE YORK MUSEUM 30
-
- SECTION OF A ROMAN MILITARY HIGHWAY 31
-
- ROMAN ROADS AROUND THE HUMBER 35
-
- ROMAN PIG OF LEAD FOUND AT SOUTH CAVE 36
-
- ROMAN ‘PENS’ FOUND AT BROUGH 36
-
- RELICS OF ROMAN FEASTS FOUND AT EASINGTON 37
-
- A ‘SAFETY-PIN’ SIXTEEN HUNDRED YEARS OLD 38
-
- DESIGN OF THE PAVEMENT OF A ROMAN VILLA AT HARPHAM 39
-
- IRON KNIFE AND BRONZE SPOON FROM AN ANGLIAN CEMETERY 45
-
- CHILD’S TOYS FOUND IN A BURIAL VASE AT SANCTON 45
-
- ‘FINDS’ IN AN ANGLIAN CEMETERY NEAR GARTON GATEHOUSE 46
-
- GOODMANHAM CHURCH (From an Old Engraving) 52
-
- TWO SIDES OF AN ANGLIAN CROSS SHAFT AT LEVEN 55
-
- DANISH SETTLEMENTS IN A PORTION OF NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE 60
-
- DANISH CROSS HEAD AT NORTH FRODINGHAM 63
-
- DANISH SUN-DIAL BUILT INTO THE WALL OF ALDBROUGH
- CHURCH 64
-
- PLAN OF THE BATTLE OF STAMFORD BRIDGE 81
-
- HOLDERNESS IN THE DOMESDAY BOOK 93
-
- A NORMAN FONT IN KIRKBURN CHURCH 96
-
- A PISCINA IN PATRINGTON CHURCH 97
-
- PART OF THE FOUNDATIONS OF THE TOWER OF HOLY TRINITY
- CHURCH, HULL 99
-
- FILEY CHURCH, SHOWING THE LINES OF THE ORIGINAL ROOF 100
-
- THE ‘BEVERLEY IMP’—ST. MARY’S CHURCH, BEVERLEY 101
-
- DIFFERENT FORMS OF ARCHES 103
-
- ‘NORMAN’ AND ‘EARLY ENGLISH’ SOUTH DOORS 105
-
- PART OF THE SOUTH WALL OF THE CHURCH AT
- GARTON-ON-THE-WOLDS 106
-
- ‘CHURCHWARDEN’ RESTORATION AT WELWICK CHURCH 108
-
- A GROTESQUE ‘POPPY-HEAD’ AT HOLY TRINITY, HULL 109
-
- BRASS OF THOMAS TONGE, RECTOR OF BEEFORD 110
-
- ARMS OF KINGSTON-UPON-HULL 111
-
- SILVER PENNY COINED AT HULL IN THE REIGN OF EDWARD I. 112
-
- PHOTOGRAPH OF THE HULL CHARTER 113
-
- EFFIGIES OF SIR WILLIAM AND DAME KATHERINE DE LA POLE 117
-
- ARMS OF THE DE LA POLES 118
-
- COMMON SEAL OF THE CORPORATION OF KINGSTON-UPON-HULL 119
-
- SEAL OF EDMUND DE LA POLE 121
-
- PEDIGREE OF THE DE LA POLES 122
-
- ARMS OF BRIDLINGTON PRIORY 123
-
- A CISTERCIAN MONK 124
-
- A BENEDICTINE NUN 125
-
- PLAN OF THE CISTERCIAN ABBEY OF KIRKSTALL 127
-
- THE PRIORY CHURCH, BRIDLINGTON 129
-
- A CORNER OF THE CLOISTER COURT AT KIRKHAM PRIORY 131
-
- THE BAYLE GATE, BRIDLINGTON 132
-
- A WHITE FRIAR IN HIS STUDY 133
-
- ARMS OF BEVERLEY MINSTER 135
-
- BEVERLEY MINSTER IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY 137
-
- ‘EARLY ENGLISH’ DOORWAY IN THE SOUTH TRANSEPT 138
-
- SMALL ‘DECORATED’ DOORWAY AT THE WEST END 139
-
- PART OF THE ARCADING ON THE SOUTH SIDE OF THE NAVE 141
-
- ‘HEY-DIDDLE-DIDDLE, THE CAT AND THE FIDDLE’ 142
-
- PLAN OF BEVERLEY MINSTER 143
-
- SANCTUARY CROSS AT BISHOP BURTON 147
-
- THE BEVERLEY FRITH-STOOL 150
-
- SANCTUARY KNOCKER AT ALL SAINTS’ CHURCH, YORK 151
-
- HENRY OF LANCASTER’S CROSS 161
-
- PRESENT SEAL OF THE BOROUGH OF HEDON 162
-
- NORTH BAR WITHOUT, BEVERLEY 163
-
- PART OF A FOURTEENTH-CENTURY PLAN OF HULL 165
-
- HIGH STREET, HULL 166
-
- SECTIONS OF A MEDIÆVAL AND A MODERN STREET 167
-
- PARISH STOCKS PRESERVED IN BEVERLEY MINSTER 169
-
- ARMS OF THE HULL TRINITY HOUSE 172
-
- A MIRACLE PLAY IN THE OLDEN TIME 174
-
- NOAH’S ARK 175
-
- A FOURTEENTH-CENTURY ‘SHOW’ 177
-
- BEAR-BAITING 178
-
- THE BEVERLEY MINSTRELS 185
-
- ARMS OF THE HULL MERCHANTS’ COMPANY 186
-
- THE GATEWAY OF KIRKHAM PRIORY 190
-
- RUINS OF THE EAST END OF THE CHURCH 191
-
- BADGE OF THE PILGRIMAGE OF GRACE 193
-
- HOWDEN CHURCH FROM THE SOUTH 196
-
- HOWDEN CHURCH—RUINS OF THE CHAPTER HOUSE 198
-
- ALL THAT REMAINED OF MEAUX ABBEY IN 1900 201
-
- A BIRD’S-EYE VIEW OF KYNGESTON-VPON-HVLL, A.D. 1640 206, 207
-
- KING CHARLES I. AT THE BEVERLEY GATE,
- KINGSTON-UPON-HULL 211
-
- SIR JOHN HOTHAM 216
-
- MEDAL STRUCK IN MEMORY OF SIR JOHN HOTHAM 219
-
- HULL’S WATER GATE 221
-
- WRESSLE CASTLE 225
-
- THE PERCY TOMB, BEVERLEY MINSTER 230
-
- BURTON CONSTABLE HALL 232
-
- BRASS OF SIR THOMAS DE ST. QUINTIN IN HARPHAM CHURCH 233
-
- BURTON AGNES HALL 234
-
- EFFIGY OF A KNIGHT IN PLATE ARMOUR AT SWINE 235
-
- EFFIGY OF A KNIGHT IN CHAIN ARMOUR AT HOWDEN 236
-
- COAT-OF-ARMS OF THE STRICKLANDS 237
-
- ON THE ROAD IN 1812 238
-
- HULL AND YORK COACHING BILL, A.D. 1787 241
-
- COACHING ROADS AND EARLY RAILWAYS 243
-
- PISTOLS AND HOLSTERS FORMERLY USED ON THE HULL AND
- PATRINGTON COACH 245
-
- THE FIRST TIME-TABLE OF THE HULL AND SELBY RAILWAY 248
-
- THE HULL AND BEVERLEY STAGE COACH 251
-
- ON THE ROAD IN 1912 252
-
- WHITEFRIARGATE BRIDGE AND THE VICTORIA SQUARE, HULL 255
-
- PLAN OF DOCKS WEST OF THE RIVER HULL 258
-
- PLAN OF DOCKS EAST OF THE RIVER HULL 259
-
- THE WILSON LINER ‘ESKIMO’ GETTING UP STEAM 260
-
- GRAIN SHIPS DISCHARGING THEIR CARGOES 261
-
- AGRICULTURAL MACHINERY ON THE WAY TO RUSSIA 264
-
- A STEAM TRAWLER 265
-
- N.E.R. RIVERSIDE QUAY 267
-
- THE GARDEN VILLAGE, HULL 268
-
- JOHN ALCOCK, BISHOP OF ELY 270
-
- JOHN FISHER, BISHOP OF ROCHESTER 272
-
- ANDREW MARVELL 273
-
- BIRTHPLACE OF WILLIAM WILBERFORCE 275
-
- WILLIAM WILBERFORCE 277
-
- SIR TATTON SYKES 281
-
- CHARLES WILSON, FIRST BARON NUNBURNHOLME 282
-
- ARTHUR WILSON 283
-
- AN ANCIENT ‘DUG-OUT’ FOUND IN NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE 285
-
- A VIKING SHIP ON A CHURCH DOOR 286
-
- ANCIENT SEAL OF THE CORPORATION OF HEDON 287
-
- ENGLISH WARSHIPS IN THE TIME OF THE ARMADA 289
-
- A NEWS SHEET OF 1837 291
-
- THE HULL WHALER ‘TRUELOVE’ 293
-
- THE FIRST STEAMSHIP BUILT ON THE HUMBER 295
-
- A HUMBER PILOT BOAT 297
-
- SHIPS OLD AND NEW—THE ‘SOUTHAMPTON’—‘BAYARDO’ 299
-
- ENTRANCE TO THE OLD HARBOUR 300
-
- ANCIENT ARMS OF BEVERLEY 311
-
- MODERN ARMS OF BRIDLINGTON 313
-
- LOCAL GOVERNMENT AREAS IN THE EAST RIDING 314
-
- THE HEDON MACE—THE OLDEST CIVIC MACE IN BRITAIN 316
-
- CREST OF THE EAST RIDING COUNTY COUNCIL 318
-
- COUNCIL CHAMBER AT THE COUNTY HALL, BEVERLEY 320
-
- ARMS OF BEVERLEY GRAMMAR SCHOOL 322
-
- ARMS OF HOWDEN GRAMMAR SCHOOL 322
-
- ARMS OF BRIDLINGTON GRAMMAR SCHOOL 323
-
- ARMS OF HULL GRAMMAR SCHOOL 324
-
- ARMS OF POCKLINGTON GRAMMAR SCHOOL 325
-
- AT SCHOOL IN THE FOURTEENTH CENTURY 325
-
- PART OF THE SEAL OF A LINCOLNSHIRE GRAMMAR SCHOOL 326
-
- ANCIENT COCK-FIGHTING BELL OF POCKLINGTON SCHOOL 328
-
- A BOYS’ PLAY-GROUND IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY 330
-
- THE OLD GRAMMAR SCHOOL, HULL 333
-
- THE HIGH SCHOOL FOR GIRLS, BRIDLINGTON 335
-
- SEAL OF THE GIRLS’ HIGH SCHOOL, HULL 336
-
- BRIDLINGTON GRAMMAR SCHOOL 339
-
- ARMS OF HYMERS COLLEGE 340
-
- HYMERS COLLEGE 341
-
- A TYPICAL SCHOOL ON THE YORKSHIRE WOLDS 342
-
- A MODERN CITY COUNCIL SCHOOL 343#
-
- MAP OF THE EAST RIDING OF YORKSHIRE _End Cover_
-
-
-
-
- THE STORY OF
- THE EAST RIDING OF
- YORKSHIRE.
-
-
-
-
- I.
- WHAT THE EAST RIDING IS.
-
-
-That an English county which is nearly as large as the ancient kingdom
-of Wales should become divided into separate portions for the purposes
-of local government is only what one would expect. But it is not obvious
-why the number of these portions should be three, and there is even an
-air of mystery about the name given to them. ‘North Riding,’ ‘West
-Riding,’ ‘East Riding’—what is this word ‘Riding’?
-
-For the answer to this question we must go back many centuries, to the
-time of the hardy Norsemen who, as we shall see, settled in such large
-numbers in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire. It was common among the Norsemen
-of old to divide lands into three portions for the purposes of
-government, and their name for each portion was _thrithjungr_.[1]
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- _Thríth-yunger_
-
-This mysterious word means in our tongue ‘a third part,’ and from it
-arose the English word THRIDING as companion to _feorthing_, another
-word which we use to-day in a very slightly altered form. But the
-difficulty of pronouncing distinctly and easily the combination ‘North
-Thriding’ is evident, and the troublesome word suffered the same fate as
-commonly then befell the troublesome man—it got, quite naturally,
-beheaded.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: THE THREE RIDINGS OF YORKSHIRE.]
-
-A glance at the small map on this page will show how the county of
-Yorkshire is divided. By no means are the three Ridings equal in area,
-the East Riding being far the smallest. In order of size they stand as
-follows:—
-
- West Riding 2,766 square miles.
- North Riding 2,128 " "
- East Riding 1,172 " "
- —-—-—-—-—-—-—
- 6,066 square miles.
-
-The map shows another point of contrast between the three Ridings.
-Whereas the West and North Ridings have numerous ranges of hills and
-correspondingly numerous water-channels, the East Riding is, with the
-exception of its northern extremity, an eastward extension of the ‘Vale
-of York’ and very nearly as flat as the proverbial pancake. Its only
-rivers are the Hull and the Derwent, and the latter for more than half
-its course forms the boundary of the Riding.
-
-An uninteresting part of the county it looks to be, does it not? But,
-nevertheless, it has an interesting history behind it, and men and women
-have been born and bred in it—men and women who have helped to make our
-country what it is to-day. Who they have been, how they have lived, and
-what they have done in the ages before we ourselves were born, it is the
-purpose of the following pages to show.
-
-
-
-
- II.
- HOW THE EAST RIDING WAS MADE.
-
-
-Stand on the very highest point of the white limestone cliffs that
-stretch northwards from Flamborough Head, and realise that you are
-standing on what was once the bed of the sea.
-
-Strange though this be, it is nevertheless true. Countless ages ago what
-now towers up 450 feet above sea-level had over it the ceaseless rolling
-of the waters of the ocean, and during countless ages it was slowly
-formed out of the shells and teeth and bones of the creatures that lived
-in these waters.
-
-Men who know tell us that the layer of chalk at the bottom of the ocean
-to-day is composed principally of the remains of creatures so minute as
-to be visible only by the aid of a microscope, and that this layer grows
-in thickness at the rate of not more than one-tenth of an inch per year.
-They tell us also that the layer of chalk which extends under our county
-is not less than 1200 feet in thickness, and thus a simple calculation
-will help us to form some idea of the extent of time necessary for its
-formation. But however long this time actually was, it came to an end
-with a tremendous upheaval of a portion of the ocean bed, and the
-formation of a new area of ‘dry land.’
-
-All the coast line of the East Riding, however, does not consist of
-chalk cliffs. North of Bempton and Speeton lie cliffs of sandstone and
-clay, which have yielded the fossil remains of living beings that once
-inhabited the water and the shore. Such are the belemnites and
-ammonites—the ‘thunderbolts’ and ‘St. Hilda’s snakes’ we may have heard
-them called—and the _Ichthyosaurus_, whose skeleton was recently
-discovered embedded in the clay cliffs at Speeton and may now be seen in
-the Hull Museum. Not a very handsome gentleman in the flesh he must have
-been, unless appearances are deceptive.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ONE OF THE FIRST INHABITANTS OF THE EAST RIDING.
- Actual length about twelve feet.
-]
-
-Again, walk southwards from Flamborough Head, and the chalk cliffs are
-found to get less and less in height until they disappear altogether,
-and their place is taken by cliffs of clay. Then these disappear, and
-are succeeded by the long, flat bank of sand and shingle which is known
-as Spurn Point; and if we round this point and follow the river bank, we
-find it nothing but mud and clay until we get past the mouth of the
-river Hull. At Hessle the chalk cliffs break out once more, and we know,
-from investigations, that the bed of chalk comes to the surface
-completely westwards of a line drawn from Flamborough to this point.
-
-Draw on a map of the East Riding a line from Sewerby, through Driffield
-and Beverley, to Hessle, and you are drawing the line of the old
-sea-beach when the upheaval previously mentioned had taken place. This
-was the shore of a land inhabited by races of animals now found living
-only in tropical regions. The elephant, rhinoceros, hippopotamus and
-hyena ranged the land for food, and bones of these creatures have been
-found in considerable numbers in the caves that exist at Kirkdale in the
-North Riding.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Then came a great change. The climate of Northern Europe became colder
-and colder till there prevailed what scientists call the ‘Great Ice
-Age.’ This was the time of formation of huge glaciers which spread from
-the mountains of Scandinavia, Scotland, and north-west England
-southwards and eastwards into the sea, until they met and made its whole
-area a slowly moving mass of ice. With the ice were carried sand,
-gravel, clay, boulders torn from projecting rocks, and bones of Arctic
-animals, such as the walrus, the reindeer, and the Irish elk; and as the
-ice gradually melted, all these were deposited at the base of the line
-of chalk cliffs, or even on the summit of the cliffs where these were
-low. From the gravel pits at Burstwick excavations of ballast for the
-embankments of the North Eastern Railway brought to light animal bones
-in such quantities that many tons were sold to chemical manure
-manufacturers, and it is probable that many tons still remain
-undiscovered.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] Relics of the Ice Age. [_C. W. Mason_
-
-]
-
-A walrus tusk from Kelsey Hill and the tooth of a mammoth from the
-cliffs at Atwick.[2]
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- The weight of this tooth is 9½ lbs. One side has been worn down and
- polished smooth by the friction of the ice in passing over it.
-
-In this way was formed the ‘great mass of gravel, clay, and sand ...
-east of the Yorkshire Wolds’ which we know as the Plain of Holderness.
-Here is what one of our foremost local geologists has to say of its
-beginnings:—
-
-‘Let us imagine the probable appearance of East Yorkshire on the final
-melting of the ice. Huge fans or sheets of gravel occur at Bridlington
-and other places as a result of the floods. Rounded hillocks of gravel
-and clay stand out in all directions; the hollows in between are filled
-with water, forming miniature lakes or meres. Of animal or plant life
-there is little or none. The climate gradually becomes milder; at first
-Arctic plants and animals exist in small numbers. Later, the margins of
-the meres become clothed in vegetation; peat is eventually formed, and
-huge trees of Oak and Fir thrive. The Red Deer, Beaver, Short-horned Ox,
-Otter, and Wild Horse, haunt the woods, and finally primitive man makes
-his appearance.’
-
-[Illustration:
-
- SKULL AND ANTLERS OF A RED DEER FOUND IN THE HORNSEA
- PEAT-BED.
-]
-
-
-
-
- III.
- MEN OF THE STONE AGE.
-
-
-What sort of man was it who first inhabited Holderness and how did he
-live? Artists in his day were few and far between, and the few who did
-exist in Europe gave pleasure to themselves and to their companions by
-drawing portraits of reindeer and horses on pieces of bone. To draw
-portraits of their fellows was probably the last thing they would think
-of doing. Reindeer and horses are graceful creatures, but the artists’
-fellows were anything but graceful.
-
-As far as we know, the first inhabitants of Holderness were a race of
-short, dark-haired men, who depended for their food and clothing on the
-animals of the forest and the mere, who pursued their prey and fought
-one another with weapons of stone, and who lived in dwellings built on
-piles driven into the bed of a lake in exactly the same way as the New
-Guinea islanders live to-day.
-
-Something definite about their dwelling-places we know; for what is
-appropriately called a _lake-dwelling_ was discovered thirty years ago
-at Ulrome. This was a structure made of tree trunks laid side by side
-and held together by piles driven into the bed of what was then a large
-mere.
-
-[Illustration: BONE IMPLEMENTS AND WEAPONS FROM BARROWS ON THE WOLDS.]
-
- A, B. Hammer head and pick made from the shed antlers of
- a red deer (1/1, 1/4).
-
- C. Bodkin or needle (1/1).
-
- D. Dagger made from a man’s thigh-bone (1/3).
-
-On this rough sort of platform, which measured 90 feet by 60 feet,
-dwelling-places had been constructed, and a ‘popular watering-place’ it
-must have been; for there was evidence that it had been built in the
-first place by a race of people whose tools were of flint and bone, and
-that this race had been ousted many years later by another more advanced
-race who had weapons and tools of bronze. That the dwellers here were
-mighty hunters and mighty eaters was proved by enormous accumulations of
-animal bones under and around the platform. That they were also
-cannibals is likely from the presence of human bones among this refuse.
-
- * * * * *
-
-So much for the ‘lake-dwellers’ of Ulrome. Up on the Wolds there were
-men living a somewhat different life. These hunted and ate the same
-kinds of creatures, and they used the same kinds of weapons, but their
-dwellings were dug out of the soil—shallow circular or elliptical pits
-each covered over with a conical roof of branches and turf, supported on
-a central post; or deeper troughs covered over with sods and scrub laid
-on slabs of chalk, so that the roof was level with the surrounding earth
-and indistinguishable from it.
-
-Of the former kind of _pit-dwelling_ an example has been discovered in
-the hollow known as Garton Slack, the pit measuring rather less than 9
-feet by 6 feet in length and breadth, and 5 feet in depth; while one of
-the latter kind has come to light under Kemp Howe, a few miles north of
-Driffield.[3] The underground chamber here measured 25 feet by 4½ feet,
-had a depth of 6 feet at its deeper end, and was approached by a sloping
-passage 11 feet in length, the entrance to which would doubtless be
-hidden with scrub. The roof had been supported on six upright posts, and
-for twelve feet along one side of the chamber ran a stone ledge—this
-last being evidently a luxury.
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- Groups of circular _pit-dwellings_ have been discovered at Bempton and
- at Atwick—the latter by Mr. William Morfitt, whose house at Atwick
- contains many ‘treasures’ which he has unearthed in the district
- around Hornsea.
-
-It is probable that these two kinds of dwellings may have been
-respectively the summer and winter houses of the same people. For the
-Roman historian Tacitus says of the ancient tribes on the other side of
-the North Sea:—
-
- Besides their ordinary habitations, they have a number of
- subterranean caves, dug by their own labour and carefully covered
- over with soil, in winter their retreat from cold and the repository
- for their corn. In these recesses they not only find a shelter from
- the rigour of the seasons, but in times of foreign invasions their
- effects are safely concealed.
-
-Of the men who lived on the Yorkshire Wolds we know a great deal; for it
-was their custom to raise over the burial places of their chiefs
-circular mounds of earth, some still very large, others now only a foot
-or two high. The relative size of a burial mound, which we speak of
-either by the Latin name _tumulus_ or by the English names _barrow_ and
-_howe_, marks the importance of the chieftain whose body or ashes once
-lay under it.
-
-These _tumuli_, or barrows, are very plentifully strewn over the
-Yorkshire Wolds, and for more than fifty years the late Mr. J. R.
-Mortimer, of Driffield, devoted all his leisure time to their
-excavation. The results of his labours are to be seen in his private
-museum—the Mortimer Museum—and details of his ‘finds’ are recorded in
-his large book on the _Burial Mounds of East Yorkshire_, some of the
-illustrations in which are here reproduced.
-
-A general idea of how a barrow has been constructed, and of what it may
-contain, can be gained from the illustration on the next page.
-
-Howe Hill, Duggleby, is one of the larger barrows, built on a sloping
-hillside, and having at its base a diameter of 125 feet and at its
-flattened top one of 47 feet.
-
-[Illustration: SECTION OF HOWE HILL, DUGGLEBY.]
-
- A-K. Skeletons in position as buried.
- O. Cremated remains. Y. Band of blue clay impervious to
- water.
-
- W. Inner mound of clay. Z. Outer mound of chalk.
-
- X. Bed of chalk grit. * Probable summit of the barrow when
- built.
-
-From the diagram we see that the bodies first interred have been placed
-at the bottom of a cavity dug out of the solid chalk. This hole not
-proving large enough for the numbers to be buried, an extension has been
-begun, but not finished. Time was evidently pressing, for some bodies
-have been buried above the surface of the ground. They have been placed
-in different positions, but the legs of all have been bent at the knees
-and all are enclosed in a low mound of clay. Above this lie the remains
-of numerous other bodies, which have been burnt before burial; and over
-them comes a twelve-inch layer of a blue clay which is impervious to
-water. Then a large mound of soil and pieces of chalk has been raised
-over all, the mound being originally much higher than it is to-day.
-
-Such has been the building of Howe Hill. But it must not be thought that
-all barrows contain the remains of a large number of bodies. Most
-contain one only, and the body has either been buried as it was when
-life left it or been burnt and the calcined bones gathered up in an
-earthenware vessel, or pinned in a skin garment. The eight full-grown
-skeletons discovered under Howe Hill are those of men, and we may
-suppose that they represent a chieftain and his relatives killed in the
-onslaught by a hostile clan. The cremated bodies, forty of which were
-discovered in the digging of a trench through the barrow, would be those
-of his dependants, who died fighting in defence of their lord and
-master.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But the barrow contains evidence of the lives of the people of the time
-as well as of their deaths. Scattered through the soil under the band of
-blue clay were found many broken bones of the ox, roebuck, red deer,
-fox, goat, and pig, the remains of the burial feast; and among these
-were human bones which had quite evidently been broken and cooked. It is
-horrible to think of the people of our East Riding as having once been
-cannibals, but the evidence to that effect is indisputable.
-
-Here and there were also found portions of the weapons with which the
-defenders of the settlement had fought—the hammer head shown on page 9,
-made from the shed antler of a red deer, and the broken javelin head of
-flint shown on page 15. In this barrow was also found the wonderfully
-made flint knife represented below—an implement fashioned out of a piece
-of flint with no other tools than such as are mentioned below, and yet
-fashioned so delicately that its greatest thickness is only
-one-sixteenth of an inch.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- POLISHED FLINT KNIFE FOUND IN DUGGLEBY
- HOWE (1/1).
-]
-
-A clever workman he must have been who made this wonderful knife. But
-such beautifully wrought implements are very rare. Only one similar
-knife—found in a barrow at Aldro—was known to its discoverer, and he had
-himself superintended the excavation of no fewer than two hundred and
-eighty-eight barrows.
-
-The weapons and tools which have been buried with their owners are more
-commonly of the rougher types figured on the opposite page. They include
-knives, chisels, spear heads, saws, and arrow heads, all made from
-flints by the processes of chipping and flaking, with hammer heads,
-picks, needles and daggers of bone.
-
-Compare the figures A and B given on page 9 with the illustration of the
-antlers of a red deer on page 7, and see how cleverly the hammer head
-and the pick have been fashioned. Equally clever has been the adaptation
-of a bone in the making of the very primitive dagger figured at D on the
-same page. But in this case it has been not the antler of a red deer
-that has been brought into use, but the thigh-bone of a man.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- FLINT IMPLEMENT AND WEAPONS.
-
- A. Chisel from Aldro (1/1). B. Barbed arrow head from
- Grimston (1/1) C. Javelin head from Duggleby Howe (1/1).
-]
-
-So far we have spoken of weapons and implements of bone and of flint.
-Others were then in use made of whinstone and greenstone, such as the
-axe heads figured overleaf. Notice the different arrangement of the
-cutting edge in these two implements, and notice also that in the first
-one the hole intended for the insertion of a wooden handle has, for some
-reason or other, not been finished. Perhaps the maker was killed before
-he had time to finish it, or perhaps he grew tired of his work and threw
-it away. At any rate this unfinished adze head was found loose on the
-surface of the ground, and not buried under a howe as was the other.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- UNFINISHED STONE ADZE HEAD
- PICKED UP ON ACKLAM WOLD (1/1).
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- WHINSTONE AXE HEAD FROM
- A BARROW ON CALAIS
- WOLD (2/3).
-]
-
-Weapons and implements of stone! May we not justly call their makers MEN
-OF THE STONE AGE? They lived before man knew how to dig metals from the
-earth, and how, having obtained them, to melt and mould them to his
-wish.
-
-But besides these weapons which have lain buried with their owners for
-some thousands of years, there are yielded up by the barrows earthenware
-vessels of different sizes and shapes. Some, like that shown below, are
-wide-mouthed and have a thick rim; others are narrower, and their rim is
-not thickened. Then others have an overhanging rim; and others, again,
-are small, only an inch or two in height, and have from two to six holes
-perforated in their sides. All are marked with simple patterns, made by
-pressing the pointed end of a stick or the thumb-nail into the moist
-clay, or by pressing round it a twisted thong of hide. There has been no
-glazing and no attempt to make use of artificial colour.
-
-[Illustration: FOOD VESSEL FROM A BARROW ON ACKLAM WOLD (1/2).]
-
-Each of these vessels has had its particular use. The first-named
-vessels, which are by far the most common, are always found to be
-stained with some decomposed matter on the inside of the bottom, and
-their use has undoubtedly been as _food vessels_. So also we may
-consider the second group to be _drinking vessels_. The food and drink
-which these two contained when they were buried have been intended for
-their owners in the new life to come, when food and drink would be again
-required. The vessels of the third kind are always found to contain
-remains of a body which has been cremated before burial—hence their name
-_cinerary urns_—and the last-named and smallest, which are found with
-them, have probably been used to hold the precious spark of fire which
-lit the funeral pyre.
-
-[Illustration: THE RUDSTON MONOLITH]
-
-Let us leave these howes and barrows and examine another example of the
-work of the Men of the Stone Age. Close to the wall of the village
-church at Rudston stands a huge upright stone, or monolith. Twenty-five
-feet is its height above the ground, and sixteen feet its girth, while
-it is said to be embedded in the ground as deep as it is high above the
-surface. Its weight is estimated as not far short of forty tons. What is
-it doing in a village churchyard, and who put it there? When and how was
-it placed where it now stands?
-
-[Illustration: THE EARLIEST KIND OF AXE USED IN EAST YORKSHIRE.]
-
-It is impossible to give any definite answers to these questions. A
-century ago, however, the village people answered them all very easily.
-The Devil, they said, objected to the building of the church, and flung
-this stone to destroy it before its completion. But his aim was not so
-accurate as it was intended to be, and the missile missed its mark.
-Asked for a proof of their wonderful story, they would point to the
-stone itself. There it was for everyone to see. What further proof could
-be needed?[4] Whether we believe this legend or not, two things are
-certain. First, that the stone is as old as the barrows in the
-surrounding wolds; secondly, that there is no rock of the same nature
-nearer to it than Filey Brig and the Brimham Rocks. Was it brought down
-by the great ice sheet and then erected by the men of the Stone Age to
-serve some purpose in their heathen rites, or did they bring it up from
-Filey or down from the hills of the North Riding on wooden rollers?
-Perhaps it is not more difficult to conceive of their doing this than of
-their raising such a huge barrow as that which stands unopened at the
-foot of Garrowby Hill—a mound 250 feet in diameter at its base and 50
-feet in height.
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- The ‘Devil’s Arrows’ is the name by which three similar huge stones
- are known at Boroughbridge.
-
-
-
-
- IV.
- MEN OF THE BRONZE AGE.
-
- THE ANCIENT BRITONS.
-
-
-With the coming of Julius Caesar to Britain in the middle of the first
-century before the birth of Christ, we reach the time in the history of
-our country when definite facts about its people begin to be recorded.
-
-Thus we know from Caesar’s own writings that the Britons lived in houses
-like those of the Gauls, that they had great numbers of cattle, that
-they used copper coins, that many of the inland tribes did not grow corn
-but lived on milk and flesh and went clothed in skins, that in war time
-they dyed their bodies with a blue stain to give them a more terrible
-aspect, and that they wore long hair on their heads and their upper
-lips.
-
-So also, with regard to their religion, Caesar tells us that their
-priests were called Druids; that if any crime had been committed, or if
-there were any dispute about an inheritance or a boundary, it was the
-Druids who gave judgment; that they had vast stores of learning, all of
-which was committed to memory and none committed to writing; and that
-their chief doctrine was that the soul of man did not perish, but passed
-after death into another body, so that no man should fear death.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- BRONZE CELT OR AXE HEAD FOUND AT SWINE.
-]
-
-From these accounts we see that there had been great progress made since
-the times described in the last chapter. This was due to the migration
-westwards of a new race of people—the Kelts—who had gained a knowledge
-of the use of metal, and who, consequently, had weapons and implements
-made of bronze instead of stone. Their greater knowledge gave them
-greater power, and the extinction of the men of the Stone Age was only a
-question of time. For not often was the bronze-weaponed warrior slain by
-a weapon of stone.
-
-But the account written by Julius Caesar refers to the inhabitants of
-the southern parts of our island. ‘Many of the inland tribes do not grow
-corn, but live on milk and flesh and go clothed in skins.’ This passage
-may be taken as true of the tribes living north of the Humber, known—so
-later Roman writers tell us—as the BRIGANTES, the wildest and most
-savage of the tribes inhabiting Britain.
-
-Let us see what Mr. Mortimer’s discoveries have to tell us of these
-BRIGANTES. The most interesting discovery, perhaps, was that made in a
-barrow on Calais Wold, the highest point of the Yorkshire Wolds, 807
-feet above sea-level. Here, on the mound being removed, a double row of
-stake-holes was exposed in the surface of the ground. These were from 3
-to 15 inches in diameter, and were arranged in circles having diameters
-of 21½ and 28 feet. Outside these were four other stake-holes, and
-beyond these again a circular trench 100 feet in diameter, 3 feet 9
-inches deep, 9 feet across at the top, and 1 foot across at the bottom.
-Within the double circle of stake-holes was a cavity cut in the chalk
-and containing a skeleton lying on its side, with its knees bent.
-
-The plan on the opposite page shows the arrangement exactly, and the
-drawing which accompanies it gives Mr. Mortimer’s clever conjecture of
-the meaning of the stake-holes. The space enclosed between the inner and
-outer walls would be used, Mr. Mortimer thought, as a storage place for
-food, skins, and weapons. It would also serve to keep the inside
-living-room warm in winter.
-
-[Illustration: IDEAL RESTORATION OF THE SITE OF BURIAL.]
-
-[Illustration: PLAN OF A BARROW ON CALAIS WOLD, SHOWING THE ENCIRCLING
-TRENCH AND STAKE-HOLES.]
-
-‘We will bury our chieftain in his home, which no one after him shall
-have power to defile.’ So, probably, thought those who buried him. But,
-if so, time has played them false; for men of a race undreamt of and
-speaking a tongue of which he would understand hardly one word, have
-ruthlessly laid bare his burial place, and have carted away his bones to
-be measured with tape and pencil, and his skull to have its brain cavity
-estimated with grains of millet seed. What an insult added to injury!
-
-A mighty chieftain he had doubtless been, and it must be his favourite
-weapon that lies buried with him, so placed that he should be buried as
-he slept—grasping its handle firmly in his right hand. One wonders how
-many of his enemies’ skulls that weapon of his had beaten in before its
-master ceased to use it. Perhaps it had been wielded against the Roman
-legions brought north of the Humber by Ostorius Scapula in A.D. 50. Who
-knows? If you would see the head of the weapon you must go to the museum
-at Driffield; its likeness you will find on page 16.
-
-The Brigantes buried their dead chiefs just as the earlier tribes had
-done, and the photograph on page 25 shows very clearly the curious way
-in which the legs were doubled and the head bent back. This skeleton was
-obtained from a barrow in Garton Slack, and here is what its discoverer
-says of the pains taken to obtain it:—
-
-‘Being desirous of possessing this skeleton in its entirety, we obtained
-a quantity of stiff, mortar-like material, scraped from the adjoining
-high road, with which we covered the remains, in order to keep all the
-bones in position. We then passed three broad pieces of sheet iron under
-it without displacing any of the bones. The remains were then lifted on
-a prepared board, and conveyed to Fimber. After being carefully cleaned,
-the skeleton was mounted in a glass case, and now, with its relics, and
-part of the ground on which it was found, forms a highly interesting
-relic in the museum at Driffield.’
-
-The skeleton is that of a woman, and with it, you will notice, are two
-objects. There is no need to say what has been the use of the bone
-ornament lying behind the head, but the use of the flint implement
-placed before the jaw is not so obvious. This is one of a class of
-implements known to us as _scrapers_—roughly chipped pieces of flint
-used by the women of a household in scraping the insides of animal skins
-when preparing them for human wear, and in scraping the roots that went
-into the ‘stock-pot’ with the flesh of the animals that provided also
-garments and beds for the household.
-
-[Illustration: HOW A BRITISH CHIEFTAIN’S WIFE WAS BURIED IN GARTON
-SLACK.]
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C.W. Mason_
-
- British Gold Coin.
- Found at Atwick by Mr. W. Morfitt (1/1).
-
-]
-
-In neither of these two barrows was there any sign of a bronze
-implement. Weapons and implements of bronze are rare among those found
-in the barrows of East Yorkshire, and the few discovered are dagger or
-knife heads and prickers. The Brigantes were far behind the Britons of
-the south in their knowledge of the use of metal; and at the time when
-the latter were making use of bronze, the wild and savage tribes of the
-north were content still to make use of greenstone and flint.
-
-Personal ornaments, too, are rare, and were found accompanying only
-fifty-seven out of eight hundred and ninety-three burials that Mr.
-Mortimer excavated. They include dress-fastenings, such as rings and
-links of jet, and buttons of amber, jet and bone. With only one British
-interment was gold found, and of silver ornaments none were discovered
-at all.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: A BRITISH WAR CHARIOT.]
-
-Especially interesting to a Yorkshireman are the discoveries of what are
-called ‘chariot burials.’ The Britons were renowned for their
-war-chariots, of which the chieftain Caswallon is recorded to have had
-4000 when he fought against Julius Caesar. To the Briton himself his
-chariot was known as an _essa_, a word which his Roman conquerors
-latinised as _essedum_. An _essedum_ was drawn by two horses, and driven
-by a charioteer who was very expert at running out along the pole
-between the horses. The _essedarii_, or charioteers, were held in high
-esteem among the tribal armies, and when they happened to be captured by
-the Roman soldiers were great favourites among the spectators of the
-gladiatorial shows.
-
-On the death of a British chieftain who was a renowned chariot warrior,
-it was the custom for him to be buried in his chariot together with his
-horses and their trappings; and the East Riding has given more evidence
-of this custom than any other part of our country of equal area. The
-‘Yorkshireman’ even then, it seems, loved a horse.
-
-Remains of British chariot burials have been discovered at Hesselskew
-and Arras, near Market Weighton; at Beverley Westwood; at Danes’ Graves;
-and, most recently, at Hunmanby. In all these instances there have been
-interred two horses standing in their harness, and in the barrow opened
-at Danes’ Graves in 1897 there were _two_ human skeletons, proving that
-in this case the charioteer, as well as his chieftain, was buried.
-
-Of course in all these interments the remains of the chariots themselves
-have been small, little existing but fragments of the bronze naves and
-iron rims of the wheels, and of the bridle bits of the horses. But these
-have been sufficient to show that the diameter of the wheels varied from
-2 feet 8 inches to 2 feet 11 inches, and that the horses themselves were
-of a much smaller breed than those of to-day.
-
-With three, at least, of these chariot burials, were also found remains
-of an iron mirror, a thing not found elsewhere. We are accustomed in
-these days of motor-cars to make use of mirrors for a knowledge of what
-is happening on the road behind the driver, and these remains point to a
-similar practice among the charioteers of the Brigantes. Really we are
-not, perhaps, so far advanced in the twentieth century as we thought we
-were.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] Earthworks at Skipsea Brough. [_C.W. Mason_
-
-]
-
- * * * * *
-
-Further evidence of the Brigantes in the East Riding is to be seen in
-the wonderful series of entrenchments that are so noticeable in the Wold
-districts. Dikes, double dikes, and treble dikes once covered the whole
-of the Wolds, says Mr. Mortimer; in fact, in the area of 75 square miles
-which he explored there are 80 miles of earthworks existing to-day.
-These consist sometimes of one ditch and one rampart only, but commonly
-of three ditches and four ramparts; and in one case, in the
-neighbourhood of Huggate, the entrenchment consists of a series of six
-parallel ditches and seven ramparts.
-
-By far the most remarkable of these ancient entrenchments is the
-so-called ‘Danes’ Dyke,’ which, 2½ miles in length, cut off the rocky
-promontory of Flamborough Head, and converted it into an impregnable
-fortress 5 square miles in area. In making it, advantage was taken of a
-natural ravine—a relic of the Ice Age—which ran down to the south; but
-in its northern portion, where the ground was naturally level, a huge
-ditch roughly 60 feet wide and 20 feet deep was dug, the soil from this
-being thrown up to form a dyke or rampart on its eastern face.
-
-At Skipsea Brough, near Hornsea, may be seen other British earthworks,
-consisting of a central mound 70 feet high, having a flat top one acre
-in extent, and covering altogether an area of 5 acres, together with a
-series of entrenchments forming the segment of a circle. The outer
-rampart is half a mile in length. Other much smaller earthworks exist at
-the ‘Castle Hill,’ Sutton, and the ‘Giant’s Hill,’ Swine.
-
-
-
-
- V.
- MEN OF THE IRON AGE.
-
- THE ROMANS IN EAST YORKSHIRE.
-
-
-In the last chapter we saw that the later Britons had some knowledge of
-iron, as well as of copper and tin. But with the Romans the use of iron
-was much more extensive, and hence they may be called MEN OF THE IRON
-AGE.
-
-The first Roman general to enter the territory of the Brigantes was
-Ostorius Scapula, who came north in A.D. 50. Twenty-eight years later
-came Julius Agricola, who penetrated as far north as the rivers Forth
-and Clyde. By Agricola the ancient British camp CAER EBURAC—the camp on
-the Ebura, or, by its modern name, the Ure—was made into a Roman walled
-city under the latinised name Eburacum.
-
-From this time EBURĀCUM,[5] or EBORĀCUM as later Roman writers spelt its
-name, became the proud capital of Britain—_altera Roma_, a second Rome
-in importance. Here died the great Roman Emperor Severus in A.D. 211,
-and here was born the still greater Emperor Constantine, under whose
-reign Christianity was established in the Roman Empire.
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- Pronounced _Eb-oo-ráh-kum_.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- STATUE OF A ROMAN
- SOLDIER IN THE YORK
- MUSEUM.
-]
-
-For nearly three and a half centuries the Roman armies ruled the land of
-the Brigantes, during which time great alterations were taking place in
-the lives of its people. Northwards came troop after troop of German and
-Italian soldiers to subdue and enslave the people of the land north of
-the Humber, and to wage incessant war against Rome’s enemies still
-farther north. And southwards marched troop after troop of the men of
-the Brigantes, on their way to Gaul and Italy and Spain, there to serve
-as Roman soldiers. In A.D. 117 came to Eboracum the famous Sixth
-Legion—LEGIO SIXTA, surnamed VICTRIX, the ‘All Conquering’—and Eboracum
-was its headquarters thenceforth till A.D. 406, when it was withdrawn to
-help in defending Rome against the enemies mustering on her threshold.
-
- * * * * *
-
-For the constant movement of troops the Roman invaders needed roads, and
-the military highways which they constructed across Britain remain
-foremost among the evidences of their occupation of the country. The
-fact that their roads have existed for so many centuries—centuries of
-hard use but of constant neglect—is due to the great care bestowed upon
-their construction.
-
-When a Roman road was made, the first thing done was to mark out its
-course by the digging of two parallel ditches. This course was from 15
-to 21 feet wide, and on it as the _gremium_, or foundation ground, was
-placed a layer of large stones 5 inches deep. This, known as the
-_statumen_, was followed by a fifteen-inch layer of broken stones
-cemented with lime. The _rudus_ thus formed was succeeded by the
-_nucleus_, a similar layer 10½ inches thick and constructed of small
-fragments of brick and pottery. Last came the _pavimentum_, made of
-large irregularly-shaped blocks of very hard stone fitted together and
-cemented with lime so as to form a perfectly even surface. The
-pavimentum was 5 inches thick, thus making a solid road raised about 3
-feet above the level of the surrounding land.
-
-[Illustration: SECTION OF A ROMAN MILITARY HIGHWAY.]
-
-Such was the usual method of construction of a Roman highway. Where the
-natural surface of the ground passed over was hard rock, the two lowest
-layers, or _strata_, were dispensed with; but where no safe natural
-foundation existed, the labour was increased by the driving of piles
-into the soft ground to afford this.
-
-Over hill and down dale were constructed these wonderful roads. No
-obstacle save an impenetrable marsh or an unbridgeable river baulked the
-Roman engineer; and the outward distinguishing mark between the Roman
-road constructed sixteen centuries ago and its modern successor is often
-the fact that whereas the latter goes round a hill, and thus makes
-things easy for the traveller, the former climbs in a straight line
-right over the summit.
-
-What engineering skill the Romans must have possessed to build their
-roads! Straight from one military station to another miles distant over
-the hills did they succeed in driving their road. How did they judge its
-direction so accurately? We know not. And what immense labour was needed
-for the construction of their roads! Think of the cohorts of Roman
-soldiers engaged in building them, and of the slave-gangs of Britons
-toiling under the lash of the task-master as they quarried the materials
-for the use of the soldiers working many miles away. So hard was the
-work of the Roman soldiers in Britain, we read, that they ‘wished for
-death to relieve them from their insupportable toil.’
-
-But human life stood for little in those days. What Roman engineer cared
-whether thousands of lives were spent in the making of his road? His one
-concern was to build it in such a way that for centuries to come the
-Roman legions should be able to march, and the Imperial Post to ride,
-along its hundreds of miles at the greatest possible speed. One hundred
-and sixty-five English miles were covered by Caesarius, a Roman
-magistrate, in the space of one day on a journey from Antioch to
-Constantinople, the whole distance of 665 miles taking less than six
-days. There is little wonder that Rome had become ‘Mistress of the
-World.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-Let us now see what the Roman road-makers did in East Yorkshire.
-Stretching north from Londinium ran the military highway known in later
-times as ERMIN STREET. At Lindum Colonia this branched in two
-directions, both branches meeting eventually at Eboracum. Skirting the
-impassable marshes around the meeting-places of the Yorkshire rivers and
-the Trent, one branch reached Eboracum by bridges or fords across the
-Trent, the Don, the Aire, and the Wharfe, where now stand Littleborough,
-Doncaster, Castleford, and Tadcaster. The crossing-places were protected
-by military stations which have since grown into these towns.
-
-But directly north from Lincoln the second branch reached the Humber at
-Winteringham, whence the river was crossed by ferry to Brough, where
-also was a military station, named Petuaria. From Brough to York the
-road passed through South Cave, South Newbald, Houghton Woods, Thorpe le
-Street, Barmby Moor and Stamford Bridge. Along this second branch would
-travel the Roman Emperors and Generals, the Imperial Post, and the
-slave-carried litters and chairs of the Roman aristocracy; round by the
-former would march the foreign troops drafted to Eboracum to replace the
-wastage in the Sixth Legion, and the British levies on their way to
-fight and die in other parts of the Roman world.
-
-At South Newbald this Roman road branched to the right, passing by
-Londesborough, Warter, Millington and Acklam, to a camp at Old Malton.
-From Stamford Bridge eastward ran another road by Garrowby, Fimber,
-Cottam and Kilham to a Roman station on the cliffs at Sewerby. Higher up
-on the Wolds ran an alternative route by Fridaythorpe, Sledmere, Octon
-and Rudston. These two roads are to-day known as the Low Street and the
-High Street.
-
-Smaller roads ran from Stamford Bridge to Old Malton, and from the
-latter to Fimber and possibly farther south in the direction of
-Beverley. Round the coast from Bridlington there was probably a
-road—long since washed away—to a military station on the headland which
-then existed about a mile to the east of the present Kilnsea.
-
-In North Lincolnshire Ermin Street is a typical Roman military road, and
-for the greater part of its course it is to-day the ‘king’s highway.’
-But its northerly portion has, since the establishing of the Ferry at
-New Holland, been disused, and is now but a green lane, whose very
-surface is lost to view as we approach the Humber.
-
-When we enter the territory of the Brigantes the road is not so
-distinguishable, and its course is in some parts uncertain. But even
-then the name of ‘Street’ given by the successors of the Romans to the
-Roman paved way—the way made of _strata_—survives; and on the map of the
-East Riding we shall find Garrowby Street, Humber Street, Wharram le
-Street, and Thorpe le Street, each name being significant of a Roman
-road. In some instances the road itself has been uncovered, as in the
-building of Drewton Bridge 60 years ago, and in building operations at
-Londesborough Park, where it was found to be 24 feet wide, and to show
-plainly the marks of wheeled carriages.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At many places in the East Riding have been discovered evidences of
-Roman commerce and domestic life. Bronze and silver coins buried in
-vases or boxes have been unearthed at Cowlam, Warter, Nunburnholme,
-Skerne, Wetwang, and Brough. At the first-named place more than 10,000
-coins had been buried in a large black vase, the finds at Warter and
-Nunburnholme numbered about half that at Cowlam, and the Copper Hall
-Farm at Skerne owes its name to a similar find.
-
-So also Roman coins have been unearthed at Hornsea, Aldborough,
-Withernsea and Hollym, on the line of a coast road from Bridlington to
-Kilnsea, though the road itself has long since been washed away.
-
-[Illustration: ROMAN ROADS AROUND THE HUMBER]
-
-Of particular interest, as pointing to the fact that the road leading
-southward to Brough was an export trade route, is a ‘pig’ of lead
-weighing 9 stone 9 lbs. discovered twenty years ago in a field adjoining
-the road at South Cave. This bears in raised letters an inscription,
-which, written in uncontracted form as
-
- CAII IVLII PROTI BRITANNICUM LVTVDAE EX
- ARGENTO
-
-would mean in our tongue [The lead] of Caius Julius Protus, British
-[lead] from Lutuda, [prepared] from silver.
-
-[Illustration: ROMAN PIG OF LEAD FOUND AT SOUTH CAVE.]]
-
-The lead mines of Derby were famous in Roman times, and much lead was
-exported from Britain to Italy; so we may easily suppose that this
-particular pig was lost in transit to the place of shipment.
-
-As evidences of domestic life we have _hypocausts_, or underground
-heating-chambers for the supply of hot air and hot water to the rooms of
-Roman villas. These must once have been numerous—for no wealthy Roman
-could do without his warm bath—but so far only a few have been
-discovered. Again, we have examples of the Roman writing-implements,
-_styli_ by name, two of which, found at Brough, are illustrated below.
-
-[Illustration: ROMAN ‘PENS’ FOUND AT BROUGH.]
-
-When a Roman wished to write, his implements were very simple—a tablet
-of wax and a _stylus_. With the pointed end of the latter he scratched
-his letters on the surface of the wax; and if he made mistakes he had
-only to smooth them out by using the other end, which was flattened for
-the purpose. The Roman schoolboy probably found the stylus a very
-convenient instrument.
-
-[Illustration: RELICS OF ROMAN FEASTS FOUND AT EASINGTON.]
-
-Humbler evidences of domestic life have been discovered in the ‘kitchen
-middens,’ or refuse heaps, which the incursions of the sea have exposed
-at Easington and Kilnsea. From these have been obtained numberless
-oyster shells and fragments of pottery, the relics of dining-room feasts
-and kitchen breakages. The former are very interesting, because they
-show the method by which the Roman cook overcame the natural reluctance
-of the creatures within them to ‘come out of their shells.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-How very curiously such discoveries of ancient relics may be made is
-seen in the recent case of an inhabitant of South Ferriby. A half-witted
-man, by name Thomas Smith, but known locally by the more familiar name
-‘Coin Tommy,’ made it his practice for several years to walk along the
-shore of the river just after the periods of high tide, and to pick up
-all metal objects which he happened to see. Whether horse-shoe or
-brace-button did not matter to ‘Coin Tommy.’ Into his pocket went
-everything of metal which he found; and on his reaching home after each
-of these expeditions, his ‘finds’ were transferred to a stock of tin
-canisters, and packed away on the shelves of his cupboard never again to
-be looked at by their finder.
-
-Now it was known by Coin Tommy’s associates that his finds were not all
-horse-shoes and brace-buttons. But few of his friends expected that
-after his death would-be purchasers of these finds from distant parts of
-the country would vie with one another for their possession. Yet so it
-happened; for Coin Tommy’s miscellaneous collection included no fewer
-than 3000 Roman coins of gold, silver and bronze, and bronze brooches,
-finger-rings, bracelets, tweezers, spoons, earpicks and styli
-innumerable.
-
-The explanation of the occurrence of all these objects along this
-portion of the south bank of the Humber is that there had been at this
-spot a Roman cemetery, and that changes in the currents of the Humber
-have caused each high tide during the last few years to wash away some
-portion of the bank, and thus bring to light treasures buried sixteen
-centuries ago. And though South Ferriby is not in East Yorkshire, Coin
-Tommy’s finds may fitly be mentioned in the story of the East Riding;
-for it is probable that many of the owners of the bracelets and brooches
-and finger rings had lived at Petuaria, on the Yorkshire side of the
-river.
-
-Very interesting are the _fibulae_, or brooches, here discovered. Some
-have engraved upon them the name of their maker, AVCISSA, and one,
-having blue enamel let into the bronze surface, is constructed in the
-form of a fish.
-
-[Illustration: A ‘SAFETY PIN’ SIXTEEN HUNDRED YEARS OLD.]
-
-This may be taken as evidence of its wearer’s being a Christian, for in
-early days the fish was an emblem of Christianity. In other cases the
-brooch is made of a single piece of bronze wire, twisted to form a
-spiral spring, and having one of its ends flattened out and bent over to
-form a catch for the pin—an illustration of the oft-quoted saying ‘There
-is nothing new under the sun’; for here is an exact model of the
-safety-pin invented, or rather re-invented, in the nineteenth century.
-
-[Illustration: DESIGN OF THE PAVEMENT OF A ROMAN VILLA DISCOVERED AT
-HARPHAM.]
-
-To come back to the East Riding, our last mention of relics of Roman
-times shall be that of the mosaic pavement which was discovered in a
-ploughed field at Harpham in 1904. This pavement formed the floor of the
-_atrium_, or square hall of a Roman villa, and was in use probably about
-the year A.D. 300. It is constructed of small _tessarae_, or cubes, of
-red sandstone and chalk, with a few others of dark blue clay, red clay,
-and yellow limestone in the centre-piece of the design, and makes an
-ingenious piece of work in the form of a maze.
-
-This Roman pavement has been removed to Hull and reconstructed in the
-Hull museum. On it when found lay the flat sandstone slabs which had
-once formed the roof over it. Many iron nails with large flat heads were
-also found, and in one instance the nail remained fast in position
-through a hole in one of the slabs.
-
-
-
-
- VI.
- OUR ANCESTORS.
-
-
-From the time when Roman soldiers first penetrated into the territory of
-the Brigantes, the land which we name Holderness was troubled by the
-piratical attacks of a people from the other side of the North Sea; and
-in the early years of the second century the low-lying marshes of this
-district were inhabited by a tribe whom the Romans called PARISII. In
-our language they would be called FRISIANS.
-
-These early Frisian settlers have left us evidence of the places they
-chose for settlement in the village names Arram, Newsom, Hollym, and
-Ulrome. Their settlements would probably be peaceful, for the lands
-taken would be unoccupied pieces of ground rising just above the level
-of the surrounding marsh.
-
-But as time went on, the eastern and southern shores of Britain were
-assailed by numerous other bands of plunderers and would-be settlers;
-and in the later Roman times we find that, beside the army stationed at
-York under the command of the _Duke of Britain_ to repel the Picts and
-Scots of the north, there was an army under the _Count of the Saxon
-Shore_ whose duty it was to defend against invaders the coast from the
-Wash to the shores of Sussex.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Under Roman rule Britain as a whole prospered exceedingly. Agriculture
-and commerce were extended, so that we find the lead-merchants of Derby
-exporting lead to Italy, the chalk-merchants of Tadcaster exporting
-chalk, and the corn-merchants of the Rhine provinces importing corn from
-Britain in large quantities.
-
-But beside the export of lead and chalk and corn, another export of
-trade was going on—the export of the warlike youth of the country, who
-went to furnish with men the Roman armies in Spain and Gaul and Germany.
-Those left at home were forbidden by law to carry arms; so there is
-small wonder that when the Roman legions were withdrawn from Britain
-Roman towns were sacked and burnt, and Roman civilisation blotted out by
-hostile invaders. ‘Tragedies can still be guessed at from heaps of ashes
-and from skeletons of men, women and children found ... in crouching
-attitudes in hypocausts and other places of concealment; and the human
-bones frequently discovered at the bottoms of wells ... enable us to see
-the ruthless savage removing the traces of a murderous raid.’
-
-Petuaria, Praetorium, Derventio—all were sacked and burnt by the hosts
-of ENGLE who sailed up the Humber and the Derwent, or landed at
-Bridlington Bay. Roman houses were generally one-storied buildings
-roofed with tiles or thatch, and the destruction of a town by fire would
-be complete. It was also, in most cases, lasting; for the destroyers
-were men who cared not for a life passed within walls and
-fortifications. ‘They liked better to hear the lark sing than the mouse
-squeak.’ So the Roman cities, towns and camps ‘remained in ruins, to be
-haunted by the owl and the fox.’
-
-But an exception was made by the invaders in the case of the greatest of
-the Roman cities. Eboracum, Londinium and Lindum Colonia became the
-chief centres of life for the tribes that captured them; and thus the
-EBORACUM of the Romans became the EOFERWIC[6] of the Angles—a
-dwelling-place in the haunts of the wild boar. Smaller towns were
-blotted out; and their sites are known to us only by the finding of the
-family store of coins, or the personal treasures once placed for safety
-in a little recess in the wall or buried in a vase under the floor—to be
-overwhelmed with debris, and to remain undiscovered for many centuries.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- Pronounced almost as _Yóv-er-wik_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The hostile tribes who invaded Britain during the fifth and sixth
-centuries in such numbers as to conquer the whole country from the Isle
-of Wight to the Firth of Forth, except the mountainous districts of the
-west, were known as the _Engle_, the _Seaxe_ and the _Iute_.[7] Angles,
-Saxons and Jutes these are to us. The IUTE landed on the shores of, and
-established colonies in, Kent and the Isle of Wight, the former of which
-developed into a kingdom; the SEAXE established three kingdoms
-distinguished from one another in name by the adjectives South, East,
-and West; and separate bands of ENGLE formed the kingdoms of East
-Anglia, Mercia, and Northumbria.
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- _Eń-gla_, _Sék-sa_, and _Yóo-ta_, in pronunciation.
-
-It is with the last-named of these ‘Seven Kingdoms’ that we are most
-particularly concerned. The huge kingdom of Northumbria stretched
-northwards from the Humber to the Forth, and was at different times
-either ruled by one king or divided into two separate kingdoms—Deira,
-from the Humber to the Tees, and Bernicia, from the Tees to the Forth.
-
-How complete was the conquest of Britain by these invading tribes is
-seen in the account written by Bede, the eighth century monk of Jarrow:—
-
- They burned and harried and slew from the sea on the east to the sea
- on the west, and no one was able to withstand them.... Many of the
- miserable survivors were captured in waste places and stabbed in
- heaps. Some because of hunger gave themselves into the hands of
- their enemies, to be their slaves for ever in return for food and
- clothing; some departed sorrowfully over the sea; some remained
- fearfully in their native land, and with heavy hearts lived a life
- of want in the forests and waste places and on the high cliffs.
-
-The completeness of the conquest may be seen also in the fact that the
-language of the Britons was replaced by that of the invaders. The
-Angles, Saxons and Jutes spoke a language entirely different from the
-Keltic language of the Britons; but except in the Highlands of Scotland,
-in Wales, and in the Isle of Man—the parts to which the invaders did not
-penetrate—the language spoken to-day is ENGLISH and the name of the
-country itself is ENGLA-LAND, the land of the _Engle_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Very definite evidence of the places chosen by the Angles for settlement
-can be found on the map of the East Riding. Where the head of the
-household decided to ‘pitch his tent’ a piece of land was enclosed with
-a _tūn_,[8] or hedge, and the dwelling erected within it became his new
-_hām_,[8] or home. Such was the origin of our numerous towns and
-villages whose names now end in the syllables _ton_ and _ham_. In many
-cases the name of the family is enshrined in the name of the settlement.
-Thus the Locings—the sons of Loc—the Essings, the Brantings, the
-Eoferings, and the Hemings gave their names respectively to Lockington,
-Easington, Brantingham, Everingham, and Hemingbrough.
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- Pronounced, respectively, _toon_ and _hahm_.
-
-Besides the endings _ton_ and _ham_, others which tell of Anglian
-settlements are _worth_ and _bald_ (a dwelling), _cote_ or _coate_ (a
-mud cottage), _stead_ (a place), _brough_ or _borough_ (a fortified
-place), _wick_ (a village), _wold_ (woodland), _field_ (a place where
-trees have been felled), _ley_ (an open place in a wood), _mere_ (a
-lake), _fleet_ (the mouth of a river) and _ford_. Examples of all these
-can be found on a map of the East Riding.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In their burial customs the Angles were little different from the
-peoples whom they dispossessed. Like them they often cremated the bodies
-of their dead, afterwards collecting the charred bones and burying them
-in earthen vessels, accompanied with the weapons or personal treasures
-which were to be used again in the life to come. A man was buried with
-his spear and shield, or with the long one-edged knife whose
-name—_seax_—gave rise to the tribal name of the Saxons; a woman with her
-knife, shears, bronze box containing thread and needles, and beads of
-glass and amber; a child with his toys, such as the tiny tweezers, knife
-and shears found with a child’s bones in a burial vase at Sancton.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- IRON KNIFE AND BRONZE SPOON FROM AN ANGLIAN CEMETERY
- NEAR GARTON GATE HOUSE (1/2).
-]
-
-Not always, however, did the Angles cremate the bodies of their dead.
-More often they buried them near the surface of a British burial mound.
-From one of the mounds at Driffield, known as ‘Cheesecake Hill,’ was
-taken a necklace consisting of 219 beads, of which 141 were of amber,
-two of glass, three of carefully cut crystal, and five of cowrie shells.
-
-[Illustration: CHILD’S TOYS FOUND IN A BURIAL VASE AT SANCTON.]
-
-Not very far from Garton Gatehouse, and near the memorial to Sir Tatton
-Sykes some three miles farther north, were accidentally discovered two
-Anglian cemeteries, one of which contained more than sixty bodies of
-men, women and children. Here all but a few had been buried not with
-their limbs bent, as was the custom among the Britons, but with their
-limbs stretched out at full length; and all but one had been buried with
-their heads to the west. Probably these were Christian burials.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ‘FINDS’ IN AN ANGLIAN CEMETERY NEAR GARTON
- GATE HOUSE.
- A. Bronze ring (1/1). B. Silver brooch (1/1). C. Bone comb (1/2).
-]
-
-From this Anglian cemetery at Garton were obtained many implements and
-personal ornaments—iron knives and bronze spoons, bronze ankle-rings and
-buckles, necklaces of glass, amber and amethyst, silver ear-rings, a
-gold button set with a precious stone, and, luxury of luxuries, a bone
-comb. What a great advance is thus shown to have taken place in the
-centuries between the British burial at Garrowby and the Anglian burials
-at Garton! With the former were weapons of flint and bone; with the
-latter, implements of bronze and iron, and personal ornaments of silver,
-gold, and precious stones.
-
-
-
-
- VII.
- HOW THE MEN OF THE NORTH BECAME
- CHRISTIANS.
-
-
-During later Roman times the worship of God had been introduced into
-Britain, and the discovery of the Roman bronze brooch figured on page 38
-shows that Christianity had reached the shores of the Humber.
-
-But the invaders who were to give a new name to the country and to
-become our ancestors were heathens, and chief among their gods was
-Woden. We of the twentieth century still preserve, the names of Wōden,
-Tīw, the god of war, and Frīg, the wife of Wōden, in our ‘Wednesday,’
-‘Tuesday,’ and ‘Friday’—the _Wodenesdaeg_, _Tiwesdaeg_, and
-_Frigedaeg_[9] of our Anglo-Saxon ancestors.
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- Pronounced, respectively, _Wóh-den-ez-dag_, _Tée-wes-dag_, and
- _Frée-ga-dag_.
-
-In the passage from Bede’s _Ecclesiastical History of the English
-People_ which was partly translated in the last chapter, we are given an
-insight into the way in which the heathen Angles and Saxons despoiled
-the worshipping-places of the Christian Britons:—
-
- Everywhere priests were slain and murdered by the side of the
- altars. Bishops together with their people were slain without mercy
- by fire and sword, and there was none to give the rites of burial to
- those who were so cruelly murdered.
-
-Thus Britain became again a country entirely pagan, and it was not until
-the closing years of the sixth century that Christian missionaries from
-Rome once more set foot in it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-To understand the events leading up to the arrival of these
-missionaries, we must bear in mind that among the Angles and the Saxons
-slavery was a common custom. Social ranks of life were very marked, and
-all men belonged to one of three distinct classes. He who could trace
-back his descent from the gods ranked as an _eorl_,[10] or man of noble
-birth, and all others were divided into two classes—the free and the
-unfree. A free man, who had the privilege of owning land by virtue of
-his freedom, was known as a _ceorl_[10]; but he who was, body and soul,
-the property of another was called a _theow_,[10] or slave.
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- _É-orl_, _ké-orl_, and _thái-ow_ in pronunciation.
-
-Slaves must have been very numerous in our country during Saxon days;
-for wars were constantly being waged between the different tribes, and
-prisoners of war naturally became the slaves of their captors. So also,
-a man who had fallen into debt and who could not release himself became
-the theow of the man to whom he owed money; and when he became a slave,
-his wife and children became slaves likewise, and could be sold by his
-master. Worst of all, a free man had the right to sell his own children
-into slavery until they reached the age of seven.
-
-Now it so happened that this horrible custom of selling children as
-slaves was the direct cause of Christianity’s being re-introduced into
-our country. A regular export trade in English children was carried on,
-and about the year 580 there were one day standing exposed for sale in
-the market of Rome some boys of fair complexion and beautiful hair.
-Along the market chanced to pass a monk, who was struck with their
-light-coloured hair and blue eyes, so different from the dark hair and
-brown eyes of the South European peoples. On his asking the slave-dealer
-from what country they had been brought, he was told that they came from
-Britain, and that the people of that island had fair complexions.
-Unsatisfied with this information, he asked of what race they were, and
-was told that they were Angli.
-
-‘_Non Angli, sed Angeli_,’ replied the monk. ‘For their look is
-angelical, and it is meet that they should become joint heirs with the
-angels in heaven.’
-
-Then he sought further information concerning them.
-
-‘What do you call the province from which the boys were brought hither?’
-
-‘Deira,’ was the reply given him.
-
-‘Deira!’ said the monk; ‘that is well said. _De ira eruti_—they shall be
-snatched from the wrath of God!’
-
-Again he asked: ‘What is the name of their king?’
-
-‘Their king is named Aelle.’
-
-‘_Alleluia!_’ replied the monk, playing on the name of the king. ‘It is
-most fit that the love of God our Creator be sung in those parts.’
-
-Fifteen years after this conversation took place in the market of Rome,
-the monk had become famous as Pope Gregory the First. Then, in
-fulfilment of the plans he had formed for rescuing the Angli from the
-wrath of God, he chose a monk named Augustine to make a journey to
-Britain with some companions. Augustine, with his small band, set out,
-but on reaching Gaul was so dismayed by the reports of the savage
-character of the people to whom he was bidden to go, that he turned
-back, and sought release from the task which had been imposed upon him.
-This Gregory refused, reminding him that ‘the more difficult the task,
-the greater is the reward.’
-
-Augustine once more set out, and landed at Ebbsfleet, in the Isle of
-Thanet, in the Spring of the year 597. The king of Kent was then
-Aethelberht, who had married a Christian princess, the daughter of the
-king of the Franks. Thus the way had been made clear for the mission of
-Augustine, and Kent soon became a Christian kingdom.
-
-King Aelle of Northumbria died in 588, and thirteen years later his son
-Edwin became king. Edwin had married the daughter of Aethelberht of
-Kent, Aethelburga by name, and with her there came to Eoferwic Paulinus,
-a monk.
-
-For long this monk was unable to persuade Edwin to become a Christian;
-but in 626 there was called a meeting of the king’s _Witan_, or ‘wise
-men,’ each of whom was asked what he thought of the new doctrines then
-being preached by Paulinus.[11] After Coifi,[12] the king’s high priest,
-had expressed his opinion that the gods they worshipped had no power,
-one of the king’s counsellors broke in with these words:—
-
- ‘Thus it seems to me, O my king, that the life of man on earth, in
- comparison with the life unknown to us, is just as if you were
- sitting at table with your ealdormen and thegns in wintertide—when
- the fire was kindled and your hall made warm, while it rained and
- snowed outside—and there came a sparrow and quickly flew through the
- hall, coming in by one door and passing out by the other. During the
- time that he is passing through the hall he is safe from the
- winter’s storm, but it is only for the twinkling of an eye, and in
- the shortest space of time he passes from winter into winter.
-
- ‘So seems the life of man—it is ours for a little while, but what
- goes before it and what follows after we know not. Therefore if this
- teaching makes anything clearer and more certain, it is meet that we
- follow it.’
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- The place of meeting was either York or Londesborough.
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- _Kóh-i-fi_ in pronunciation.
-
-What an apt comparison—the life of a man is like the brief flight of a
-sparrow through a pleasant room! Many a time must those present when the
-words were spoken have seen a bewildered sparrow fly swiftly through the
-king’s hall, entering it to seek shelter from the storm without, and
-leaving it to seek safety from the smoke of the fire and the noise of
-men’s voices within. And what more suitable illustration of man’s
-ignorance of the hereafter could have been chosen? We can imagine its
-effect upon Coifi, who, on hearing the words of the king’s counsellor,
-exclaimed:—
-
- ‘I see clearly that what we have been worshipping is but naught. For
- the more earnestly I have sought the truth through our worship, the
- less I have found it. Therefore, O king, I now advise that we
- speedily destroy and burn with fire the altars which we hallowed
- without receiving any benefit.’
-
-Thus were King Edwin of Deira and his _Witan_ converted to the true
-religion, and the temple which contained the heathen altars destroyed.
-Coifi himself sought permission to be the first to cast down the idols
-it contained, and the king granted him weapons and a horse for the
-purpose. Riding to the temple, he first cast his spear against the
-altar, and then called to his companions that they should pull down the
-idols and burn them. ‘The place is yet pointed out,’ wrote Bede one
-hundred years later, ‘not far east from Eoferwic beyond the river
-Derwent, and is to-day called Godmundingaham, where the high priest,
-through the inspiration of the true God, cast down and destroyed the
-altars which he himself had previously hallowed.’
-
-‘Not far east from York, beyond the river Derwent’—such was Bede’s
-description of the place of this memorable deed. GODMUNDINGAHAM, he
-says, was its new name, and GOODMANHAM it is in our own day. Tradition
-says further that the present church, dedicated to All Saints, stands on
-the exact site of the heathen temple which Coifi, the heathen high
-priest, was the first to profane. But whether tradition speaks true we
-have no means of knowing.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- GOODMANHAM CHURCH.
- (_From an old Engraving_).
-]
-
- * * * * *
-
-The immediate results of the adoption of Christianity at Goodmanham were
-the building of a wooden church at York, and the baptism in it of King
-Edwin on Easter Day 627. This wooden church, dedicated to St. Peter, was
-shortly afterwards succeeded by a larger and loftier church of stone,
-which, in its turn, was destined to be succeeded by another yet larger
-and loftier—the Minster that we count to-day as one of the glories of
-Northern England.
-
-Six years later King Edwin was slain in battle against Penda, the
-heathen king of Mercia, and Cadwallon, a British king, ‘more fierce and
-cruel than the heathen, for he was a barbarian.’ The head of Edwin was
-taken to York and buried in the stone church of St. Peter which he had
-begun to build; and Paulinus, the first Archbishop of York, fled by sea
-southwards to Kent with Edwin’s widowed queen and their two children.
-Then for the whole of an ‘unhappy and godless’ year Northumbria was
-wasted by Cadwallon.
-
-At the end of the year Edwin’s nephew Oswald, with an army small but
-strengthened by belief in Christ, fought against Cadwallon. Now Oswald
-was ‘a man dear to God,’ and before the battle he caused to be made a
-hastily-constructed cross of wood, which was erected in a pit dug in
-front of his army. With his own hands he set up this cross and held it
-till his men had made it firm with heaped-up soil. Then did Oswald call
-to him all his men and gave them his command: ‘Let us all bend the knee
-and together ask the almighty, living, and true God to defend us with
-His mercy from this proud and cruel foe; for He knows that we are justly
-fighting for the safety of our people.’
-
-This they all did; and in the fight which followed, Oswald gained a
-complete victory, and Cadwallon was slain. The place of Oswald’s victory
-was called ‘Heavenfield’; and, says Bede, ‘many people to-day take chips
-and shavings from the wood of that holy cross and put them in water, and
-sprinkle the water on sick men and beasts, or give them it to drink, and
-they are at once cured.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-With the accession of King Oswald Christianity returned to the people of
-the north. This time, however, it was brought not by the monks of Rome,
-but by British monks from a monastery which had been established by
-Columba, an Irish saint, on the tiny island of Iona, lying off the west
-coast of Scotland.
-
-It was to this monastery that Oswald sent asking for teachers for his
-people. In reply there was sent him a monk of hard and stern nature, to
-whom the people would not gladly listen; so that he was able to effect
-little, but returned to Iona and reported that he could do nothing
-because the people of Northumbria were unteachable. ‘Was it not,
-brother,’ said one of his fellow monks, ‘you who were not sufficiently
-patient and gentle with those untaught men?’ The question made all
-present turn to the speaker, and they quickly decided that he was worthy
-to be sent as teacher to their friend, King Oswald.
-
-So came to Northumbria the saintly Aidan, whose success in converting
-the heathen Angles was due chiefly to the fact that as he taught so he
-himself lived. For, says Bede,
-
- he in no way desired or sought after the things that are of this
- world; but all the worldly goods that were given him by kings or by
- rich men he gladly gave to the poor and needy who came to him.
- Through all the land he travelled, visiting towns and wayside
- villages, and never on horseback, unless there were special need,
- but always on foot. And wheresoever he came and whomsoever he met,
- whether rich or poor, he turned to them. If they were unbelievers,
- then he invited them to believe in Christ; if they were believers he
- strengthened them in their belief, and with word and deed stirred
- them up to almsgiving and the performance of good deeds.
-
-By the labours of Aidan and his fellow monks the men of the north again
-became Christians; and such earnest Christians were they that they
-hallowed with the ‘Sign of the Cross’ the places at which they held
-their meetings for the purposes of government.
-
-A British burial mound was often found convenient for an Anglian _mōt_,
-or meeting,—whence the name ‘Moot Hill’—and its purpose was marked by a
-large trench in the form of a cross cut through the mound down into the
-chalk. The four arms of the trench were made roughly equal, and always
-pointed north, south, east, and west. Cowlam Cross, near which the
-village church was afterwards erected, is cut seven feet deep in the
-solid chalk, and another similar cross with arms twenty-one feet long
-has been discovered at Helperthorpe.
-
-[Illustration: TWO SIDES OF AN ANGLIAN CROSS SHAFT AT LEVEN.]
-
-Where no convenient mound existed, the place of meeting was sometimes
-marked in the opposite way. Instead of cutting a deep trench they raised
-at right angles two ridges of earth and stones, entirely surrounded by a
-shallow ditch.
-
-Such crosses have been named _Embankment Crosses_, and eleven have been
-discovered within a radius of fifteen miles from Driffield. A favourite
-name for them among the country folk is that of _bield_, or shelter,
-because they were supposed to have been built up to serve as shelters
-for the cattle. There is one near East Heslerton, known locally as the
-‘Old Bield,’ the arms of which measure 45 yards each, north and south,
-and 50 yards east and west. Another formerly existed near the site of
-the ancient village of Haywold. Ploughing operations have caused
-this—and probably many others—to be destroyed; but its name, ‘Christ
-Cross,’ is still preserved.
-
-With the introduction of Christianity there took place great development
-of the arts of peace in home and village life. ‘The English forged the
-ploughshare rather than the sword. They built weirs, and fished, and set
-up watermills by the rivers. Boat-building, brewing, leather-tanning,
-pottery, dyeing, weaving, the working of gold and silver, and
-embroidery, grew and soon began to flourish. The days of merchandise
-succeeded the days of plunder; life became gentler, nearer in spirit to
-the homes of England as we now conceive them.’
-
-
-
-
- VIII.
- THE COMING OF THE NORTHMEN.
-
-
-Two hundred years pass onwards from the coming of Saint Aidan to
-Northumbria, and we are again among scenes of famine, sword, and fire.
-Let us see what the records of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles have to tell.
-
- A.D. 787. In these days first came three ships of the Northmen, and
- when the bailiff rode down to them, and would take the men
- to the king’s town—for he knew not who they were—he was
- slain. Those were the first ships of the Danish men that
- came to the land of the Angles.
-
- A.D. 833. In this year King Egbert fought against the crews of
- thirty-five ships at Charmouth, and there was great
- slaughter, and the Danish men possessed the battlefield.
-
- A.D. 851. In this year the heathen men first remained over the
- winter, and in the same year came three hundred and fifty
- ships into the mouth of the Thames, and broke into
- Canterbury and London, and put to flight Beorhtwulf, King
- of Mercia.
-
- A.D. 867. In this year the heathen army went from East Anglia over
- the mouth of the Humber to York ... and there was immense
- slaughter of the Northumbrians, some within York, and some
- without, and the survivors made peace with the heathen
- army.
-
-These records show that the history of the fifth and sixth centuries was
-being repeated at the close of the eighth century, and during the ninth.
-They tell us of the inroads of a new race of free-booters, men of
-Northern Europe—coming from Denmark, Norway, and Sweden—men among whom
-was a passionate love of the sea and an overwhelming desire for the
-plunder of other lands. Sea-pirates they are now often called, but we
-must remember that among them what we should call piracy was looked upon
-as the most honourable career in life.
-
-Each year as Spring came round these Danish sea-rovers would gather
-together their men, take advantage of the north-east winds, and sail
-away to Britain, or the northern coast of France, or even to the shores
-of the Mediterranean Sea, and return laden with plunder on the coming of
-Autumn.
-
-One thing the records which have been quoted make very clear. In 787
-‘first came three ships of the Northmen’; less than fifty years later
-King Egbert of Wessex was fighting against the crews of thirty-five
-vessels; and in 851 the fleet of ships entering the Thames numbered no
-fewer than three hundred and fifty. What does this astonishing increase
-in numbers mean? It can mean only one thing—that the Northmen found
-their marauding expeditions to England profitable. England, in other
-words, was worth plundering. In fact, England was so prosperous a
-country, and its churches and monasteries contained such treasures of
-gold and silver, that the Northmen found it worth their while to build
-more ‘long-ships’—as their ships of war were called—in order that they
-might plunder it more completely.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But as time passed away the Northmen came not merely to plunder and
-return home, but to seek new homes in the fertile lands of Britain. In
-later records we find mention of peace being made between the Angles and
-the Danes without the fighting of a battle:—
-
- A.D. 872. In this year went the heathen army into Northumbria. They
- also took up winter quarters at Torksey, and the Mercians
- made peace with the invaders.
-
- A.D. 876. In this year Healfdene divided the Northumbrian land, and
- the Danes gave themselves up to ploughing and tilling the
- land.
-
-Two years after the last record Alfred, King of the West Saxons, made
-with Guthrum, the Danish leader, a treaty by which all Northern and
-Eastern England—all England, that is, north of Watling Street, the Roman
-road leading from London to Chester—was ceded to the Danes to be ruled
-according to their laws. Henceforth this district becomes known as the
-DANELAGH.
-
-So history goes on repeating itself. For just as the Angles and Saxons
-had warred against the Britons, and then made settlements and turned to
-forest-clearing and ploughing, sowing and reaping; so a few centuries
-later came the Danes to make war upon them in turn, and finally to take
-possession of uncleared and hitherto unclaimed lands whereon to make for
-themselves new homes.
-
-Very numerous settlements were made by the Danes in the part of England
-known as the Danelagh, and most of these may be recognised by the
-village names of to-day. What to an Angle were a _tūn_ and a _wīc_[13]
-were to a Dane a _bȳr_[13] and a _thorp_. Hence the name-endings _by_
-and _thorp_ denote respectively the sites of a Danish farmhouse and a
-Danish village; and it is interesting to pick out such names on a
-large-scale map, and see how they occur in groups or succeed one another
-along the line of an old highway.
-
-Footnote 13:
-
- Pronounced _week_ and _beer_, respectively.
-
-Thus in the East Riding, within a radius of five miles of the Anglian
-settlements of Bridlington and Hessle, we shall find the Danish names
-Hilderthorpe, Wilsthorpe, Fraisthorpe, Haisthorpe, Caythorpe, Carnaby,
-Bessingby, Sewerby; and Anlaby, Willerby, Skidby, Wauldby, Tranby,
-Ferriby. Other groups will be found round York, Malton, and Pocklington.
-The best example of the occurrence of a succession of Danish names along
-the line of an ancient highway is to be found on the other side of the
-Humber. Here, along the road from the Humber to the old Roman station at
-Caistor, passing through the Anglian settlements of Horkstow and Brigg,
-there are no fewer than fifteen villages whose names end in _by_, and
-one of them has in addition the suffix _Thorpe_.[14]
-
-Footnote 14:
-
- There are more Danish place names in Lincolnshire than in all the rest
- of England south of the Humber. North of the Humber the largest number
- is to be found in the East Riding.
-
-[Illustration: DANISH SETTLEMENTS IN A PORTION OF NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE.]
-
-Place names ending in _by_ and _thorp_ by no means exhaust the list of
-Danish settlements. A complete list of name-endings which are Norse in
-origin would include the following:—
-
- beck a stream.
- by a farmstead.
- fell a hillside.
- force or foss a waterfall.
- garth an enclosure.
- gill a ravine.
- holm } an island, or a piece of firm land rising
- holme } out of the surrounding marsh.
- how a hill.
- lund a sacred grove.
- ness a headland.
- scar a cliff.
- tarn a small mountain lake.
- thorp or thorpe a village.
- thwaite a forest clearing.
- toft an enclosure.
- wick or wyke a bay or creek.
-
-Examples of all these can be found on the map of Yorkshire, and most of
-them occur in the East Riding. But it must be remembered that the modern
-place name is not always a sure guide in this direction. Names have in
-many cases changed during the course of centuries. For example, the name
-‘Nunburnholme,’ which looks Danish in origin, was originally _Brunham_;
-while, on the other hand, ‘Kilnsea’ and ‘Withernsea’ have replaced the
-older Danish names _Hornes_ and _Witfornes_.
-
-The two name-endings which conclude the list given above are very
-interesting, because it was the Danish word _vīk_[15] that gave rise to
-the name by which the sea-rovers became generally known in our country.
-_Vikings_, or men of the creeks—so they were called; and so may we call
-them, if we remember that their letter _v_ stood for the sound of our
-_w_, and that their name is to be pronounced _Wik-ings_ and not, as it
-is so commonly mispronounced, _Vi-kings_.
-
-Footnote 15:
-
- Pronounced exactly like the Anglian word _wīc_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A hardy and a daring race were these old Vikings. There were no
-‘wasters’ and few ‘slackers’ among them. When a Viking’s son was born,
-the babe was shown to its father for his approval or disapproval. If the
-father liked the look of his babe, and thought that it showed signs of
-growing up into a manly and sturdy boy, it was taken back to its mother
-to be ‘raised.’ But woe betide the babe that looked puny and sickly, or
-that showed signs of deformity! The father’s orders were that it should
-be taken outside his dwelling and exposed to the cold so that it died.
-
-‘What a cruel custom!’ you will think. Yes, so it was. But the Vikings
-lived in an age when men looked upon things very differently from the
-way in which we look upon them. In a cruel age the Northmen were so
-cruel, and the fear that they inspired in the hearts of the people whose
-lands they plundered was so great, that the monks inserted in their
-Litany the prayer:—
-
- A FURORE NORMANNORUM, LIBERA NOS, DOMINE!
- (From the fury of the Northmen, O Lord, deliver us!)
-
-There is little wonder that, with such a rearing as the children of the
-Vikings received, a race of warriors grew up among whom was the
-unwritten law that ‘a Dane who wished to acquire the character of a
-brave man should always attack two enemies, stand firm and receive the
-attack of three, retire only one pace from four, and flee from no fewer
-than five.’
-
-Social distinctions among the Danes were similar to those among the
-Angles. In place of the Anglian _eorl_, _ceorl_, and _theow_ were the
-Danish _jarl_,[16] _karl_, and _thrall_; with this difference—that the
-Danish _jarl_ was a military commander and not a man who could pride
-himself on being descended from the gods. It is from the word ‘jarl’
-that our English word ‘earl’ has arisen.
-
-Footnote 16:
-
- Pronounced _yarl_
-
- * * * * *
-
-Like their cousins the Angles, the Northmen were heathens when they
-invaded our shores.
-
-The Wōden, Tīw, and Frīg of the Angles were the Odin, Tȳr and Freya of
-the Danes. But their greatest god was Thor, the Thunderer, whose name
-will be recognised in the name for the fifth day of the week.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- DANISH CROSS HEAD AT NORTH
- FRODINGHAM.
-]
-
-Like the Angles, also, the heathen Northmen eventually became
-Christians, and evidences of their Christianity have come down to us. In
-the vicarage garden at North Frodingham is a broken cross head of Danish
-tenth-century workmanship, and in the churchyard at Nunburnholme is
-preserved a broken cross shaft sculptured with figures of men, women,
-children, and animals.
-
-But the most interesting relic of Danish Christianity is a sun-dial now
-built high up in one of the interior walls of the church at Aldbrough.
-Round it, in Anglian letters, is the inscription:—
-
- ULF LET ARÆRAN CYRICE FOR HANUM AND
- GUNWARA SAULA.
-
-Put into modern English this would read:—
-
- Ulf caused to be built a church for himself and for
- the soul of Gunvör.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _ALDBROUGH_
- _Danish Sun-Dial Built into the Wall of Aldbrough Church._
-]
-
-Though written in Anglian letters, the names Ulf and Gunvör are both
-Danish names, and the word ‘Hānum’ is likewise a purely Danish word. Who
-this Ulf was we do not know, for the name was a common one. One jarl Ulf
-married the sister of King Cnut, and another was the owner of lands at
-Aldbrough and Brandesburton during the reign of King Edward the
-Confessor.
-
-
-
-
- IX.
- IN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD 892.
-
- A PICTURE OF LIFE IN THE EAST RIDING DRAWN FROM
- DETAILS IN THE OLD NORSE SAGAS.
-
-
-The year of Our Lord is eight hundred and ninety-two, and the scene lies
-a couple of miles north of the village of Hessle, on the Yorkshire bank
-of the Humber.
-
-Twenty-five years before this date a heathen army had crossed over the
-Humber on their march to York, and a good number of broken heads and
-hewn-off limbs had been the result of their visit to the province of
-Deira. Then, like sensible people, the invaders and the invaded had come
-to terms. Villages of the Angles were not too numerous in the district.
-At any rate there was plenty of unoccupied land lying around them, and
-this was just what the invaders wanted; for their brothers and sisters
-had grown so numerous in the lands across the sea that those who had
-left their homes had no great desire to go back to them.
-
-Among the band of heathen Northmen had been a jarl named Anlaf, and
-between Anlaf and the ealdorman at Beverley it had been agreed that the
-former should choose land whereon to settle his men somewhere in the
-four miles of unoccupied country lying between Hessle and Cottingham.
-Also his men were to be allowed to choose wives from among the maidens
-of these two villages or the neighbouring ones of Weighton and
-Riplingham. In return the Northmen were to give their attention to
-clearing and tilling the land they had chosen, and to conduct
-themselves, as far as could reasonably be expected, in a manner harmless
-to the people of all the surrounding villages.
-
-Such had been the beginnings of Anlafsbyr. The land for settlement was
-chosen—nice dry land on rising ground with a natural drainage to the
-river—rough shelters for the men were first made, and the ground was
-then marked out for the building of Anlaf’s hall. Three times was the
-ground measured for this, and each time after the first the measurements
-proved slightly larger than the previous ones. This boded good luck, and
-the work was therefore entered upon with spirit.
-
-In the course of time the building of the hall was finished. Then came
-the rewards to Anlaf’s men for their labours. The surrounding land was
-marked out and divided up, each karl receiving a portion, large or small
-in accordance with his own worth; and a considerable portion was left
-over to belong to all the karls in common. The thralls of course got no
-land—they did not count as men but as cattle. Probably some of them were
-exchanged with the ceorls of Hessle for four-legged cattle.
-
-In three years’ time Anlafsbyr was a thriving settlement. The omens had
-promised good luck and the good luck came. Meanwhile Ketil, the son of
-Anlaf, chose himself a wife from Riplingham. So did others for
-themselves; and some, not finding the looks of the maidens of Hessle and
-Beverley and Weighton and Riplingham to their liking, went farther
-afield and made raids on the villages of Hotham and Sancton, only to
-retire with several cracked heads and broken arms for their pains.
-
-But this was an exception to the general rule. In most cases the Anglian
-maidens were quite willing to wed the handsome strangers, even if their
-language was at first difficult to understand, and their methods of
-wooing somewhat rough and unpolished. In fact they rather approved of
-the roughness than disapproved of it, and to be singled out for one’s
-good looks and carried off by one of those bold Northmen was something
-for a maiden to be proud of.
-
-The result of the frequent marriages between the Northmen and the Angles
-quickly became apparent. Husband and wife spoke languages sufficiently
-alike for one to make out the other’s meaning in most cases. But the
-children were, quite naturally, brought up to speak the tongue of their
-mother and not that of their father; so that as time went on the
-language of the Northmen disappeared, or rather became merged in the
-language of the Angles. Thus although Anlaf and his karls spoke the
-Norse tongue, their grandchildren spoke the English. But for all that,
-they lived in the Danelagh, where Danish customs and Danish laws were
-observed.
-
-When Anlaf died in 871, Ketil Anlafsson began to rule his father’s
-settlement. His two sons, Ulf and Hrafn, went, as custom decreed they
-ought to go, on Viking raids as soon as they reached the manly age of
-fifteen or sixteen. Four years of these raids sufficed to prove the
-prowess of Ulf Ketilsson, and his right eventually to succeed his father
-as jarl. Then he settled down to help his father, who had become a man
-past middle age; but Hrafn his brother continued at sea. In 890 Ketil
-Anlafsson died, and his son Ulf was proclaimed jarl. Hrafn was then
-away. But now in the Spring of 892 he has just returned, to be honoured
-by all men as the first among them to make the perilous voyage to an
-island lying far to the north-west, whose name was spoken of as
-‘Iceland.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-Great therefore are the rejoicings at Anlafsbyr. Jarl Ulf has ridden at
-full speed to the river-shore on hearing that three ships have been
-sighted coming up the river with red, blue and green sails like those of
-his brother’s ships. Before he leaves home he has given instructions to
-his wife Helga that the hall is to be got ready for a great feast in
-case the ships are his brother’s. A messenger has quickly brought back
-the good tidings, and preparations are being pushed on rapidly, that the
-welcome Hrafn and his men receive shall be one fitting to the occasion.
-
-Let us now glance round the hall built by Anlaf and see what it is like.
-
-Picture to yourself an oblong hall built entirely of wood, and with a
-steep roof supported by upright and cross beams. It is built east and
-west and at each end is a door, one the men’s door, the other the
-women’s door. Along each side there is a low aisle, which is partitioned
-off into small sleeping-rooms for the jarl’s family and guests.
-
-Down the middle of the hall are long stone hearths on which are
-smouldering three fires of wood and turf. Above each fire is a hole in
-the roof through which the smoke makes its escape after eddying round
-the rafters, which are covered with a thick layer of soot. The windows
-are high up, of just sufficient size for a man’s body to be able to
-squeeze through, and the holes are covered with the membrane obtained
-from the inside of a cow, which is almost as transparent as glass.
-
-Along the hall will be two long tables, constructed of planks resting
-upon trestles. At the middle of the south side stands the high seat of
-the jarl, and opposite it is another which is always reserved for the
-most honoured guest. Thralls in white woollen clothes are now running
-hither and thither placing the long tables in position, and coaxing the
-smouldering fires into a big roaring blaze; for the nights are still
-very cold.
-
-Adjoining the hall are numerous other buildings—the women’s sleeping
-rooms and the kitchens and storehouses. The last two are a scene of
-bustle. Bondwomen are hurrying about in all directions. If you look at
-this one you will perhaps notice that she has lost an ear. It has been
-cut off for an act of pilfering, but she tries to hide her loss by
-arranging her hair over the place where the ear should be. In the
-distance is another bondwoman who cannot possibly hide the marks of her
-punishment. Three times has she been caught pilfering, with the result
-that she now has to manage as best she can without an ear at all and
-without a nose.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But outside there is a great noise of shouting and the trampling of
-horses and of men. Hrafn Ketilsson has arrived with his men, and welcome
-is being given him by Jarl Ulf and his wife, Helga Eiriksson. It is not
-yet time for the meal now being prepared, and Hrafn declares that he is
-not hungry one little bit; so sports are hastily arranged on the green
-in front of the hall. There shall be a great horse-fight; for two of
-Ulf’s karls have horses which have been thoroughly trained to fight, and
-neither of which has yet been beaten.
-
-The horse-fight takes place accordingly. Each karl makes his horse rise
-on its hind legs and attack the other, biting it wherever it can. As the
-contest goes on, the horses get enraged and their masters incite them by
-blows on their hind quarters. Finally one of the horses gives in and
-runs away, leaving the other the victor.
-
-Then there is a running contest. Hrafn the Viking has among his troop a
-man from Ireland, named Gilli, whom he wagers to beat any horse in
-speed. A dozen horses are immediately offered, and the best of them, a
-horse belonging to a karl named Hrolf, is chosen. Gilli will race
-Hrolf’s horse; and if the horse wins, its owner shall have a gold ring
-given him by Hrafn. For half a mile they race along, Gilli being all the
-while at the horse’s shoulder, and the result being therefore a dead
-heat.
-
-‘But,’ says Hrolf, ‘you had hold of the strap of my saddle-girth, and my
-horse pulled you along.’ ‘Then,’ replies Gilli, ‘we will have it over
-again.’
-
-This time Gilli starts a yard in front of the horse, and at the end of
-the half-mile he is still the same distance in front. ‘Did I this time
-take hold of your saddle-girth?’ asks Gilli. ‘No,’ is Hrolf’s answer,
-‘but my horse had no chance. You were just in front of him all the way,
-and I was afraid of riding you down.’
-
-‘Very well,’ says Gilli, ‘we will have the race over again.’
-
-So for the third time they race, and this time the horse is given twenty
-yards start. But Gilli catches Hrolf up, passes him, stands still till
-the horse is again in front, then starts again, and finishes ten yards
-in front. There is tremendous cheering, and Jarl Ulf gives Gilli a gold
-ring of weight equal to that offered by his brother to the horse’s
-owner.
-
-Next a game of ball. Sides are chosen, and a hard wooden ball and two
-wooden bats are brought forth. The bats are given to one man on each
-side. The ball is thrown up into the air, and one of the batsmen hits it
-with all his force in the direction of the other. The second batsman
-tries to hit it back and not let it pass him, but before he can hit it
-he is pulled down by the men of the other side. So the game goes on. It
-is by no means a gentle game, for the occasion is a special one and all
-the players are on their mettle. When ‘time’ is called and bruises and
-wounds are reckoned up, it is found that the players have sustained
-three broken arms, a broken thigh-bone, and the loss of one eye. Lesser
-injuries go uncounted.
-
- * * * * *
-
-By this time the feast is ready, and so are the men. If good appetites
-are any indication of good health, the uninjured men are all in a state
-of very vigorous health. Jarl Ulf Ketilsson leads the way to his high
-seat, and Hrafn the Viking is shown to the high seat opposite. Swords,
-shields, and axes are hung on nails driven into the walls above the side
-benches. By the side of Ulf sits his wife Helga. The scene is one of
-varied colour, the blue, red, green, scarlet, and purple kirtles of the
-freemen contrasting strongly with the white garments of the thralls who
-serve the food.
-
-Huge joints of beef and pork are brought in from the kitchens, and there
-are numerous calls for the former; for there has been little or no fresh
-meat since the beginning of last November, and men’s stomachs have a way
-of getting tired of salted pig, when they have fed on it for five months
-without a break. Plates are of wood, fingers serve for forks, and each
-man cuts off with his knife-dagger the amount of meat and of bread that
-he feels himself capable of eating. Ale is served to the jarl and his
-family in bullock’s horns adorned with gold and silver bands, to the
-others in wooden drinking-cups. Half-way through the feast Helga leaves
-her seat, fills a horn with wine, and offers it to Hrafn. As the Viking
-drains it at a draught there is a great cheer, which takes a long time
-to die down.
-
-So the meal goes on. There is little variety in the food, but there is
-plenty of it, and that is the important thing where hungry men are
-concerned. As they eat, all are talking. This karl is describing to
-another how he has just been ‘had’ by a fellow at Weighton, who sold him
-a thrall guaranteed sound in wind and limb. But the thrall cannot run
-twice round Jarl Ulf’s hall without getting the stitch. His new master
-is vehemently explaining that he intends to get his money back.
-
-Another is telling how he has seen a karl’s wife and her bondwoman take
-the ordeal at Hundmansbyr. The bondwoman had accused her mistress of
-wrong-doing, and the mistress had challenged her bondwoman to go to the
-ordeal.
-
-So the priests had got ready a bucket of boiling water, at the bottom of
-which were placed two sacred stones. In sight of all, the mistress had
-plunged in her hand and brought up one of the stones. And her arm showed
-no signs of a hurt. Then the bondwoman had attempted the same. But her
-arm had been frightfully scalded. Thus the innocent had been
-distinguished from the guilty, and the bondwoman had been taken to the
-nearest ditch and drowned.
-
-Meanwhile Hrafn the Viking’s karls have been pouring into eager ears
-tales of their adventures among the snow and ice of the seas far away to
-the north. One has a walrus tooth to show, and others have the claws of
-a huge white beast that can walk on its hind legs and can squeeze a
-man’s body in its arms till every bone is broken. They have the skin of
-one of these fearsome creatures on board down at the river-shore,
-intended by their Viking chief as a present to his brother’s wife. A
-fine bed it will make, but it cost the lives of three men to obtain.
-Would their listeners hear wonders? There are plenty to tell. In the
-seas from which they have returned they sailed for four days without a
-night, while the sun went round and round in a great fiery ring.
-
-While this talk is going on, a shame-faced fellow is trying to slink in
-unobserved at the men’s door. But he is greeted with cries of
-‘Nithing!’[17] and receives a volley of beef bones that first bowls him
-over and then makes him depart more hurriedly than he had come in. Some
-of Hrafn’s men follow him, for he has been guilty of stealing from a
-comrade on one of the ships. His head will be shaven to-morrow, then
-dipped in tar and covered with eider down, so that he may remember for
-the future that honourable karls do not steal the belongings of their
-comrades.
-
-Footnote 17:
-
- This is the old Norse word for our ‘Villain!’
-
-Tables are eventually cleared much more quickly than they were filled.
-Places are now changed. The jarl and his brother play chess, others play
-at dice. A wrestling-match is soon fixed up, in which the combatants are
-strapped together at the waist and each will try to throw the other.
-
-Following this there is a tug-of-war across the fire. An ox-hide is
-brought in and an end seized by each of two men standing on opposite
-sides of the hearth stones. Each tries to pull the other into the fire.
-But they are fairly equally matched, and for some time neither succeeds.
-Then tempers rise. The shouts of the supporters of each urge them on,
-and one succeeds in pulling the other on to the fire. As he has drunk
-deeply of strong ale, he is not content with his victory, but throws the
-ox-hide over his fallen opponent and then jumps upon him to mark his
-defeat. When the defeated karl’s friends succeed in pulling him out of
-the fire, he is, naturally, somewhat scorched.
-
-Now comes in a juggler. He can perform many tricks, and among them is
-that of keeping three daggers in motion, so that one is always in his
-hand and the two others in the air. Further, he offers to show his skill
-on the following day by stepping from oar to oar on the outside of a
-ship while it is being rowed. He will step thus from stem to stern and
-back again, and moreover will keep his three daggers moving all the
-time. The challenge is accepted and he shall have his choice of presents
-from Hrafn if he can succeed in doing what he says he will.
-
-Challenges are in the air, it seems. Here is Bersi, one of Hrafn’s
-karls, challenging Egil, a karl of Ulf, because he finds that while he
-has been away from home Egil has married the maiden to whom he was
-betrothed. And Bersi is not at all pleased with the course of events, so
-he has challenged the other karl for his wife. To-morrow they will go to
-the _holmgang_,[18] and fight it out; and if Egil is not the victor, he
-will lose his wife and Bersi will gain one.
-
-Footnote 18:
-
- The _holmgang_ was a duel fought according to fixed rules on a piece
- of ground specially marked out for the purpose. In earlier times it
- was fought on a _holm_, or island, whence the name.
-
-The excitement caused by Bersi’s challenge is dying down when further
-excitement arises from the entrance of a karl with news of a strange
-sight to be seen in the sky. It had been a dark, cloudy night, but
-suddenly the clouds broke up and there between two clouds appeared a
-star with a long light streaming from it like a tail of fire. It is
-there for all to see if they don’t believe him.
-
-So a rush is made for the men’s door and the hall is left deserted.
-Outside there are groups of wondering men looking upwards at a bright
-‘hairy star,’ and asking one another with bated breath what evil fortune
-to their land this marvellous sight portends.
-
-
-
-
- X.
- TWO FAMOUS BATTLES OF LONG AGO.
-
-
-In 901 died Alfred, King of the West Saxons, and Edward, his son,
-succeeded him, to be succeeded in turn by his son Aethelstan in the year
-925. King Alfred had, it will be remembered, agreed with Guthrum the
-Dane to divide England into two parts, one of which each of them should
-rule.
-
-But Alfred’s son Edward enlarged his power so greatly that he was in 924
-‘chosen to father and lord by the Scots King and all the Scots people,
-by all the men of Northumbria—both English and Danes and Northmen—and by
-the King of the Strathclyde Welsh.’ To Aethelstan was accorded still
-greater honour, for it fell to his lot to be the first king crowned as
-‘King of England.’
-
-Now in the reign of Aethelstan there took place the greatest battle that
-had yet been fought between the English and the Northmen. The compact of
-Edward’s reign was short-lived; for in 937 the Danes of Northumbria
-entered into a league with Constantine, King of the Scots, and Owen,
-King of the Strathclyde Britons, against the King of England. Their
-league was joined also by two Norse Kings from Ireland, named Anlaf, one
-of whom had married the daughter of Constantine. To meet these
-disturbers of the peace Aethelstan marched north, and at a place known
-as BRUNANBURH the famous battle between them was fought.
-
-So great was the victory here won by King Aethelstan that the chronicler
-who records it bursts into song when he tells how
-
- Aethelstan the King, the lord of Earls,
- The bestower of gifts, and his brother also,
- Edmund the Prince, life-long honour
- Won in combat, with the edges of swords,
- At Brunanburh.
-
- All day, from the rising of ‘God’s candle’ until its setting, went
- on the fight; so that the battlefield streamed with blood, and many
- a Northman lay on the ground struck down with spears. Weary and
- sated with the fight fled the Scots, pursued by the West Saxons with
- swords new-sharpened on the grindstone. To none of those who, doomed
- to death, accompanied Anlaf over the sea did the Mercians refuse the
- hard hand-play. On the battlefield there lay five young kings put to
- sleep by the sword, with seven of Anlaf’s jarls and an uncounted
- host of shipmen and of Scots. Then fled the Northmen to the shore of
- the yellow flood; and so also fled Constantine, who had left behind
- his son, borne down with many wounds.
-
- Thus departed in their nailed ships those of the Northmen whom the
- spears had left alive, and the King and his brother sought again the
- West Saxon land, exulting in victory. Behind them they left the
- dusky-coated kite, the swart, horny-beaked raven, the white-tailed
- eagle, and the grey wolf—all eager to feast upon the corpses of the
- slain.
-
-Such is the picture of the battlefield painted in words by the Saxon
-chronicler. And when we read it we wonder to ourselves: ‘Where was
-Brunanburh, at which this great battle was fought?’ But the question is
-one to which no certain answer can be given. The name ‘Brunanburh’ is
-lost, and the nearest approach to it among the village names of to-day
-is Bromborough, on the Cheshire shore of the Mersey.
-
-This may possibly be the site of the battle; but it is curious that two
-writers of old chronicles, both living within two hundred years of the
-actual date of the battle, agree in saying that the Norse fleet invaded
-England by the Humber. So also said the Bridlington monk, Peter of
-Langtoft, who certainly ought to know; and a Lincolnshire hermit, who
-translated Peter’s Norman-French into English, is very definite about
-it:—
-
- At Brunesburgh on Humber thei gan tham assaile,
- Fro morn unto even lasted that bataile.
-
-If Brunanburh did lie ‘on Humber,’ on which side of the river was it?
-Some claim that the battle took place at Kirkburn near Driffield, and
-others put it at Little Weighton, nearer the river.
-
-But one thing is certain. King Aethelstan and his men must have marched
-north by either the Watling Street or the Ermin Street. If the Norse
-fleet did come into the Humber, he must have come north by the Ermin
-Street, and his army could hardly have crossed the river under the
-circumstances. However much, therefore, we should like to assert that
-the greatest battle of olden times was fought in the East Riding of
-Yorkshire, it would be wiser not to do so, but to let our somewhat
-despised sister-county of Lincolnshire have the benefit of the doubt.
-
-A glance at the map given at the end of this book will show about four
-miles from the Humber, on the road from Barton to Caistor, a village
-named Burnham. At this village there are still to be seen the remains of
-an ancient entrenchment enclosing a space of about 64 acres. One of the
-half-dozen ancient spellings of the name of the manor of Burnham is
-_Brunan_, and the suffix _burh_ means ‘a fortified place.’
-
-Further, men’s bones, Saxon coins, and a Saxon sword have been ploughed
-up on the adjoining fields; while just south of Burnham there was in the
-eighteenth century a road known as ‘Bloody Gate’ and just north of it
-there is still a ‘Dead Man Dale.’ So we shall have to concede that the
-southern bank of the ‘yellow flood’ has some considerable claims to the
-possession of the site of the famous battle of Brunanburh.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Let us pass on to the middle of the next century. For twenty-eight years
-England had been ruled by Danish Kings, when, in 1042, the Saxons came
-into their own again and the third Saxon Edward began to rule in London.
-
-But Danish jarls still ruled at JORVIK[19] and Jarl Siward, the eighth
-of these, was the greatest of them all. In 1054 he took a large army and
-a fleet into Scotland, where he fought against the Scots in
-Aberdeenshire, and slew their king Macbeth. Siward’s son Osbern was also
-slain in the battle, and when news of his son’s death was brought to the
-old jarl, he rejoiced that his son had died a worthy death. In
-Shakespeare’s play _Macbeth_ it is put thus. Ross, a Scots nobleman, has
-just broken to Siward the news that his son ‘has paid a soldier’s
-debt’:—
-
- _Siward._ Had he his hurts before?
-
- _Ross._ Ay, on the front.
-
- _Siward._ Why then, God’s soldier be he!
- Had I as many sons as I have hairs,
- I would not wish them to a fairer death.
-
-Footnote 19:
-
- Pronounced _Yór-wik_.
-
-One year later Siward’s own death took place, and these were his words
-when he felt that he was fated to die not on the battlefield but in his
-bed:—
-
- ‘I feel shame not to have fallen in one of the many battles that I
- have fought, and to have been preserved to die like a cow. Close me
- in my mail of proof, gird my sword on me, fit the helmet on my head,
- and put a shield in my left hand and a gilded axe in my right, that
- I may die like a soldier.’
-
-So died the lord of the manors of Barmston and Holmpton, and the
-greatest of the Anglo-Danes of Northumbria. After his death his earldom
-was given by King Edward to Tostig, the son of Earl Godwin the West
-Saxon; and if one-half of the stories told about him by the old
-chroniclers are true, the Northumbrians must have felt the change
-acutely.
-
-One of Tostig’s little jokes was played at his half-brother Harold’s
-hall at Hereford. The two had quarrelled at Windsor in the presence of
-King Edward, and Tostig, expelled from the Court in disgrace, had ridden
-to Hereford, where he found his brother’s servants busily making ready
-for a visit from the King. To vent his anger on his brother he killed
-the servants—so the story goes—chopped up their bodies, threw the legs,
-arms and trunks into hogsheads of wine and barrels of cider, and gaily
-sent word to the King that ‘he had provided against his coming plenty of
-salt meat.’
-
-Small wonder that the proud Anglo-Danes of the north refused to submit
-for long to such a one of the despised West Saxons. In 1064 they
-rebelled against their unpopular jarl, outlawed him, slew his servants,
-both English and Danes, seized all his weapons and his gold and silver
-in Jorvik, and sent for Morcar, the son of Jarl Aelfgar, to be their
-jarl. Tostig fled to Baldwin, Count of Flanders, vowing vengeance on his
-half-brother Harold, who had advised the King to fall in with the wishes
-of the Northumbrians.
-
-Two years passed away. Edward had died and Harold, Tostig’s
-half-brother, had been chosen by the Witena-gemōt to be King of England.
-Now was the time for Tostig to have his revenge. So he enlisted the aid
-of another Harold—Harold Hardrada, King of Norway, a warrior huge of
-stature and dauntless in courage, who had, when an exile from Norway,
-won fame in Sicily, Greece and Africa, and who had formed at
-Constantinople a bodyguard to the Emperor, consisting of five hundred
-Northmen. Together they would conquer England, and Harold of Norway
-should be its king, as Cnut, King of Denmark, had been before him.
-
-With a fleet of 240 warships Harold of Norway set out for the conquest
-of England, his royal banner, the ‘Land-Waster’ proudly flying aloft.
-But omens of misfortune to come were not wanting; for he and his men had
-bad dreams at night—dreams of the English host marching down to the
-sea-shore led by a wolf on whose back was seated a ‘witch-wife.’
-Moreover, the witch-wife fed the wolf with the corpses of Northmen; and
-as fast as one was eaten, another was ready.
-
-To a superstitious people, such as the Northmen were, these omens must
-have seemed to bode terrible ill-luck. But Harold had never yet turned
-back from an expedition, and he did not mean to start turning back now.
-So over the sea to the Shetlands and the Orkneys his fleet sailed, then
-down the eastern coast of the mainland till they reached the mouth of
-the Tyne. Here they were joined by Tostig, and soon afterwards the
-‘Land-Waster’ was unfurled in the North Riding of Yorkshire.
-
-So far Harold of Norway had met with no resistance. But the fisherfolk
-of Scarborough did withstand the attack made upon their little town;
-whereupon, so the old Norse account of Harold’s invasion tells us—
-
- He went up on a high rock near the town, and set fire to a large
- pile which he made. They took large poles and lifted it up and threw
- it down into the town; soon one house after the other began to burn,
- and the whole town was destroyed. The Northmen slew many people, and
- took all the property they could get.
-
-Then southward along the coast the fleet sailed, until they reached a
-place called by the Northmen _Hellornes_, which was probably our
-Hornsea. Here a pitched battle was fought; but the men of the East
-Riding were no match for the invaders, and Harold and his Northmen got
-the victory.
-
-Next the mouth of the Humber was reached. Sailing up this and up the
-Ouse they cast anchor at Riccall. Here one-third of the Norwegian host
-was left to guard the ships while the remainder set out on a march to
-Jorvik.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- BATTLE OF STAMFORD BRIDGE
- SEPᵀ. 25ᵀᴴ 1066.
-]
-
-But at Fulford, two miles from the city, they were met by the forces of
-Morcar and his brother, Edwin of Mercia. The ensuing battle was fought
-on a strip of land lying between the river Ouse and a ditch which was
-‘deep, broad, and full of water.’ As at _Hellornes_, victory lay with
-the North men; and so great was the slaughter of the Northumbrian and
-the Mercians that the Northmen walked across the ditch ‘with dry feet on
-human bodies.’ Four days later—September 24th—Jorvik surrendered, and
-the Northmen moved their forces along the Roman road leading to the
-Derwent, and took up their quarters at STANFORDBRYCG.
-
-Meanwhile news of the invasion had reached Harold of England. Gathering
-together what forces he could muster, Harold hurried north. Up the Ermin
-Street, and round by Doncaster, Castleford and Tadcaster, he marched. On
-the day on which York surrendered he was at Tadcaster; the next day he
-had passed through York and had surprised the Northmen at Stamford
-Bridge.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The battle that took place between the two Harolds was preceded by
-negotiations. To his half-brother, Tostig, Harold of England sent envoys
-offering peace:—
-
- ‘Harold thy brother sends thee greeting, and the message that thou
- shalt have peace and get Northumberland; and rather than that thou
- shouldst not join him he will give thee one-third of all his realm.’
-
- ‘Then something else is offered than the enmity and disgrace of last
- winter,’ answered Tostig. ‘If this had been offered then, many who
- are now dead would be alive, and the realm of the King of England
- would stand more firm. Now if I accept these terms, what will my
- brother Harold offer to the King of Norway for his trouble?’
-
- ‘He has said what he will grant King Harold of Norway. It is a space
- of seven feet, and it is so long because he is taller than most
- other men.’
-
-Tostig’s reply to his half-brother’s terms was a noble one:
-
- ‘Go and tell my brother, King Harold, to prepare for battle. It
- shall not be said among Northmen that Jarl Tostig left Harold, King
- of Norway, and went into the host of his foes when he made warfare
- in England. Rather will we all resolve to die with honour, or win
- England with a victory.’
-
-After the failure of these negotiations, both sides made ready for
-battle. And then happened another omen boding ill-luck for the Northmen;
-for their King, who was riding a black horse with a white mark on its
-forehead, was thrown to the ground by the stumbling of his horse.
-
-In Roman times the passage across the Derwent at the spot where the
-battle took place had been made by a stone-paved ford; but this had, in
-later times, been replaced by a wooden bridge, whence the name it then
-bore—‘Stone-ford-bridge.’
-
-At the outbreak of hostilities some of the Northmen were on the right
-bank of the river, and were gradually forced back over the bridge by
-Harold of England’s men. The last of them to cross was a second
-Horatius, for he kept the bridge against the whole English army.
-Wielding his huge battle-axe, he had slain no fewer than forty of his
-enemies before he was himself slain by a soldier in Harold’s army, who
-floated down the river in a tub and stabbed him with his spear through
-one of the spaces between the wooden planks of the bridge.
-
-The old Norse account of the battle reads very much like the accounts of
-the battle of Hastings, which was so shortly to follow. Harold of Norway
-ordered his men to take up their positions with shield against shield on
-all sides. The outer rank were to press the spikes of their spears into
-the ground and to point the heads against the breasts of the attacking
-horsemen; the next rank were to point their spear heads against the
-breasts of the horses. If all of them stood firm and took care not to
-break away, Harold of England’s onset might be completely checked.
-
-But what the English would be unable to do in the battle to come, the
-Northmen were unable to do at Stamford Bridge. They broke their lines in
-pursuit of the English, and the battle was lost. Harold Hardrada rushed
-hither and thither dealing such blows with his battle-axe that ‘neither
-helmet nor coat of mail could withstand him; he went through the ranks
-of his foes as if he were walking through air, for all who came near him
-fell back.’ But to no purpose, and an arrow which struck him in the
-throat brought him his death-wound. Soon afterwards fell Jarl Tostig,
-and though the Northmen who had been left in charge of the fleet at
-Riccall hurried to the battle, they were not able to prevent the
-‘Land-Waster’ from falling into the hands of Harold of England.
-
-When darkness had set in, the victorious army was on its way back to
-York. Thither came Olaf, the son of Harold Hardrada, and the Jarls of
-Orkney to swear peace and give hostages. And thither also came at full
-speed a messenger who brought news that William of Normandy had landed
-with his army on the southern coast of Harold’s kingdom.
-
-
-
-
- XI.
- HOW THE NORMANS CAME TO
- YORKSHIRE.
-
-
-The tale of the Northmen’s invasions of England could be matched by the
-tale of their invasions of the northern coasts of France. Early in the
-tenth century a Viking known among his people as Rolf the Ganger[20]
-made a descent upon Rouen and entered into a treaty with Charles the
-Simple, King of Paris, by which a large tract of land around Rouen was
-ceded to him and his followers, in return for their aid against Charles’
-enemies.
-
-Footnote 20:
-
- To ‘gang’ meant to walk, and Rolf the Ganger was given this nickname
- because, being extra tall, he found it more comfortable to walk when
- on land than to ride one of the small ponies of his native country.
-
-Such was the beginning of the province of Northern France known in later
-history as Normandy. After forty years of sea-roving Rolf settled down
-to rule his new and fertile dukedom; and as with the Northmen in
-England, so with him and his men in France. The Northmen married wives
-of their new country, and their children grew up to speak the mother’s
-tongue rather than the father’s. Thus the descendants of heathen
-Northmen became Christian Frenchmen.
-
-To Rolf the Ganger’s dukedom there succeeded in turn William Longsword,
-Richard the Fearless, Richard the Good, Robert the Devil, and William,
-whom his enemies called William the Bastard—‘the Tanner’s Grandson’—but
-who was destined to become famous as William the Conqueror of England.
-
-How Harold of England, after hearing of William’s landing on the coast
-of Sussex, marched southward to his death at Hastings, and how William
-of Normandy was crowned King in his stead at Westminster on Christmas
-Day in the same year, does not concern us here. But what we are
-concerned with is the course of events that led to William’s coming
-north to the city of York.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The events of the last three months of the fateful year 1066 by no means
-proved that England was a conquered country. True, the Witena-gemōt had
-accepted William as their king; but that was only because there was no
-one else fit to lead the Saxon forces, and because Anglo-Danes and
-Saxons mistrusted each other. Edwin of Mercia and his brother Morcar
-submitted to William and were allowed to retain their earldoms. Oswulf,
-who now ruled Northumbria, did not submit, so William appointed a
-certain Copsige[21] to supplant him. Copsige came north to dispossess
-Oswulf, and was immediately slain.
-
-Footnote 21:
-
- Pronounced _Kóp-si-ga_.
-
-In 1067, during William’s absence in Normandy, rebellions broke out in
-the south and west of England; and when the King returned, he began the
-conquest of the western portions of the country. Exeter submitted after
-a siege lasting eighteen days, but no sooner had the western rebellion
-been subdued than Mercia and Northumbria were in revolt.
-
-Next year the King marched north and reached York, the inhabitants of
-which rather unexpectedly surrendered their city; and on William’s
-departure he left William de Malet, one of his Norman knights, in charge
-of it. But after a few months the men of York again rose in revolt and
-Malet was hard pressed, although he succeeded in holding out till
-relieved by the King.
-
-All over England these rebellions were going on. But none was more than
-partly successful; and for the reason that ‘Englishmen could not agree
-to act together. One district rose at one time and one at another. Some
-were for Sweyn, some for Edgar, some for the sons of Harold; Edwin and
-Morcar were for themselves. So there was no common action against
-William, and the land was lost bit by bit.’
-
-In the autumn of 1069 it seemed as if there really was to be made in the
-North of England a united effort to throw off the yoke of the Frenchmen.
-Sweyn Ulfsson, King of Denmark, sent a large fleet of ships into the
-Humber under the command of Jarl Asbiorn, his brother. Outside the walls
-of York the Danish shipmen were joined by Edgar the Aetheling, by
-Gospatric, the dispossessed successor of Oswulf, and by Jarl Waltheof,
-Siward’s son.
-
-Then began a second siege of York. The French garrison, under William de
-Malet and Gilbert of Gaunt, retreated to the two wooden castles which
-William had caused to be erected, and set fire to the portions of the
-city surrounding these in order to give themselves greater security. For
-two days the flames raged, destroying many houses and the Minster of St.
-Peter. Meanwhile the allies entered the city. Then the Normans attempted
-a sally from their castles, but unsuccessfully. Their forces were cut to
-pieces, and William de Malet and Gilbert of Gaunt were taken prisoners.
-
-So far all had gone well with the armies of Jarl Asbiorn and Jarl
-Waltheof, and had they only held the city when taken and awaited the
-arrival of King William, they would have had every chance of repeating
-their success. But a fatal dissension once more broke out, and Asbiorn’s
-men went back to their ships and sailed first to North Lincolnshire and
-then to Holderness, while Waltheof withdrew his men to the marshes
-between the Trent and the Ouse.
-
-For the third time King William marched north to York; and this time he
-determined on vengeance. ‘Par splendeur Dex,’ he swore that he would
-utterly root out the Northumbrian people; and in fulfilment of his oath
-he carried out that ‘Wasting of the North’ which changed the fertile
-Plain of York into a desolate waste. For sixty miles north of York every
-town and village was sacked and burnt, every inhabitant slain or driven
-out, all farming-stock and farming-implements destroyed, and nothing
-spared save only what belonged to St. John of Beverley. Then, having
-wreaked his revenge, William caused himself to be re-crowned at York,
-and there he kept his Christmas feast.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The system followed out by William the Conqueror after his subjugation
-of a district was everywhere the same. Lands were taken from their
-English owners and given to the King’s Norman followers, while strong
-castles were built to afford protection to the Norman lords.
-
-Thus Drogo de Bevrere, a Flemish knight who had married the King’s
-niece, was rewarded for his services with the _Isle of Holderness_, and
-built himself a castle at Skipsea, where the earthworks of a long-dead
-chieftain were still standing. No remains of Drogo’s castle now exist,
-nor have we in the East Riding the remains of any Norman castle such as
-those existing at Knaresborough, Helmsley, Pontefract, Scarborough,
-York, and elsewhere in the other Ridings of Yorkshire.
-
-With this parcelling out of the land among William’s Norman followers
-there became fixed two principles on which the whole ‘Feudal System’ was
-based:—
-
- (1) All land belonged to the King by virtue of his conquest of the
- country;
-
- (2) All land was held in return for services rendered.
-
-Under the Feudal System the King would make a large grant of land to one
-of his followers, who thus became a _tenant-in-chief_ of the King. This
-tenant-in-chief would sub-divide his land among his particular
-followers, each of whom might sub-divide his portion. Thus Drogo de
-Bevrere was a tenant-in-chief, and one of his tenants was a certain
-Lanbert, who held lands at Sutton ‘two miles long and a half a mile
-broad.’ Drogo, Earl of Holderness, was a vassal of the King; Lanbert, a
-vassal of Drogo.
-
-For these lands no regular rent was paid. Instead, there was the
-obligation of military service, each holder of land being bound to serve
-the King in war for forty days every year as his services were required.
-This service had to be performed at the vassal’s own cost, and with
-proper equipment. By this means the King could always be assured of an
-army equipped at short notice, and at no cost to himself.
-
-In addition to this military service there were money payments to be
-made at certain irregular intervals. An _aid_ was due from a vassal to
-his overlord on each of three occasions:—
-
- (1) The knighting of the lord’s eldest son; (2) The marrying of
- his eldest daughter; (3) The ransoming of his own person.
-
-Of these occasions the first and second would, as a rule, occur only
-once in a vassal’s life-time, while the third might not occur at all.
-For all tenants-in-chief it did occur when King Richard I. had to be
-ransomed from his enemy, the Emperor Henry VI., into whose hands he had
-happened to fall. The monks of the Abbey of Meaux, being
-tenants-in-chief, then found themselves called upon to pay, as their
-share of the total ransom of 150,000 marks, the sum of 300 marks; to
-raise which they were compelled to sell their stock of wool and their
-church plate.
-
-On the death of a vassal and the succession of his heir, another money
-payment became due to the vassal’s overlord. This was known as a
-_relief_. Again, if on a vassal’s death his heir or heiress had not yet
-come of age, his estate passed for the time being into the hands of the
-overlord, who managed it and took the profits. This right was known as
-_wardship_, and it might be rather dangerous for the ward.
-
-Thus, in the early years of the thirteenth century, Thomas, the parson
-of Routh, held certain lands under William de Stuteville, the lord of
-the manor. Thomas died, and the lord of the manor claimed wardship over
-his young daughter Agnes. But before Agnes had come of age, William de
-Stuteville died also, and the wardship passed into the hands of his
-widow Cecilia. Unfortunately for Agnes her new guardian was not
-overburdened with principles of honour; for, having two daughters of her
-own—who were, we may suppose, not sufficiently good-looking to find
-husbands readily—she offered with them as dowry the lands of Agnes. Thus
-two lucky bridegrooms, Stephen of Pokthorpe and Henry of Hutton, were
-enriched by Dame Cecilia, each with one-half of the lands of Agnes, the
-parson’s daughter. And poor Agnes never succeeded in getting her lands
-back, though she tried her best.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The various money payments due to a vassal’s overlord depended as to
-their amount on the value of the estate held. Therefore, in order that
-the King should know exactly what sums were due to him from his
-tenants-in-chief, he caused a great survey of England to be made. The
-vastness of the undertaking may be gauged by the fact that each estate
-in all the counties of England except Northumberland, Cumberland,
-Westmorland, Durham, and Monmouth—which last was then reckoned as a
-Welsh county—was to be reported on by the King’s officers, who were
-instructed to make enquiries as to its value and to record the result of
-their enquiries.
-
-These officers were to set down the area of each estate, great or small,
-the area of that part of it which was ploughed land, the area of that
-part which was grass land, the name of its holder, the name of its
-holder in the last year of the reign of King Edward the Confessor, the
-amount of stock and of farming-implements on it, the number and
-condition of the people living on it, its annual value in the time of
-King Edward, and its annual value at the time of the investigation—the
-last two items being the most important of all.
-
-In this manner was constructed what is known as THE DOMESDAY BOOK—the
-book by which a judgment could be made as to the amount of the money
-payments due to the King from each of his tenants-in-chief. The work was
-planned at the Witena-gemōt held at Christmas 1085, and was carried out
-during the following year.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Domesday Book is one of the most valuable historical records
-possessed by the nation, and much information as to the England of 1086
-has been gleaned from its parchment leaves. The entries in it are of
-course in Latin, and the following translation of the portion dealing
-with the manor of Patrington will serve as an example of the facts
-recorded in it.
-
- LANDS IN HOLDERNESS.
-
- LAND OF THE ARCHBISHOP OF YORK.
-
- In _Patrictone_ with the four berewicks _Wistede_, _Halsam_, _Torp_,
- _Toruelestorp_, there are thirty-five carucates and a half, and two
- oxgangs and two parts of an oxgang to be taxed. There is land to
- thirty-five ploughs.
-
- This manor was, and is, belonging to the Archbishop of York.
-
- There are now in the demesne two ploughs and eight villeins and
- sixty-three bordars, having thirteen ploughs. There are six sokemen
- with two villeins and twenty bordars, having five ploughs and a
- half. There are thirty-two acres of meadow there. Two knights have
- six carucates of the land of this manor; and two clerks two
- carucates and three oxgangs, and the third part of an oxgang. They
- have there four sokemen and five villeins, and three bordars with
- five ploughs.
-
- In the time of King Edward the value was thirty pounds, at present
- ten pounds and five shillings.
-
- Arable land three miles long and one mile and a half broad.
-
-All this reads very strangely to us living in the twentieth century. Put
-into present-day language it would read something like the following:—
-
-The manor of Patrington, with the neighbouring hamlets of Winestead,
-Halsham, [Welwick] Thorp, and Tharlesthorp,[22] measures 4300 acres,[23]
-and its thorough cultivation would provide work for thirty-five teams of
-oxen, reckoning eight oxen to each team.
-
-Footnote 22:
-
- Tharlesthorp is one of the ‘lost towns of the Humber.’ Its probable
- site is marked on the map on the opposite page.
-
-Footnote 23:
-
- A ‘carucate’ was the amount of land that a team of eight oxen could
- plough each year. It varied in size according to the nature of the
- soil, but may be roughly taken as being equal to 120 acres. An oxgang
- was one-eighth of this.
-
-It belonged to the Archbishop of York in the reign of King Edward the
-Confessor, and is still held by him.
-
-Attached to the lands of the manor-house there are eight serfs who have
-among them sixteen oxen, and sixty-three cottagers, who own 104 oxen.
-There are also six small farmers who have under them two serfs and
-twenty cottagers, and work forty-four oxen. Parts of the manor lands are
-held by two knights and two parsons. The former are tenants of 720
-acres, the latter of 290 acres. On their lands there are four small
-farmers, three cottagers and five serfs, possessing among them forty
-oxen.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- HOLDERNESS IN THE DOMESDAY BOOK
-]
-
-The land on which wheat, barley and oats are grown measures three miles
-by one and a half miles, and there are thirty-two acres of meadow land.
-
-In King Edward’s time the annual value of the manor was £600, but is now
-only £205.[24]
-
-Footnote 24:
-
- The value of money was in 1086 approximately twenty times its value at
- the present day. The Domesday ‘pound’ meant, not a coin, but a pound
- weight of silver.
-
-The value of the manor of Patrington was, in 1086, only just over
-one-third of its value twenty-five years earlier. This is one example of
-the results of the ‘Wasting of the North.’ Others are to be found in the
-records given of the manors of Burstwick and Kilnsea, each of which had
-been worth fifty-six pounds, but was then worth only ten pounds. The
-manors of Withernsea and Hornsea had similarly decreased in value from
-fifty-six pounds to six pounds. All these belonged in 1086 to Drogo de
-Bevrere, Lord of Holderness. The manor of Beeford had experienced a
-still greater decrease in value; for it had sunk from twenty pounds to
-ten shillings. Others again, such as estates at Barmston, Drypool,
-Routh, and Sigglesthorne are recorded by the ominous word ‘waste.’ Such
-entries tell a very sure tale of the effects of King William’s
-vengeance.
-
-On the map on page 93 are shown most of the manors and a few of the
-hamlets recorded in that part of the Domesday Book which deals with the
-Holderness division of Yorkshire. In many cases the spelling is very
-quaint; but most of the names are recognisable if we remember that U and
-V are different forms of the same letter, and that our letter W was then
-what, according to its name, it ought still to be. We must remember also
-that the men who took down the records were Frenchmen, who found it
-difficult in many cases to pronounce the names they heard the English
-witnesses use, and who had to spell these names as best they could
-according to their sound.
-
- * * * * *
-
-For more than nine hundred years the Domesday Survey remained the only
-survey made of English lands as a whole, and not till 1910 was an
-attempt made to compile the second Domesday Book. In that year
-commissioners started on the same task as was performed by the King’s
-officers in the year 1086; and the task has been undertaken for the same
-purpose—to enable the King’s taxes to be gathered in correctly.
-
-
-
-
- XII.
- HOW OUR ANCIENT PARISH CHURCHES
- WERE BUILT.
-
-
-In these days of bicycles most of us have experienced the pleasure of
-seeing, over the tree-tops in the distance, the spire or the
-square-capped tower of one of our village churches. For us on that
-occasion, perhaps, it marked the goal of a long journey, and we
-therefore hailed it gladly. Then probably we thought no more about it.
-
-Yet that village church was worth a few minutes of our thoughts. To one
-who knows how to see it was worth walking round, and worth also looking
-into. For it had a tale to tell—a tale that stretches back into the
-centuries long past, a tale of the joys and sorrows of the people whose
-places we now fill, a tale which ought to make us realise that we of the
-twentieth century are not the only clever people who have lived in the
-East Riding of Yorkshire.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C.W. Mason_
-
- A Norman Font in Kirkburn Church.
-
-]
-
-Let us learn how to read the tale aright. In the first place we must
-know the names of the different parts of a church. If it is small, it
-will be simply a rectangular building, running east and west, and
-divided by an open arch or by a woodwork screen into two parts, a _nave_
-and a _chancel_. The former is, on service days, occupied by the
-congregation of worshippers, the latter by the clergy and the choir. At
-the east end of the chancel is the _altar_ or _communion-table_, at the
-east end of the nave are the _lectern_ and _pulpit_, at the west end of
-the nave is the _font_.
-
-If the church boasts a _tower_, this will be at the west end, where also
-will probably be the main entrance door. This may, however, be on the
-south of the nave near the west end. On the south of the chancel may be
-another smaller door, once the _priests’ door_; and by it in the wall
-may be the _sedilia_, or priests’ seats, three in number. Close to these
-may be the _piscina_, or drain, at which the holy vessels were once
-washed; and in the wall on the opposite side may be the _aumbry_, or
-cupboard, in which the holy vessels once stood.
-
-But such small churches are not common. Generally the nave has along
-each side what is called an _aisle_, in which case its central roof is
-supported on a double row of pillars. Possibly the chancel also has
-aisles. The walls above the lines of pillars may be pierced with
-windows, which thus look out above the roofs of the aisles. These
-windows are known as _clerestory_ windows.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C. W. Mason_
-
- A Piscina in Patrington Church
-
-]
-
-In cathedrals and very large churches there is a story which runs along
-each side of the nave and chancel, between the capitals of the pillars
-and the clerestory. This is called the _triforium_. Beverley Minster has
-a triforium, but there is no passage round it, and it is really a blind
-story. A portion of it can be seen in the photograph of the Percy Tomb
-on page 230. Bridlington Priory Church has a triforium on the north side
-only.
-
-In churches of large size the building is not simply a rectangular one
-with or without aisles, but is formed of two rectangular buildings
-crossing each other at right angles. The nave and chancel have added to
-them a _north transept_ and a _south transept_, and above the
-crossing-place rises a _central tower_ on four huge _piers_.
-
-These transepts, as well as the nave and chancel, may have aisles. But
-this is customary only in cathedrals. Holy Trinity Church, Hull, the
-third largest church in Britain,[25] has aisles only to the nave and
-chancel; Patrington Church—the ‘Queen of Holderness’—has aisles to the
-nave and to each transept; and Hedon Church—the ‘King of Holderness’—now
-has aisles only to its nave, though its transepts formerly had an aisle
-on the east.
-
-Footnote 25:
-
- The following are the _internal areas_ of the three largest churches
- in Britain:—
-
- St. Nicholas’, Great Yarmouth 25,023 sq. ft.
- St. Michael’s, Coventry 24,015 "
- Holy Trinity, Hull 21,756 "
-
- * * * * *
-
-Many were the difficulties that the builders of our ancient churches had
-to overcome. In the East Riding one difficulty was the obtaining of
-suitable building-material. Stone blocks were costly, for these had to
-be brought by water from the quarries of the West Riding. So usually the
-builders had to make the best use they could of the materials they
-obtained locally—boulders from the cliffs of the sea-shore, blocks of
-chalk from the Wolds, or clay bricks from the low-lying bank of the
-Humber.[26]
-
-Footnote 26:
-
- The brickwork of the chancel and transepts of Holy Trinity, Hull, is
- probably the ‘earliest existing example of mediæval brickwork in
- England.’ These portions of the church were built during the first
- quarter of the fourteenth century.
-
-Another difficulty was sometimes encountered in obtaining suitable
-foundations. The clay soil on which the church of Holy Trinity, Hull, is
-built was not of sufficient depth to afford foundations for the heavy
-central tower which it was intended to build.
-
-Twentieth-century builders would drive piles down into the clay to make
-a firm foundation; the fourteenth-century builders solved the problem by
-constructing four huge rafts of trimmed oak trunks, each consisting of
-two rows of trunks crossing at right angles. On these rafts they raised
-the piers for their tower; and when, in 1906, it became necessary to
-take out the tree-trunks and replace them with steel girders and cement,
-many of the trunks were found to be as sound as on the day that they
-were placed in position six hundred years ago.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_J. Ball_
-
- Part of the Foundations of the Tower of Holy Trinity Church, Hull.
-
-]
-
-The greatest charm of our ancient churches lies in the fact that, except
-in a very few instances, a church is not built in the same style
-throughout. It is quite evident, if we have a seeing eye, that additions
-and alterations have been made at different times. The nave and the
-chancel were plainly not designed by the same architect; the north side
-of the church differs from the south; here has been added a new door,
-there a new window; the roof has been taken off, the worn ends of the
-rafters sawn away, and the rafters used again, so that the roof has to
-be of less slope than it was before.
-
-[Illustration: FILEY CHURCH, SHOWING THE LINES OF THE ORIGINAL ROOF.]
-
-All these are the signs of life and growth. If we wish, we can read by
-them how our forefathers prospered in their worldly business, and how
-they gave thanks to God for their prosperity; or how the coming of the
-Plague brought them poverty and distress, and perhaps put a stop to
-their building operations, which were not completed till many years
-afterwards, and then in a style quite different from that in which they
-had been begun.
-
-Often these alterations and rebuildings were put on record, and some of
-the records remain to our day. Thus John Skinner, of Westgate, Hedon, by
-his will made in 1428, left the sum of forty shillings towards the
-building of the new tower of St. Augustine’s Church. On the south face
-of the tower of Aughton Church is an inscription which is now illegible,
-but which once told in the Anglo-French language that Christopher Aske,
-the second son of Sir Robert Aske, rebuilt the tower in 1536.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C.W. Mason_
-
- The ‘Beverley Imp’—St. Mary’s Church, Beverley.
-
-]
-
-Cut into the stone of the same tower is in two places the likeness of an
-_aske_ or newt, a punning allusion to the name of the builder. In the
-same way, the tower of Hemingbrough Church is ornamented with a row of
-‘dolly-tubs’ or ‘weshing-tuns’—an allusion to the name of Prior
-Wessington, in whose period of rule the tower was rebuilt.
-
-Most interesting of all such records are the inscriptions on the pillars
-of the north side of the nave in St. Mary’s, Beverley. They show that
-when the tower fell in 1520 and destroyed that side of the nave, the
-destruction was repaired by a combined effort on the part of the
-parishioners. A family named Crosslay provided the wherewithal for
-rebuilding the half pillar at the west end, and the two pillars next to
-it towards the east; the ‘good wives’ of the parish rebuilt the next two
-pillars; and, as will be shown later, the remaining pillar was rebuilt
-by the Gild of Minstrels.[27]
-
-Footnote 27:
-
- See page 185.
-
-Hence the inscriptions which we may read to-day high up on the pillars:—
-
- XLAY AND HIS WYF TO PYLLORS
- FE MADE THES AND A HALFFE
-
- THYS TO PYLLO WYFFYS GOD
- RS MADE GVD REWARD THAYM
-
-But though no written or inscribed record may exist, it is yet possible
-to tell approximately the date at which either a church was built, or
-some particular portion of it was rebuilt. This is so because men built
-in different styles at different times—the fashionable mode of building
-changed as the centuries went on. Let us see how we can recognise these
-styles.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the Normans came to England, they brought with them great zeal for
-church-building, and many churches built by them remain to our day on
-the Wolds of the East Riding.
-
-The NORMAN style of building was one of round-headed arches and of
-narrow round-headed windows with the sides widely splayed, so that the
-window-opening inside is very much larger than the narrow slit which
-appears on the outside of the wall. The walls were very thick, the
-masonry was rough, the joints between the stones were very clumsy, and
-the buttresses, if used at all, did not project more than a few inches
-from the walls. The early Norman churches had very plain chancel or
-tower arches, such as we see at Speeton, Reighton, and Rudston; but
-those built later had arches magnificently carved with zigzags or
-_chevrons_, and with animal forms. Good examples of these may be seen at
-North Newbald, Kirkburn, Nunburnholme, Etton, and Garton-on-the-Wolds.
-
-[Illustration: DIFFERENT FORMS OF ARCHES.]
-
-The Norman style of building lasted from 1066 to 1190. Then came a
-change. Instead of using a semi-circular or one-centred arch, architects
-found out the advantages of a two-centred arch. They also made the
-discovery that the walls need not be so thick, if the thickness of the
-buttresses was increased. Thus came about what we call the EARLY ENGLISH
-or LANCET style of building, which was fashionable for the ninety years
-from 1190 to 1280. Beautiful examples of this style can be seen in the
-churches of Filey, Hedon, Middleton-on-the-Wolds, and Kirk Ella.
-
-Again came a change, a growth of ideas. Men grew tired of the simple
-form of _Lancet_ window, which we to-day consider so beautiful because
-of its simplicity. First they experimented by piercing an ornamental
-hole through the stonework above a group of lancets. This gave what we
-call _Plate Tracery_, examples of which are not numerous in our Riding.
-
-Then a further experiment was made. Instead of building the head of a
-group of lancets in solid stone, some architect-builder hit upon the
-idea of making a pattern of shaped bars of stone, and of filling in the
-pattern with glass cut to fit the spaces. This at once proved popular,
-and an entirely new fashion in window designs set in.
-
-At first the patterns made in stone were simple _Geometrical_ ones, such
-as those in the chancel windows at Rudston. But gradually, as one set of
-builders vied with another in building the most beautiful church, the
-patterns became more complicated and _Curvilinear_ in form. These last
-two styles together made up what is usually known as the DECORATED style
-of building, and were in fashion from 1280 to 1380.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ‘NORMAN’ AND ‘EARLY ENGLISH’ SOUTH DOORS.
-
- STILLINGFLEET. HESSLE.
-]
-
-Lastly came another great change, due to the discovery of methods for
-producing stained glass. The windows of Norman churches had been very
-small, and the interiors of the churches had been very dark. How dark
-they were may be judged from the present interior of the church of
-Garton-on-the-Wolds when the doors are both shut. Very early the
-worshippers experienced a desire for more light, and at Garton they
-solved the problem by knocking down some of the wall and inserting a
-much larger _Decorated_ window.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C. W. Mason_
-
- Part of the South Wall of the Church at Garton-on-the-Wolds.
-
-]
-
-But when stained glass became reasonably cheap, there were few
-church-people who could endure the thought that some neighbouring church
-had stained-glass windows when their church had none. So there began a
-competition among them as to who should be able to show the greatest
-area of stained glass in their church windows. Walls were therefore
-pulled down, and windows enlarged, or perhaps a nave or chancel was
-entirely rebuilt, for the reception of this glass; until where there had
-once been a stone wall with a few narrow slits in it, there was now a
-series of wide expanses of glass separated with narrow strips of wall.
-
-For convenience also, the bars of stone which formed the window tracery
-were made straight instead of curved. This is the style which we call
-the _Perpendicular_ style, and it grew in popular favour from 1380 until
-1547, when the Reformation put an end to further growth.
-
- * * * * *
-
-All the three styles, _Early English_, _Decorated_, and _Perpendicular_,
-make up what is known as GOTHIC architecture. The name is unfortunately
-a meaningless one; for it does not in any way refer to the architecture
-of the Goths, as the name NORMAN does to the architecture of the
-Normans.
-
-The great difference between the two styles is that whereas the roof of
-a _Norman_ building was supported by the walls, the roof of a _Gothic_
-building was supported not by the walls, but by the buttresses, some of
-which might be constructed in the form of bridges. Such buttresses are
-known as _flying buttresses_.
-
-It would be almost true to say that we might knock down every inch of
-wall in Beverley Minster or Patrington Church and yet leave standing the
-framework and roof of the buildings, with the western towers of the one
-and the central spire of the other. Such buildings are perfect in
-design, and their perfectness is due to the knowledge and skill which
-were possessed by their architect-builders.
-
-Gothic architecture grew like a plant, and reached its full development
-in the _Perpendicular_ style, when the enthusiasm for church-building
-was at its height. Most of our village churches show signs of having
-been in part rebuilt during the period when the _Perpendicular_ style
-flourished, and one of its most marked features is a lofty central or
-western tower, such as we see at Hedon, Howden, and Driffield.
-
-For a long time after the Reformation there was no fresh
-church-building, and little church-repair. What little attention our
-ancient parish churches had at the repairers’ hands was often of the
-kind that is called ‘churchwarden’ restoration, an example of which we
-see in the accompanying photograph of a portion of Welwick Church. Now,
-happily, such is a thing of the past, and our church restorers aim at a
-restoration which is true to its name.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C.W. Mason_
-
- ‘Churchwarden’ Restoration at Welwick Church.
-
-]
-
-It is unusual to find an ancient parish church built in one style
-throughout. But Filey Church is almost entirely on the border-line
-between _Norman_ and _Early English_; Patrington Church is almost
-entirely _Decorated_; and Skirlaugh Church, which was built by Walter
-Skirlaw, Bishop of Durham, about 1403, is entirely _Perpendicular_.
-
-Modern churches are, on the other hand, usually in one style throughout.
-The churches of Kilnwick Percy, East Heslerton, and Sledmere will serve
-as good examples of modern _Norman_, modern _Early English_, and modern
-_Decorated_ styles.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C.W. Mason_
-
- A Grotesque ‘Poppy-Head’ at Holy Trinity, Hull.
-
-]
-
-In and about many of our ancient parish churches are preserved features
-which remind us of the customs and beliefs of long-past days. At
-Easington we may see the ancient tithe barn, in which was stored the
-parson’s tithe of corn when tithes were paid not in money but in kind.
-At Barmby-on-the-Marsh, North Frodingham and Swine are preserved the
-church chests in which the parish records were kept. Holy Trinity, Hull,
-has only recently parted with the library of which its parishioners
-enjoyed the use long before the days of ‘Free Libraries.’
-
-In the churches at Barmston, Burstwick, Goodmanham and Thwing may be
-seen the _squint_, or hole cut through a pier of the tower so that the
-people worshipping in the transept might see the ‘elevation of the host’
-before the high altar. At Millington, Nunburnholme and Sancton there
-remain the _low-side_ or _lepers’ windows_, so built that the poor
-unfortunates outside the walls of the church might not be deprived of
-the sight of the same.
-
-[Illustration: BRASS OF THOMAS TONGE, RECTOR OF BEEFORD. A.D. 1472.]
-
-Just within the south door of the church at Great Givendale stands the
-_stoup_ or holy-water vessel, from which all worshippers were once
-sprinkled; and across the chancel arches at Flamborough and Winestead
-stand the ancient _rood screens_. At Kirkburn we may see a modern
-replica of an ancient rood screen in all the glory of brilliant colours;
-and the interior surface of the walls and roof of the church at
-Garton-on-the-Wolds reproduces the ancient custom of painting in colours
-every square inch of available space within a church.
-
-In several churches there are grotesque carvings in wood and
-stone—gargoyles, corbels, poppy-heads, and misericords—carvings so
-grotesque and irreligious that we can only wonder at the feelings which
-prompted their construction.
-
-Brasses and altar tombs show us plainly how the lords and ladies were
-dressed in former days, and an occasional brass of a parish priest
-serves to point out the differences between the parish priest of the
-fifteenth century and his successor, the ‘parson’ of to-day.
-
-
-
-
- XIII.
- THE BIRTH OF HULL
- AND
- THE ROMANCE OF THE DE LA POLES.
-
-
-[Illustration: ARMS OF KINGSTON-UPON-HULL.]
-
-To say exactly the date of birth of the city which to-day the
-inhabitants proudly call ‘The Third Port’ is one of the things that are
-beyond man’s power. It used to be thought that Hull was founded by King
-Edward I., but we know now that this was wrong; for there are in
-existence old title deeds which show that the city goes back in point of
-time more than one hundred years before ‘Edward of the Long Shanks’
-became King of England.
-
-On the other hand, we are certain that there was no town of Hull in the
-time of William the Conqueror. Had there been, we should find mention of
-it in the Domesday Book. Hessle is mentioned in this, and so is Ferriby.
-But, though we find in the Domesday Book no mention of Hull, we do find
-mention of Myton, a hamlet belonging to the Manor of North Ferriby, and
-recorded at the time of the survey as ‘waste.’
-
-Later on we find this hamlet grown into a manor, and meanwhile there was
-growing up alongside it another small settlement to which became
-attached the names _Wyke_, _Wyke-upon-Hull_, and _Hull_. Its position
-was the angle formed where the small river Hull empties itself into the
-mighty Humber, and its first inhabitants would doubtless be fishers and
-other sea-faring men, who found the place convenient for beaching their
-boats. Whether they were Angles or Danes we cannot definitely tell, for
-its name, _Wyke_, might have been given by either of these peoples.
-
-The first mention of Wyke is in a grant of land made in the year 1160,
-and after this date its growth must have been rapid. Less than forty
-years later it was one of the ports to which was given the privilege of
-exporting wool; and in 1203 the taxes collected on wool and other
-exported goods at Hull amounted to no less than £344, while those
-collected in London amounted to only £836.
-
-[Illustration: SILVER PENNY COINED AT HULL IN THE REIGN OF EDWARD I.]
-
-The export trade in wool grew by leaps and bounds during the thirteenth
-century, and Hull was the port in the north of England that derived most
-benefit from this growth. At the close of the century there were ‘some
-sixty houses in the town, mostly built of clay and timber, and
-one-storied, with perhaps a chamber or two in the thatched roof; a gaol;
-a court-house; a church[28] ...; a monastery of White Friars; with some
-seven acres of land set apart for markets and fairs, and lying around
-and about where the Market-place now runs.’
-
-Footnote 28:
-
- This was a chapel, dedicated to the ‘Holy Trinitie,’ which James
- Helward, a townsman, founded in 1285. It stood where the chancel of
- Holy Trinity church now stands, and was pulled down when the present
- transepts and chancel were built a few years later.
-
-Such was Wyke, or Hull, when in 1293 the monks of Meaux Abbey, its
-owners, sold the greater part of it to King Edward I., in exchange for
-other lands. Its annual value was £81 12s. 4d., and that of the part
-sold was £78 14s. 8d. With it were sold some farm lands and buildings at
-Myton, worth not quite half as much.
-
-When the town thus passed into the King’s hands, he had to appoint a
-Warden to collect his rents, and the first King’s Warden rejoiced in the
-name of Richard Oysel. Six years later the townsmen obtained from the
-King a charter granting them all the privileges belonging to the
-inhabitants of a ‘Free Borough.’ Among these was the right of holding a
-market twice weekly, and a fair lasting for thirty days each year.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_J.R. Boyle_
-
- Photograph of the Charter granted by Edward I. to the Townsmen of Hull
- in 1299.
- (One-fifth actual size).
-
-]
-
-Under its new name of the _King’s Town upon Hull_ the port naturally
-drew to itself merchants from the less-privileged towns of the
-neighbourhood, and among those who came to take advantage of its
-privileges was a wealthy merchant of Ravenser named William de la Pole.
-With the migration of this Ravenser merchant began an uninterrupted
-course of prosperity both for his family and for the King’s Town.
-
-William de la Pole’s two elder sons, Richard and William, came into
-great prominence as merchants. The ‘great Hull Firm of De la Pole
-Brothers’ has been a modern description of their business enterprise,
-and the adjective ‘great’ is rightly used. For not only was Richard de
-la Pole King Edward III.’s wine merchant, but the two brothers were also
-for many years the King’s bankers. As royal wine merchant, Richard had
-some twenty deputies in other ports of England, and as royal bankers the
-‘Firm’ lent large sums of money to the King for the carrying on of his
-wars with Scotland and France.
-
-In 1327, for instance, these Hull merchants lent the King sums amounting
-to £10,200; and in February of the next year the King, while at York,
-paid two wine bills, one of two thousand marks and the other of £1,200.
-Later on in this year, the brothers undertook to find £20 per day for
-the upkeep of the King’s household, and as much wine as was necessary.
-
-In 1337 Edward declared war against France, and that war was carried on
-mainly with supplies of money provided by the De la Pole Brothers.
-
-Within two years of the opening of war, the King had borrowed money on
-the crown jewels, on the crown itself, and even on his own person.
-Edward was actually stranded in France unable to move for lack of money,
-when his ‘beloved merchant,’ William de la Pole, came to his assistance
-with new supplies; and the King acknowledged himself bound to him for
-the astonishing sum of £76,180, a sum equal to more than a million
-pounds in our money.
-
-‘How was this immense sum raised?’ we may quite naturally ask. Probably
-a large portion of it was borrowed by the lender from others who were
-quite ready to put their spare cash into the hands of such a far-sighted
-and reliable man of business as William de la Pole. And how was the loan
-repaid by the King?
-
-The answer to the second of these questions gives the secret of the
-wealth of the ‘Hull Firm.’ Edward repaid his loans not with money but by
-grants of the customs and duties payable on exported goods at the
-various ports of the kingdom. In other words, if the King borrowed
-£1000, he gave to the lender of this sum permission to collect all the
-dues at, say, the port of Bristol, for the next five years; and as the
-trade of Bristol was then rapidly growing, the lender very probably
-received during those five years twice as much value in dues as he had
-lent in money to the King.
-
-Such services as these, rendered at a critical moment, did not go
-unrewarded in other ways. In 1332 Edward visited his new ‘King’s Town’
-on his way to Scotland, and was the guest of William de la Pole, whom he
-knighted before his departure.
-
-At the same time the townsfolk were granted the dignity of having a
-Mayor and four Bailiffs instead of a Warden, and Sir William was,
-naturally, the man chosen by them to hold this office. Thus the long
-line of Mayors of the city of Hull goes back to Sir William de la Pole,
-who was Mayor for three years, 1332–1335. Later on other honours were
-showered upon him, and when he died his body was buried in the church of
-the Holy Trinity, where the alabaster effigies of himself and Dame
-Katherine his wife may still be seen.
-
-As William de la Pole was a great favourite of King Edward III., so his
-son Michael was equally a favourite of Edward’s grandson, King Richard
-II. Michael de la Pole had gone to Spain in the train of John of Gaunt,
-Edward’s third son, and his retinue had consisted of 140 men-at-arms,
-140 archers, 1 knight banneret, 8 knights bachelor, and 130 esquires.
-
-In 1376 Michael was not only Mayor of Hull but also ‘Admiral of the
-King’s Fleets in the Northern Parts.’ Seven years later he became a
-Knight of the Garter and Lord Chancellor of England. In another two
-years he was raised to the peerage as Earl of Suffolk, the first example
-in our history of a prosperous merchant becoming a peer of the realm. As
-Earl of Suffolk, Michael began the building at Kingston-upon-Hull of a
-mansion which was known when finished as Suffolk Palace, and which stood
-on the ground where has recently been built the General Post Office.
-
-But the first Earl of Suffolk was by no means a favourite with
-Parliament, whatever he might be with the young King; and though he had
-as Lord Chancellor advised the members of Parliament to ‘avoid all
-corruptions,’ he was accused by them of enriching himself at the expense
-of the nation. As the result of the charges laid against him by his many
-and powerful enemies he was exiled, and died at Paris four years after
-the creation of his peerage.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- EFFIGIES OF SIR WILLIAM DE LA POLE AND DAME KATHERINE IN HOLY TRINITY
- CHURCH, HULL.
- _From Gough’s ‘Sepulchral Monuments.’_
-]
-
-[Illustration: ARMS OF THE DE LA POLES.]
-
-Richard II.’s deposition by Parliament followed ten years after his
-favourite’s death, and Henry IV. became King. This King’s son, Henry V.,
-attempted to rival in France the exploits of his great-grandfather; and
-in his retinue when the English army sailed from Harfleur were two
-Michael de la Poles, father and son. Both were of high honour in the
-King’s train, both set out in hopes of winning still higher honour in
-the glorious conquest that was to be, but both were fated to die a
-soldier’s death on the soil of the country which they had hoped to
-conquer. The elder Michael, second Earl of Suffolk, died of dysentery
-before the walls of Harfleur in September 1415; the younger Michael,
-third Earl of Suffolk, fell mortally wounded in the battle of Agincourt,
-five weeks after the death of his father. His body was brought home to
-England, and lay in state in Saint Paul’s Cathedral before it was buried
-in Oxfordshire.
-
-You will find an account of the Earl of Suffolk’s death in Act IV.,
-Scene 6, of Shakspeare’s play _Henry the Fifth_; and when you next read
-of the wars of Edward III. and Henry V. in France, do not fail to
-remember, if you yourself belong to the city of Hull, that good silver
-crowns from Kingston-upon-Hull provided the wherewithal for the battle
-of Crecy, and that good honest men from Kingston-upon-Hull fought,
-and—in one case at least—died in the battle of Agincourt.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Two years after this battle, King Henry was again fighting in France,
-and in his retinue was again an Earl of Suffolk. This was William, the
-fourth Earl, brother of him who had been slain at Agincourt. ‘Thirty
-lancers and four score and ten archers’ was the portion of the army
-furnished by this Earl, and for seventeen consecutive years he served in
-France as a soldier of the King. While Henry VI. was the infant King of
-England, Suffolk was in command of the English army in France, and it
-was his misfortune to be beaten by the ‘Maid of Orleans.’ In this war he
-was taken prisoner by the French, and ransomed for the sum of £20,000.
-
-After Suffolk’s return home as a defeated soldier we find him playing
-the part of a successful ambassador. The marriage of King Henry with
-Princess Margaret of Anjou was arranged by him, and for his services he
-was raised to the dignity first of a Marquis and secondly of a Duke. At
-the same time his heirs were granted the privilege of carrying at the
-coronation of all the King’s successors a golden sceptre with a dove
-upon the top—a privilege embodied in the design of the Common Seal of
-the Corporation of Kingston-upon-Hull.
-
-[Illustration: COMMON SEAL OF THE CORPORATION OF KINGSTON-UPON-HULL.]
-
-But this marriage brought the newly-created Duke of Suffolk into great
-disfavour with Parliament; for he was accused of having delivered the
-important province of Maine into the hands of the French, this being one
-of the conditions of the marriage treaty. His enemies also accused him
-of having murdered the Duke of Gloucester.
-
-To save his favourite Duke the King banished him for five years, but his
-enemies were determined that he should not escape their vengeance.
-Realizing the danger he was in, he set sail from Ipswich, and hoped to
-reach Calais in safety. Before his departure he wrote, on the 30th of
-April, 1450, the following letter to his young son:—
-
- My dere and only welbeloved sone, I beseche oure Lord in Heven, the
- Maker of alle the world, to blesse you, and to sende you ever grace
- to love hym, and to drede hym; to the which, as ferre as a fader may
- charge his child, I both charge you and prei you to ... do no thyng
- for love nor drede of any erthely creature that shuld displese
- hym....
-
- Secondly, next hym, above alle erthely thyng, to be trewe liege man
- in hert, in wille, in thought, in dede, unto the Kyng ... to whom
- bothe ye and I been so moche bounde to....
-
- Thirdly, in the same wyse, I charge you, my dere sone, alwey, as ye
- be bounden by the commaundement of God to do, to love, to worshepe
- youre lady and moder, and also that ye obey alwey hyr
- commaundements, and to beleve hyr councelles and advises in all
- youre werks....
-
- Wreten of myn hand,
- The day of my departyng fro this land.
-
- Your trewe and lovying fader,
-
- SUFFOLK.
-
-It was indeed the day of Suffolk’s ‘departyng fro this land,’ as the
-following portion of a letter written in London on the 5th of May of
-that year will show. The writer tells first how news had then reached
-London that on April 31 the Duke of Suffolk had been captured off Dover
-by a ‘shippe callyd Nicolas of the Towre,’ whose master ‘badde hym
-“Welcom, Traitor.”’ Then—
-
- Yn the syght of all his men he was drawyn ought of the grete shippe
- yn to the bote ... and oon of the lewdeste of the shippe badde hym
- ley down his hedde, and he should be fair ferd wyth, and dye on a
- swerd; and toke a rusty swerd, and smotte of his hedde withyn halfe
- a doseyn strokes, and toke awey his gown of russet, and his
- dobelette of velvet mayled, and leyde his body on the sonds of
- Dover.
-
-Although the first Duke of Suffolk suffered this ignominious death, the
-tide of fortune for his family still rose. John, his son, the second
-Duke, married the sister of King Edward IV.; and in the year 1484 their
-son John, Earl of Lincoln, was declared heir-presumptive to the throne
-of England.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration:
-
- SEAL OF EDMUND DE LA POLE
- EARL OF SUFFOLK.
-]
-
-This is the high-water mark of the family fortunes. The battle of
-Bosworth, and the accession of King Henry VII. a year later, altered
-everything. The Earl of Lincoln took up arms against King Henry on
-behalf of the pretender, Lambert Simnel, and was killed at the battle of
-Stoke in 1487. His younger brother, Edmund de la Pole, Earl of Suffolk,
-was considered a man too dangerous to be allowed to live and was
-beheaded by Henry VIII. in 1513; and his remaining brother, Sir Richard
-de la Pole, having fled to Italy, was killed in the battle of Pavia in
-1525.
-
- =Sir WILLIAM DE LA POLE.=
- A merchant of Ravenserodd, who migrated to Hull.
- |
- +-------------------+------------------+
- | |
- =Sir Richard de la Pole.= =Sir William de la Pole.=
- A merchant of Hull; A merchant of Hull, founder
- d. 1346. of the Hull Charterhouse and
- | first Mayor of Hull (1332–5);
- | d. 1366.
- | |
- =Michael de la Pole,
- Earl of Suffolk.=
- Mayor of Hull 1376, and Admiral
- of the King’s Fleets in the Northern
- Parts; Italian Ambassador and
- | Lord Chancellor of England;
- | d. 1389 in exile at Paris.
- | |
- =Richard, Duke =Michael, Earl of Suffolk.=
- of Buckingham and Fought at Harfleur, and
- Chandos.= died of dysentery, Sept.
- d. 1889. 18, 1415.
- |
- +-------------------------------------+---+
- | |
- =Michael, =William, Earl of Suffolk.=
- Earl of Suffolk.= Commander of the English army
- Slain at Agincourt, in France; became =Marquis=, and
- Oct. 25, 1415. later =Duke, of Suffolk=; was accused
- of various crimes, exiled,
- and murdered at sea, 1450.
- |
- =John,
- Duke of Suffolk.=
- Married Elizabeth,
- sister of Edward IV.
- and of Richard III.;
- d. 1491.
- |
- +-------------------------+----------+---------+
- | | |
- =John de la Pole, =Edmund de la Pole, =Sir Richard
- Earl of Lincoln.= Earl of Suffolk.= de la Pole.=
- Declared heir-presumptive Beheaded by Fled to Italy,
- to the English throne Henry VIII., 1513. and was killed
- 1484; Commander-in-Chief at Pavia, 1525.
- in Lambert Simnel’s
- rebellion; killed at Stoke
- 1487.
-
- PEDIGREE OF THE DE LA POLES.
-
-In all English history there is no stranger family history than that of
-the De la Poles. For had there been no battle of Bosworth, the
-great-great-great-great-grandson of a Hull merchant would, in all
-probability, have become King John II. Such, however, was not to be, and
-there is now living no descendant of the first William de la Pole in the
-male line. A few years ago the female line was represented in the Duke
-of Buckingham and Chandos, who was lineally descended from Richard de la
-Pole, the elder partner in the ‘great Hull Firm of De la Pole Brothers.’
-
-
-
-
- XIV.
- MONKS, NUNS, AND FRIARS.
-
-
-[Illustration: ARMS OF BRIDLINGTON PRIORY.]
-
-Scattered over some of the pleasantest parts of Yorkshire are to be
-found the ruined homes of men and women who centuries ago formed a very
-distinct class among the people of our country. These men and women were
-the monks, friars, and nuns of mediæval England, and their homes were
-known as monasteries and friaries.
-
-The foundation of monasteries was due to the growth of an idea that men
-and women could serve God better by withdrawing entirely from worldly
-affairs, and by giving themselves up to a life of continual prayer and
-worship. Many were established in England during the tenth and eleventh
-centuries, but the great period of their foundation was that from 1066
-to 1216. During these years no fewer than 556 monasteries were founded
-in our country, and 65 of these were in Yorkshire.
-
-[Illustration: A CISTERCIAN MONK.]
-
-According to whether a monastery was independent of all others or not,
-it ranked as an Abbey or a Priory; and according to the particular code
-of rules under which its inmates lived, it was inhabited by
-BENEDICTINES, CISTERCIANS, or CARTHUSIANS. The monks of the Order of St.
-Benedict were popularly known as _Black Monks_, and their three Abbeys
-in Yorkshire were at Whitby, Selby and York. They had no House in the
-East Riding, but there were Benedictine nunneries at Nunburnholme,
-Nunkeeling, Wilberfoss and Yedingham.
-
-The Order of the Cistercians, or _White Monks_, received its name from
-the Abbey of Citeaux in Normandy. In this the rules were stricter and
-the life harder than among the Benedictines. The Cistercians believed
-that the work of a man’s hands was as acceptable an offering to God as
-the recitation of prayers and the chanting of psalms, and hence they
-became great farmers and wool-growers.[29] Yorkshire was particularly
-their county, and the great Abbeys of Fountains, Rievaulx, Jervaulx and
-Byland were some of the wealthiest and most powerful in England. In the
-East Riding the Cistercians had an Abbey at Meaux and a nunnery at
-Swine.
-
-Footnote 29:
-
- In 1280 the monks of Meaux owned 11,000 sheep and 1000 beasts.
-
-[Illustration: A BENEDICTINE NUN.]
-
-A still stricter Order of monks was that of the Carthusians, who
-received their name from the Abbey of Chartreuse in the south-east of
-France. From the popular corruption of the word ‘Chartreuse’ into
-‘Charterhouse,’ their monasteries became generally known as
-_Charterhouses_. One of these was established at Hull by Sir Michael de
-la Pole,[30] and there was in the North Riding another at Mount Grace,
-near Northallerton.
-
-Footnote 30:
-
- Close to this Carthusian monastery Sir Michael also built—in 1384—a
- _Maison Dieu_, or Hospital, for twenty-six poor men and women, ‘feeble
- and old.’ Its buildings were pulled down during the second siege of
- Hull, but afterwards replaced by others. This is the ‘Charterhouse’
- that exists to-day, the present buildings dating from 1780.
-
-The life of a monk or a nun was one spent apart from the world but, at
-the same time, in common with all other inmates of the monastery or
-nunnery. The inmates worked together, prayed together, had their meals
-together, and slept in a common dormitory.
-
-Their life was also one of absolute devotion to carrying out the rules
-of their Order. Each inmate took, on entering the religious life, the
-three vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience. By the first, no monk or
-nun might own separate possessions except the necessary clothing and
-bedding. Thus, one mattress, two pairs of blankets, two counterpanes,
-one cowl and frock, two tunics, two pairs of vests, four pairs of
-breeches, two pairs of shoes, four pairs of socks, two pairs of
-day-boots, one pair of night-boots, one night-cap, two towels, one
-soiled-linen ‘pokett,’ and one shaving cloth formed the wardrobe of a
-Black Monk. In addition he might possess a silver spoon, and then his
-outfit was complete. By the second vow he bound himself never to marry,
-and by the third to obey implicitly the orders of his superiors.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Houses of these monks and nuns were, with slight exceptions here and
-there, constructed on certain definite lines, which can best be
-illustrated by a plan of the Cistercian Abbey of Kirkstall, near Leeds.
-Surrounding all was a wall, not shown in the plan.
-
-The arrangement of the various buildings was very simple. Foremost in
-importance ranked the _church_, which was always the first building to
-be erected and that on which the greatest wealth was lavished. To the
-south of this were attached the domestic buildings, grouped round a
-central _cloister court_. Of these the most important were the _chapter
-house_, in which the monks assembled each morning to hear a chapter from
-the Latin rules of their Order; the four _cloisters_ or covered walks in
-which the daily tasks of the monks were performed; the _frater_ or
-_refectory_, in which their midday meal was served; and the _dorter_ or
-_dormitory_, in which they slept. This last ran above the line of
-buildings to the south of the south transept, and had a staircase
-leading directly into this as well as one leading into the east
-cloister.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE CISTERCIAN ABBEY OF KIRKSTALL.
-
- _From ‘Transactions of the East Riding Antiquarian Society,’ Vol.
- III._
-]
-
-The other buildings included the _sacristy_ or treasure-house; the
-_library_; the _locutorium_ or parlour, which was a meeting-place for
-conversation as well as a school for the novices; the _infirmary_ for
-sick monks; the _calefactory_, or warming-house, where a fire was kept
-burning from the first day in November till the following Easter; the
-_kitchen_; the _cellarium_ or store-room; the _hospitium_ or
-guest-house; and the _Abbot’s house_.
-
-Attached to each House of the Cistercians was a band of _conversi_, or
-lay brethren, the uneducated portion of the community, who did all the
-rough work of the House. Their frater and dorter were separate from the
-other buildings, the dorter running over the cellarium; and they
-attended service in the nave of the church, whereas the monks used the
-choir or chancel.
-
-Such was the general plan of a Cistercian monastery or nunnery. That of
-the Benedictines did not differ from it except that their churches were
-larger and more magnificently built than those of the Cistercians, and
-their fraters ran east and west instead of north and south.
-
-Look at the outer wall of the south aisle of Bridlington Priory Church,
-and you will at once notice something strange. The windowless wall and
-blocked arches are due to the fact that the Abbot’s house adjoined the
-church at this spot. Look along the wall farther to the east, and you
-will see plainly the brackets on which once rested the roof beams of one
-of the four cloisters.
-
-In some cases the domestic buildings lay to the north of the church, but
-this was exceptional. Advantage was usually taken of the protection
-afforded by the church against the biting north winds of winter, an
-advantage not to be despised by those who had to live in unwarmed stone
-buildings on the bleak moorlands of Yorkshire. One can imagine a
-shivering monk returning from his two hours’ service in the church at
-two o’clock on a cold winter’s morning, and piling on the bed his whole
-wardrobe in a vain endeavour to keep the marrow of his bones from
-freezing into solid ice. It was worth something to be an Abbot. For the
-Abbot’s house had fire-places, and there would be little fear of his
-forgetting to make use of such a comfortable privilege.
-
-[Illustration: THE PRIORY CHURCH, BRIDLINGTON.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-As was mentioned earlier in the chapter, the monk lived in common with
-his fellows. In winter his time-table was as follows:—
-
- 7 a.m.—Prime—a prayer,[31] hymn, and three psalms.
- 8 a.m.—Mixtum or breakfast.
- 8–30 a.m.—Morning mass.
- 9 a.m.—Chapter, followed by confession of sins and punishment for
- faults.
- 10 a.m.—High mass.
- 11 a.m.—Dinner.
- 12 noon.—Manual work.
- 5 p.m.—Vespers.
- 6–30 p.m.—Collation—a short reading in the chapter house.
- 7 p.m.—Compline—a service in the church.
- 7–30 p.m.—Bed.
- 12 midnight—Matins and Lauds—services in the church.
- 2 a.m.—Bed.
-
-Footnote 31:
-
- The prayer with which the daily life began was this: ‘O Lord God
- Almighty, Who hast brought us to the beginning of this day, so assist
- us by Thy grace, that we may not fall this day into sin, but that our
- words may be spoken and our thoughts and deeds directed according to
- Thy just commands.’
-
-Strict regulations were made with regard to the church services, manual
-work, and meals. Each monk had some definite occupation for his working
-hours. He was a stonemason, a carpenter, a worker in metals, a scribe,
-or a farmer; and his work must be carried out in silence—a very needful
-exception being made in the case of the blacksmiths.
-
-Each monk’s dinner allowance was one pound of bread and a pint of wine
-or ale, with two cooked dishes and fruit or salad. Mondays, Wednesdays,
-Fridays, and all the days in Lent were fast days, when no meat might be
-eaten. On these fast days there were allowed as cooked dishes to every
-two monks either two plaice or mackerel, or four soles, or eight
-herrings or whiting, or ten eggs. No breakfast was the rule on fast
-days, and to avoid excess of blood due to good living, each monk was
-‘cupped’ four times a year.
-
-Table manners were also looked after. ‘No one was to clean his cup with
-his fingers, nor wipe his hands, or mouth, or knife, upon the
-tablecloths.... Salt was to be taken with a knife, and the drinking-cup
-was to be held always in both hands.’
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A CORNER OF THE CLOISTER COURT AT KIRKHAM PRIORY.
-
- The two arches at the back formed the lavatory, where the monks
- washed their hands before passing into the frater by the door
- on the left.
-]
-
-More severe by far was the life of the Carthusians. They lived solitary
-lives, each in his separate two-roomed cell, never talking to others,
-and not even seeing others except at matins and vespers. A Carthusian
-never ate meat and always wore a hair shirt next his skin. It is
-therefore not surprising that this Order did not become a popular one.
-
- * * * * *
-
-So far we have been dealing with monks and nuns. Besides these there
-were the REGULAR CANONS—men who lived under a _regula_, or rule, as did
-the monks, and who took the same three vows, but who were generally
-priests, while the monks were generally laymen. The Augustinian Canons
-had priories at Bridlington, Haltemprice, Kirkham, North Ferriby and
-Warter, and there was a Gilbertine nunnery at Ellerton and a House for
-both Gilbertine Canons and Benedictine Nuns at Watton. Here the canons
-and nuns had each their separate domestic buildings, but they shared the
-church, the canons using one half of it and the nuns the other half.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE BAYLE GATE, BRIDLINGTON.
-
- Formerly one of the gateways to the Priory grounds.
-]
-
-Quite distinct from monks and canons were the FRIARS. Monks were
-concerned with one thing only—the salvation of their own souls. Hence
-their monasteries were, as a rule, built in desolate spots, far removed
-from the centres of population. The churches of the canons were, in most
-cases, partly used as parish churches, the prior of the convent being
-also the rector of the parish. Friars were concerned with the salvation
-of the souls and bodies of other people, hence they established
-themselves in populous towns. _Fratres_, or _frères_, they were to all
-poor people, whether they were Dominican Friars, Franciscan Friars,
-Carmelite Friars, or Austin Friars.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A WHITE FRIAR IN HIS STUDY.
- (_From Abbot Gasquet’s ‘English Monastic Life.’_)
-]
-
-The followers of St. Dominic were the teachers, the followers of St.
-Francis the doctors, of the middle ages. _Black Friars_ and _Grey
-Friars_ they were in the language of the common people. Beverley had its
-Dominican and Franciscan Friaries, while Kingston-upon-Hull had its
-Carmelite and Austin Friaries—the names of the two latter remaining
-to-day in our ‘Whitefriargate’ and ‘Blackfriargate.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is difficult for us to realise what enthusiasm there was in the olden
-days for that which was called ‘the religious life.’ ‘It is good for us
-to be here, for here a man lives more purely, falls more rarely, rests
-more safely, and dies more happily’ was the honest thought of each of
-the _religious_ in early days.
-
-But as with all other human institutions, these good ideals perished in
-the course of time. Men did not continue to live up to the rules of
-their Order. Even in Chaucer’s time—that is, before the year 1400—the
-typical monk had travelled far away from his vows of poverty and
-obedience.
-
- Full many a dainty horse had he in stable.
- * * * * * *
- Greyhounds he had as swift as fowls in flight;
- Of riding and of hunting for the hare
- Was his delight, for no cost would he spare.
- * * * * * *
- He was not pale as a tormented ghost,
- A fat swan loved he best of any roast.
-
-Chaucer’s friar was likewise a wanton and merry man, who knew the
-taverns well in every town.
-
- His tippet was aye stuffèd full of knives,
- And pins also, fit for to give fair wives.
- And certainly he had a merry note,
- Well could he sing and play upon a rote.[32]
-
-Footnote 32:
-
- A violin with three strings.
-
-
-
-
- XV.
- SAINT JOHN OF BEVERLEY AND HIS MINSTER.
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ARMS OF BEVERLEY
- MINSTER.
-]
-
-Each of two East Riding villages, Harpham and Cherry Burton, claims to
-be the birthplace of Saint John of Beverley. His date of birth is even
-more uncertain than his place of birth; but we know that he was sent to
-school at the monastery at Canterbury, and afterwards became an inmate
-of the famous monastery of St. Hilda at Whitby. Then he was for nineteen
-years Bishop of Hexham, and finally, in 705 or 706, was ‘translated’ to
-York, and thus became the fifth in the long line of eighty-nine
-Archbishops from Paulinus to Cosmo Lang.
-
-While John was Bishop of Hexham he purchased a plot of ground in
-Beverley, and on it built a church which he placed in charge of a small
-number of canons. The surrounding country was then nothing but swamp and
-forest—the swamps of the river Hull and the wild woodland whose name has
-come down to us as ‘Beverley Westwood.’ So fond of this church was John,
-that in 718 he gave up his Archbishopric and retired to Beverley, where
-he died three years later.
-
-John’s church suffered the fate which came to nearly all the monasteries
-and churches of those far-off times. The ravaging Northmen fell upon it,
-and it was not till the reign of King Aethelstan that it recovered from
-their attacks.
-
-Then its fame began to grow. In 934 Aethelstan was marching north to
-make war upon the Scots, and when at Lincoln met—so the story runs—a
-band of pilgrims who joyously declared that they had been healed of all
-manner of diseases by visiting the tomb of the blessed John of Beverley.
-Their story induced the King to pay a visit to the same tomb; so he
-journeyed directly north, crossed the Humber, and went on to Beverley,
-while his army went round by the longer branch of the old Roman road to
-York.
-
-Arriving at Beverley, Aethelstan besought the aid of the holy Bishop
-John, and placed his knife on the high altar as a pledge of the rewards
-that he would bestow upon the church if he were successful in his
-journey. Thereupon a vision of John of Beverley appeared before his
-eyes, and he heard the words, ‘Pass fearlessly with your army, for you
-shall conquer’—words which certainly came true enough.
-
-Believing that his success was due entirely to the power of the holy
-Bishop whose banner he had brought with him from Beverley, the King, on
-his return, liberally fulfilled his pledge, and endowed John’s church
-with grants of lands, tolls, and the right of Sanctuary.
-
- =Swa mickel fredom give i ye,=
- =Swa bert may think or egbe see=—
-
-is the way in which a charter of much later date than the time of
-Aethelstan describes the King’s gifts to John of Beverley’s church.
-
-[Illustration: BEVERLEY MINSTER IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY, FROM THE
-NORTH-EAST.]
-
-So great after this became the fame of the miracles performed at the
-tomb of the founder of the church, that in 1037 the Pope ordered that
-John of Beverley should thenceforth be ranked as a Saint. His bones and
-other relics were then laid in a magnificent shrine in front of the high
-altar, and the story of the fate which came upon the sacrilegious
-Toustain in 1069 is sufficient evidence of their power.[33]
-
-Footnote 33:
-
- See page 152.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The charter of Aethelstan was renewed by Edward the Confessor, Henry I.,
-and Stephen; and in the reign of the last-named King the banner of St.
-John was for the second time in the forefront of a battle against the
-Scots. This was the _Battle of the Standard_, when the banners of the
-four northern Saints—St. Peter of York, St. Cuthbert of Durham, St.
-Wilfrid of Ripon, and St. John of Beverley—brought victory to the
-English host.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C.W. Mason_
-
- ‘Early English.’ Doorway in the South Transept of Beverley Minster.
-
-]
-
-Once again an English King visited Beverley and carried north with him
-the banner of St. John. The King was Edward I., the ‘Hammer of the
-Scots,’ and the Household Accounts of his reign show that in 1299 there
-was paid:
-
- To master Gilbert de Grimsby, vicar of the collegiate church of St.
- John de Beverley, for his wages, from the 25th day of November, on
- which day he left Beverley to proceed, by command of the King, with
- the standard of St. John, in the King’s suite aforesaid, to various
- parts of Scotland, until the 9th day of January, both computed, 46
- days, at 8½d. per diem ...
-
- £1 8s. 9d.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C.W. Mason_
-
- Small ‘Decorated’ Doorway at the west end of Beverley Minster.
-
-]
-
-Edward II., Henry IV., Henry V., and Henry VI. all paid visits to the
-shrine of St. John of Beverley, and his power was once more demonstrated
-in the victory of the English army at the battle of Agincourt. For
-during the time that the battle was being waged, did not the tomb of the
-Saint sweat drops of holy oil? So at least said the pilgrims to the
-shrine, and certainly they ought to have known whether it did or not.
-
-Royal gifts and pilgrims’ offerings brought great prosperity to the
-church of St. John of Beverley. But evil days were fast approaching, and
-in 1547 Royal Commissioners were sent to report on it. They reported
-that there were attached to the church a Provost, 9 Canons, 7 Parsons, 9
-Vicars, 15 Chantry Priests, 4 Sacristans, 2 Incense Bearers, 8
-Choristers, and 22 others, a total of 77 officers, who shared among them
-an income of £900 derived from lands and tithes. Two years later its
-revenues were declared confiscated to the Crown, and its inmates reduced
-in number to 1 Vicar and 3 Assistants.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Of the building as it was in its earliest days we know little. In
-Aethelstan’s time it was probably entirely of wood. The erection of a
-stone church is believed to have taken place in the reign of Edward the
-Confessor, but we know that in 1188 the chancel and transepts of this
-church were destroyed by fire.
-
-Rebuilding was commenced shortly afterwards, and a lofty tower was built
-on the weak foundations of the older one. As a result the new tower soon
-fell, and about 1225 the building of an entirely new church was taken in
-hand. This was the time when what we call the _Early English_ style of
-building was in vogue, and there is nothing of this style in all England
-finer than the chancel and transepts of Beverley Minster.[34]
-
-Footnote 34:
-
- The name _Minster_ became attached in mediæval times to the great
- churches which were not parish churches but were governed by a
- _College_, or body of secular canons.
-
-If you look at the old engraving of the Minster given on page 137 you
-will notice that this one style of building was not followed throughout
-the church. Just past the transepts the style changes into the
-_Decorated_ style. The reason is that there was a long interval of
-nearly one hundred years during which the canons had not enough money to
-continue their building operations, so that the work came to a
-standstill. Meanwhile the Norman nave was still standing; and when at
-last money again became plentiful, a larger nave in the new and
-fashionable style was built around the old one. A curious result of this
-mode of building is seen to-day in that the pillars of the nave are not
-exactly opposite to one another, because the builders were not able to
-measure directly across from one to the other.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C.W. Mason_
-
- Part of the Arcading on the south side of the Nave in Beverley Minster,
- showing the change of style from ‘Early English’ to ‘Decorated.’
-
-]
-
-Another glance at the old engraving will show that a further change in
-men’s ideas of building took place before the church was finished. The
-ravages of the ‘Black Death’ stopped progress for a time; and when the
-great twin towers of the west end were built, the _Perpendicular_ style
-of building had become fashionable. Then, in order that the east window
-should be in fashion with the west window, it was rebuilt ‘in the latest
-style.’ Thus we have in the church three successive styles of building,
-quite different from one another, and yet so blended that they make one
-harmonious whole.
-
-After the confiscation of the church property in 1549, the Minster fell,
-naturally, into sad disrepair. Its beautiful octagonal chapter house was
-sold and pulled down. One hundred and ten years ago the Minster was
-reported to be almost a ruin. So bad was its condition that the
-beautiful gable of the north transept had bulged outwards no less than
-four feet, and was saved from destruction only by the skill of a
-carpenter named Thornton, who erected a huge screen of timber, and
-forced the wall back to its upright position.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ‘_Hey-diddle-diddle,
- The cat and the fiddle._’
-
- A WOOD-CARVING IN BEVERLEY MINSTER.
-]
-
-In 1886 a great architect, Sir Gilbert Scott, was employed to make
-necessary restorations. First of all he took down the dome-like roof,
-with gilded ball above it, seen in the old engraving of the Minster.
-True, the Minster still lacks the central tower which, like the
-cathedrals of York, Durham, and Lincoln, it was originally planned to
-have; but better none at all than the unsuitable dome which our
-ancestors built a century ago. The beautiful choir screen was designed
-also by Sir Gilbert Scott, and was carved by a Beverley craftsman, Mr.
-James Elwell.
-
-Since 1886 the main work of restoration has been the filling in of the
-numerous niches around the walls, each of which before the Reformation
-had its statue, great or small. Only one of these ancient statues
-remains, a statue of one of the Percy family, on a buttress of the north
-face of the north tower. There are now in position on the walls of the
-Minster 182 statues—108 outside and 74 inside—most of which have been
-provided through the generosity of Canon Nolloth.
-
-[Illustration: PLAN OF BEVERLEY MINSTER]
-
-There is much of interest to see around the Minster. The best view of
-the great towers is obtained from the entrance to Minster Moorgate; that
-of the interior of the nave from the upper floor at the west end, which
-is reached by a staircase in the north tower.
-
-Climb to the top of the tower and you will, if the day is fine, be
-rewarded with a wide-reaching view over Beverley Westwood and the Plain
-of Holderness. Go into the chancel and examine the Percy Tomb. You are
-looking at the most magnificent stonework of the fourteenth century in
-the whole of Europe. Lift up the seats in the canons’ stalls and you
-will see the best collection of carved _miserere_ seats in England. Sit
-in the ancient _Frith-Stool_ and you can imagine yourself to be either
-an innocent victim of oppression or a criminal of the deepest
-dye—whichever you prefer. Stand before the great east window, and admire
-the beauty of the old stained glass of which it is composed. Or stand
-before the great west window and you will see portrayed in its coloured
-glass Augustine and Aethelberht of Kent and St. John of Beverley, the
-marriage of Edwin and Ethelburga, the baptism of Edwin by Paulinus, and
-Coifi, the heathen high priest, with his broken idols—an epitome of the
-early church history of our country.
-
-
-
-
- XVI.
- SANCTUARIES.
-
-
-The Church in the Middle Ages had a tremendous hold over people’s minds,
-and this was largely due to the power which it wielded over their
-bodies. Foremost amongst the rights then possessed by it was the right
-of ‘Sanctuary,’ by which the poor and injured could gain safety from the
-attacks of their oppressors, and one who had unwittingly committed a
-crime might save himself from a criminal’s death. This right belonged,
-in greater or less degree, to all the churches scattered up and down the
-country.
-
-Let us imagine a by-no-means uncommon event in the years just after the
-Black Death. A husbandman is working for his master as a free labourer
-and small cottager. His father before him had also been a free labourer,
-but his grandfather had in his youth been a serf of the lord of a
-neighbouring manor. This grandfather of his, because the serfs had
-increased beyond their lord’s requirements, had been allowed with others
-to go free; and taking advantage of his freedom he had sought and
-obtained work as a free labourer under a new master. But now, after the
-Black Death, labourers are scarce; and the present lord of the manor is
-causing to be looked up all the descendants of those serfs whom his
-ancestor had set free. Thus the lord’s bailiff has been making enquiries
-about our freeman, and has sent two servants to arrest him and take him
-back to the serfdom that his grandfather had once suffered.
-
-But our freeman is a man of spirit, and will not be taken without
-resistance. Knives are drawn, and he defends himself. In the scuffle one
-of his assailants stumbles and falls, and unluckily for himself and for
-our freeman, he happens to fall upon his own weapon, which pierces his
-body and so causes his death. His comrade, chicken-hearted, fears to
-continue the struggle alone, and makes off to the village for help.
-
-What is our freeman to do? If he remains where he is and allows himself
-to be taken, not only will he be claimed as a serf by the lord of the
-neighbouring manor, but he will also be charged with causing the death
-of the lord’s servant.
-
-Little chance is there of his proving himself innocent of his
-assailant’s death; for the dead man’s companion will not fail to swear
-that the death-blow was struck by him. In any case he will be thrown
-into the town jail for an indefinite length of time, perhaps not to come
-out alive, or to come out maimed for life. Were not three prisoners, two
-men and a woman, thrown into the jail last year on suspicion of having
-been concerned in a murder, and were they not kept there till one of the
-men died, the other lost a foot, and the woman lost both feet, from
-disease produced by the foul condition of the cell into which they were
-cast?
-
-So thinks our freeman to himself. It is little comfort to him to
-remember that when the two prisoners who remained alive were eventually
-tried, they were found ‘not guilty’ of the charge laid against them, and
-were told by the justices that they could depart.
-
- * * * * *
-
-What can our freeman do? In a short while the lord of the manor’s other
-servant will come up with help against him, and he must then be
-overpowered. He can only flee. But whither? In the distance he can just
-distinguish the outline of the great church of St. John of Beverley. If
-he can only reach that church and knock on the small door that holds the
-sanctuary knocker he will be safe.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] Sanctuary Cross at Bishop Burton. [_C. W. Mason_
-
-]
-
-So off he sets on a six-mile run, with life before him and death behind.
-He has a good start over his pursuers, whom he can just make out
-half-a-mile or so away, but will he be able to hold out till he reaches
-the goal set before him? Nearer and nearer becomes the church, and
-although his pursuers are gaining on him, yet his heart is cheered by
-the sight of the boundary cross which tells him he has little more than
-a mile now to run, and which in itself gives him a certain amount of
-protection. For should he now be taken, he is under the protection of
-St. John, and his pursuers will lay hands on him at the risk of a fine
-of eight pounds payable to the Church.
-
-Spurred on by fresh hope he reaches his goal, and has just sufficient
-strength to clang the knocker before he falls heavily against the heavy
-door. ‘Oh that the door may be opened quickly!’ His prayer is answered;
-for a watching priest has seen the pursuit. He draws back the bolt,
-drags in the senseless form, and clangs to the door again just as the
-pursuers reach it.
-
-For a space of thirty days our freeman will now be safe, and during
-these thirty days he will be fed and lodged by the canons of the
-Minster. But first he will be required, with his hand placed on the
-great written copy of the Bible possessed by the Minster, to take an
-oath read out to him by the Coroner in the following words:—
-
- ‘Sir, take hede on your oth—
-
- Ye shalbe trew and feythfull to my Lord Archbisshop of York, Lord
- off this towne....
-
- Also ye shall bere gude hert to the Baillie and xij governars of
- this town....
-
- Also ye shall bere no poynted wepen, dagger, knyfe, ne none other
- wapen, ayenst the Kynges pece.
-
- Also ye shalbe redy at all your power, if ther be any debate or
- stryf, or oder sothan case of fyre within the towne, to help to
- surcess it.
-
- Also ye shalbe redy at the obite[35] of Kyng Adelstan ... at the
- warnyng of the belman of the towne, and doe your dewte in
- ryngyng....’
-
-Footnote 35:
-
- A service held in memory of the death of a benefactor.
-
-Then having taken the oath he will be required to ‘kysse the book.’
-
-But in the eyes of the law our freeman is a felon—a man over whose head
-there hangs a charge of murder, and who will have little chance of
-proving his innocence of this charge. He must avail himself of the law
-established of old and confirmed by King Edward II.—
-
- Let the felon be brought to the church door, and there be assigned
- unto him a port, near or far off, and a time appointed to him to go
- out of the realm, so that in going towards that port he carry a
- cross in his hand, and that he go not out of the King’s highway,
- neither on the right hand nor on the left, but that he keep it
- always until he shall be gone out of the land; and that he shall not
- return without special grace of our lord the King.
-
-Such were the rights of sanctuary possessed by the Minster at Beverley.
-For the space of a mile around the church in every direction the peace
-of St. John extended, and within this circle—the boundaries of which
-were marked by the erection of a ‘sanctuary cross’ on each of the roads
-entering Beverley—partial safety was assured to all fugitives. But the
-nearer a fugitive got to the high altar of the Minster the safer he
-became. Seated in the _Frith-Stool_ that stood by the side of the altar
-he was absolutely safe; for none—not even the King himself—dare violate
-its sacred peace.
-
-The Beverley frith-stool now stands in the chancel near the north-east
-transept. A plain, massive seat of stone it is, so massive and so simple
-in design that its age seems greater than that of the Minster itself.
-Possibly it dates back to the days of the Saxon King Aethelstan. It was
-once engraved, we know, with a Latin inscription, the translation of
-which ran thus:
-
- This stone seat is called FREEDSTOLL, that is, chair of peace, on
- reaching which a fugitive criminal enjoys complete safety.
-
-A frith-stool very similar to the Beverley one exists at Hexham Abbey in
-Northumberland, and in the village church of Halsham in our East Riding
-there is what is thought to be another. Here, however, the ‘chair of
-peace’ is built into the wall of the chancel between the sedilia and the
-priests’ door. No other examples are known in Yorkshire.
-
-[Illustration: THE BEVERLEY FRITH-STOOL.]
-
-Of sanctuary knockers still existing the finest is the Norman one on the
-north door of Durham Cathedral, but nearer home there is a good example
-on a door of All Saints’ Church at York. That which once existed, and
-which was so freely used, on a door of Beverley Minster has long ago
-disappeared, nor is there any known example in the East Riding.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_W. Watson_
-
- Sanctuary Knocker on a Door of All Saints’ Church, York.
-
-]
-
-As an instance of the protection afforded to the people by the existence
-of this right of sanctuary, and of the power of the Church over the
-minds of even such Kings as William the Conqueror, may be given the
-story told by Alured,[36] a priest of the Minster of St. John in the
-reign of William’s son, Henry I.:—
-
- At the time when William was engaged on his ‘Wasting of the North’
- he had once pitched his camp seven miles from Beverley, and had
- caused all the people of the district to flee to the church for
- protection. Certain soldiers coming up intent on plunder made their
- way to the church, and their leader, Toustain by name, did not
- hesitate to spur his horse within its open door. But the vengeance
- of St. John came down upon him for his impious deed, his horse
- stumbled on the threshold, and Toustain fell with broken neck.
- Moreover, when his men picked him up, his head was found to be
- twisted towards his back, and his feet and hands were distorted like
- those of a mis-shapen monster. Fear came upon all the Norman
- soldiers, and when William was informed of the miracle that had
- happened, fear came also upon him; so that he confirmed all the
- privileges of the church, gave it a grant of lands at Sigglesthorne,
- and decreed that the lands of the blessed Saint John should be
- everywhere spared from the ‘Wasting.’
-
-Footnote 36:
-
- An old spelling of ‘Alfred.’
-
-In affording protection to the innocent, the injured, and the oppressed,
-the Church was carrying on a good work. But we must remember that the
-same protection was afforded to those actually guilty of all possible
-crimes. The registers kept at Beverley show that during a space of sixty
-years in the reigns of King Edward IV., Richard III., Henry VII. and
-Henry VIII., those who claimed the right of sanctuary included:—
-
- 186 who were charged with murder,
- 54 ” ” ” ” felony,
- 1 ” was ” ” horse-stealing,
- 1 ” ” ” ” treason,
- 1 who was charged with receiving stolen goods,
- 7 ” were ” ” coining,
- 208 ” ” ” ” debt,
- 35 ” ” ” ” other crimes.
- —--
- 493 who were charged with various offences.
-
-In the Beverley registers there are 469 entries, of which all but a few
-are written in Latin. One of the English entries will give an idea of
-the kind of record kept:—
-
- John Spret, Gentilman.
-
- Memorandum, that John Spret, of Barton upon Umber, in the Counte of
- Lyncoln, gentilman, com to Beverlay, the ferst day of October, the
- vij yer of the reen of Keing Herry the vij, and asked the lybertes
- of Saint John of Beverlay, for the dethe of John Welton, husbondman,
- of the same town, and knawleg[37] hymselff to be at the kyllyng of
- the saym John with a dagarth,[38] the xv day of August.
-
-Footnote 37:
-
- Acknowledged.
-
-Footnote 38:
-
- Dagger.
-
-It is evident from these 469 entries that the Beverley Sanctuary must
-have been of special repute. For the criminals who asked the liberties
-of Saint John of Beverley came from parts of Britain as wide apart as
-Lowestoft, Honiton, Haverfordwest, Anglesey, and Durham. No fewer than
-thirty came from London, Beverley itself provided five, _Preston in
-Holdernes_ three, and _Kyngestone super Hull_ ten; while others came
-from _Heydon_, _Hezell_, _Hoton Cransewik_, _Hogett super le Wolde_,
-_Otteryngham_, _Wetherwyk_, and fifty other towns and villages in the
-East Riding.
-
-All ranks and conditions of life are represented among these entries,
-from the _armiger_ or knight, and _generosus_ or person of noble birth,
-down to the common _laborer_. The _goldsmyth_, the _surgyon_, the
-_grosiar_—an alderman of London—the _yoman_, the _chapman_, the
-_shepard_, and the _husbondman_ are there. So, sad to relate, is the
-_capellanus_, or chaplain; and among the tradesmen there are the
-_berbrower_, _bocher_, _bowyer_, _brykemaker_, _capper_, _coke_,
-_flecher_,[39] _fysshemonger_, _payntour_, _pewterer_, _plommer_,
-_pursor_, _pynner_, _saddiler_, _salter_, _syngyngman_, and
-_tawlowchaunler_.
-
-Footnote 39:
-
- A _flecher_, or _fletcher_, was an arrow-maker.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Under such circumstances as these, it is not wonderful that complaints
- of the misuse of sanctuary rights became frequent. In 1324 ten
- prisoners escaped from Newgate Jail, of whom five took refuge in one
- or other of the London churches, and thence escaped out of the
- country. In 1376 Parliament complained to the King that certain people
- got money or goods on loan, made pretended gifts of all their property
- to their friends, then went into sanctuary, and stayed there till
- their creditors were glad to accept some small portion of the debt in
- payment for the whole; after which they came out, received back their
- pretended gifts, and lived merrily on their ill-gotten wealth. Cases
- even occurred in which thieves and murderers left their place of
- sanctuary at nightfall, committed fresh crimes during the night, and
- returned to the ‘chair of peace’ again before daybreak.
-
- So great did the scandal of this misuse of the privileges afforded by
- sanctuaries eventually become, that in 1623 Parliament passed a law
- that:
-
- No sanctuarie or priviledge of sanctuary shal be hereafter admitted
- or allowed in any case.
-
- The law was again passed in 1697, but it was not until the reign of
- George I. that the last sanctuary in our country was demolished.
-
-
-
-
- XVII.
- HOW TWO KINGS OF ENGLAND LANDED
- AT SPURN.
-
-
-In the old Norse account of the life of Harold Hardrada it is stated
-that after the battle of Stamford Bridge Olaf, the King’s son, ‘led the
-fleet from England, setting sail from _Hrafnseyri_.’ This is the
-earliest mention that we have of the bank of sand and shingle which is
-known to-day as Spurn Point, and the name of the place—‘Hrafn’s
-gravel-bank’—is evidence of both its general appearance and its
-ownership in the year 1066.
-
-For two centuries after this we have no mention of it, but in the
-meanwhile there had grown up two settlements to each of which the name
-Ravenser was attached. _Ald Ravenser_—that is, Old Ravenser—was ‘inland,
-distant both from the sea and the Humber’; while _Ravenserodd_, or as we
-should write it, Ravenser Point, lay ‘between the waters of the sea and
-those of the Humber,’ and was ‘distant from the main land a space of one
-mile and more.’ Connecting the two was a sandy road ‘covered with round
-and yellow stones, thrown up in a little time by the height of the
-floods, having a breadth which an archer can scarcely shoot across, and
-wonderfully maintained by the tides of the sea on its east side, and the
-ebb and flow of the Humber on its west side.’
-
-Of the birth of the former of these towns we know nothing, but the birth
-of the latter was described by one of the jurors in a lawsuit brought in
-the year 1290 by the men of Grimsby against the men of Ravenserodd.
-Several years before a ship had stranded on a sand bank, and the wreck
-had been taken possession of by an enterprising fellow who used it as a
-store for meat and drink which he sold to sailors and merchants. Then
-others came to dwell on the sand-bank, and in 1235 or thereabouts the
-Earl of Albemarl, Lord of Holderness, began there the building of a
-town.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The growth of this town must have been rapid; for in 1251 the King
-granted to the Earl of Albemarl the right to hold in Ravenserodd a
-weekly market and a fair lasting sixteen days. Then trouble began
-between the men of the town and the men of Grimsby, and the latter
-complained that
-
- the men of the said town of Ravenserodd go out with their boats into
- the high sea, where there are ships carrying merchandise, and
- intending to come to Grimsby with their merchandise. The said men
- hinder those ships from coming to Grimsby, and lead them to Ravenser
- by force when they cannot amicably persuade them to go thither.
-
-So we see that ‘peaceful picketing’ was not altogether unknown in these
-parts six hundred years ago.
-
-At intervals during the reigns of Edward II. and Edward III. the men of
-Ravenser were called upon to provide a ship for the King’s wars against
-Scotland. In each case the ship was to be furnished with from thirty to
-a hundred of ‘the stoutest and strongest men of the town, with armour,
-victuals, and other necessaries.’ In 1332, also, an expedition of five
-hundred men-at-arms and two thousand archers set sail from Ravenser for
-Scotland, having on board Edward Baliol, Lord Beaumont, Lord de Wake,
-and others who wished to see Baliol crowned as King of Scotland. Their
-wishes were fulfilled, for the expedition was successful and Baliol was
-crowned at Scone.
-
-From about this time the fortunes of Ravenser began to decline.
-Probably the superior privileges granted by King Edward to his
-_Kyngstown-svper-Hvll_ provided very largely the cause of the decline.
-The climax of its misfortunes came with a succession of extremely high
-tides about the year 1356—tides which ‘sometimes exceeding beyond
-measure the height of the town, and surrounding it like a wall on
-every side,’ caused its absolute destruction. In 1400 Ravenserodd was
-recorded to be ‘altogether consumed,’ while nothing remained of Ald
-Ravenser but a single manor-house.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Such was the condition of the once prosperous port when in the month of
-June, 1399, Henry, Duke of Lancaster, and grandson of King Edward the
-Third, landed on its site with sixty followers. As Henry of Bolingbroke,
-Earl of Hereford, he had in 1398 been banished by King Richard II. for a
-term of six years, in order that a duel between him and the Duke of
-Norfolk might be prevented. As Henry, Duke of Lancaster, he now returned
-to claim the estates of his father, John of Gaunt, which estates Richard
-had confiscated on their holder’s death.
-
-When Henry of Lancaster landed at _Ravenserespourne_, he found its sole
-occupant to be a hermit, by name Matthew Danthorpe. This hermit was
-engaged in building a chapel on the desolate bank of shingle; and great
-must have been his surprise when a ship carrying a company of well-armed
-men bore down upon his hermitage instead of passing up the river, as
-ships were accustomed to do.
-
-Still greater must his surprise have been when he found that the ship
-belonged to a royal Duke, and that its arrival was shortly followed by
-arrivals from inland of the great Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland,
-and the Earl of Westmorland. His surprise was, probably, not unmixed
-with fear. For he was building his chapel without having obtained a
-license from the King, and rumours were soon flying about that Henry of
-Lancaster had come to claim something more than the estates which were
-his by right of descent.
-
-These flying rumours soon became certainties. Other lords and barons
-rallied round the standard of Henry, and before long his sixty followers
-had become as many thousands. At the time of his landing King Richard
-was in Ireland; and when, after being long delayed by contrary winds, he
-landed on the coast of Wales, he soon fell into the hands of Henry and
-was taken a prisoner to the Tower of London. On the 30th of September
-Henry, addressing the Members of Parliament, spoke as follows:
-
- ‘In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, I, Henry of
- Lancaster, challenge this realm of England ... as I am descended by
- right line of the blood coming from the good lord King Henry the
- Third.’
-
-Then Parliament declared the abdication of King Richard the Second and
-the accession of King Henry the Fourth.
-
-And what meanwhile of the hermit of _Ravenserespourne_? Had Henry
-forgotten him? On the last day of September Henry was proclaimed King,
-on the first day of October he signed at Westminster a royal license
-making known that:
-
- Of our special grace we have pardoned and remitted to the said
- Matthew all manner of trespasses and mistakes committed by him in
- this matter....
-
- And moreover, of our more abundant grace, we have given and granted
- to the said Matthew the aforesaid place, to hold to his successors,
- the hermits of the aforesaid place, together with the chapel
- aforesaid, when it shall be built and finished, and also the wreck
- of the sea, and waifs, and all other profits and commodities
- contingent to the sands for two leagues round the same place, for
- ever.
-
-The landing of King Henry IV. at Ravenser Spurn was commemorated by the
-erection of a cross at the place of landing. Was it a grateful Matthew
-Danthorpe who erected it? Very possibly. At any rate it was erected
-within fourteen years of Henry’s landing. Many years afterwards it was
-removed to Kilnsea; later still it was removed to Burton Constable, and
-finally to Hedon, where it stands to-day in the garden of Holyrood
-House.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The reign of Henry IV. was followed by that of his son and that of his
-grandson. Then came in 1471 one of the most curious parallels in history
-that it is possible to imagine. The ‘Wars of the Roses’ had been
-discomforting the land for sixteen years. Henry VI. had been deposed in
-1461, and Edward IV. had been elected in his place. But in 1470 Henry
-had once more been placed upon the throne and Edward had fled to
-Holland. A year later the latter returned, and landed on the same spot
-where Henry Bolingbroke had landed seventy-two years earlier.
-
-The parallel, however, does not end with his landing. As Henry of
-Lancaster proclaimed that he had come merely to claim his ancestral
-lands, so Edward of York proclaimed that he had returned for this same
-purpose only. As a Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland, was the chief
-supporter of Henry of Lancaster, so a Henry Percy, Earl of
-Northumberland, came to the support of Edward of York. And as Henry of
-Lancaster was fated to depose and put to death King Richard II., so
-Edward of York was fated to overthrow and cause to be murdered King
-Henry VI.
-
-It had been Edward’s intention to land on the coast of Norfolk. But
-finding a landing there impossible because of the guard kept by the
-Earls of Warwick and Oxford, he had headed his four large and fourteen
-small ships for the mouth of the Humber. The following is part of the
-account of his landing given by Ralph Holinshed, a chronicler living in
-the reign of Queen Elizabeth:—
-
- The same night following, a great storme of winds and weather rose,
- sore troubling the seas, and continued till the fourteenth day of
- that moneth being thursday, on the which day with greater danger, by
- reason of the tempestuous rage and torment of the troubled seas, he
- arriued at the head of Humber, where the other ships were scattered
- from him, each one seuered from other; so that of necessitie they
- were driuen to land in sunder where they best might, for doubt to be
- cast awaie in that perillous tempest. The king with the lord
- Hastings his chamberleine, and other to the number of fiue hundred
- men being in one ship, landed within Humber on Holdernesse side, at
- a place called Rauenspurgh, euen in the same place where Henrie erle
- of Derbie, after called king Henrie the fourth landed, when he came
- to depriue king Richard the second of the crowne, and to vsurpe it
- to himselfe.
-
- Richard, duke of Glocester, and three hundred men in his companie,
- tooke land in another place foure miles distant from thence, where
- his brother king Edward did land. The earle Riuers, and with him two
- hundred men, landed at a place called Pole, fourteene miles from the
- hauen where the king came on land. The residue of his people landed
- some here, some there, in place where for their suerties they
- thought best. On the morrow, being the fifteenth of March, now that
- the tempest ceased, and euerie man being got to land, they drew from
- euerie of their landing places towards the king, who for the first
- night was lodged in a poore village, two miles from the place where
- he first set foot on land.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C.W. Mason_
-
- Henry of Lancaster’s Cross.
- Now in the garden of Holyrood House, Hedon.
-
-]
-
-The landing of Edward IV. at Ravenser Spurn was not entirely to the
-liking of the men of Holderness. At first he was opposed by forces
-raised by ‘Syr John Westerdale,’ the vicar of Keyingham, and by a
-certain Martin atte See, or Martin de la Mare, a descendant of the first
-inhabitant of Ravenserodd. The vicar of Keyingham was afterwards cast
-into a London prison for his opposition, but Martin de la Mare was won
-over to Edward’s side, and was knighted eleven years later.
-
-By his will Sir Martin de la Mare directed that he should be ‘beried in
-the queere of the parissh churche of Alhalowes in Barneston in
-Holdernes;’ and on the left-hand side of the chancel in this church
-there is an altar tomb, with a beautiful alabaster effigy, which until
-recently was thought to be his. It is, however, now known to be that of
-another knight who was buried at Barmston some fifty years before the
-death of Sir Martin de la Mare.
-
-
-
-
- XVIII.
- LIFE IN A MEDIÆVAL TOWN.
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- PRESENT SEAL OF THE
- BOROUGH OF HEDON.
-]
-
-What sort of life did the townsfolk lead five centuries ago? Suppose the
-townsfolk of to-day could suddenly be transported back five hundred
-years, what would be the things likely to strike them as most strange?
-
-One of these would certainly be the way in which the town was cut off,
-as it were, from the surrounding district. Thus Hedon was cut off by two
-Havens, one natural, the other artificial, and by another artificial
-watercourse called the Town Moat. Beverley was entirely surrounded by a
-similar moat, part of which remains in our own day, and entrance to the
-town was gained by _Bars_ spanning the roads. Those at Beverley were
-known respectively as the North Bar, Newbiggyn Bar, Keldgate Bar,
-Norwood Bar, and South Bar.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] North Bar Without, Beverley. [_C.W. Mason_
-
-]
-
-How early these Bars were built we do not know, but there have recently
-been discovered the complete accounts for the rebuilding of North Bar in
-1409. This is the Bar which exists to-day, and it has, in its five
-hundred years’ existence, undergone little change, except for the
-cutting through it of two side-passages for foot traffic. It still has
-the massive oak folding doors which were shut every night at sunset, and
-the groove can yet be seen in which the portcullis worked. If you ride
-on through the Bar to York, you will enter that city by the Walmgate
-Bar, and above your head as you pass through this you may see the bottom
-spikes of its still remaining portcullis.
-
-Hull was defended even more strongly than Beverley; for in 1322 the King
-granted to its townsfolk leave to defend themselves with a wall as well
-as a moat. A portion of the wall which they built is represented on the
-old plan of Hull reproduced in part on the opposite page.
-
-This plan shows the town as it was about the year 1380, and makes very
-clear the difference between a town and a village five centuries ago. On
-the left bank of the river Hull is the village of _Dripole_, with its
-church and few scattered houses; on the right bank is the town of
-_Kyngeston-upon-Hull_, with its churches, houses, and gardens closely
-packed together within a castellated wall, and protected by a riverside
-battery armed with three small cannon. The shipping on the river is seen
-to be also protected, and this with an iron chain drawn across the mouth
-of the river.
-
-In the part of the plan not here given, there is shown a more ominous
-sign of authority. Outside the Beverley Gate stands a gibbet on which
-hang the bodies of three culprits as warnings of the fate that comes to
-evil-doers.
-
- * * * * *
-
-To those accustomed to the wide and well-paved streets of our modern
-towns, the streets of a mediæval town would appear very strange. On the
-plan of Hull the two main streets, then known as _Aldgate_ and
-_Lowgate_, are shown fairly wide. But _High Street_, which follows
-regularly in its course the windings of the river Hull, is much
-narrower; and the by-streets of the town are so narrow as not to appear
-at all.
-
-[Illustration: PART OF A FOURTEENTH-CENTURY PLAN OF HULL.]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- HIGH STREET, HULL.
- Showing the ancient _King’s Head Inn_, now pulled down.
-]
-
-Streets in mediæval times were astonishingly narrow. The ‘High Street’
-of Hull has changed little during the last five hundred years, and
-to-day there are portions in which two carts cannot pass each other. The
-extreme width of the western half of Grimsby Lane, one of the by-streets
-connecting High Street and the Market Place, named after Simon de
-Grymesby, Mayor of Hull in 1391, is only nine feet. So also the main
-street in Beverley now barely allows two vehicles to pass each other,
-and some of the side lanes entering it, such as Laundress Lane and
-Tindall Lane, are even narrower than the Grimsby Lane just mentioned.
-
-In all these cases the roadway has remained practically the same width
-for a space of five centuries. But five centuries ago the condition of
-the road and the amount of air-space above it were very different from
-what they are to-day. Mediæval houses were built of thick beams of
-timber, with the intervening spaces filled in with brick and plaster,
-and security of the floors was obtained by making the second story
-project a foot or two beyond the first, and the third project similarly
-beyond the second. The result was a very firmly built house, but a very
-narrowly confined roadway.
-
-[Illustration: SECTIONS OF A MEDIÆVAL AND A MODERN STREET.]
-
-The difference between the mediæval and the modern style of road
-planning is shown in the above diagram, which gives to scale the
-building-lines of High Street and King Edward Street—the oldest and the
-newest business streets in the city of Hull.
-
-Mediæval streets were paved with round cobble stones—such stones as
-still form the pavement of the market-places of Beverley and Hedon. It
-is on record that in the year 1400 two Dutch ships brought into Hull
-cargoes of these stones amounting to 56,000 in number. But the method of
-drainage was then exactly the opposite of what it is to-day; for the
-middle of the road was the gutter, or _kennel_. If we imagine that there
-were then no ‘dust-carts,’ and that each householder got rid of refuse
-by the simple process of casting it out into the kennel for the next
-shower of rain to wash away, we shall come to some idea of the general
-condition of the streets in a mediæval town.
-
-Little wonder that in mediæval towns were bred foul diseases that broke
-out at intervals and sometimes carried off half the population in the
-course of a few months. In 1349—the year of the ‘Black Death’—1361,
-1369, and 1451 the _Plague_ visited the East Riding, and there are to be
-seen in the chancel floor of Holy Trinity Church, Hull, the tombstone
-and brasses of a merchant named Richard Byll, who was one of its victims
-in the last-mentioned year.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Five centuries ago one of the privileges of a free borough was the
-holding of a market for the sale of goods by people who were not
-burgesses of the town. Every free borough had its market-place, which
-usually lay under the shadow of the parish church, as it does to-day at
-Beverley, Driffield, Hedon, Howden and Hull. The markets were held on
-certain fixed days of the week, and Tuesdays and Fridays have been the
-market-days at Hull since the granting of King Edward I.’s charter in
-the year 1299.
-
-While the position of the market, and probably also its general
-appearance, have not altered during all these centuries, certain of its
-adornments have entirely disappeared. Beverley is the only town in the
-East Riding that has preserved its market cross. From all the towns of
-the East Riding have disappeared the stocks, the pillory, and the
-ducking-stool.
-
-[Illustration: PARISH STOCKS PRESERVED IN BEVERLEY MINSTER.]
-
-To the stocks and the pillory went in former times such men and women as
-‘John Fleshewer, butcher,’ of Hedon, who in 1420 was brought before the
-town bailiffs on the charge that he ‘did sell flesh not useable, old,
-useless, and worthless,’ and ‘Agnes, wife of John Piese, schipman,’ also
-of Hedon, who ‘did sell two penny wheat loaves of bread, not useable and
-fusty.’ In the ducking-stool went to the town moat or the river the
-scolding woman whose temper and tongue were equally beyond their owner’s
-control. So the stocks, pillory, and ducking-stool proved themselves to
-be not only ornamental but also very useful.
-
-The daily work of wage-earners five hundred years ago was very different
-from what it is to-day. There were then no such things as our huge
-factories in which thousands of ‘hands’ are employed day after day at
-the same monotonous toil. Work was more varied and the conditions were
-much freer. But hours were longer and pay was considerably less. The
-legal hours of the day labourer from March to September were 5 a.m. to 7
-p.m., with two hours allowed for breakfast and dinner. On the other
-hand, ‘Bank Holidays’—or Holy-Days, as they were then called—were far
-more numerous. _Holy-days_, in fact, reduced the working-days of the
-year to only 264 in number.
-
-The building-accounts for the Beverley North Bar in 1409 give a record
-of all the wages paid; and from these we find that the wages of a
-bricklayer were 6d. per day, of a labourer 4d., and of a carter with his
-horse and cart 12d.[40] What would the ‘British workman’ of to-day think
-of the following scale of wages, which formed the _statute yearly wages_
-in 1444:—
-
- With food and
- clothing.
-
- s. d. s. d.
-
- Bailiff of husbandry 23 4 or 5 0
-
- Hind, carter, shepherd 20 0 ” 4 0
-
- Labourer 15 0 ” 3 4
-
- Woman servant 10 0 ” 4 0
-
- Child under 14 6 0 ” 3 0
-
-Footnote 40:
-
- The total cost of the building operations, from the surveying of the
- ground to the ‘roseynyng’ of the doors, was £96 17s. 4½d.—about £2000
- in our money.
-
-The work of the _Trade Gilds_ in regulating the trade and industries of
-a town will be described in another chapter, but here is the place to
-refer to the work of the RELIGIOUS or SOCIAL GILDS which were so
-prominent a feature of mediæval town life. These were voluntary
-associations of men and women, who undertook to pay sums of money into a
-common fund, on which all members could draw during old age or during
-periods of sickness. In other words they were the Friendly Societies—the
-‘Hearts of Oak,’ ‘Ancient Order of Foresters,’ and ‘Oddfellows’—of our
-own times.
-
-At Hull there were six of these Gilds, the most important being the Gild
-of St. John Baptist, the Gild of Corpus Christi, and the Gild of the
-Holy Trinity. In the case of the first of these a member undertook to
-pay two shillings of silver each year, in four instalments, and derived
-the following benefits, on becoming ‘infirm, bowed, blind, deaf, dumb,
-maimed, ... either in youth or age.’:—
-
- (1) weekly, one halfpenny of silver;
-
- (2) at the Festival of St. Martin in winter 5s. of silver for one
- garment.
-
-The entrance fee to this Gild was 13s. 4d., but that to the Gild of
-Corpus Christi was 3 lbs. of silver. Here, however, the ‘sick pay’ was
-correspondingly higher, being 14d. weekly; and if any brother or sister
-was in need 20s. was ‘granted on loan.’
-
-In the reign of Edward VI. nearly all the Religious Gilds came to an
-end. Henry VIII. had intended their suppression, but it fell to the lot
-of Protector Somerset to be their actual destroyer. On the plea that
-they were engaged in religious services not in accordance with
-Government ideas, they suffered the fate of the monasteries; and their
-property in lands, houses, and plate—their invested funds we should call
-it to-day—was diverted to other purposes.
-
-Of the Gilds at Hull the sole one to survive was the _Gild of the Holy
-Trinity_, which was founded in 1369 and later became identical with the
-_Shipman’s Gild_. This identity with the Shipman’s Gild in 1547 saved
-its life, and in place of being swept away its privileges were
-increased. It had many private benefactors, chief among whom was Thomas
-Ferries, who in 1631 gave it the estate of the Whitefriars on which its
-buildings now stand. King Charles II. granted it a charter in which it
-is stated that the Gild
-
- hath much tended to the furtherance of Navigation, the increase of
- shipping, and the well breeding of Seamen in that Town and Port.
-
-[Illustration: ARMS OF THE HULL TRINITY HOUSE.]
-
-The Corporation of the HULL TRINITY HOUSE consists of twelve Elder
-Brethren, six Assistants, and an indefinite number of Younger Brethren.
-From the Elder Brethren two Wardens are chosen annually. They maintain
-several almshouses for mariners and their dependents, and one of the
-best navigation schools in the country; they also grant out-pensions to
-a large number of worn-out seamen.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have dealt with the work of the townsfolk in the fifteenth century,
-but what of their amusements? Here they were certainly nothing like so
-well off as their descendants of the twentieth century. Of theatres and
-kinematograph shows they had none. Football matches they had
-occasionally. But it was with this difference—that a football match then
-was not one in which thirty men played while thirty thousand looked on
-and yelled their applause or disapproval. A football match in those days
-meant one in which the ‘field’ was the main street of the town, the
-‘goals’ were the town wall or moat at either end of the street, and the
-‘players’ were the whole body of townsfolk. Such a match is still played
-annually in at least one town of Northern England.
-
-For the rest the people had their Church-Ales, their Miracle Plays, and
-their Fairs. CHURCH-ALES were parish feasts held in and around the
-church on the eve of the church’s saint’s-day; and to them each
-parishioner contributed his share—a dozen loaves, a cheese, or a few
-gallons of ale—the whole being then sold as required, while all present
-made merry. Church-Ales were, in other words, the ‘Parish-Teas’ and the
-‘Knife-and-Fork Suppers’ of our own degenerate days.
-
-As has been said, there were in mediæval towns no theatres. Still the
-townsfolk had their plays. In very early times the play-house was the
-church, the plays were representations of events recorded in the
-Scriptures, and the performers were the clergy.
-
-In the thirteenth century, however, it became the custom for these
-MIRACLE-PLAYS, as they were called, to be performed no longer in the
-church, but on moveable platforms, known as ‘pageants,’ in streets and
-market-places, or on village greens, at the different fairs and
-festivals throughout the country. Yorkshire seems to have taken a
-prominent share in their creation; for we have to-day a manuscript of
-forty-eight plays performed regularly at York for two hundred years, and
-another of thirty plays performed at Wakefield. We know also that at
-Beverley such plays were produced each year on the festival of Corpus
-Christi—the Thursday after Trinity Sunday—from 1407 to 1604, and that at
-Hull the play of _Noah_ was performed in the streets once each year for
-a space of three centuries.
-
-[Illustration: A MIRACLE PLAY IN THE OLDEN TIME.]
-
-What the performance of a Miracle Play was like may be judged pretty
-well from the accompanying illustration. The pageant was a large
-‘two-decker’ vehicle, which could be drawn by men or horses from one
-‘station’ to another.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- NOAH’S ARK.
- (_From an old French Miracle Play_).
-]
-
-It was the custom at York for the first play in the series—_God the
-Father Almighty Creating and Forming the Heavens_—to begin on Corpus
-Christi morning at 5 o’clock. This was at the gates of the Priory of
-Holy Trinity. When this part of the Creation had been satisfactorily got
-through, its pageant passed on to take up its second station ‘at the
-door of Robert Harpham’; while another play showing _God the Father
-Creating the Earth_ took its place. And so on through the whole series,
-each play being thus performed at twelve different stations during the
-course of the day.
-
-The performers of these plays were the members of the various Trade
-Gilds of a town. So far as the number of plays allowed, each Gild might
-have its own play, and the plays were as far as possible appropriately
-distributed. Thus at York the Goldsmiths had allotted to them _The Three
-Kings Coming from the East_, the Vintners had _The Turning of Water into
-Wine_, and the Butchers had _The Crucifixion_. At both York and Hull the
-Shipmen, or Mariners, had the play of _Noah_.
-
-Stage properties were well looked after. The ‘ark’ used in a French
-performance of _The Deluge_ is here shown, while that used in the
-corresponding play produced each ‘Plough Monday’[41] by the Hull Shipmen
-was equally elaborate though built more in resemblance to an ordinary
-ship. It had mast and rigging, and pictures of the animals that ‘went in
-two by two’ hung round its sides painted on boards. From one festival to
-another it remained suspended from the roof of Holy Trinity Church.
-
-Footnote 41:
-
- The first Monday after ‘Twelfth Night,’ _i.e._ the Monday following
- January 6th.
-
-Some curious items occur in the old accounts of the Hull Trinity House
-in this connection:—
-
- To Robert Brown, playing God 6d.
-
- To Noah and his wife 1s. 6d.
-
- To a shipwright for clinking Noah’s
- ship, one day 7d.
-
- For three skins for Noah’s coat, making
- it, and a rope to hang the ship in the
- kirk 2s. 5d.
-
-When, in 1494, the Gild of the Holy Trinity had to purchase a new Ark,
-the accounts show also that the cost amounted to the tremendous sum of
-£7 4s. 11d.
-
-The lower stage of the pageant is, in the illustration, shown to be
-curtained off. This lower stage was the actors’ dressing-room, and also
-served very conveniently as the ‘lower regions’ from which through a
-trap-door the Devil would emerge with horns and tail complete. God was
-stationed on a raised platform at the back of the upper stage, and
-appeared in the full dress of a Pope, saints had gilded hair and beards,
-and angels were dressed in white surplices through which their gilded
-wings projected.
-
-Most impressive and realistic these must have seemed in the eyes of the
-beholders. But there were also ‘realistic effects’ to be seen—lightning,
-earthquakes, and the destruction of the world by fire—as the following
-items show:—
-
- Payd for the baryll for the yerthequake iiij_d._
- Payd for starche to make the storm vj_d._
- Payd for settynge the world of fyer v_d._
-
-How realistic also must have been the crossing of the Red Sea! For the
-children of Israel did actually cross it in the sight of all. ‘Halfe a
-yard of Rede Sea’—there it is down in black and white among the
-properties belonging to _Israel in Egypt_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A FOURTEENTH CENTURY ‘SHOW.’
- (_From an old Manuscript_).
-]
-
-The mediæval Miracle Plays have long been dead in our country, but we
-still have with us the remains of the great mediæval FAIRS. In the days
-when few people travelled if they could possibly stay at home, and when
-for the whole of the winter months the state of the country roads
-prohibited all travelling except that on horseback, fairs were a
-necessity. The right to hold an annual fair was therefore an eagerly
-sought privilege.
-
-Thus Beverley, Bridlington, Hedon, Howden, Hull—all these towns very
-early obtained the right to hold annual fairs. The Hedon townsfolk had
-their fair every year ‘on the feast of St. Mary Magdalen, and for seven
-days after,’ from the year 1162; and this fair continued to be held on
-Magdalen Hill down to 1878. The charter for the holding of a fair at
-Hull was granted in 1299, and the eleventh day of October, 1911, saw
-Hull Fair still in full swing.
-
-To these mediæval fairs would come a large concourse of merchants,
-minstrels, pedlars, jugglers, and rogues. To them would come also
-householders and the stewards of manor-house and castle, eager to buy
-cloth, silks, ribbons, pots and pans, boots and shoes, wine, wax, malt,
-a store of butter to last over the winter, or a store of salt for
-preparing the winter meat supply.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- BEAR-BAITING.
- A fifteenth century wood-carving in St. Mary’s Church, Beverley.
-]
-
-Among the entertainment providers would come the owner of the ‘wild
-beast show’—the show consisting of a solitary elephant or dromedary, or,
-much more frequently, an ape and a bear. If it is a bear that is the
-showman’s stock-in-trade, then there will be a chance for dogs that have
-grown sated with indulgence in the sport of bull-baiting to experience a
-new sensation.[42]
-
-Footnote 42:
-
- The old ‘bull ring’ to which bulls were tethered at a bull-baiting in
- the market-place of Kilham is now built into the bank of the
- churchyard wall.
-
-Hither also would come that strange product of the middle ages—the
-pardoner. He professes to have from the Pope power to grant pardons for
-sins committed, or even for sins to be committed, if only satisfactory
-payment is forthcoming. To prove his genuineness he has a wallet full of
-parchments, brought straight from Rome, and all duly stamped with large
-seals. And if that is not enough for his credulous audience he has holy
-relics to show—a piece of the sail of St. Peter’s boat, and a feather
-from the wing of the angel Gabriel.
-
-He has also the shoulder bone of a holy Jew’s sheep, which is guaranteed
-to cure disease in any cow, calf, ox, or sheep, if the bone be but
-washed in a bucket of water and the sick animal’s tongue well cleaned
-with this water. ‘One penny’ is all his charge. ‘Bring your buckets full
-of water. Now’s your chance! If you lose it, your sick cow, calf, ox, or
-sheep may be dead in the morning, and you’ll be sorry ever afterwards
-that you didn’t take my advice.’
-
-Thus does the rascal do a roaring trade.
-
-
-
-
- XIX.
- THE TRADE UNIONS OF THE MIDDLE AGES.
-
-
-With the Trade Unions of our days almost everyone is to some extent
-acquainted. Certainly everyone who lives in a town is acquainted with
-them. For, in the first place, most workmen in a town belong to a trade
-union; and, in the second place, many who are not ‘workmen’, in the
-usual meaning of the word, are made uncomfortably aware of the existence
-of one or other of the Trade Unions when what is called a ‘Strike’ takes
-place.
-
-Many people, if asked their opinion, would say that Trade Unions are a
-purely modern institution—that it is only in our own times that workmen
-have found the usefulness of binding themselves together in a ‘Union’
-for the obtaining of benefits which singly they could not expect to
-gain. But such an opinion would be wrong. Trade Unions, though called by
-a different name, existed in our country six, seven, and even eight
-hundred years ago.
-
-What we call by the name of Trade Unions were in former times known as
-CRAFT GILDS. They had this name because they were clubs, or
-fraternities, or brotherhoods, of men who were engaged in some branch or
-branches of handicraft, and who paid a fine—originally known as
-_gildi_—to obtain the privileges of membership.
-
-In all towns there were found these Craft Gilds. Thus in 1406 Beverley
-had thirty-eight, and the Craft Gilds of Kingston-upon-Hull in the
-sixteenth and seventeenth centuries included those of the Weavers, the
-Tailors, the Glovers, the Joiners, the Carpenters, the Shipwrights, the
-Bricklayers, the Cobblers, the Shoemakers, the Coopers, the Brewers, the
-Innholders, the Bakers, and the Barber Chirurgeons. Each of these crafts
-had its own Gild. But, on the other hand, the Goldsmiths, Pewterers,
-Plumbers, Glaziers, Painters, Cutlers, Musicians, Stationers,
-Bookbinders, and Basketmakers had to be content with one Gild among
-them; and a strange medley their Gild must have been.
-
-There was one great difference between these Craft Gilds and our Trade
-Unions. Whereas the men who belong to the latter are the employed
-workmen, those who belonged to the former were both the employers and
-the employed, both the masters and the men. Hence the rules of the Gilds
-were framed not only to protect the workmen against hard and unjust
-masters, but also to protect the masters against dishonest and careless
-workmen, and, in addition, to protect the public from being defrauded by
-either dishonest masters or idle workmen. How each of these good results
-was effected will be seen from the following extracts, taken from the
-rules of different Craft Gilds belonging to Kingston-upon-Hull.
-
- * * * * *
-
-First, we will consider the protection of the workman. Before a _Weaver_
-might set up in business for himself he must pay xij_d._ to the Alderman
-of his Gild for the inspection of his workhouse by the searchers, who
-would search whether his workhouse were ‘good and able’ or not. If they
-were satisfied on this point, then the owner was permitted to begin
-business on payment of an ‘upsett’ of iij_s._ iiij_d._ No woman was
-allowed to work at this trade within the town upon pain of xl_s._ Nor
-might a _Tailor_ keep any manner of workman tailor employed within his
-dwelling-house. Again, no _Joiner_ might withhold his servant’s wages
-over the space of six days after the same were due. If he did, the
-servant could get from the Warden an order for their payment, and the
-master’s penalty for disobeying this order was xij_d._
-
-For the protection of the masters there were corresponding laws:—
-
- If any of the brotherhood of the _Bricklayers_, being at work with
- any man, do, in the time of his work, resort unto the alehouse or do
- play at dice, cards, or any other unthrifty game, he shall forfeit
- and pay for every time so doing viij_d._
-
-So also, in the rules of the _Shipwrights_, a very heavy penalty was
-imposed upon the workman who for mere caprice threw down his tools and
-left his work unfinished:—
-
- If any person shall be lawfully retained in work by the day, and
- shall unjustly and unlawfully leave or depart from the same until
- such time as the same work shall be fully finished, he shall forfeit
- and pay to the master warden for every such offence forty shillings
- of lawful money of england.
-
-The protection of the public was equally well looked after. No person
-might set up or keep an Inn, unless he could make and furnish four
-comely and decent guest beds; and every _Innholder_ was obliged to have
-in his house, ready-made, four bottles of hay, to be shown to the
-searchers at all times when they came to make search. Thus the comfort
-of both man and beast was ensured to travellers.
-
-All manufactured goods were to be open to inspection by the searchers of
-the particular Gild, and any scamped or fraudulent goods were ‘seized
-and forfeited.’ Thus a rule of the _Shoemakers’ Gild_ stated that—
-
- The searchers shall well and diligently search and try all boots,
- shoes, buskins, slippers and pantoufles,[43] whether they be made of
- leather well and truly tanned and curried, and well and
- substantially sewed with good thread, well twisted and made and
- sufficiently waxed with wax well rosined, and the stitches hard
- drawn with hand leathers.
-
-Boots and shoes made under these regulations were intended to last in
-wear for a substantially long time, and brown paper inner soles and
-wooden heels would stand a poor chance of passing the inspection of the
-searchers. On the shelves of the Hull Museum may be seen some pairs of
-boots made and worn two hundred and fifty years ago, and still almost
-‘as good as new.’
-
-Footnote 43:
-
- The French name for slippers.
-
-A rule of the _Brotherhood of Cobblers_ reads quaintly. But, doubtless,
-it proved a very useful rule:—
-
- If any cobbler shall keep any work brought to him longer than two
- days, without consent of the owner, he shall forfeit for every
- offence the sum of two shillings and sixpence.
-
-One is bound to imagine that there was in those days a brisk trade in
-‘Boots Mended While You Wait.’
-
-Prices were also well looked after. ‘That no one presume to sell a pound
-of candles for more than one penny, or a gallon of the best ale for more
-than the same, or a gallon of small ale for more than a half-penny’—so
-runs one of the laws as to prices. Bakers’ charges were regulated
-according to the price of wheat. A farthing and a half-penny were fixed
-as the price of loaves, but the weight of the loaf varied. Thus in 1267,
-when wheat was one shilling a quarter—
-
- White bread cost ½d. per 13 lbs.
- Wheat bread ” ” ” 20 ”
- Horseloaves[44] ” ” ” 27 ”
-
-Footnote 44:
-
- Horse loaves were coarse bean bread, something like the modern
- dog-biscuit, and used as a winter food for horses.
-
-The employment of cheap unskilled labour was expressly guarded against.
-In general, no master might keep more than one or two apprentices, and
-each apprentice must serve for a space of seven years. By the latter
-rule there was a kind of guarantee that an apprentice would learn his
-craft thoroughly before becoming a journeyman. No alien might be taken
-as an apprentice, and in many towns night-work was forbidden, as being
-usually inferior to day-work.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When an apprentice had ‘served his time’ and learned his craft, he
-might, in his turn, become free of his Gild and so earn the right to
-sell the product of his hands. But this right to sell was carefully
-guarded, as the following regulations of the _Coopers_ and the _Bakers_
-show:—
-
- No cooper, unless he be first free burgess of this town and free of
- this company, shall keep any shop in this town upon pain of 5s.
- weekly.
-
- No person or persons dwelling without this town shall sell any bread
- or cakes within this town otherwise than on the Tuesdays and
- Fridays, market days, in open market.
-
-If a craftsman was thus protected against undue competition from
-outsiders, so he was protected against undue competition from those who
-had a desire to encroach on someone else’s preserves. Carpenters might
-not work as joiners or as shipwrights, cobblers might not work as
-shoemakers, nor might shoemakers work as cobblers. ‘Every man to his own
-trade’ was a maxim of the middle ages, and there was then no call for a
-‘William Whiteley’ or a ‘Selfridge’s, Ltd.’
-
-Sunday labour and Sunday trading were expressly forbidden in all Gilds:—
-
- No shopwindows of the fraternity of _Shoemakers_ shall be opened
- upon the sabbath days in pain of every default viij_d._
-
- No brother exercising the crafts or mysteries of a _Barber_ or
- _Peruke-maker_ shall upon the Lord’s day, commonly called Sunday,
- either out or in time of divine service, work, or keep open his
- shop, on pain to forfeit for every time he shall be found so doing
- the sum of ten shillings.
-
-Again, it is interesting to find that ‘Sunday Closing’ was provided for
-in the following regulation:—
-
- No _Vintner_ or _Aleseller_ shall sell any ale or wine unto any one
- before 11 o’clock on Sunday, unless to strangers, under penalty of
- vj_s._ viij_d._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Most interesting of all the thirty-eight Craft Gilds of Beverley is that
-of the Minstrels. The charter of this Gild was confirmed by ‘the
-gracious goodness of our most virtuous sovereign Lord and Lady, King
-Philip and Queen Mary,’ and is said to date ‘from the time of King
-Aethelstan, of famous memory.’
-
-[Illustration: THE BEVERLEY MINSTRELS.]
-
-In 1520 the tower of St. Mary’s Church, Beverley, fell, and destroyed in
-its fall the greater part of the nave of the church. Various families of
-the town undertook the rebuilding of some portion of this, and one
-portion—the north-east pillar and the wall and roof above it—was rebuilt
-at the expense of the _Gild of the Minstrels_. This fact is recorded on
-a tablet placed high up on the pillar, where may be read these words:—
-
- THYS PYLLOR
- MADE THE
- MEYNSTYRLS.
-
-Attached to the east face of the pillar are also figures of five
-‘meynstyrls,’ each gaudily coloured and holding his particular musical
-instrument—a tabor and pipe, a large viol, a shawm, a cittern, and a
-wait or hautboy.
-
-Besides these numerous Craft Gilds there were MERCHANT GILDS, or, as we
-should call them to-day, ‘Trading Companies.’
-
-The distinction between the two kinds of Gilds is not always clear, and
-in some cases a trader belonged to both. But in general the Craft Gilds
-contained men who by their daily work changed the form of a thing, while
-the Merchant Gilds contained those whose daily work consisted of trading
-in a thing without changing its form. Thus, the Merchant Tailors bought
-and sold cloth, but the Tailors made the cloth into clothes. And just as
-to-day it is ‘much more respectable’ to be an egg-merchant than to be a
-pastry-cook, so, five centuries ago, it was equally ‘more respectable’
-to be a merchant-tailor than a tailor pure and simple.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ARMS OF THE HULL
- MERCHANTS’
- COMPANY.
-]
-
-Chief among the Merchant Gilds of Kingston-upon-Hull were the _Gild of
-the Merchant Adventurers_, originally known as the ‘Brotherhood of St.
-Thomas of Canterbury,’ and the _Hull Merchants’ Company_. During the
-reigns of the Tudor and Stuart Kings, these did much to foster the trade
-of Hull with the great ports on the other side of the North Sea.
-
-A charter was granted to the Hull Merchants’ Company by Queen Elizabeth,
-and King Charles II. renewed it on receipt of ‘fifty pounds of good and
-lawful money of England.’ The members of the Company met in the
-Merchants’ Hall—the upper story of the red-brick building on the south
-of the Market Place, now known as the Choir School—and a ‘merchant’s
-mark’ is still to be seen cut in three stone panels in the front wall of
-the building. They were a wealthy Company, and at one time had much
-power. Fines or ‘upsetts’ for the privilege of membership ranged from
-6s. 8d. to £20.
-
-It is interesting to find that the Hull Merchants’ Company acted as a
-Post Office for foreign correspondence. ‘Masters of ships’—so ran one of
-the laws governing their Exchange—must
-
- hang up a bagg a week before their sailing, that merchants may putt
- their letters therein, and soe the masters to take the same away the
- night before they intend to saile.
-
-Equally interesting is it to find that the Hull merchants of the
-seventeenth century were, evidently, firm believers in the modern
-doctrine of ‘Protection.’ For, by one of the statutes regulating the
-trade of the port, all alien merchants must bring their goods to the
-Exchange and must pay one penny in the pound for the privilege of sale.
-
- * * * * *
-
-What an insight into the working-lives of the townspeople, whether
-traders or craftsmen, we have given us in the ancient documents of the
-Merchant Gilds and Trade Gilds! As Canon Lambert says in his _Two
-Thousand Years of Gild Life_, they ‘bring back into view the everyday
-life of the town in the centuries of which they treat. As we study them
-we can mingle again in the vigorous life of the narrow streets. We can
-learn how it was that the men of that time built houses of which the
-mortar stands to-day as hard as stone; we can picture the barber looking
-askance at the upstart man who presumed as surgeon to molest his ancient
-right of letting the blood of his customers at the fall of the leaf; we
-can look into the mysteries of the brewing-vat as it was before tea had
-usurped the time-honoured place of the pewter at the breakfast tables of
-society; we can see the shipwrights who made the ships of Elizabeth at
-work; we can walk, as it were, along the small booths and shops, and
-judge of the quality of the goods which had come from Hamburg or
-Muscovy, or which had been fashioned with such care in the workshop
-behind the parlour.’
-
-Of the _Religious_ or _Social Gilds_, which existed at even earlier
-times than the Merchant and Craft Gilds, something was said in Chapter
-XVIII. The fate which overwhelmed the Religious Gilds during the reign
-of Edward VI. had, doubtless, some effect on the Trading Companies and
-Brotherhoods of Craftsmen. But the last-named were very largely excepted
-from the Suppression of the Gilds in 1547, and their gradual decay and
-final extinction were due to the introduction of new industries and new
-methods of working. The _Hull Merchants’ Company_ became extinct in
-1706, there was still existing at Beverley in 1752 the _Brotherhood of
-the Barkers or Tanners_, and the last entry in the Book of the _Hull
-Fraternity of Coopers_ is dated 1788.
-
-
-
-
- XX.
- THE SUPPRESSION OF THE MONASTERIES
- AND
- THE PILGRIMAGE OF GRACE.
-
-
-In a previous chapter were described the various buildings of a
-monastery and the mode of life of its inmates. And at the end of the
-chapter reference was made to the gradual loss of those high ideals
-which had been the origin of the many hundred monasteries that existed
-in our country at the beginning of the sixteenth century. The results of
-that loss will now be described.
-
-The benefits to the country at large arising from the establishment of
-these religious houses had been great. They served as hotels for the
-rich and as almshouses for the poor. The Cistercian monks were pioneers
-in agriculture. Both monks and friars got together libraries of
-books—that at Meaux Abbey contained 324 volumes in 1539—and were mostly
-diligent scribes. Thus they helped to spread the means of learning.
-
-But by the beginning of the sixteenth century many Houses had outlived
-their usefulness. Their inmates had decreased in numbers until only six
-monks remained where sixty had once been. Laxity of discipline crept in
-with this decrease of numbers. Hence it seemed right to suppress the
-small and useless religious houses, and to apply their revenues to other
-useful purposes.
-
-This was the thought in the minds of both Cardinal Wolsey and the Pope
-of Rome when in 1524 the one applied for a certain Papal Bull and the
-other granted it. It was to the effect that various small monasteries to
-the annual value of three thousand ducats should be suppressed, and
-their revenues used to endow the new ‘Cardinal College’ which Wolsey was
-then planning to build at Oxford. Four years later permission was
-granted to suppress others to the annual value of eight thousand ducats.
-In the following year King Henry VIII. was given permission to suppress
-others to the annual value of ten thousand ducats, and to apply their
-revenues to the foundation of new cathedrals.
-
-‘Very right and proper,’ you will probably think. ‘The money was going
-to be put to a better use.’ Yes, but these suppressions might point out
-to some unscrupulous adviser of the King a means whereby large supplies
-of money could easily be obtained; and if the King happened to be in
-need of money and was not very scrupulous as to the manner in which that
-money were obtained, it might become a very dangerous precedent.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] The Gateway of Kirkham Priory. [_H.F. Farr_
-
-]
-
-This is just what it did become. King Henry VIII. was not a particularly
-scrupulous man in more ways than one, and his chief adviser after
-Cardinal Wolsey’s death was particularly unscrupulous. Acting on the
-advice of Thomas Cromwell, Parliament, at the close of 1535, ordered a
-‘Visitation’ of the monasteries throughout the country, and the
-presentation of a report based on the results of this. Accordingly, two
-‘Visitors’ were appointed, who in the short space of six weeks visited,
-or were said to have visited, eighty-eight monasteries in the dioceses
-of Coventry, Lichfield and York.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C.W. Mason_
-
- Ruins of the East End of the Church of Kirkham Priory.
-
-]
-
-The report presented to Parliament was named THE BLACK BOOK, and its
-nature was such that in February, 1536, Parliament ordered the
-suppression of all monasteries that had an annual income of less than
-£200. As a result 376 religious houses were suppressed, their inmates
-were transferred to the larger houses or left to shift for themselves,
-and their lands, to the annual value of £32,000, were forfeited to the
-King. All the monasteries and nunneries in the East Riding thus came to
-an end except those at Kirkham, Meaux, Watton and Bridlington, whose
-annual incomes amounted to £269, £299, £360 and £547 respectively.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In most parts of the country this suppression of the smaller monasteries
-caused no great stir. Undoubtedly some of them needed suppression.
-Undoubtedly, too, the report which got about, that the confiscation of
-the wealth of the religious houses would provide so much money for the
-government that there would thenceforth be no taxes for the common folk
-to pay, tended to prevent an outcry from being raised by the people. But
-in two counties there were rebellions. The first, in Lincolnshire,
-proved of little account; but the second, which had its origin in
-Yorkshire, was a formidable rising to which was given the name of _The
-Pilgrimage of Grace_.
-
-In this rising all the north of England was concerned. The great Abbeys
-of Yorkshire exercised a powerful influence over the minds of the
-people, and a widespread religious ferment broke out. Lord Darcy, Earl
-of Holderness, Sir Robert Constable of Flamborough, Sir Thomas Percy,
-brother of the Earl of Northumberland, and many other northern nobles
-threw in their lot with the rebellious commoners. Soon forty thousand
-men were enrolled under the command of Robert Aske, a Westminster lawyer
-and brother of John Aske, the lord of the manor of Aughton-on-Derwent.
-
-The demands of Aske and his followers were:—
-
- (1) The restoration of the suppressed monasteries;
-
- (2) The expulsion of counsellors of low birth from the King’s court;
-
- (3) The holding of Parliament and of a Court of Justice at York as
- well as at London.[45]
-
-Footnote 45:
-
- This third demand resulted in the formation of the ‘Council of the
- North,’ which met at York during the next hundred years.
-
-Thus the rebellion had both a religious and a political aspect, but the
-former was that which was most apparent. The suppression of the smaller
-monasteries was to be followed by the closing and pulling down of the
-smaller parish churches, and the church plate was to be confiscated as
-had been that of the abbeys and priories. That was—so people said—the
-intention of Thomas Cromwell, the counsellor of low birth against whom
-their second demand was aimed. So the men of the North were up in arms
-in defence of their religious liberties; and as they marched behind the
-processional crosses brought from their parish churches, they wore on
-their sleeves a roughly-made badge of the ‘five wounds of Christ.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration:
-
- BADGE OF THE PILGRIMAGE OF GRACE.
- The letters ‘I G’ stand for the Latin
- words _Itinerarium Gratiae_—the
- Pilgrimage of Grace.
-]
-
-Robert Aske had been crossing by the ferry from Brough to Barton at the
-close of the ‘long vacation’ of 1536 when he was told by the boatmen
-that the Commons were ‘up’ in Lincolnshire. Another London barrister,
-William Stapleton, the son of Sir Brian Stapleton of Wighill, similarly
-heard of the Lincolnshire rising while he was waiting at Hull to cross
-the river. He had been staying with his eldest brother, ‘a very weake,
-craysid and ympotent man’, in the Grey Friary at Beverley. This was
-apparently a much-frequented health resort; for his brother was ‘lying
-there for chaunge of ayer as he had doon the somer before from Maye till
-after Mydsommer.’
-
-It was three o’clock on the morning of October 5th when Christopher
-Stapleton’s servant brought word to William that
-
- all Lyncolnshere was up from Barton to Lincoln ... and that
- Grauntham way was stopped as well as Lincoln, so that no man could
- passe to london vntaken.
-
-So William Stapleton had perforce to remain waiting in Hull.
-
-Meanwhile Robert Aske was sending out letters to the men of the East
-Riding, and on Sunday, October 8th, the town bell at Beverley was set
-ringing and the townsmen ‘took oathe to the comons.’ Then
-
- with greate noyse, showtes, and cryes they made proclamation everye
- man to appere at Westwood grene the morrowe after with suche horse
- and harnes as they had upon payne of death.
-
-Great was the alarm of the ‘weake, craysid’ Christopher at these doings,
-and he gave orders to his people that they should keep themselves within
-doors. But his wife had determined otherwise, and went out to talk over
-the hedge and learn what was happening. ‘Where is your husband and his
-folkes that he cometh not as other dooth?’ she was asked, and her reply
-made quite clear which way her sympathies lay. ‘They be in the freers,
-goo pull them oute by the heddes.’
-
-Christopher Stapleton’s wife had evidently paid more heed to the advice
-of a certain Carthusian monk, ‘Sir Thomas Johnson, otherwise called
-Bonadventure,’ who was at that time an inmate of the Grey Friary, than
-she had to the commands of her husband.
-
-The lady’s suggestion came very near being carried out on the following
-morning. But appearances were saved by William Stapleton and his brother
-Brian’s coming out on the ‘Westwood grene’ to take their oath, while
-‘certayne honnest men’ were sent to record the oath of Christopher.
-Whereat Christopher’s wife and the Carthusian monk were ‘very joyous and
-merye,’ while outside on the ‘grene’ there were unanimous cries:
-‘Maister William Stapulton shelbe our Captayne.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-William Stapleton thus became one of the leaders of the insurgents. By
-his orders Hunsley beacon and Tranby beacon were fired; men came in from
-_Newbalde_ and _North Cave_, _Brantyngham_, _Cottingham_ and _Hassell_;
-and a small army of nine thousand marched to _Wighton Hill_, there to
-meet Robert Aske, who had ‘raysed all Howdenshire and Marshelande.’
-
-Following the plan of campaign decided upon at Weighton, Aske with the
-main part of the army of insurgents marched to York, which surrendered
-on October 16th, and thence to Pontefract, which he captured four days
-later. Meanwhile Stapleton laid siege to Hull, encamping his men close
-to the Beverley Gate. The city was being held for the King by Sir Ralph
-Ellerker and Sir John Constable, neither of whom would hear of
-surrender; for they were determined, as Sir John Constable put it,
-rather to ‘dye with honneste than lyve with shame.’
-
-An easy way to effect the capture of the town was pointed out by one of
-Stapleton’s men, who said that
-
- with one barell of pyche fiered and sent downe with the tyde he
- would sett on fyer all the shippes in the haven.
-
-But Stapleton would have none of such methods, and, much to the disgust
-of the more unruly of his men, he even forbade the firing of the
-windmills near the Beverley Gate.
-
-The leader of this besieging force was a strict disciplinarian. He would
-allow no pillaging, and gave orders that every man must pay honestly for
-what he took. But ‘spoylinges and prevy pickinges’ did happen,
-nevertheless;
-
- wheruppon he badde watche and take some therewith, and prove what he
- shuld doo. And theruppon they toke one Barton a fletcher whiche the
- said William had put in trust to kepe their vittall, and also one
- nawghty fellow a saynetewary[46] man of Beverley and a comen picker
- taken with picking muche thinges.
-
- Wheruppon ... he cawsed to take the same twoo, and made them beleve
- they shulde dye, and theruppon assigned a freer to them being in his
- companye, advysing them to make them clene to God ...; after the
- whiche so doon the said William callid for one Spalding a waterman
- and in the presence of all men causede them to be called oute, and
- the seyntuary man was tyed by the middell with a rope to thende of
- the bote and so haled over the water and seuerall tymes put downe
- with the oore over the hedde. And thother seeing him thought to be
- so handiled, howbeit at the request of honest men he being a
- howsekeper, he was suffered to goo unponyshed and so bothe bannyshed
- the hoost.
-
-Footnote 46:
-
- Sanctuary.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C.W. Mason_
-
- Howden Church from the South.
- Showing how the east end of the church has been destroyed.
-
-]
-
-A very satisfactory mode of punishment it turned out to be. For after
-this ‘there was never spoile in the company of the said William.’
-
-The conclusion of the _Pilgrimage_ must be briefly told. The defenders
-of Hull finally surrendered on honourable terms. Aske, after taking
-Pontefract, went south to Doncaster, where negotiations were opened with
-the Duke of Norfolk, Commander-in-Chief of the King’s forces. As a
-result of these negotiations Aske was granted a safe-conduct to visit
-the King in London, and returned home on January 8th, with a promise
-that the King would visit York next Whitsuntide and hold there a
-Parliament at which all grievances should be considered. Satisfied with
-this success Aske disbanded his men.
-
-All might now have gone well. But unfortunately for those who had been
-concerned in the rebellion, a certain Sir Francis Bigod and John Hallam,
-a servant of Sir Robert Constable, formed plans for seizing the towns of
-Scarborough, Beverley, and Hull, and beginning the rebellion again.
-Their attempts failed, and were made the occasion of a withdrawal of the
-terms previously offered by the King, and the taking of ruthless
-measures to stamp out the insurrection.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The results of the Pilgrimage of Grace proved terrible for the
-ringleaders. Robert Aske was decoyed to London, arrested, tried at
-Westminster, exhibited as a traitor in each of the towns where he had
-been welcomed as a deliverer of the people, and finally hanged, drawn,
-and quartered at York. Sir Robert Constable was hanged in chains on the
-Beverley Gate of Hull, Lord Darcy was beheaded on Tower Hill, Sir John
-Bulmer was hanged at Tyburn, and his wife was burnt at the stake. The
-abbots of Fountains, Rievaulx, and Jervaulx, together with the Prior of
-Bridlington, were also hanged at Tyburn; and an excuse was thus made for
-the forfeiture of their Houses to the King.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C.W. Mason_
-
- Howden Church—Ruins of the Chapter House.
-
-]
-
-When, in 1536, the decree for the suppression of the smaller monasteries
-was issued, Parliament thanked God that ‘in divers and great solemn
-monasteries of the realm, religion is right well kept and observed.’ The
-Abbots of some of these were induced to surrender voluntarily—‘willingly
-to consent and agree’ to the destruction of their Abbeys and the
-confiscation of all their property. The Abbots of others were convicted
-of high treason, and their Abbeys declared forfeited. One hundred and
-fifty surrendered during 1538–9, and by 1540 all had been suppressed.
-
-The sale of the Abbey lands realised a sum of money equal to £8,500,000
-in the money of to-day, and the value of the plunder from the
-shrines—gold, silver gilt, and silver crosses, chalices, and
-candlesticks—was not less than another million pounds. The total cash
-value to the King amounted to nearly £15,000,000 in our money. Of this
-huge sum about one-half was spent on public purposes—the foundation of
-new bishoprics, the building of schools, and the organisation of
-harbours and other national defences.[47] The remainder went into the
-pockets of the King’s courtiers, many of whom rose from comparative
-poverty to a position of wealth.
-
-Footnote 47:
-
- See page 208 for an example of this.
-
- * * * * *
-
-What the _Suppression_ meant to the religious houses of the East Riding
-may be judged from the following letter, written in 1538 by a servant of
-Thomas Cromwell to his master:—
-
- Pleasythe your good Lordshipp to be advertysed. I have taken downe
- all the lead of Jervayse,[48] and made itt in pecys of half-foders,
- which lead amounteth to the numbre of eighteen score and five
- foders,[49] with thirty and foure foders, and a half, that were
- there before. And the said lead cannot be conveit, nor caryed unto
- the next sombre, for the ways in that contre are so foule, and deep,
- that no carrage can passe in wyntre. And as concerning the raising
- and taken downe the house, if itt be your Lordshipps pleasure I am
- minded to let itt stand to the Spring of the yere, by reason of the
- days are now so short it wolde be double charge to do itt now. And
- as concerning the selling of the bells, I cannot sell them above
- 15s. the hundreth,[50] wherein I would gladly know your Lordshipps
- pleasor, whether I should sell them after that price, or send them
- up to London. And if they be sent up surely the carriage wolbe
- costly frome that place to the water. And as for Byrdlington I have
- doyn nothing there as yet, but sparethe itt to March next, bycause
- the days now are so short, and from such tyme as I begyn I trust
- shortly to dyspatche itt after such fashion that when all is
- fynished, I trust your Lordshipp shall think that I have bene no
- evyll howsbound in all such things, as your Lordshipp haith
- appoynted me to doo. And thus the Holy Ghost ever preserve your
- Lordshipp in honor. At York this fourteenth day of November by your
- most bounden beadsman.
-
- RICHARD BELLYCYS.
-
-Footnote 48:
-
- Jervaulx Abbey, in the North Riding.
-
-Footnote 49:
-
- A _foder_ equals 2400 lbs.
-
-Footnote 50:
-
- Hundredweight.
-
-That Cromwell’s ‘most bounden beadsman’ faithfully kept his promise we
-see to-day in the condition of Bridlington Priory. What we call the
-‘Priory Church’ is merely the nave of the church of the Augustinian
-Priory. Chancel and transepts have equally disappeared. So have the
-cloisters, chapter house, frater, dorter, Abbot’s house, and the
-numerous farm buildings which once stood within the Priory walls. Of the
-walls themselves nothing remains but the ‘Bayle Gate.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-A worse tale has to be told of the wilful destruction of the other
-monasteries, nunneries, and friaries in our Riding.
-
-Of Kirkham Priory, on the bank of the river Derwent, there are remains
-only of the once beautiful gateway, the cloister court, and the east end
-of the church. What is now the Swine parish church was once the chancel
-of the nunnery church. Of the Black Friary at Beverley there are remains
-of the boundary wall. The oriel window of the Prior’s house is to be
-seen built into the modern ‘Watton Priory,’ and a few stones of the
-Priory of Haltemprice are built into a farmhouse which now occupies part
-of its site. Of the great Abbey of Meaux—founded in 1150 by William le
-Gros, Earl of Holderness, in redemption of a vow that he would make a
-pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and rebuilt four times during the next hundred
-years—there now remains not one stone in place above ground. And of the
-Friaries once flourishing in Hull nought remains but their mere names.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C.W. Mason_
-
- All that remained of Meaux Abbey in 1900.
-
-]
-
-‘Even where the dogs licked the blood of Naboth, even there shall the
-dogs lick thy blood also, O King.’ Such was the text which a certain
-Grey Friar used when he had occasion to preach before King Henry. A bold
-man he must have been thus to take his fate into his hands. What the
-fate of Friar Peto actually was is not recorded, but we know that the
-Grey Friars and the Carthusian Monks were treated with particular
-brutality.
-
-Of the monks of the London Charterhouse five were hanged at Tyburn, and
-their bodies afterwards cut up. Ten were removed to Newgate on May 29th,
-1537. Sixteen days later the following report was issued:—
-
- There are departed 5
- There are even at the point of death 2
- There are sick 2
- There is healed 1
-
-Later on all but one are reported as dead, and three years afterwards
-that one was hanged at Tyburn. With his name we are already
-acquainted—‘Sir Thomas Johnson, otherwise called Bonadventure.’ Surely
-never was monk given a less appropriate name than his turned out to be.
-
-
-
-
- XXI.
- HOW THE GREAT CIVIL WAR BEGAN AT HULL.
-
-
-In four different centuries has England suffered the pangs of that
-deplorable kind of war which we are accustomed to describe by the
-adjective ‘Civil.’ And in each case has the cause of the war been the
-same—a disagreement as to who should be the ruler of the country’s
-destinies. In the twelfth century it was a struggle between the King and
-a would-be Queen, in the thirteenth a struggle between the King and his
-barons, in the fifteenth a struggle between two royal families, and in
-the seventeenth a struggle between King and Parliament. It is the fourth
-of these wars that has gained, from the bitterness of the struggle and
-the catastrophe which ended it, the additional description of ‘Great.’
-
-Both King and Parliament are among the oldest of our national
-institutions. In the days of the Angles and Saxons the head of the
-Government was the King, but his power had not been absolute. There was
-a body of King’s Counsellors, the _Witena-gemōt_, who had power to
-depose the King if necessary, and in whose hands rested the elections to
-the throne.
-
-No idea of hereditary right to the throne then existed, and after the
-Norman Conquest the same right of election by the people—expressed
-through the _Great Council_—remained. It was not, in fact, till the
-accession of Edward I. that the principle of hereditary succession to
-the throne of England became firmly recognised. Edward I. was the first
-of our sovereigns to become King simply because he was the son of his
-father, and without an expression of the will of the nation.
-
-On the death of Queen Elizabeth it happened that the throne of England
-fell to the King of Scotland—a King who may be described as one-fourth
-English, one-fourth French, and one-half Scots, in blood. It is,
-therefore, not altogether strange that James I., ‘the wisest fool in
-Christendom,’ should fail to see things from an Englishman’s point of
-view, or that he should be unable to understand English customs and
-English institutions.
-
-Thus it was that the King began to quarrel with his Parliament, and when
-Charles I. became King in his father’s stead things grew rapidly worse.
-According to his view, he was King of England by the manifest will of
-God, and as the elect of God he was bound to consult none but God; while
-all his subjects were bound to obey his will, as they would the will of
-God.
-
-But according to the view taken by Parliament, the King was one factor
-only in the Government. Commons, Lords Temporal, Lords Spiritual—the
-‘Three Estates of the Realm’—had the King for their head. He was, as it
-were, the keystone of the arch, of no power by himself, but of very
-great power when fitted into his place in the government of the country.
-Such was the view of Parliament in the early years of King Charles’
-reign. Later on the Members of Parliament thought they had made a new
-discovery—that the arch would hold itself up without the help of its
-keystone.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When Charles came to the throne, England was engaged in a war upon the
-Continent. From his first Parliament the King demanded supplies of money
-to carry on this war, but was told that he must first redress the
-‘grievances’ under which the nation suffered. This not being the reply
-that he had expected, he dissolved Parliament and began to raise money
-by a system of compulsory loans obtained from all townsfolk who were
-deemed wealthy enough to provide them. From the town of Hull the two
-Commissioners, who attended at the Town Hall for the purpose, demanded
-and received the sum of £332 13s. 4d.
-
-At the same time seaport towns were ordered to provide armed vessels
-towards a fleet of one hundred ships which was being equipped. Hull’s
-share was three ships large enough to transport 1350 men.
-
-As his second Parliament proved no more tractable than his first had
-been, the King now decided to govern without a Parliament at all; and
-this he did from 1629 to 1640. During this time he continued to raise
-money by what many people considered to be illegal taxes—such as _ship
-money_, or money provided by seaport and inland towns for the fitting
-out of imaginary fleets; and _tonnage and poundage_, a levy on every tun
-of wine imported and every pound’s worth of merchandise bought and sold.
-
-It was only to be expected that some people would object to pay taxes
-which were said to be illegal. In fact many people were to be found who
-said, ‘We will pay no taxes which we, through our Members of Parliament,
-have not sanctioned.’ The famous John Hampden was one of these; and when
-the King’s Judges said to Hampden, ‘You and everybody else must pay,’
-there were scores of people up and down the country who proclaimed
-openly in the market-places, 'Well, we won’t pay, that’s all.’
-
-Matters were thus getting into a very unpromising condition when, in
-1639, the King levied an army of 22,000 men to make war upon the Scots,
-who had shown just as strong objections to using the King’s prayer-book
-as the English people had shown to paying the King’s taxes. At the head
-of this army Charles marched north, and took up his quarters for a time
-at York, from which place he paid a visit to Hull.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Let us now see what Hull was like when Charles visited it for the first
-time.
-
-The plan of _Kyngeston-vpon-Hvll_ given overleaf is reproduced from the
-very carefully drawn plan of a famous Dutch engraver named Hollar, and
-shows the appearance of the town in 1640. Surrounding the town to the
-north and west are the town wall and the moat, repaired and cleaned out
-by royal orders the previous year. North Gate and Hessle Gate span the
-moat and thus prevent ingress from both the Humber and the Hull. At each
-of the intervening three gates—Low Gate, Beverley Gate, and Myton
-Gate—the moat is spanned by a draw-bridge, and at the ends of Postern
-Gate Street and Blanket Row there are in the moat stakes for the support
-of bridges.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A BIRD’S-EYE VIEW OF KYNGESTON-VPON-HVLL
- (_From Hollar’s Plan. A.D. 1640_.)
-]
-
-Within the town wall are plainly to be seen the chief streets and
-buildings. What was called _The Ropery_ is our Humber Street, which then
-formed the actual bank of the Humber. Holy Trinity Church is far and
-away the largest of the buildings. St. Mary’s Church has now no tower,
-this having fallen in 1540—or, as tradition puts it, having been ‘pulled
-down to ye bare ground’ by order of the King. The sites of the Black
-Friary and White Friary are yet unbuilt upon.[51] The Suffolk Palace,
-begun by Michael de la Pole in 1384, confiscated to King Henry VIII.,
-and converted by him into a ‘Sitidell and a special kepe of the hole
-town,’ rented of the Hildyards of Winestead by King Charles I. in 1639,
-and used as a magazine for military stores, forms an imposing pile of
-buildings. Its gardens stretch almost as far as the Beverley Gate.
-
-Footnote 51:
-
- The church of the Black Friary and the tower of St. Mary’s Church are
- very plainly shown in the older plan given on page 165.
-
-On the opposite side of the river Hull, the ancient village of _Dripole_
-has disappeared, and its place is taken by a new line of fortifications
-consisting of a ditch and wall, the latter strengthened by the addition
-of two ‘Blockhouses’ and a ‘Castle.’
-
-This line of fortifications, together with a strong bridge over the
-Hull, was constructed by order of King Henry VIII. when he visited Hull
-in 1541; and its cost, £23,000, was provided by the King from the
-revenues of the suppressed monasteries. Large quantities of building
-materials from the White and the Black Friaries were used in its
-construction.[52]
-
-Footnote 52:
-
- In 1681 the North Blockhouse was abandoned, and a new Citadel built
- enclosing the Castle and the South Blockhouse. The whole was
- demolished about the middle of last century, with the exception of a
- small turret, which still remains built into the walls of the Humber
- Transport Company, but is shortly to be taken down and rebuilt in the
- West Park.
-
-The welcome accorded to King Charles on this his first visit to Hull was
-most cordial. Outside the Beverley Gate he was met by the Mayor,
-Aldermen, and Recorder, who delivered to him the keys of the town, to be
-received back from the King’s hands with gracious words. In the speech
-made by the Recorder to his ‘Most Gracious Sovereign’ occurs this
-promise:—
-
- ‘We make bold, with the utmost zeal and fidelity that can be, to
- give your Majesty a full assurance of our most sincere loyalty, and
- will adhere to you against all your enemies with the utmost of our
- lives and fortunes.’
-
-Then came the turn of the Mayor, who, in presenting the King with a long
-ribbon, which Charles at once tied in a knot and placed in his hat,
-said:—
-
- ‘Vouchsafe, great Sir, to accept the emblematic bond of our
- obedience, which is tied as fast to your Majesty, your Crown, and
- the Church, as our souls are to our bodies, and we are resolved
- never to part from the former until we part from the latter.’
-
-But how hollow and insincere these words were was very shortly to be
-made apparent. Probably Charles himself recognised their tone of
-insincerity, and was doubtless much better pleased with the ‘purse of
-curious workmanship, containing one hundred guineas’ which accompanied
-the giving of the ‘Hull favour.’ That night the King lodged at the house
-of Sir John Lister[53] in High Street—that known to us as ‘Wilberforce
-House’—the next night he lodged at Beverley, and the following day he
-again reached York.
-
-Footnote 53:
-
- The King knighted his host during his visit.
-
- * * * * *
-
-These events were happening in the month of April, 1639. On the
-twenty-third of the same month three years later, Charles paid his
-second visit to Hull. And what a different reception was then to await
-him!
-
-During these three years the relations between King and Parliament had
-been steadily growing more strained. Each recognised the possibility of
-there being in the future an appeal to arms; and each recognised, too,
-the importance of possessing ‘the most important fortress in the whole
-kingdom, and its vast magazine, which far exceeded the collection of
-warlike stores in the Tower of London.’[54]
-
-Footnote 54:
-
- In 1639 the military stores at the King’s Manor in Hull included 50
- cannon, 200,000 muskets, carbines, pistols, and swords, 1,800 spades,
- shovels, and wheelbarrows, with powder, shot, and match to the value
- of upwards of £6000. Other stores of armour, powder, cannon balls, and
- musket shot purchased in Holland were added in the same year.
-
-It was the King’s misfortune that Parliament, and not he, secured
-possession of Hull. Early in 1642 the Commons appointed Sir John Hotham,
-Member of Parliament for Beverley, to be Governor of Hull; and sent him
-down to take possession of the town, with orders not to deliver it up
-without the King’s authority ‘signified by both Houses.’ On April 23rd
-the King himself set out from York on the same errand, taking care to
-send forward from Beverley an officer charged with the message that the
-King would shortly arrive to dine with the Governor of the town.
-
-But the result of this message was not what the King had expected it to
-be. Having consulted Mr. Pelham, one of the two Members of Parliament
-for the town, Sir John Hotham caused the bridges to be drawn up, the
-gates to be closed, and the walls to be lined with soldiers. The Mayor
-and townsfolk were ordered to keep within their houses.
-
-It was eleven o’clock in the morning when the King, with a bodyguard of
-some three hundred soldiers, arrived before the Beverley Gate, where
-only three years before he had received such a cordial welcome. Now,
-when he commanded Sir John Hotham to open the Gate, he was met with a
-polite refusal. The Governor was very sorry to have to disobey the
-King’s command, but ‘he durst not open the gates to him, being intrusted
-by the Parliament with the safety of the town.’
-
-[Illustration: KING CHARLES I. AT THE BEVERLEY GATE, KINGSTON-UPON-HULL,
-A.D. 1642.]
-
-To the offer of the King, that he would leave all his train outside the
-Gate, with the exception of twenty horse, the Governor proved equally
-unresponsive.
-
-From eleven o’clock till four o’clock the parleying of King and Governor
-went on. Then the King ‘retired to a little house without the walls, and
-after an hour’s stay returned’ and demanded a final answer. Would Sir
-John Hotham admit the King to ‘a town and fort of our own, wherein our
-own magazine lay;’ or would he forthwith be proclaimed a traitor?
-
-Sir John chose the latter alternative, and was at once proclaimed guilty
-of high treason by the King’s heralds. Then the King withdrew to
-Beverley, and the first act of open hostility between Parliament and
-King was ended. The Great Civil War had, in fact, begun.
-
-
-
-
- XXII.
- HOW HULL WAS TWICE BESIEGED.
-
-
-The events of April 23rd, 1642, were immediately followed by the sending
-of letters to Parliament. Sir John Hotham forwarded an account of how he
-had obeyed the orders of Parliament to the best of his ‘understanding
-and utmost endeavours, though with some hazard of being misconceived by
-His Majesty’; while the King wrote demanding that ‘his said town and
-magazine might be immediately delivered up unto him, and that such
-severe exemplary proceedings should be taken against those persons who
-had offered him that insupportable affront, as by the law was provided.’
-
-To the King’s letter no reply was given. But in reply to that of Sir
-John Hotham a deputation of members was sent to thank him and the
-soldiers under him for their services. Two warships were ordered to sail
-immediately to Hull under the command of the Earl of Warwick; and the
-following resolutions were passed by the two Houses:—
-
- (1) That Sir John Hotham has done nothing but in obedience to the
- commands of both Houses of Parliament.
-
- (2) That this declaring Sir John Hotham a traitor—being a Member of
- the House of Commons—is a high breach of the privilege of
- Parliament.
-
-Copies of these resolutions, and of the ‘Declaration’ which accompanied
-them, were printed and spread abroad among the people. So also, from a
-printing-press established in St. William’s College at York, were issued
-pamphlets giving the King’s version of recent affairs. In one of these
-King Charles states his views in these words:—
-
- We would fain be answered, what title any subject of our kingdom has
- to his house or land that we have not to our town of Hull? Or what
- right has he to his money, plate, or jewels, that we have not to our
- magazine or munition there? If we had ever such a title we would
- know when we lost it? And if that magazine and munition, bought with
- our own money, were ever ours, when and how the property went out of
- us?
-
-The answer of the Houses of Parliament to the King’s questions was
-contained in _A Declaration of the Lords and Commons on the 26th of
-May_:—
-
- By the known law of the kingdom, the very jewels of the Crown are
- not the King’s proper goods, but are only intrusted to him for the
- use and ornament thereof; as the towns, forts, treasure, magazine,
- offices, and people of the kingdom, and the whole kingdom itself,
- are intrusted to him, for the good and safety, and best advantage
- thereof; and as this trust is for the use of the kingdom, so ought
- it to be managed by the advice of the Houses of Parliament, whom the
- kingdom has trusted for that purpose.
-
-While letters, pamphlets, and declarations were thus being composed,
-both King and Parliament were making preparations for actual warfare.
-And herein are seen the far-reaching effects of the prologue to the
-drama of the Great Civil War. The King had not—so the Royalist
-historian, the Earl of Clarendon, tells us—‘one barrel of powder, nor
-one musket, nor any other provision necessary for an army; and, what was
-worse, was not sure of any port to which they might be securely
-assigned; nor had he money for the support of his table for the term of
-one month.’
-
-To purchase a supply of arms and ammunition by the sale of her own
-jewels, as well as of the Crown jewels, which Parliament was shortly to
-declare were ‘not the King’s proper goods,’ the Queen had sailed to
-Holland; and as the result of her journey a small ship, named the
-_Providence_, arrived in the Humber and was run ashore in Keyingham
-Creek. Sir John Hotham, hearing of its arrival, sent out from Hull a
-party of soldiers to seize its cargo. But his men were unsuccessful, and
-thus a small supply of military stores reached the King at York.
-
-Meanwhile Parliament was busy in borrowing money ‘to raise forces which
-should defend the Protestant religion ... and the privileges of
-Parliament.’
-
-These few words show us what was really the cause of the trouble. There
-had been growing up in the country a strong religious spirit which we
-call Puritanism, and the Puritans hated everything that savoured of
-Roman Catholicism. The Queen, Henrietta Maria, was a Roman Catholic, and
-the King was thought to have leanings to ‘idolatry’ himself. It was
-feared, in fact, that King Charles’ intention of raising an army of
-22,000 soldiers for service in Ireland, and of arming them from the
-magazine at Hull, was only a subterfuge. What he really intended, so the
-Puritans said, was to overawe Parliament, and make England again a Roman
-Catholic country.
-
-By the judicious spreading abroad of such pamphlets as the following—
-
- More news from Hull; or a most happy and fortunate prevention of a
- most hellish and devillish plot, occasioned by some unquiet and
- discontented spirits against the town of Hull, endeavouring to
- command their admittance by casting balls of wild fire into the
- town, which by policy and treaty they could not obtain
-
-—Parliament succeeded in borrowing a large sum of money, and large
-quantities of plate.
-
-On June 3rd there assembled on Heworth Moor, close to the walls of York,
-a huge gathering of the King’s adherents, whose help was asked in ‘the
-defence of true religion, and of the laws and constitutions of this
-kingdom.’ The King was here accompanied by his son, Prince Charles, a
-bodyguard of 150 knights in armour, and some 800 soldiers. A month later
-the Court was moved to Beverley, where the King took up residence in the
-house of Lady Gee, a short distance within the North Bar.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: SIR JOHN HOTHAM.]
-
-Now began the first of two sieges which the town of Hull sustained
-during the war. The King’s forces are said to have amounted to 3,000
-foot soldiers and 1,000 horsemen. Two hundred of the latter, under the
-command of Lord Willoughby de Eresby and Sir Thomas Glemham, were sent
-to establish forts at Paull and Hessle, on the shore of the Humber,
-above and below the town. A similar number of the former were employed
-in digging trenches to divert the stream which gave the town its
-water-supply.
-
-But the Royalists were no match for the defenders of the town. The
-Governor called a Council of War, and the Council decided on a bold
-stroke of defence—nothing less than the cutting of the banks of the
-Humber and the Hull. This was immediately carried out, with the result
-that the low-lying lands surrounding the town were submerged, and any
-widely-planned measures of attack were rendered impossible. Sir John
-Meldrum, a Scots officer whom Parliament had sent down to assist the
-Governor, also organised a surprise attack on the King’s forces. The
-foot soldiers fled at the first blow, and the horse soldiers, thus left
-unsupported, were compelled to retreat to Beverley.
-
-Luck was, it seemed, entirely against the King. Off Paull one of the
-Earl of Warwick’s ships of war fought with and sank a vessel bringing
-guns and ammunition to him, and in an engagement in the village of
-Anlaby a barn was set on fire which contained a large portion of the
-ammunition which he then possessed. These reverses caused the King to
-decide on raising the siege, and on retiring to York.
-
-The measures adopted by the Governor for the defence of Hull thus proved
-entirely successful. But an interesting side-light on these measures is
-thrown by _The Humble Petition of the Gentry and Inhabitants of
-Holderness_, which was signed by ‘neer three hundred’ of his ‘Majesties
-most loyall and oppressed subjects,’ and ‘delivered to His Majestie at
-Beverley the sixth of July, 1642.’ The petitioners declare that they
-have
-
- for the space of four moneths (with much patience and prejudice)
- endured great and insupportable Losse ...
-
- They further complain that the cutting of the river banks Drowning
- part, and indangering the rest of the Levell of Holderness, is a
- Presumption higher than was ever yet attempted by any Subject.
-
-The answer of ‘the Kings most excellent Majestie,’ signed by Lord
-Falkland, contains many fair words, and a promise that he will
-
- by drawing such Forces together as he shall be able to leavie,
- endeavour the Petitioners Relief in their present sufferings—
-
-a promise which the ‘Gentry and Inhabitants of Holderness’ probably did
-not consider altogether satisfactory.
-
-Queen Henrietta Maria, who had during all this time been raising
-supplies of money for her husband, set sail from Holland on February
-2nd, 1643, bringing with her a supply reckoned by popular rumour at
-£2,000,000. For nine days the small fleet accompanying her battled
-against a storm, and the Queen’s personal bravery was shown when she
-kept up the spirits of her terrified attendants with the jest that
-‘Queens of England are never drowned.’
-
-After a second start she eventually reached Bridlington Quay, and slept
-once more on land. But in the early hours of the February morning the
-little seaport was awakened with the noise of guns, and the crashing of
-shot among the houses. Four ships of the Parliamentarians were outside
-the harbour firing at the Dutch vessels which had brought over her and
-her supplies.
-
-Once again the Queen showed her courage. For, hurrying to a place of
-safety in what scanty clothing she could lay hands on, she remembered
-that she had left behind her little lap-dog, and would not rest content
-until she had returned to her bedroom and rescued it. The rest of that
-night the Queen spent taking refuge in a ditch, but the morning brought
-to her aid some of the forces of the Earl of Newcastle, and the journey
-to York was accomplished in safety.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Less than twelve months after the first siege of Hull, the town came
-within an ace of falling into the hands of the King, and this through
-treachery on the part of its former defender.
-
-Sir John Hotham, who had on more than one occasion shown a certain
-amount of indecision, and who was credited by some with secret leanings
-to the King’s party, was greatly angered by the decision of Parliament
-that its forces in the North of England should be under the command of
-another Yorkshireman, Ferdinando, Lord Fairfax. Considering himself and
-his services slighted, he now, with his son, Captain Hotham, plotted to
-give up the town to the Queen.
-
-But the plot was discovered, owing to counter-treachery on the part of
-one of his relatives; and on June 29th Captain Mayer, in command of the
-_Hercules_, then lying in the Humber, landed a hundred men and seized
-the castle and block-houses.
-
-[Illustration: MEDAL STRUCK IN MEMORY OF SIR JOHN HOTHAM.]
-
-Meanwhile the Mayor, Mr. Thomas Raikes, had placed a guard over the
-Governor’s house, and had secured possession of Captain Hotham. The
-Governor himself effected his escape, passed out of the town by the
-Beverley Gate, attempted unsuccessfully to cross the river Hull at
-Stoneferry and at Wawne, decided to attempt to reach his house at
-Scorborough, was met in Beverley by his nephew, Colonel Boynton, and was
-knocked off his horse and captured by one of the latter’s soldiers.
-
-Both father and son were sent to London on board the _Hercules_, and
-were then committed to the Tower. After an imprisonment lasting for
-seventeen months they were tried at the Guildhall, and condemned to
-death on a charge of ‘traitorously betraying the trust imposed upon them
-by Parliament.’ New Year’s Day, 1645, saw the execution of Captain
-Hotham on Tower Hill, the following day saw that of his father.
-
-To return to the events of 1643—Lord Ferdinando Fairfax was appointed
-Governor of Hull in place of Sir John Hotham, and to raise money for the
-payment of his soldiers sold to the Trinity House his store of family
-plate. The agreement made on the occasion runs as follows:—
-
- Whereas I Ferdinando Lord Fairfax, Lord Gen̄all of the Northerne
- forces raised for the Kinge, & Parlmᵗ; and Governor of the Towne of
- Kingston upon Hull, have received the some of ffoure hundered
- pownds, & foure shillings of the Guild, or Brotherhood of Maisters
- Pilotts, & seamen of the Trynity howse of the said Towne, for the
- use of the King, & Parlmᵗ: I doe hereby grant, bargaine, & sell
- sev̄all peices of silver plate conteining in weight one thousand six
- hundered ffiftie six ownces, to the said Trynity howse, & their
- successours for ever and have delivered the said plate to Willm
- Peck, & Willm Rayks Wardens of the said howse to the use thereof. In
- witnesse whereof, I have hereto sett my hand & seale the 4th day of
- September, Anno dni 1643
-
- Fer: fairfax.
-
-Two days before the signing of this agreement the second siege of Hull
-had been begun by the Marquis of Newcastle, with a force of 4,000 horse
-soldiers and 12,000 foot. This had been rendered necessary by the fact
-that Newcastle’s _Cavaliers_ would not leave their Yorkshire homes on a
-march southward, while the hated _Roundheads_ remained in possession of
-a stronghold from which they could with ease ravage the surrounding
-country. Hence Newcastle wanted, above all things, to gain possession of
-the town.
-
-The second siege of Hull was very largely a repetition of the first. The
-besiegers cut off the water-supply, and also succeeded in mounting guns
-within half-a-mile of the town walls. With these guns much damage was at
-first done; for by constructing a furnace for the heating of balls, the
-gunners were enabled to fire red-hot balls over the walls of the town.
-But this was not for long, Lord Fairfax’s erection of a flanking battery
-soon putting these guns out of action.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C.W. Mason_
-
- Hull’s Water Gate.[55]
-
-]
-
-At the beginning of the siege the Governor’s son, Sir Thomas Fairfax,
-who had been driven out of Beverley, had taken refuge within the walls
-with a large body of cavalry. But horse soldiers are not of much use in
-repelling a siege, and their horses are likely to be a severe hindrance.
-So it was in this case; and when the opportunity was afforded by the
-arrival of some of Oliver Cromwell’s soldiers at Barton, Sir Thomas and
-his ‘twenty troops of horse’ were ferried across to Lincolnshire.
-
-Footnote 55:
-
- This passage, which connects Blackfriargate and Little Humber Street,
- was, in the seventeenth century, the only entrance to the town from
- the landing-place on the Humber. It is less than seven feet wide.
-
-On the 22nd of September—a day being held in the town as one of fasting
-and humiliation—Cromwell himself crossed over the Humber, bringing a
-fresh supply of muskets and powder. The town was now once more entirely
-surrounded by water. For a fortnight before this the former Governor’s
-plan of cutting the rivers’ banks had been carried out, and the
-Royalists thus compelled to abandon their positions.
-
-Things were going badly for the besiegers. On September 28th their
-powder magazine at Cottingham was blown up, but whether by accident or
-by treachery is not known. On October 5th a reinforcement of 500 men
-crossed over to Hull from Lincolnshire, and six days later the garrison
-made a successful sally and captured one of a pair of huge guns known
-familiarly as ‘the Queen’s pocket pistols.’ That night the Marquis of
-Newcastle determined to raise the siege, and on the 12th of October the
-besieging army withdrew to York, smaller by one-half than it had been
-six weeks earlier.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The importance of the two sieges of Hull cannot be overestimated. Had
-the first been successful, the King would have been in the position to
-strike a decisive blow before the forces of Parliament were organised.
-In 1643 the King’s plan of campaign was that his three armies—his own at
-Oxford, that under Sir Ralph Hopton in Cornwall, and that under the Earl
-of Newcastle in Yorkshire—should converge on London, the headquarters of
-Parliament.
-
-But for this plan to succeed two obstacles must be removed. The
-Parliamentarians held the seaport towns of Plymouth and Hull. The siege
-of each was undertaken; and the siege of each failed, mainly because
-Parliament held ‘the command of the sea.’ Thus, in the words of the
-great historian of the Great Civil War, ‘Hull and Plymouth saved the
-Parliamentary cause.’
-
-
-
-
- XXIII.
- SOME ANCIENT EAST RIDING FAMILIES.
-
-
-‘My ancestor came over with William the Conqueror,’ boasts one who is
-proud of his long line of ancestors. ‘So did mine’—‘and mine’—‘and
-mine’—might say a good number of us. Perhaps we could not prove our
-statement, but never mind. If we cannot prove that an ancestor of ours
-did come over with William the Conqueror, no one can prove that he
-didn’t.
-
-Of course we all of us had ancestors living somewhere or other in the
-year 1066, but there are very few who can identify those ancestors. How
-many of us can trace back our pedigree for a couple of hundred years?
-Few probably. But the family descent of some of our countrymen and
-countrywomen can be traced back for several hundred years. These are our
-nobles and landed gentry.
-
-Thus the descent of the present Baron Hotham of South Dalton can be
-traced back, through the Sir John Hotham who defied King Charles I., to
-an ancestor who in the twelfth century changed his name from De Trehouse
-to Hotham; that of Major Chichester-Constable of Burton Constable to an
-Ulbert Constable who lived in the reign of Henry I.; that of the Duchess
-of Norfolk to a William Fitz Nigel, who was Lord of Flamborough in the
-same reign; that of Mr. W. H. St. Quintin of Scampston Hall to a Sir
-Herbert de St. Quintin who was one of the companions-in-arms of William
-the Conqueror; and that of the Duke of Northumberland and Earl of
-Beverley to a Willelmus de Perci, who ‘came over with the Conqueror’ in
-the year 1067.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Proudest of all the proud nobles of the North were the PERCYS, whose
-descent from Willelmus de Perci has just been mentioned. Willelmus took
-his surname from the village of Perci in Normandy, and himself boasted a
-descent from one of the companions of that Rolf the Viking who sailed up
-the Seine in the year 912. _Als Gernons_ he was nicknamed, from his
-habit of wearing whiskers, whence the name ‘Algernon’ which was given
-generation after generation to the male members of the family.
-
-In the Domesday Book Willelmus de Perci is recorded as the
-tenant-in-chief of more than a hundred manors in Yorkshire, and of
-twenty-three in Lincolnshire. Among the former were Leconfield,
-Scorborough, and Nafferton; among the latter Immingham. Willelmus was
-one of the Norman knights who accompanied Duke Robert of Normandy in the
-First Crusade, and he died at Mountjoy within sight of the Holy City.
-
-Century after century the Percys took part in all great affairs of
-state. A Percy fought in the Battle of the Standard, another took part
-in the signing of Magna Carta at Runnymede, another was taken prisoner
-with the King at the battle of Lewes, another fought in the great naval
-victory of Sluys, and helped to win the battle of Neville’s Cross six
-years later.
-
-The thirteenth Baron Percy was created Earl of Northumberland on the day
-of Richard II.’s coronation. But he and his son ‘Harry Hotspur’—the hero
-of the famous battle known as ‘Chevy Chace’—befriended Henry of
-Lancaster when he landed at Ravenser Spurn. Afterwards, however, both
-father and son rebelled, and Hotspur met his death at Shrewsbury, while
-his father was slain at Bramham Moor, in Northumberland. Hotspur’s son,
-the second Earl, fell at the battle of St. Albans which opened the ‘Wars
-of the Roses,’ and his grandson, the third Earl, fell at Towton six
-years later. Such a race of fighters were the Percys.
-
-Most princely of the line was Henry Algernon Percy, the fifth Earl,
-nicknamed ‘Henry the Magnificent.’ He took part in the Field of the
-Cloth of Gold, and ruined himself by the expense there entailed. This
-Henry Percy possessed a castle at Wressle, and a fortified manor-house
-at Leconfield—the latter a large house standing ‘withyn a great Mote,’
-and built ‘three partes ... of tymbere,’ the fourth part being ‘of stone
-and some brike.’ The ‘Mote’ remains, but all traces of the ‘large House’
-with its eighty-three rooms have disappeared.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] Wressle Castle. [_C.W. Mason_
-
-]
-
-Wressle Castle, or rather a part of it, still exists—the only ancient
-castle in the whole of the East Riding. Built in the closing years of
-the fourteenth century, it remained the chief Yorkshire seat of the
-Percys till the time of the Great Civil War; when orders for its
-destruction were issued by a Parliamentary Committee at York, although
-the owner—the tenth Earl of Northumberland—had sided with Parliament
-against the King.
-
-The castle was built round a central courtyard, and in 1650 three sides
-of the square were pulled down, only the south side being left standing.
-A fire which broke out about 120 years ago completed the destruction of
-the interior of this remaining side, so that what exists to-day is a
-mere shell.
-
-This block of buildings contained the Great Chamber or Dining Hall, the
-Drawing-Chamber, and the Chapel. The last was afterwards used as the
-Parish Church. On its ceiling was painted the Percy motto:—
-
- =Esperance en Dieu ma Comforte.=
-
-Above the chapel was a small chamber which is thus described by a
-visitor in the reign of Henry VIII.:—
-
- One thing I likid exceedingly yn one of the Towers, that was a
- Study, caullid Paradise; where was a Closet in the midle, of 8
- squares latised aboute, and at the Toppe of every square was a Desk
- ledgid to set Bookes on Cofers withyn them, and these semid as
- yoinid hard to the Toppe of the Closet; and yet by pulling, one or
- al wold cum downe briste higthe in rabettes,[56] and serve for
- Deskes to lay Bokes on.
-
-Footnote 56:
-
- _Rabbets_ are grooves cut in the edge of a piece of wood.
-
-Much interesting information as to life in a mediæval castle can be
-gleaned from what is known as _The Northumberland Household Book_.[57]
-The original manuscript of this was prepared in 1512 by the orders of
-Henry the Magnificent, and gives a detailed account of the estimated
-household expenditure for a year and of the regulations of the
-household.
-
-Footnote 57:
-
- A reprint was published in 1905 by A. Brown & Sons, Ltd.
-
-From this book we learn that the staff at Wressle Castle consisted of
-166 persons, of whom eleven were priests, and that ‘the Hole Expensys
-... for oone hole Yere amounted to DCCCCXXXIIJ_L._ VJ_S._ VIIJ_D._’ It
-is strange to find that beds, hangings, and furniture were moved from
-one residence to another when the Earl travelled, and that there is no
-mention of glass among the table requisites, vessels for eating and
-drinking being solely of wood or pewter.
-
-For travelling and for hunting the Earl’s stables contained _vj Gentle
-Hors_, _iiij Palfreis_ (one for my Lady and three for my Lady’s
-gentlewomen), _iij Naggs_, _iij Sumpter Hors_ and _Mail Hors_ (for
-carrying the bed, coffers, and coats of mail), vij Hors for the use of
-servants, and _vij Charriot-hors to drawe in the Charriot_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Very precise rules are given for the serving of meals. Breakfast was
-served at eight, and dinner at eleven, each morning. Among the rules to
-be observed for the serving of meals are these:—
-
- First when they go to Cover, Hee [the Usher] must go before them
- through the Hall, crying ‘By your leaves Gentlemen, stand by.’
-
- If any unworthy Fellow do unmannerly sett himself down before his
- Betters, he must take him up and place him lower.
-
- Let the best fashioned and apparrelled Servants attend above the
- Salte, the Rest belowe.
-
- If one Servant have occasion to speak to another about Service att
- the Table, let him whisper, for noyse is uncivil.
-
-What my Lord and Lady had to eat for breakfast is shown in the following
-extracts:—
-
- BRAIKFASTIS OF FLESCH DAYS DAYLY
- thorowte the Yere.
-
- BRAIKFASTIS for my Lorde and my Lady.
-
- FURST a Loof of Brede in Trenchors ij Manchetts[58] j Quart of Bere
- a Quart of Wyne Half a Chyne of Mutton or ells a Chyne of Beif
- boilid.
-
-Footnote 58:
-
- Small loaves of white bread.
-
-During Lent no breakfast was allowed on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays,
-but on the other days of the week there were provided in place of
-‘meitt’:—
-
- ij Pecys of Saltfisch vj Baconn’d Herryng iiij White Herryng or a
- Dysche of Sproits.
-
-What the Earl’s children had for breakfast in the nursery is similarly
-shown:—
-
- BRAIKFASTS for the Nurcy for my Lady Margaret
- and Mr. Yngram Percy.
-
- ITEM a Manchet j Quarte of Bere and iij Muton Bonys boilid.
-
-Or, during Lent:—
-
- ITEM a Manchet a Quarte of Bere a Dysch of Butter a Pece of
- Saltfisch a Dysch of Sproits or iij White Herryng.
-
-Among the household necessaries to be provided are:—_Wheet_, _Malte_,
-_Beefis_, _Muttuns_, _Gascoin Wyne_, _Poorks_, _Veelis_, _Lambes_,
-_Stokfish_, _Salt Fishe_, _Whyt Hering_, _Rede Herynge_, _Sproits_,
-_Salmon_, _Saltt Elis_, _Fieggs_, _Great Rasins_, _Hopps for Brewynge_,
-_Hony_, _Oile_, _Waxe_, _Weik for Lightys_, _Bay Saltte_, _White
-Saltte_, _Parishe Candell_, _Vinacre_, _Lynnon Clothe_, _Brass Pottis_,
-_Mustarde_, _Stone Crusis_, _Rughe Pewter Vessel_, and _All Manner of
-Spices_—_Piper_, _Rasyns of Corens_, _Prones_, _Gynger_, _Clovvez_,
-_Sugour_, _Allmonds_, _Daytts_, _Nuttmuggs_, _Rice_, _Safferon_, and
-_Coumfetts_—_See Cholys_, _Char Cholis_, _Fagoots_, and _Greet Woode_,
-‘bicause Colys will not byrne withowte Wodd.’
-
-For the great feasts during the year xx _Swannys_ were to be provided
-from the Earl’s Carr at Arram, in addition to xxix _Does_ and xx _Bukks_
-from his Parks at Leconfield and elsewhere. So also for my Lord’s table
-were to be bought _Capons_, _Geysse_, _Chekyns_, _Pegions_ (‘iij for
-j_d._’), _Cunys_ (‘ij_d._ a pece’), _Pluvers_ (j_d._ a pece’),
-_Mallardes_, _Woodcokes_, _Seegulls_ (‘j_d._ a pece so they be good and
-in season’), _Styntes_ (‘vj for j_d._’), _Quaylles_, _Snypes_,
-_Pertryges_, _Redeshankes_, _Dottrells_, _Bustardes_ and _Larkys_ (‘xij
-for ij_d._’). _Hearonsewys_,[59] _Bytters_,[59] _Fesauntes_ and
-_Kyrlewes_ were to be paid for at the rate of ‘xij_d._ a pece’; but the
-most expensive dish was one of _Cranys_, which cost ‘xvj_d._ a pece.’
-
-Footnote 59:
-
- Herons and Bitterns are known to-day in the East Riding as
- ‘herrin-sews’ and ‘buttherbumps.’
-
-What high junketings there must have been at Wressle Castle in the days
-of ‘Henry the Magnificent’! Did the feasters afterwards pay for their
-over-indulgence in rich food? An answer may perhaps be supplied from the
-purchase of ‘xxx Saks of Charcoill for Stilling of Bottells of
-Waters’—_Water of Roses_, _Water of Harts Tonge_, _Water of Parcelly_,
-_Water of Walnott Leeffs_, _Water of Prymeroses_, _Water of Cowslops_,
-_Water of Tandelyon_, _Water of Marygolds_ and many others—‘all worth,’
-each penitent would doubtless declare, ‘xxj_s._ a bottell.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-In chapter XV. mention was made of the _Percy Tomb_ in the chancel of
-Beverley Minster. The magnificent canopy of this was built in memory of
-Eleanor Fitz Alan, wife of Henry Percy of Alnwick, who died in 1328.
-Henry Percy, fourth Earl of Northumberland, lies buried in the _Percy
-Chapel_ at the extreme east end of the Minster, and the wife of another
-Henry Percy lies buried in Hessle Church. But of her burial there is no
-record but a simple brass inscribed:—
-
- =Here vnder lieth Daim an percy wyff=
- =to sir Henry percy=....
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C.D. Holmes_
-
- The Percy Tomb, Beverley Minster.
-
-]
-
-Other proud nobles of our Riding were the WAKES and the CLIFFORDS. Hugh
-Wac married the daughter of Gilbert of Gaunt, the first Earl of Lincoln,
-and his son Baldwin assisted at the coronation of King Richard I. A
-descendant, the first Baron Wake, fought in the Scots wars of Edward I.
-Thomas, the third Baron, was granted by Edward III. leave to convert his
-manor-house at Cottingham into a castle. From him the Wakes of Somerset
-claim descent.
-
-On the chancel floor of Londesborough church may be seen the brass of
-Margaret, Lady Clifford and Vescy, the wife of the Lord Clifford whom
-Shakspeare calls ‘bloody Clifford.’ This Lord Clifford fought on the
-Lancastrian side at the disastrous battle of Towton, and was one of the
-many nobles there slain. During twenty-four years after the battle
-Henry, Lord Clifford’s son, lived in disguise as a shepherd on the moors
-round Londesborough and on the hills of Cumberland, thus earning the
-name of ‘shepherd lord.’ But the battle of Bosworth Field restored the
-fortunes of the family, and the ‘shepherd lord’ then regained ‘the
-estates and honours of his ancestors.’
-
-The descendants of Henry, Lord Clifford, became Earls of Cumberland, and
-the heiress to the Earldom married Richard Boyle, the first Earl of
-Burlington. Their great-grandson, the third Earl of Burlington, was
-famed for the rebuilding of Burlington House, London, and for the
-planting of the ‘Londesborough Clumps.’ This was between the years 1703
-and 1753.
-
-From the third Earl of Burlington the Londesborough estates passed in
-descent to the Dukes of Devonshire, one of whom pulled down its ancient
-Hall, and afterwards sold the estates to George Hudson, the ‘Railway
-King.’ By further purchase they devolved upon the present Earl of
-Londesborough.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Older than the Cliffords are the CONSTABLES, of whom there are in the
-East Riding two distinct families. Robert Constable, the son of Ulbert,
-possessed the manor of Halsham in the reign of King Stephen; and from
-him is descended Major Chichester-Constable, Lord of the Seigniory of
-Holderness, and owner of Burton Constable Hall.
-
-[Illustration: BURTON CONSTABLE HALL.]
-
-In the year 1133 was living a certain William Fitz Nigel, Constable of
-Cheshire and Lord of Flamborough. From him descended Sir Marmaduke
-Constable of Flamborough, who, when seventy-one years of age, fought
-together with his four sons in the battle of Flodden. Sir Marmaduke lies
-buried in the church at Flamborough, where, on his tomb, is a brass
-inscription recording his exploits. Part of it is here given:—
-
- =Here lieth Marmaduke Cunstable, of fflaynborght, knyght,=
- =Who made aduentore into ffrance, and for the right of the same=
- =Passed over with Kyng Edwarde the fouriht, yt noble Knyght;=
- =And also with noble King Herre, the seuinth of that name.=
- . . . . . . . .
- =But for all that, as ye se, he lieth under this stone.=
-
-[Illustration:
-
- BRASS OF SIR THOMAS DE ST. QUINTIN IN HARPHAM CHURCH. ABOUT A.D. 1420.
-]
-
-The Sir Robert Constable who took part in the Pilgrimage of Grace and
-was hanged in chains over the Beverley Gate at Hull was Sir Marmaduke
-Constable’s eldest son. With his execution the fifty-one manors that he
-held were forfeited to the King, but some of these were restored to his
-descendants by Edward VI. and Queen Elizabeth. The last of the
-Constables of Flamborough took the side of the Parliamentarians in the
-Great Civil War, and signed the death-warrant of the King.
-
-From the second son of Sir Marmaduke Constable descended the Constables
-of Everingham, to which house belongs the Duchess of Norfolk, daughter
-of the late Baron Herries. From Sir Marmaduke’s nephew descended the
-Constables of Wassand, whose representative to-day is Mr. Henry
-Strickland Constable of Wassand Hall.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another East Riding family whose ancestor ‘came over with the Conqueror’
-is that of the ST. QUINTINS, whose name is derived from a town in the
-north of France. Sir Herbert de St. Quintin held the manors of Skipsea,
-Mappleton and Brandesburton in the reign of Henry I. On the floor of the
-chancel of Brandesburton church are the brasses of Sir John de St.
-Quintin, who died in 1397, and his wife Lora.
-
-Several members of the family lie buried in Harpham Church, where are
-the altar tombs of Sir William de St. Quintin, who died in 1349, and his
-wife; the brasses of Sir Thomas de St. Quintin and his wife Agnes,
-dating from about 1420; and the brass of another Thomas de St. Quintin,
-who died in 1445.
-
-Sir William St. Quintin was Member of Parliament for Hull in the reigns
-of William III., Anne, and George I.; and Mr. William Herbert St.
-Quintin, of Scampston Hall and Lowthorpe Lodge, is the present
-representative of the family.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: BURTON AGNES HALL.]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- EFFIGY OF A KNIGHT IN PLATE
- ARMOUR IN THE HILTON CHAPEL AT
- SWINE CHURCH. ABOUT A.D. 1350.
-]
-
-The ancient family of BOYNTONS took its name from the East Riding
-village of Boynton. By marriage with the heiress of the Sir Martin de la
-Mare mentioned at the close of Chapter XVII., the family became
-possessed of the manor of Barmston; and in 1614 Matthew Boynton married
-Frances, daughter of Sir Henry Griffith of Burton Agnes. Four years
-later he was created a baronet by James I., and forty years later his
-son, Sir Francis Boynton, succeeded to the Burton Agnes estates. Sir
-Griffith Henry Boynton of Barmston, and Mrs. T. L. Wickham-Boynton of
-Burton Agnes Hall, are his descendants.
-
-Burton Agnes Hall is famed as being ‘one of the most beautiful Tudor
-houses in Yorkshire.’ Parts of a building to the west of the Hall go
-back to about the year 1170, and some of its woodwork dates from the
-middle of the fifteenth century. But the Hall itself was built in the
-early years of the seventeenth century, and the date 1601 and the
-initials of Sir Henry Griffith and his wife are carved in the stonework
-over the main doorway.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Taking part in the Wars of the Roses was a Robert Hildyard of Winestead,
-famed widely as ‘Robin of Redesdale.’ Winestead came into possession of
-the HILDYARDS by the marriage of this Robert with the heiress of the
-HILTONS, three of whose altar tombs remain to-day in the Hilton chapel
-of the church at Swine.
-
-Another Robert Hildyard had command of a King’s regiment of horse in the
-Great Civil War, and for his services in this was knighted and
-afterwards created a baronet. There are in Winestead Church fragments of
-large brasses, an altar tomb, and a wall monument, to different members
-of this family; to a younger branch of which belong the Hildyards who
-have for many generations been rectors of Rowley.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration:
-
- EFFIGY OF A KNIGHT IN
- CHAIN ARMOUR IN THE
- SALTMARSHE CHAPEL AT
- HOWDEN CHURCH.
- ABOUT A.D. 1280.
-]
-
-How early the SALTMARSHES of Saltmarshe, near Howden, took their name is
-not definitely known. Sir Edward de Salso Marisco was Member of
-Parliament for Beverley in 1299, and a Geoffrey de Saltmersc held lands
-at Swinefleet about 1170. Their ancestor is said to be Lionel
-Saltmarshe, who was knighted by William the Conqueror in 1067. Colonel
-Philip Saltmarshe is the representative of the family to-day.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Last to be mentioned here are the STRICKLANDS of Boynton. The family had
-its origin at Marske, in the North Riding, and a Sir Thomas de
-Strickland bore the banner of St. George at the battle of Agincourt.
-
-William Strickland, who purchased the manor of Boynton in 1549, sailed
-when a youth to the New World with Sebastian Cabot, and helped to
-discover Labrador and Newfoundland. He is said to have introduced the
-turkey into our country—a deed commemorated in the family crest. His
-descendant was created a baronet by King Charles I., and the present Sir
-Walter William Strickland, of Boynton Hall, is the ninth holder of the
-title.
-
-[Illustration: COAT-OF-ARMS OF THE STRICKLANDS.]
-
-Readers of _Tom Brown’s School-Days_ will all remember the hero’s friend
-Martin, his second in the historic fight with Slogger Williams. ‘The
-Madman’ was his name among his fellow school-boys, but it was as Sir
-Charles Strickland that he was known in the neighbourhood of Boynton.
-
-
-
-
- XXIV.
- STAGE COACH AND RAILWAY.
-
-
-Travelling for pleasure is something that we all understand. But our
-forefathers a few centuries ago would have thought a person mad if he
-had said he was going to take a journey for pleasure. Merchants had to
-travel, and so had messengers; but ordinary folk stayed at home, unless
-the burden of their sins moved them to undertake a pilgrimage to some
-far-off shrine. Such journeys were performed on horseback or afoot, but
-invalid women and infirm old men might use a horse-litter.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ON THE ROAD IN 1812.
- AN EAST RIDING STAGE WAGGON.
-]
-
-Until the reign of Queen Mary I. there was in England no such thing as a
-coach. The lumbering _stage waggon_ with wheels ten or twelve inches
-wide, and drawn by eight or ten horses attended by a driver who rode on
-the back of a pony, came into use during the reign of Queen Elizabeth.
-Its successor, the _stage coach_, was not invented till the time when
-King Charles paid his first visit to Hull.
-
-Two years before the accession of Charles II., a regular coach service
-from London to York was announced, the coaches to make the journey three
-times a week in the advertised time of four days. But this time was
-largely exceeded as a rule, and at nearly the close of the century we
-find the coach taking six days to reach London from York.
-
-The development of road travel may be said to date from the year 1662,
-when an Act of Parliament was passed for improving the condition of the
-main roads, permission being granted to those local authorities that
-desired it, to erect toll bars and charge travellers for the privilege
-of using the roads when put into repair. Yorkshire roads in particular
-were notoriously bad, as the letter written to Thomas Cromwell in 1538
-shows.[60]
-
-Footnote 60:
-
- See pages 199–200.
-
-But few local authorities stirred themselves in the matter of road
-improvement, and an old coach bill still preserved at the _Black Swan_
-in Coney Street, York, has a very significant reminder of the dangers
-attending the journey to London in 1706:—
-
- All that are desirous to pass from London to York, or from York to
- London ... may be received in a Stage Coach every Monday, Wednesday,
- and Friday, which performs the whole Journey in Four Days (_if God
- permits_).
-
-As an example of the TURNPIKE ACTS which became numerous as the
-eighteenth century slipped away, may be taken the ‘Act for Repairing the
-Road between the Town of Kingston upon Hull, and the Town of Beverley in
-the East Riding of the County of York.’ This came into force on May 1st,
-1744. By it Trustees were appointed
-
- for the surveying, ordering, amending, and keeping in Repair, the
- said Road ... and they ... shall and may erect, or cause to be
- erected, a Gate or Gates, Turnpike or Turnpikes, in or cross any
- Part or Parts of the said Road, and also a Toll-house or Toll-houses
- in or upon the same; and shall receive and take the Tolls and Duties
- following, before any Horse, Mare, Gelding, Mule, Ass, Cattle,
- Coach, Chariot, Landau, Berlin, Chaise, Calash, Chair, Hearse,
- Litter, Waggon, Wain, or Cart, or other Carriage whatsoever, shall
- be permitted to pass through the same.
-
-The tolls payable varied from one-and-sixpence for a six-horsed coach,
-or a waggon drawn by five or more oxen, to three half-pence for an ‘Ass,
-not drawing.’ A drove of oxen was charged tenpence, and one of swine or
-sheep fivepence, per score.
-
-Thus the users of a road paid for its upkeep, the very necessary
-reservation being made that no tolls were to be demanded in the case of
-men and vehicles engaged in farming operations; nor for waggons carrying
-hay or straw to be laid in the houses of the people in the neighbouring
-parishes and townships;[61] nor from persons attending the funeral of a
-parishioner, or attending ‘Church, Chapel, or other Place of Religious
-Worship on Sundays’; nor from voters going to and returning from the
-poll.
-
-Footnote 61:
-
- The floor of the Council Chamber at the Hull Trinity House is still
- strewn with rushes, these being changed about every six weeks.
-
-As the result of such Turnpike Acts’ being enforced, stage coaching
-increased considerably; and the year 1760 saw the birth of _Flying
-Machines on Steel Springs_, that got through the journey from Leeds to
-London in the short space of three days. But the journey was still
-accomplished at some considerable amount of personal discomfort; for the
-‘outside’ passengers had to stand all the time in a kind of huge basket
-slung behind the body of the coach.
-
-From 1785, in which year the Royal Mails began to be conveyed by stage
-coach, travel increased by leaps and bounds; and stage coaching may be
-said to have reached the height of its prosperity about 1835.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: Royal Mail Schedule]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-The old coaching roads of the East Riding are shown on the map given on
-the opposite page. Most frequented of all was that from Hull to York—in
-part the Roman road over Barmby Moor. From Beverley to Bridlington there
-were alternative routes used by rival coach proprietors. The
-announcement of one of these reads as follows:—
-
- The BRITISH QUEEN leaves the Stirling Castle, Bridlington Quay, at
- Seven every morning (Sundays excepted), by way of Brandsburton and
- Beverley, and arrives at the Kingston and Vittoria Hotels, the
- George and Bull and Sun Inns, Hull, at Eleven in the Forenoon. The
- Coach returns in the afternoon, at four, by the same route, after
- the arrival of the Barton Packet with the Express Passengers from
- London, and arrives at the Stirling Castle, Bridlington Quay, at
- Eight o’clock in the evening.
-
- The BRITISH QUEEN will be found a delightful conveyance to
- Bridlington Quay, on account of the Road for the last Six Miles
- being close to the Sea Side, and passing through a most beautiful
- part of the country.
-
-So say the proprietors of the _British Queen_. But what have those of
-the rival coach to tell us?
-
- The Public are respectfully informed that the WELLINGTON leaves the
- Cross Keys General Coach Office, Hull, every morning, at Six, to
- Beverley, Driffield, Bridlington and Quay, Hunmanby, and Filey, and
- arrives at the Bell Inn and Blacksmith’s Arms, Scarbro’, at Twelve;
- proceeds at Four to Whitby, Guisbro, Stockton, Sunderland, Shields,
- Durham, Newcastle, and Edinbro’. Seats secured at any time.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: COACHING ROADS AND EARLY RAILWAYS]
-
- The Road by Driffield is so well known as to be universally
- recommended. The Sea having made such dreadful havoc of the
- Brandsburton Road during the last few years as to render it
- dangerous travelling that way, being, for five or six miles, quite
- at the edge of the cliff.
-
-Both these advertisements appeared in the columns of the _Hull Packet_
-in 1833; and timorous old ladies who wished to journey from Hull to
-Bridlington in that year were no doubt very thankful to the proprietors
-of the _Wellington_ for making so clear the dangers of the road
-traversed by that ‘delightful conveyance,’ the _British Queen_.
-
-Still standing by the side of what is now Cardigan Road at Bridlington,
-there is a mile stone informing all who desire the information that
-Beverley is distant 22 miles. It is on the old coaching road once
-traversed daily by the _British Queen_. But a few hundred yards past
-this relic of the old coaching days the road now reaches the sea-shore,
-and the remaining portion as far as Barmston has long since disappeared
-under the waves of the North Sea.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Very pleasant it must have been in the ‘Thirties’ to travel by a
-well-appointed stage coach—say the _Rockingham_, _Rodney_, _Trafalgar_,
-_Wellington_, _True Briton_, _Express_, _Telegraph_, _King William_, or
-_Queen Adelaide_, all of which coaches were running from Hull in 1832.
-
-But this would be, of course, provided the weather were fine, and one
-could afford to travel ‘first class.’ It would not be pleasant to have
-to get out and walk uphill as the ‘second class’ passengers were
-expected to do in the case of a coach running from North Cave to Hull
-through Brantingham and Hessle; and it would be decidedly unpleasant to
-have to get out and push behind, as was demanded of the ‘third class’
-passengers by this coach.
-
-But there was always the danger of highwaymen to be faced, and the Royal
-Mail travelled ‘with a guard well armed,’ as the coaching bill
-reproduced on page 241 shows.
-
-And what of winter travelling, with the thermometer down below
-freezing-point and the risk every minute of the coach’s being stuck fast
-in a snow-drift on a part of the road ‘five miles from anywhere’? Here
-are two local records which testify to the existence of such
-discomforts:—
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C.W. Mason_
-
- Pistols and Holsters formerly used on the Hull and Patrington Stage
- Coach.
- (Now in the possession of Dr. J. Wright Mason, Hull)
-
-]
-
-1839. Jan. 7. A dreadful storm visited the country.... For an hour and a
- half the Scarbro’ mail coach horses could not contend against the
- wind. The inside passengers of the Beverley coach had to get out
- and support the vehicle from being overturned.
-
-1846. Dec. 15. Turnpike roads impassable with snow. Scarborough mail
- coach unable to proceed beyond Bridlington. Narrow escape of
- several persons from being frozen to death on the highways.
-
-Ten years before stage coaches reached the height of their prosperity, a
-new era had begun—the era of the RAILWAY. The first railway to be used
-for passenger traffic was one between Stockton and Darlington, and in
-the year of its opening another from Leeds to Selby was being planned by
-the great engineer, George Stephenson.
-
-This, as originally planned, was to be of a length of 20 miles. Near
-Leeds there were to be three inclines, up each of which the train was to
-be hauled by a fixed engine stationed at the summit. The rest of the
-line was to be worked either by a travelling engine or by a horse.
-
-The latter could, it was calculated, be very profitably employed. For
-his work would only be needed on the flat and up the slight inclines;
-and for six or seven miles on the journey from Leeds to Selby he could
-be ‘thrown off’ and could ride ‘in his own carriage behind the train of
-waggons,’ until his services were again required. Such was Railway
-Engineering in its infancy.
-
-The Leeds and Selby Railway Company having been formed, work was
-proceeded with on plans drawn up by another engineer, Mr. James Walker,
-and the line was declared open for traffic in 1834.
-
-In the following year a new Company, known as the Hull and Selby Railway
-Company, was formed, with Mr. Henry Broadley as Chairman. An Act of
-Parliament ‘for making a Railway from Kingston-upon-Hull to Selby’ was
-then obtained, and the work of constructing the new railway was pushed
-forward rapidly.
-
-This, the first terminal railway to be constructed in the Riding, was
-expected to bring with it great advantages. By it Hull would be linked
-to Manchester, and Manchester was already linked to Liverpool. Thus
-there would be direct railway communication across England from the
-North Sea to the Irish Sea.
-
-But, for all this, the scheme met with great opposition. Hull and Selby
-were already served by steam packets travelling along the Humber and the
-Ouse, and this service was deemed so satisfactory that there was little
-chance of the new railway’s proving a commercial success.
-
-Objections were also raised by some of the large landowners, who feared
-that the introduction of the railway would very largely decrease the
-value of their properties along its route. Such objectors had, of
-course, to be conciliated—as was Mr. Raikes of Welton, by a gift of
-£10,000 and an undertaking to build a station at Brough instead of at
-Welton.
-
- * * * * *
-
-July 2nd, 1840, saw the opening of the first terminal railway in our
-Riding, amid scenes of wild enthusiasm at both Selby and Hull, as well
-as at the various stations along the line. The first train from Hull to
-Selby—as reported in the _Hull Packet_—‘started about a quarter past
-twelve, and was nearly two hours in going to Selby. In returning,
-however, the Prince performed the trip, 31 miles, in one hour and five
-minutes.’[62]
-
-Footnote 62:
-
- The _Prince_ was one of the five engines employed on the new line. The
- fastest non-stop run in the British Isles to-day is that made on the
- N.E.R. from Darlington to York, when 44-1/4 miles are covered in 43
- minutes—an average speed of 61.7 miles per hour.
-
-The first East Riding time-table was a very modest affair, as will be
-seen from the reproduction overleaf. The order of arrangement of the
-train is seen to be:—Engine and tender, goods waggon, second-class
-carriage, first-class carriage, and third-class carriage; but the
-last-named is on this occasion occupied by four-legged passengers. It is
-recorded that when the passengers in this were two-legged cattle, ‘a
-great number of hats were lost’ and many ‘colds and inconveniences’ were
-caught—facts at which we shall probably not be surprised.
-
-Several of the regulations of the Hull and Selby Railway seem very
-quaint. It was the duty of a _station-keeper_ ‘to conduct himself
-civilly,’ and ‘to enter on a waybill the number, class, and destination
-of the passengers sent by each train.’
-
-[Illustration: THE FIRST TIME-TABLE OF THE HULL AND SELBY RAILWAY.]
-
-The _guard’s_ duties were very numerous. Among them—
-
- He shall not allow any of the passengers to smoke in the trains, nor
- in any manner to endanger themselves by imprudent exposure. No
- passenger shall be allowed to ride on the outside of a carriage
- without leave from the general superintendent. In the event of any
- passenger being intoxicated, or disorderly, so as to annoy other
- passengers, the guard shall use all gentle means to stop the
- annoyance, and if he does not succeed, he shall set him down at the
- next or most convenient station, and report the circumstance.
-
-The new method of travelling proved very popular. In 1841 the number of
-passengers carried by the Hull and Selby Railway amounted to 212,000,
-‘without the slightest accident to any of them.’ This was the beginning
-of the days of the ‘cheap tripper,’ and it is recorded that on August
-22nd, 1844—
-
- A pleasure train from Hebden Bridge and Luddington Foot brought
- 3,200 persons [to Hull] in 82 carriages; being the longest train
- that ever visited the town.
-
-In many cases the railway train, steam packet, and stage coach ran in
-conjunction. Thus the journey from Hull to Knaresborough was completed
-in the following three stages:—
-
- Hull to Selby by steam packet,
- Selby to Micklefield by railway,
- Micklefield to Knaresborough by stage coach.
-
-The fares for this journey were ‘6s. 6d. outside and fore-cabin,’ and
-‘10s. 6d. inside and best cabin.’ Certainly the traveller could not
-complain that he did not get plenty of variety for his money.
-
-As an instance of the success of the new Railway in transporting ‘live
-stock’ may be given another extract from the _Hull Directory_:—
-
-1842. December 9. A cow, which arrived here by the same steamer as the
- Post Office bags, outstripped those bags, 14 hours in her arrival
- at Manchester.
-
-It is to be presumed that the cow travelled from Hull to Manchester by
-train, while the Post Office bags went by mail coach. But this is left
-to the imagination of the readers of the Directory.
-
-In 1845 the Hull and Selby Railway was leased to the York and North
-Midland Company, a powerful company under the control of Mr. George
-Hudson, the ‘Railway King.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-This year and the next saw what was called the ‘Railway Mania,’ when
-promoters vied with one another in preparing schemes for new railways
-which people with money to invest were only too anxious to support. Two
-hundred and seventy-two Acts of Parliament authorizing new railways were
-obtained during the ‘boom;’ and when the ‘crash’ came, many lost the
-whole of the money they had so rashly invested.
-
-The Hull and Bridlington Branch Railway was opened in 1846, and
-continued to Scarborough the following year. In 1847, also, the York and
-Market Weighton Branch Railway was opened; and the following year saw
-the opening of the Manchester, Sheffield, and Lincolnshire Railway ferry
-from Hull to New Holland. Hull and Withernsea were joined by the Hull
-and Holderness Railway in 1854.
-
-[Illustration: THE HULL AND BEVERLEY STAGE COACH—WILSON’S ‘SAFETY.’]
-
-Among the projected railways not carried out were the Hull and Market
-Weighton Railway, via Brough, and the Hull, South and West Junction
-Railway. One of the objectors to the former was the Vicar of South Cave,
-whose objection was that if there were a station at South Cave, ‘the
-scum of Hull would make it one place for their Sunday revels.’ His
-summary of the results of the introduction of railways was that—
-
- The country youths go to some neighbouring town for a ‘lark,’ and
- the tag-rag-and-bob-tail of towns come into the country, not for
- sober enjoyment, but for Sunday dissipation.
-
-Although this line of railway was not built, an alternative route from
-Hull to Market Weighton has long been provided. But the Hull, South and
-West Junction Railway, which was to cross the Humber by a tunnel at
-Hessle nearly forty years ago, remains as a project which will some day
-be successfully carried out.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ON THE ROAD IN 1912.
- THE BEVERLEY AND BEEFORD MOTOR OMNIBUS.
-]
-
-
-
-
- XXV.
- ENGLAND’S THIRD PORT.
-
- THE MODERN GROWTH OF HULL.
-
-
-We have seen in some of the foregoing chapters how the small town of
-Wyke, or Hull, was born early in the twelfth century, how it received a
-charter of privileges from King Edward I., and how it was afterwards
-fortified with walls and ditches that withstood successfully a couple of
-sieges during the Great Civil War. It remains to see how the small,
-insignificant ‘King’s Town upon Hull’ has grown into a city so important
-as to take rank after London and Liverpool as ‘England’s Third Port.’
-
-Six hundred years ago Hull was much smaller than, and nothing like so
-important as, its neighbours, Beverley and Hedon. Yet to-day its
-inhabitants number twenty-one times those of Beverley, and two hundred
-and thirty-nine times those of Hedon. Why should this be?
-
-The answer is that in the first place Hull owes its greatness to its
-position on the northern shore of the mighty Humber. When ships were
-small, they could pass up the river Hull to Beverley, and could reach
-Hedon by its Haven. But as ships grew in size this became no longer
-possible, and Beverley and Hedon were left behind in the race, while
-Hull, because of its deep water, went ahead. For it is situate at the
-only spot on the north bank of the Humber where there is water
-sufficiently deep to allow large ships to approach the shore.
-
-But there is one remarkable thing about the growth of Hull. This has
-taken place almost entirely within the last two hundred years. For 450
-years after its walls were built, its inhabitants lived within them. Not
-till nearly the close of the eighteenth century did their houses begin
-to stretch out beyond its walls. In 1812 the area of the town was about
-three times that within these walls. But in 1912 the city has extended
-its arms so far beyond them that there are along its main roads six tram
-routes, each measuring from one and three-quarters to two and a half
-miles, while the houses of its inhabitants extend still farther.
-
-The rapid growth of Hull within the last hundred years may be seen also
-by comparing the numbers of its inhabitants in different years:—
-
- In 1811 its inhabitants numbered 37,000
- ” 1841 ” ” ” 67,000
- ” 1871 ” ” ” 122,000
- ” 1901 ” ” ” 241,000
- ” 1911 ” ” ” 278,000
-
-These figures show that during each period of thirty years from 1811 to
-1901 the population almost doubled itself, and that the greatest actual
-increase was between the years 1871 and 1901.
-
-And why this sudden growth? Because of the introduction and perfection
-of the railway and the steamship, which together have enabled merchants
-to reap full benefit from the great advantages that nature herself
-bestowed upon their city.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If you turn to the fourteenth-century plan given on page 165, you will
-see that trading ships are moored in the river Hull—the ‘Old Harbour,’
-as we call it to-day—on the right bank of which are the cranes for
-removing their cargoes. For another four centuries the river continued
-to be the only place for the mooring of ships.
-
-[Illustration: WHITEFRIARGATE BRIDGE AND THE VICTORIA SQUARE, HULL.]
-
-But when, by the revival of the whale-fishing industry in 1765, the
-amount of shipping greatly increased, need was felt for more
-accommodation. An Act of Parliament was therefore obtained in 1774
-giving permission to ‘the Dock Company, of Kingston-upon-Hull,’ to make
-a dock extending from the river Hull to the Beverley Gate along the line
-of the town moat.[63]
-
-Footnote 63:
-
- The Hull Dock Company became extinct in 1893, when its property was
- purchased by the North Eastern Railway Company.
-
-The first stone of this dock was laid in the following year, amid scenes
-of great enthusiasm. Saluted with the firing of nine cannon and
-accompanied by ‘a large band of music, constables and flags,’ the Mayor
-and Corporation walked in procession to the _Cross Keys_, where they
-had, we read, ‘an excellent dinner.’ Nor did they forget their humbler
-townsfolk, for the workmen were given ‘fifteen guineas to drink.’
-
-In 1778 the work of building the dock was finished, and Hull had the
-honour of possessing the first enclosed trading dock in Great Britain.
-It proved a great success, paying to its 120 shareholders good dividends
-out of the dues which were collected from the owners of vessels using
-it.
-
-These varied from two pence per ton for a coasting vessel trading as far
-north as Holy Island or as far south as Yarmouth, to one shilling and
-ninepence per ton for vessels trading with Greenland, Africa and
-America—foreign vessels paying in all cases double dues.
-
-THE DOCK measured nine acres in water area. In 1809 another dock was
-built, with an entrance direct from the Humber. This became known as the
-NEW DOCK, the corresponding adjective ‘Old’ being then applied to the
-earlier one. In 1829 a JUNCTION DOCK was built between the two. The line
-of the town moat was now entirely replaced with a line of docks.
-
-In 1840 the railway came to Hull. The station was at that time in
-Kingston Street—on the site of the present Goods Station—and to give
-greater access to it for ships, the RAILWAY DOCK was built off the New
-Dock.
-
-But the four docks that Hull then possessed proved quite incapable of
-dealing with the volume of trade to which they gave rise. So new ground
-was tapped, and in 1850 the VICTORIA DOCK, with a water area of 20
-acres, was built. At the same time the names of the three old docks were
-changed, and became thenceforth the QUEEN’S DOCK, HUMBER DOCK, and
-PRINCE’S DOCK.
-
-For nineteen years this provision was sufficient. Then there was opened
-the ALBERT DOCK, four acres larger than the Victoria Dock, and in 1880
-and 1883 this was followed by the WILLIAM WRIGHT DOCK[64] and the ST.
-ANDREW’S DOCK.
-
-Footnote 64:
-
- The Albert Dock and the William Wright Dock are now combined into one,
- known as the ALBERT AND WILLIAM WRIGHT DOCK.
-
-All this building of new docks was intended to provide greater
-facilities for shipping, and as these were provided the volume of trade
-went on increasing. Meanwhile new shipping companies were formed to cope
-with the increase of trade.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Most famous of all the shipping companies is that known to us as ‘Thos.
-Wilson, Sons & Co., Limited,’ which was started by Mr. Thomas Wilson
-about the time of the opening of Junction Dock. ‘Beckinton, Wilson &
-Co.’—as the firm was then called—possessed one or two sailing ships and
-traded with Sweden in iron ore. ‘Thos. Wilson Sons & Co.’ possess a
-fleet of nearly one hundred steamships, and trade with all the chief
-ports of the world.
-
-[Illustration: PLAN OF DOCKS WEST OF THE RIVER HULL.]
-
-[Illustration: PLAN OF DOCKS EAST OF THE RIVER HULL.]
-
-The history of the Wilson Line has been called a romance of the shipping
-world. Trade with Sweden was followed by the opening out of trade with
-Russia. When the building of the Suez Canal gave added importance to the
-Mediterranean, the Wilson Line began to trade with the ports of the
-Adriatic Sea, and later with Odessa and Constantinople. Next came trade
-with India, the _Orlando_, built at Hull in 1870, being the first
-steamship to arrive at Hull from India direct.
-
-After this was laid the foundation of trade with New York. The success
-of the new venture seemed very doubtful at first, but the Wilson Line
-now carry more cargo to and from England and New York than the vessels
-of any other line of steamships. Together with all these new enterprises
-has gone the organisation of weekly services to the Belgian ports, and
-of fortnightly services to the ports of the Mediterranean Sea.
-
-[Illustration: THE WILSON LINER ‘ESKIMO’ GETTING UP STEAM.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-Early in this chapter it was stated that in the first place Hull owes
-its greatness to its geographical position. It is this position which
-has made it a great distributing centre for imported goods, and a great
-collecting centre for exported goods. The Port of Hull has thus become
-‘the gateway for the world to the great manufacturing centres of
-Yorkshire, Lancashire, and the Midlands.’
-
-[Illustration: GRAIN SHIPS DISCHARGING THEIR CARGOES INTO LIGHTERS.]
-
-Much of the transfer and despatch of goods is carried on over the side
-of the ocean-going steamships into or from the river-going lighters and
-keels, which are able to make use of two systems of inland waterways.
-One of these, the _Aire and Calder Navigation_, dates from the year
-1698, and is the oldest as well as the most up-to-date waterway in Great
-Britain. The other system is known as the _Trent Navigation_.
-
-The relative cheapness of transit by water makes these inland waterways
-of very great importance for all heavy traffic in which speed is not
-required. For fast traffic Hull is served by three railway systems, the
-North Eastern Railway, the Hull and Barnsley Railway, and the Great
-Central Railway; and other Companies have running powers over the lines
-of the North Eastern.
-
-The coming of the first railway to Hull in 1840 was described in the
-preceding chapter. Five years after this event the merchants of Hull
-sought to establish a Hull and Barnsley Junction Railway; but the
-project fell through, and it was not till 1885 that the line now known
-as the Hull and Barnsley Railway was constructed.
-
-With this new line was also constructed a new dock. This, the ALEXANDRA
-DOCK, is the deepest dock on the east coast of Great Britain, and has a
-water area of 53½ acres.
-
-The opening of this huge dock gave a great impetus to the export trade
-in coal. In 1884 not more than 600,000 tons were exported, but in 1910
-the quantity exported reached the enormous total of 5,000,000 tons.[65]
-Most of this went to North Russia, Germany, Holland, Sweden and South
-America.
-
-Footnote 65:
-
- It is expected that this amount will be greatly increased within the
- next few years by the opening of new collieries around Doncaster, and
- the tapping of a new ‘Eastern Coalfield,’ which is believed to extend
- deep down under the Humber and the Wash, right out into the North Sea.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Let us take a walk round some of the Hull docks, and try to realise what
-the import and export trade really means.
-
-Here, in the Alexandra Dock, is a huge iron steamship into which coal is
-being shipped by means of electric coal hoists or by transporter belts.
-Its cargo of 5,000 tons is being taken on board at the rate of ten tons
-a minute. From the hold of another equally large ship grain is pouring
-into lighters ranged alongside. It will require five working-days of ten
-hours each to discharge its cargo of 6,000 tons. Then the ship will take
-its place under the coal hoists, and its empty hold will be filled with
-an outgoing cargo of ‘black diamonds.’
-
-The Victoria Dock is mainly given up to vessels unloading timber from
-the White Sea and the Baltic, a large proportion of it being ‘pit props’
-for the coal mines of Yorkshire and Lancashire.
-
-In the Albert and William Wright Dock, as well as in the Alexandra Dock,
-are vessels discharging hundreds of cases of bacon and hams from the
-United States, or of frozen carcasses of sheep from South America. From
-the hold of another vessel are being brought up crate after crate of
-eggs from North Russia, from another bale after bale of wool from
-Australia. Lined up alongside another big steamship are dozens of
-agricultural engines and machines made by workmen in Gainsborough and
-Lincoln. In a few weeks’ time they will be at work in the corn-fields of
-Russia.
-
-[Illustration: AGRICULTURAL MACHINERY ON THE WAY TO RUSSIA.]
-
-Every day of the week we shall find ships giving up their cargoes of
-linseed and cottonseed from India, Egypt, or South Russia. But if we
-want to see the ‘butter boats’ emptied, we must be on the spot in the
-very early hours of a Monday morning. For these boats arrive from
-Denmark during the Sunday, and the work of transporting their cargoes to
-the lines of railway waggons that await their arrival begins with the
-last stroke of midnight. By four or five o’clock on the Monday morning
-the butter is on its way to all parts of the north of England. The cargo
-of one ship alone is sometimes consigned to as many as 300 separate
-stations.
-
-[Illustration: A STEAM TRAWLER.]
-
-Come for a walk along the Humber Dock or on the Riverside Quay and,
-according to the season of the year, we shall see unshipped cargoes of
-plums from Germany; new potatoes and other vegetables from Jersey,
-France, and Holland; cranberries from Russia; bananas from the Canary
-Isles; apples from Australia, Canada, and the United States; oranges,
-lemons, grapes, nuts, tomatoes and onions from Spain, Portugal and
-Italy.
-
-Last of all we will pay a visit to the St. Andrew’s Dock, and watch the
-entrance and unloading of the steam trawlers and steam carriers of the
-Hull fishing fleets. From the fishing-grounds of the North Sea, the
-White Sea, and the stormy seas around Iceland each brings its ‘catch.’
-As quickly as it can be brought up from the hold—tubs of plaice, turbot,
-halibut, codfish, ling, hake or herring—it is sold at auction to the
-fish buyers who attend from all the large towns of the north of England;
-and as quickly it is packed on board the waiting ‘Fish Trains,’ which
-will distribute it among the fifteen million people who live within
-reach of the port of Hull.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We shall now be able, perhaps, to understand what is meant when we call
-Hull ‘England’s Third Port.’ The following table shows the position of
-Hull in comparison with the other large ports of Great Britain:—
-
- Annual Value of Imports
- Name of Port. and Exports in 1910.
-
- London 360 million pounds.
-
- Liverpool 341 " "
-
- Hull 73 " "
-
- Manchester 47 " "
-
- Southampton 46 " "
-
- Glasgow 44 " "
-
- Grimsby 32 " "
-
-The growth of Hull’s shipping industry has meant a corresponding growth
-of its manufacturing industries. Most of these find their home on the
-banks of the river Hull, along whose winding course we can find oil and
-cake mills, flour mills, saw mills, paint, colour and varnish works,
-starch, blue and black-lead works, coal tar works, and cement works—all
-one after another.
-
-Among these mills and works are some that rank as the largest in the
-British Isles. Thus the ‘British Oil and Cake Mills, Ltd.’ have the
-largest oil refinery, the ‘Hull Oil Manufacturing Co.’ are the largest
-producers of castor-oil, and the firm of ‘Blundell, Spence & Co.’ own
-the largest paint works. There are forty different firms engaged in the
-saw-milling industry, and an equal number in the manufacture of paints,
-colours and varnishes.
-
-[Illustration: THE N.E.R. RIVERSIDE QUAY.]
-
-That ‘England’s Third Port’ is still going ahead may be seen in recent
-shipping and industrial developments. One of these has been the building
-of a new RIVERSIDE QUAY, available for large ships at any state of the
-tide, and the inauguration of a daily service of steamers to and from
-the Belgian ports. Another is the construction of a new JOINT DOCK by
-the North Eastern and the Hull and Barnsley Railways. This is planned to
-have eventually a water area of 83 acres, and to be thus an imposing
-rival of the Great Central Railway’s new dock at Immingham on the
-Lincolnshire shore of the Humber.
-
-The year 1910 saw the beginning of a new direct steamship service
-between Australia and Hull, a service which is expected to open out a
-large trade in the import of Australian wool for the looms of the West
-Riding. March, 1909, saw the arrival in Hull of the first large cargo of
-soya beans sent out from China, and the beginning in Europe of a new
-industry—the crushing of soya beans and the manufacture of soya oil and
-feeding cake.
-
-Another new industry was started in 1907, when the ‘National Radiator
-Co.’ opened a branch of their American works. They have extended their
-buildings each year since the opening, and now employ nearly 1000 hands.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] The Garden Village, Hull. [_C. Bennett_
-
-]
-
-Most noticeable of all recent developments in Hull, however, have been
-the destruction of slum districts and the opening out of wide
-thoroughfares in the heart of the city—a work that was carried out
-during the five years’ mayoralty of Sir Alfred Gelder—the securing of an
-unfailing supply of pure drinking-water; the construction of a tramway
-system that is one of the cheapest, if not the cheapest, in Great
-Britain; and the planning of Garden Villages and Public Parks on the
-outskirts of the city.
-
-
-
-
- XXVI.
- FAMOUS SONS OF THE EAST RIDING.
-
-
-
-
-First in the list of those who may justly be called ‘Famous Sons of the
-East Riding’ stand the names of ROGER OF HOWDEN, WILLIAM OF NEWBURGH,
-and PETER OF LANGTOFT. All these were men of learning in an age when
-knowledge was difficult to obtain, and each devoted himself to the work
-of spreading the knowledge of which he became possessed. The work that
-each of them bequeathed to us is a history of our country, the histories
-of the first and second being written in Latin, and that of the third in
-Norman-French rimed verse.
-
-Roger of Howden and Peter of Langtoft took their surnames—_i.e._,
-additional names—from the places at which they were born. But William of
-Newburgh was born at Bridlington in 1136, and gained his surname from
-the fact that he became an inmate of the monastery at Newburgh in the
-North Riding. Peter of Langtoft was a Canon of the Priory at
-Bridlington.
-
-Peter of Langtoft’s _History of English Affairs_ takes rank as the
-‘finest historical work left us by an Englishman of the twelfth
-century.’ It is interesting because there are introduced several of the
-songs sung by the peasantry and the townsfolk of Yorkshire in the
-thirteenth century.
-
-But most interesting to us is the _Annals_ of Roger of Howden. Roger was
-a clerk, or secretary, to King Henry II., and later became one of the
-King’s Justices in Yorkshire. He records several facts about his
-birthplace—among them that King John spent Christmas, 1191, as a guest
-of Hugh Pudsey, Bishop of Durham, at the latter’s palace or manor-house
-at Howden, and that in 1200 the King granted Bishop Hugh the right to
-hold there an annual fair.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Next in our list come the names of two famous churchmen, JOHN ALCOCK and
-JOHN FISHER, who were both destined to become Bishops of Rochester.
-
-[Illustration: JOHN ALCOCK, BISHOP OF ELY.]
-
-John Alcock was born at Hull about 1428, and became Bishop of Rochester
-in 1472. Four years later he was promoted to the see of Worcester, and
-after another ten years received further promotion to the see of Ely. In
-his time it was customary for churchmen to be at the head of all affairs
-of the State, and twice was Bishop Alcock appointed by the King to be
-Lord Chancellor of England. On the second occasion he had the duty of
-opening the first Parliament of Henry VII.
-
-Hull folk have reason to be proud of the memory of their great townsman,
-John Alcock. For not only did he reach the highest position in the
-country next to the King himself, but he was also famed as a great
-architect and a great patron of learning. As ‘Comptroller of the Royal
-Works’ he designed the wonderful ‘Henry VII.’s Chapel’ in Westminster
-Abbey, and as a patron of learning he founded Jesus College, Cambridge,
-and the Hull Grammar School.
-
-Bishop Alcock died in 1500 at Wisbech Castle, the palace of the Bishops
-of Ely, and was buried in the chapel of Ely Cathedral which he caused to
-be built, and which is to this day known as ‘Bishop Alcock’s Chapel.’
-
-John Fisher was twenty-nine years younger than the Bishop of Rochester
-whose life has just been described. He is said to have been the son of a
-Beverley mercer, and to have owed his high office in the Church to the
-favour of Margaret, Countess of Richmond.
-
-So eager was he for the advancement of learning that he started to study
-Greek when quite advanced in years; and so upright and sincere was he
-that when confessor to Queen Catherine of Aragon he was ‘the only
-adviser on whose sincerity and honesty she could rely.’
-
-Fisher was the only bishop who opposed the divorce of Henry VIII. and
-Catherine of Aragon, and hence he incurred the enmity of the King. This
-was increased fourfold when, further, he refused to recognise Henry as
-the ‘Supreme Head of the Church of England.’ And when, as a result of
-this refusal, the Pope sent Fisher a Cardinal’s hat, Henry’s wrath
-became ungovernable fury.
-
-‘Yf the Cardinal’s hat were layed at his feete, he wolde not stoupe to
-take it up, he did set so little by it,’ were Fisher’s words when he
-heard of the Pope’s present to himself. But for all that he was declared
-to be guilty of treason, and was sentenced by the King to be hanged at
-Tyburn as a common felon.
-
-[Illustration: JOHN FISHER, BISHOP OF ROCHESTER.]
-
-Nothing would move Fisher from the position he had taken up. Come what
-might, the King was not in his eyes the ‘Supreme Head of the Church.’ So
-at the age of 76 he suffered the fate of most of those who ventured to
-oppose the will of Henry VIII. The indignity of a death at the hangman’s
-hands was spared him, and he was beheaded on Tower Hill, his head being
-afterwards spiked on London Bridge, and his body buried in St. Peter’s
-Chapel, by the side of that of his friend, the great statesman Sir
-Thomas More.
-
- * * * * *
-
-‘A pure-minded patriot in the most corrupt times.’ Such has been the
-description of ANDREW MARVELL—son of a rector of Winestead and master of
-the Hull Grammar School—who was assistant to John Milton, the Latin
-Secretary to the Council of State in the time of the Commonwealth, and
-Member of Parliament for Hull during nineteen years.
-
-[Illustration: Andr. Marvell]
-
-Andrew Marvell was born in 1621 at his father’s rectory, and, as an ‘old
-boy’ of the Hull Grammar School, passed on to Cambridge at the age of
-fifteen. When he was nineteen years old, his father was drowned in
-crossing the Humber by the ferry-boat, and as a result he was adopted by
-a Mrs. Skinner of Thornton, in North Lincolnshire.
-
-In 1657 Marvell entered the service of the Commonwealth, and two years
-later he was elected a Member of Parliament for Hull, which post he
-continued to hold until his death. It was then the custom for Members of
-Parliament to be paid for their services by their constituents, and
-Marvell thus received from the townsfolk of Hull the sum of six
-shillings and eightpence per day ‘for knight’s pence.’ It is curious to
-notice that he was the last member for Hull to be paid for his services
-in Parliament until the year 1911.
-
-Notwithstanding this payment Marvell’s means were always very limited,
-and for some years he lived in a state bordering upon actual poverty.
-But the scantiness of his means did not cause him to swerve from what he
-considered to be the path of honesty, and the tale is told of how Danby,
-the Lord Treasurer, tried unsuccessfully to bribe him with the offer of
-£1,000. ‘Up two pair of stairs in a little court in the Strand’ Marvell
-was found by the Lord Treasurer’s messenger. And there he was also left,
-incorruptible in his honesty.
-
-Marvell earned considerable fame as a writer of political satires, and
-also as a poet. The poems by which he is best remembered are probably
-those entitled _Thoughts in a Garden_ and _An Horatian Ode upon
-Cromwell’s Return from Ireland_.
-
-In the latter poem occur the famous lines in which the author, himself a
-strong Parliamentarian, honours the way in which King Charles I. met his
-death:—
-
- He nothing common did or mean
- Upon that memorable scene,
- But with his keener eye
- The axe’s edge did try;
-
- Nor called the gods, with vulgar spite,
- To vindicate his helpless right;
- But bowed his comely head
- Down, as upon a bed.
-
-Marvell died in 1678, so poor that his funeral expenses were paid by the
-Corporation of Hull. How great his worth was may be judged from the
-words of the great statesman William Pitt:—‘Every man has his own price;
-I know of but one exception, and that is Marvell, in the past.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration:
-
- WILBERFORCE HOUSE, HIGH STREET, HULL.
- The Birthplace of William Wilberforce.
-]
-
-The house in which Sir John Lister entertained King Charles on his visit
-to Hull in 1639 was also that in which was born Hull’s greatest son,
-WILLIAM WILBERFORCE. Tradition states, further, that he was born in the
-room in which the King had slept.
-
-William Wilberforce was born on August 24th, 1759, the grandson of
-another William Wilberforce, who had been a Baltic merchant and an
-alderman of the town. Delicate as a child, and reared in luxury, he yet
-grew up filled with an understanding of the earnestness of life; and
-after leaving Cambridge he entered Parliament at the age of twenty-one,
-as a member for Hull. Four years later he was chosen a member for both
-the county of York and the town of Hull. The former of these
-distinctions was the one that he selected, and thenceforth for
-twenty-eight years he remained one of the two members of Parliament for
-the ‘Shire of Broad Acres.’
-
-Just at that time the minds of thoughtful Englishmen were beginning to
-be stirred by feelings of horror at the evils of the slave-trade. It had
-been an English seaman of Queen Elizabeth’s time who had started the
-traffic in human beings. And, curious as it may seem to us, that traffic
-had been blessed by the Church; since the negroes who were taken across
-the Atlantic to the West Indies were being given a chance to learn the
-truths of Christianity.
-
-It had been, also, an English crew of seamen who had on one occasion
-thrown overboard a hundred and forty ‘niggers’ to lighten their vessel.
-But it was also Englishmen who first set to work to put an end to the
-unholy traffic.
-
-In 1787 a small band of thinkers—Thomas Clarkson, Granville Sharp,
-William Wilberforce, and a few others—started to labour with this end in
-view. The great statesmen of the time, Pitt, Burke, and Fox, all
-supported their efforts, and piles of information were obtained.
-
-[Illustration: WILLIAM WILBERFORCE.]
-
-They got together details of the bartering of prisoners by African
-chiefs for supplies of rum; details of voyages across the Atlantic
-during which the slaves lay chained on decks which had only a couple of
-feet of space between them, and were so closely packed together that
-they had hardly room to move their limbs; details of the cruel treatment
-meted out to them when they were eventually sold to work in the sugar
-plantations of the West Indies.
-
-But the slave-trade was a very profitable one. Merchants did not feel
-anxious to give up profits of one hundred and twenty per cent.; so the
-opposition met by Clarkson, Sharp, and Wilberforce was great. Eleven
-times during the years 1791–1805 was a Bill introduced in Parliament for
-the abolition of the slave trade, only to be either rejected by the
-House of Commons, or thrown out by the House of Lords.
-
-However, in 1806, the Bill was passed by the Lords, and afterwards
-carried in the House of Commons by two hundred and eighty-three votes to
-sixteen. Royal assent to the Bill followed on March 25th, 1807.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Almost immediately after this the Ministry resigned, and a General
-Election took place. This was the occasion of the historic contest
-between William Wilberforce, the Hon. Henry Lascelles (son of the Earl
-of Harewood), and Viscount Milton (son of Earl Fitzwilliam). Wilberforce
-and Lascelles stood as Tories, Viscount Milton as a Whig.
-
-For fifteen days the polling went on in the Castle Yard at York, to
-which the voters from the whole county had to travel by stage coach or
-post chaise, on horseback, or afoot. From the East Riding there were
-3,556 voters, and at the close of the poll the figures stood:—
-
- Wilberforce 11,806
- Milton 11,177
- Lascelles 10,989
-
-Thus William Wilberforce and Viscount Milton became the two members for
-Yorkshire. The defeated candidate owed his position at the bottom of the
-poll largely to the fact that his father owned slaves on his West Indian
-estates, and one of the election cries against him was ‘No Yorkshire
-votes purchased with African blood!’ The election cost Wilberforce
-£28,000, and each of the other two candidates about £100,000—a striking
-example of the difference that has come over our political life during
-the last century.
-
-In 1812 Wilberforce retired from his old constituency, and thenceforth
-sat for a small borough in Sussex until 1825, when he withdrew from
-Parliament. But the good work which he had helped to start was continued
-by others, and two weeks after his burial in Westminster Abbey—August
-5th, 1833—an Act of Parliament was passed for the Abolition of Slavery
-in the British Colonies, the sum of money paid as compensation to
-slave-owners being £20,000,000.
-
-The memory of our great philanthropist has been perpetuated at York by
-the building of the Wilberforce School for the Blind, and at Hull by the
-erection of the Wilberforce Monument near Whitefriargate Bridge, and the
-opening of his birthplace in High Street as a Public Museum of Local
-Antiquities. The Wilberforce Monument, which towers up 102 feet above
-the roadway, bears on one of its sides the simple yet effective
-inscription:—
-
- NEGRO
- SLAVERY
- ABOLISHED
- I. AUGUST
- MDCCCXXXIV.
-
-From William Wilberforce we turn to SIR TATTON SYKES—‘t’owd Squyer’ of
-Sledmere. Sir Tatton was born in 1772, the second son of Sir Christopher
-Sykes, and succeeded to the title and the family estates on the death of
-his brother, Sir Mark Masterman Sykes, in 1823.
-
-Before this he had become widely known as a breeder of sheep and
-racehorses, and as a fearless sportsman. At the age of twenty-three he
-rode his first race at Malton, at the age of sixty he rode his last; and
-on both occasions he came in the winner.
-
-Under Sir Christopher Sykes the cultivation of the bleak, desolate Wold
-country was successfully begun, and under Sir Tatton Sykes great
-improvements were wrought by the introduction of bone manure. Sir Tatton
-was for forty years a master of fox-hounds, and the discovery of the
-usefulness of bone manure was due to his observing that on the places
-near his kennels at Eddlethorpe where the hounds were fed, the grass
-grew more luxuriantly than it did elsewhere.
-
-Throughout his long life of ninety-one years Sir Tatton Sykes continued
-to dress in the fashions of his early days—‘a long frock coat, drab
-breeches, top-boots, and a frilled shirt.’ And such was his reputation
-that sixty years ago the three things best worth seeing in the county
-were said by Yorkshiremen to be ‘York Minster, Fountains Abbey, and
-t’owd Squyer.’
-
-Absolutely ‘straight’ in all that he did, he takes rank as a true
-specimen of ‘The Fine Old English Gentleman’—the Sir Roger de Coverley
-of the nineteenth century.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_Henry Thelwell_
-
- Sir Tatton Sykes.
-
-]
-
- * * * * *
-
-Last on our list of Famous Sons of the East Riding stand the names of
-CHARLES AND ARTHUR WILSON.
-
-The younger sons of Thomas Wilson, founder of the great shipping firm of
-‘Thomas Wilson, Sons & Co., Limited,’ they were born at Hull in 1833 and
-1836 respectively. On the retirement of their eldest brother David in
-1867, the control of the firm came into their hands, and how it grew and
-prospered, and how the town of Hull grew and prospered at the same time
-have been described in a previous chapter.
-
-The parallel between the ancient family of the De la Poles and the
-modern family of the Wilsons has been noted by more than one writer. It
-may rightly be said that as the former were the founders of the
-commercial prosperity of the town of Kingston-upon-Hull, so the latter
-were the founders of the commercial prosperity of the city of Hull.
-
-For thirty-two years—from 1874 to 1906—Charles Wilson sat in Parliament
-as a representative of the burgesses of his native place. Then his
-political services were recognised by the Ministry, and he became the
-first Baron Nunburnholme of Kingston-upon-Hull.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_Barry, Hull_
-
- Charles Wilson, First Baron Nunburnholme.
-
-]
-
-Arthur Wilson did not, like his brother, enter political life, but
-became widely famed as a sportsman. For twenty-five years he was Master
-of the Holderness Hunt, and the most famous Meet under his rule was that
-at Brantingham Thorpe, then the residence of Mr. Christopher Sykes, in
-January 1882, when more than four thousand people assembled to greet the
-Prince of Wales.
-
-Charles, Baron Nunburnholme, died at Warter Priory, on October 27th,
-1907, and his brother, Mr. Arthur Wilson, at Tranby Croft, on October
-21st, 1909. The body of the latter was drawn to its resting-place in
-Kirkella Churchyard on a farm rulley by a team of farm horses, and
-public feeling at the time may be gauged from the following passage in
-one of the newspaper reports of his death:—
-
- In Hull Mr. Wilson was known and respected as a just and honourable
- merchant and a philanthropist; in the county he was known and
- admired as a model landlord, and a keen and fearless sportsman.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] Arthur Wilson. [_Barry, Hull_
-
-]
-
-
-
-
- XXVII.
- SHIPS OF THE HUMBER.
-
-
-Let us ask ourselves what is our idea of a ship. However we express this
-in words, it will be vastly different from the idea of a ship that
-possessed the minds of those early inhabitants of Holderness of whom we
-read in Chapter III. Theirs was that of a tree-trunk hollowed out partly
-by fire and partly by hand labour with implements of flint, until it
-would balance itself on the water, and could be pushed along by its
-occupants with some sort of paddle.
-
-Such were the ships that men first used on the Humber. Not long ago one
-of them was found buried six feet below the surface of the ground at
-Brigg in North Lincolnshire.
-
-At a time when the river Ancholme spread widely over the surrounding
-land, this boat had been deserted on the river bank, and as years went
-by it sank into the mud of which the bank was composed. Then the river
-gradually silted up, so that what had once been a wide expanse of water
-became merely a narrow water-channel.
-
-This ancient ‘dug-out’ is now one of the treasures of the Hull Museum.
-It has been constructed of the trunk of an oak tree, split lengthwise,
-and is nearly forty-eight feet long from stem to stern. Its width is
-from four to five feet, and its depth roughly two feet six inches. There
-is probably no oak tree growing in our country that would be tall enough
-to make a similar boat of equal length.
-
-The stern board of the boat is a separate piece of timber, fitted into a
-groove along each side; and originally the sides were bound across with
-leathern thongs to keep the board in position.
-
-[Illustration: AN ANCIENT ‘DUG-OUT’ FOUND IN NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE.]
-
-Think of the immense amount of labour that the making of this early
-‘ship of the Humber’ cost. The patience that its makers must have
-displayed would put some of us to utter shame in our frantic haste to
-finish a thing in the shortest possible space of time after its
-beginning.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Long after the days of the builders of this boat, the Romans and the
-Angles came to our shores. With them the knowledge of shipbuilding had
-greatly increased, and their ships were propelled with both oars and
-sails.
-
-Later again came the Northmen, against whose attacks the Angles prayed
-in vain. A true sea-faring race were these Vikings of old, and they
-could boast, as their lineal descendants in Norway boast to-day, that
-they possessed more ships than any other nation in the world.
-
-_Long-ships_ was the name given to the Northmen’s ships of war, they
-being thus distinguished from the wider and clumsier merchant ships. But
-the Northmen were a poetic race, and to a Viking his ship was a ‘black
-horse of the sea,’ a ‘deer of the surf’ or a ‘raven of the wind.’
-
-The largest ships of the Vikings were ornamented with a dragon’s head at
-the stem, and often a dragon’s tail at the stern, whence their name
-_Dragons_. The dragon’s head and tail might be covered with thin sheets
-of gold, if its owner were a great king. Its prow and sides might also
-be coated with iron to aid in ramming other vessels.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A VIKING SHIP ON A CHURCH DOOR.
- Norman Ironwork at Stillingfleet.
-]
-
-These ships were driven along by the use of a large square sail, and
-also by the use of oars. Twenty or thirty rowers’ benches was the usual
-number allowed for, and the space between two benches was known as a
-‘room.’ Each ‘room’ would hold seven or eight men; so that a
-thirty-seater, which would be in length about 150 feet, would have a
-crew of something over two hundred men. Cnut the Great had a monster
-ship 300 feet long, and containing sixty ‘rooms.’
-
-The Norsemen were very fond of bright colours, and the sails of their
-long-ships were made of woollen material striped red, blue, green, and
-white. The sides were painted red, purple, and gold, and along each were
-ranged the warriors’ shields, alternately yellow and black.
-
-Picture to yourself what a fleet of some two or three hundred of these
-long-ships must have looked like when it sailed up the Humber. What
-terror it must have struck into the hearts of those who watched its
-arrival!
-
-Then picture another scene. A single ship, the home of a renowned
-Viking, drifting slowly down the Humber on an ebb tide, with sail set,
-bearing in its bosom the dead bodies of its owner and his favourite
-horses, and alight from stem to stern with blazing tallow, tar, and oil.
-This is the picture that a great English poet has painted for us in his
-poem called _Balder Dead_:—
-
- Soon, with a roaring, rose the mighty fire, And the pile crackled;
- and between the logs Sharp, quivering tongues of flame shot out, and
- leapt, Curling and darting, higher, until they licked The summit of
- the pile, the dead, the mast, And ate the shrivelling sails. But
- still the ship Drove on, ablaze above her hull with fire.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE ANCIENT SEAL OF THE
- CORPORATION OF HEDON.
-]
-
-With the passing of centuries came more peaceful times, when the ships
-that passed up and down the Humber were no longer ships of war, but
-ships of peace. They were ships ‘that sailed from Hull ... to Bergen
-with English wares, and brought back cargoes of salt fish; that fetched
-iron from Sweden, and wine from the Rhine vineyards, and oranges and
-spices and foreign fruits from Bruges; and that carried out the English
-woollen cloths to Russia or the Baltic ports, and brought back wood,
-tin, potash, skins and furs.’
-
-What the ships of the fourteenth century were like we can judge from the
-old plan of Hull on page 165, and from the drawing of the seal of the
-Corporation of Hedon here shown. The Humber was then noted for its
-ships, and in the year 1346 furnished the following ships and men to the
-expedition fitted out by King Edward III. for the siege of Calais:—
-
- TOWNS SHIPS MARINERS
- Kingston-upon-Hull 16 466
- Grimsby 11 171
- Barton 3 30
- Ravenser 1 27
-
-For the same expedition London provided only twenty-five ships and 662
-mariners.
-
-Gradually the ships of the Humber increased in size; and when in 1598
-the seamen of Hull first engaged in whale fishing, the kind of ship they
-had was one much more seaworthy than the ‘cockle-shells’ of previous
-centuries.
-
-In the hall of the Hull Trinity House hangs a strange relic of the early
-days of the whale fishery. This is an Esquimaux canoe, built entirely of
-whalebone and sealskin, and picked up off the Greenland coast by the
-captain of a Hull whaler in 1613.
-
-When sighted, the canoe held the dead body of its owner sitting strapped
-upright with his paddle across his knees. The ‘Bonny Boat’ the English
-sailors christened it, and there in the Trinity House it may be seen
-to-day, with what at first glance appears to be its owner still sitting
-as he sat when he died of starvation on the wide Atlantic Ocean.
-
-During the time of the Dutch wars of the reign of Charles II., the
-whaling industry passed into the hands of the Dutch, but a century
-later—in 1765—it was resumed by the Hull seamen. A shipowner named
-Captain Standidge took a great part in this revival of the Greenland
-fisheries, and for his services in this direction received the honour of
-knighthood.
-
-[Illustration: ENGLISH WARSHIPS IN THE TIME OF THE ARMADA.]
-
-From 1772 to 1852 the WHALING INDUSTRY flourished. To the icy seas
-around Spitzbergen, or to the Greenland seas and the Davis Straits,
-there went each year ships of the Humber in number from three to
-sixty-five. Often they were unlucky, and had to return ‘clean’—that is,
-with nothing in their holds to repay their owners and their crews.
-Sometimes they were still more unlucky, and did not return at all,
-having been gripped in the ice or captured by French privateers. Out of
-ten ships that sailed from the Humber in 1775, six came back ‘clean,’
-and two were lost.
-
-One of the most disastrous years known was 1835, when five of the Hull
-ships were frozen up, three of them being eventually lost, one with all
-hands.
-
-In the following year a Hull vessel, named the _Swan_, was frozen up
-much farther north than the whalers usually went; so that it was the
-midsummer of 1837 before she got free. Meanwhile she had been given up
-as lost; and on Sunday, July 2nd, a memorial service was held on the
-Dock Green, and a collection of £47 taken on behalf of the families of
-the crew. In the midst of the service, however, news arrived that the
-‘missing’ vessel was entering the mouth of the Humber.
-
-We can imagine the excitement caused by her arrival. Among other things
-it meant, of course, a ‘Hextra Speshul’ edition of the News Sheet, as
-the photograph on the opposite page shows.
-
-As a rule, however, a voyage resulted in fair profits for both owners
-and crews. The thirty-one ships that went to Greenland in 1821 took
-between them 204 whales, and the twenty-one that went to Davis Straits
-took 294 whales. These 498 ‘fish’ produced whalebone and oil to the
-value of £150,000. The average return per ship was here slightly lower
-than that for the whole period 1772–1852, which works out to £3,500.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A NEWS SHEET OF 1837.
- (_Presented to the Wilberforce Museum, Hull, by Mr. John Suddaby_).
-]
-
-Occasionally a ship would be particularly fortunate. In the Greenland
-Sea in one day the _Gibraltar_ killed eleven whales, the _Manchester_
-ten, and the _Molly_ six. In 1794, also, the _Egginton_ arrived from
-Greenland with the produce of fifteen whales, 3,021 seals, and five
-bears. She had been away from home only a hundred days, and created a
-record by afterwards making two trading voyages to St. Petersburg the
-same season.
-
-Such luck as this was quite exceptional. Usually the capture of a single
-whale meant much hard work and many dangers for the boats’ crews. In
-1821 the _Baffin_
-
- struck a whale which ran out fifteen lines of 240 yards each, and
- dragged two boats and fifteen men for a long time. When the ‘fish’
- was killed, it was found to have been also dragging under water six
- similar lines and a boat belonging to the _Trafalgar_, of Hull. The
- 5,040 yards of line weighed a ton and a half.
-
-Most famous of the ships of the Humber that passed to and fro in the
-whaling industry was the _Truelove_. This was a three-masted barque with
-a length of 96 feet and a width of 27 feet. Built at Philadelphia in
-1764, the _Truelove_ was captured by the English in the American war,
-and eventually sold to a merchant of High Street, Hull.
-
-The _Truelove’s_ first whaling voyage was to Spitzbergen in 1784. From
-that year till 1868 she made seventy-two voyages to Spitzbergen,
-Greenland, or the Davis Straits, and accounted for about 500 whales. In
-1873 she was taken to her birthplace, where the captain and crew were
-fêted; and for several years afterwards she made trading voyages to
-Norway until eventually she was broken up as no longer seaworthy.
-
-The peculiar build of the _Truelove_ accounted to a large extent for her
-many hair-breadth escapes from the danger of being ‘nipped’ in the ice.
-Her sides bulged outwards like a barrel; or, as sailors put it, they
-‘tumbled home’ to the deck.
-
-One of the saddest events in the Hull whaling industry was the return
-home of the _Diana_ in 1867. This was the first steamship to go to the
-whaling-grounds, and in her voyage of 1866 she had the misfortune to
-become locked in the ice for six months. The sufferings of her crew can
-be imagined. Captain Gravill died in December, one of her crew died in
-February, five died in March, and five more died in April.
-
-[Illustration: THE HULL WHALER ‘TRUELOVE’.]
-
-The _Truelove_ was sent out from the Humber as a relief ship for the
-_Diana_, but the two vessels passed each other. With thirty-six men down
-with the scurvy, and only seven left fit to work the ship, the
-unfortunate _Diana_ eventually reached home, her dead captain’s coffin
-on the ship’s bridge.
-
-The following year this ill-fated vessel was wrecked on the treacherous
-flats of Donna Nook, off the Lincolnshire coast at the mouth of the
-Humber. With her loss the whaling industry of the Humber seamen came to
-an end.
-
- * * * * *
-
-During many of the years when the whale fisheries were providing work
-for East Riding seamen, France and England were at war. Men were
-consequently needed to man the English navy, and such notices as the
-following were frequently issued in seaport towns:—
-
- RECRUITING FOR THE NAVY.
-
- =WANTED.=
-
- For the parishes of _Sculcoates_, _Cottingham_, and _Little
- Weighton_, A few able-bodied SEAMEN or LANDMEN to serve in His
- Majesty’s Navy during the present War ONLY.... The Families and
- Friends of Volunteers will receive Monthly Pay, and the Volunteers
- themselves will have a bountiful supply of Cloathing, Beef, Grog,
- Flip, and Strong Beer, also a certainty of Prize Money, as the men
- entered for this service will be sent to capture the rich Spanish
- Galleons, and in consequence will return loaded with Dollars and
- Honour, to spend their Days in Peace and Plenty.
-
- * * * * *
-
- May the constitution of _England_ endure for ever, and
- the Parishioners of _Sculcoates_, _Cottingham_ and
- _Little Weighton_ live to see it.
-
- Hull, November 28th, 1796.
-
-But the results of this ‘Recruiting for the Navy’ were not always
-satisfactory, notwithstanding the ‘certainty of Prize Money’ and the
-‘bountiful supply of ... Grog, Flip, and Strong Beer.’ So recourse was
-had to the _Press Gang_, and many were the tricks practised by the
-captains and crews of Hull whalers to reach home safely.
-
-[Illustration: THE FIRST STEAMSHIP BUILT ON THE HUMBER.]
-
-A ship of war was stationed in the Humber to board incoming whalers and
-impress men for service in the navy. To escape, numbers of the men were
-landed at Easington or at lonely spots farther north, and these would
-make their way home as best they could by land.
-
-Another very ingenious trick was worked successfully by the captain of a
-whaler which was boarded by a revenue cutter off Flamborough Head. This
-is how Captain Barron in his _Old Whaling Days_ tells the story:—
-
- A revenue cutter hove in sight off Flambro’ Head when Captain
- Scoresby was returning home with a full ship. When he saw it in the
- distance, he let four or five feet of water into the hold through a
- large brass tap which some whalers had in their counters on purpose
- to fill their casks for ballast. This was kept running, so that the
- pumps could not gain upon it, and when the officer boarded the ship
- he was told she made so much water that the crew would not be able
- to keep her afloat if he took any away. The officer sounded the
- pumps, and was satisfied in finding when they stopped pumping the
- water rose in the hold. He took his departure. The tap was at once
- turned off, and the water pumped out. This clever trick saved his
- men from being forced on board His Majesty’s ships.
-
-On another occasion—in 1798—the _Blenheim_ was boarded in the Humber by
-_H.M.S. Nonsuch_, and a free fight followed, in which two of the
-warship’s crew were slain. For this the captain of the whaler was
-brought to trial at York. But he was acquitted on the charge of murder
-laid against him; and when the York coach brought him safely home to
-Hull, ‘the crowd took out the horses, dragged it to the Market Place,
-and ran it three times round the statue of King William’ by way of
-showing their joy.
-
-The warships of this period, were, of course, vastly different from the
-battleships of which English seamen are so proud to-day. Many were built
-in the Humber; the largest being the _Humber_, an eighty-gun ship,
-launched at Hessle Cliff in 1693. _H.M.S. Hector_ was built by Hugh
-Blaydes fifty years later. During the years 1739–1774 three warships
-were built at Paull, six at Hessle, and fifteen at Hull. A memento of
-the _Hyperion_, built at Hull in 1806, still exists in the name of a
-small street running off Great Union Street, and a neighbouring street
-bears the name of a very popular whaler, the _Aurora_.
-
-[Illustration: A HUMBER PILOT BOAT.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-The first steamship used on the Humber was one built in Scotland, and
-hence appropriately named the _Caledonia_.[66] This steam packet ran
-between Hull and Selby in 1815. Five years later the _Rockingham_ was
-built at Thorne, and the following year the _Kingston_ began the
-‘expeditious and easy conveyance’ of passengers from Hull to London.
-
-Footnote 66:
-
- The first steamboat built in England was constructed in a yard off
- Wincolmlee, Hull, and was launched in the river Hull. This was in the
- year 1787, and the engine was patented the next year. The makers,
- Messrs. Furness & Ashton, afterwards built a larger steam-boat, which
- was put together in London and bought by the Prince Regent, who
- rewarded them with a pension of £70 each.
-
-The _Kingston_ was, of course, looked upon as a wonderful vessel. Its
-owners proudly announced to the public:—
-
- In the construction of this elegant vessel, which will be propelled
- by an engine of sixty horse power every attention has been paid to
- render the conveyance expeditious, commodious, and safe.
-
-‘Expeditious’, however, it did not prove to be—at any rate on its first
-voyage. For when twenty miles from the Humber, the axis of the paddles
-broke; and instead of reaching London in thirty hours, as the passengers
-had expected, the _Kingston_ found its way back to Hull some forty-eight
-hours after its triumphant start.
-
-These early steam packets were somewhat different from the ocean liners
-of our own day. Compare the portrait of the _Rockingham_ on page 295
-with that of the _Bayardo_ on page 299. Launched in 1910 from Earle’s
-Shipbuilding Yard, at a cost of £67,000, the latter was for its short
-life the ‘Queen of the Wilson Line.’
-
-The fate of the _Diana_ and the _Bayardo_ illustrates the dangers of the
-Humber. The latter vessel left Gothenburg on a Friday evening in
-January, 1912, with a cargo worth £30,000 and a small number of
-passengers. On the Saturday evening she was making her way up the Humber
-in a dense fog when she ran hard aground on a sandbank almost opposite
-the dock which was her destination. By the following evening her back
-was broken, and the ‘Queen of the Wilson Line’ was a hopeless wreck.
-
-[Illustration: The ‘Southampton.’]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- The ‘Bayardo.’
- SHIPS OLD AND NEW.
-]
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_C.W. Mason_
-
- The Entrance to the ‘Old Harbour.’
-
-]
-
-Stand on the Victoria Pier at Hull on a clear day, and watch the ships
-of the Humber. Of all sizes and shapes and speeds they are. There we see
-the keel, with its one square sail, making its way slowly along, the
-peaceful descendant of the square-sailed long-ship of Viking days. There
-are the schooners and barques that are survivals from the days when all
-ships depended on the wind for their motive power. There is a tug-boat
-taking out to its moorings the light-ship on which the safety of many
-other ships will depend.
-
-There also are the ‘fast-sailing’ steam trawlers and carriers coming
-from, or going to, the fishing-grounds off Iceland and north of the
-White Sea—the representatives of the whalers of a hundred years
-ago—there the scurrying pilot boats and revenue cutters. And there is a
-great ocean liner riding at anchor and waiting the turn of the tide to
-allow it to enter the dock and discharge the cargo it has brought from
-the other side of the world.
-
-
-
-
- XXVIII.
- FOLK-SPEECH OF THE EAST RIDING.
-
-
-There is a tale told of a Yorkshireman on a visit to London that he fell
-into argument with a bus conductor over the correct way of pronouncing
-the simple word ‘road.’ The cockney bus-conductor had, in his usual way,
-called out ‘’Toria Rowd; ’Toria Rowd!’ and the Yorkshireman was highly
-displeased with this obvious murder of the King’s English. ‘Rowd!’ said
-he in his disgust; ‘whah dooant ya speeak English? R-o-a-d—that’s hoo
-it’s spelt, beeant it? Whah dooant ya ca’ it Roo-ad?’
-
-The story will serve to illustrate the fact that a man born and bred in
-the heart of England’s biggest shire, and one born and bred in the heart
-of England’s biggest city, do not sound all their words in the same
-manner, though they may at the same time spell them alike. Moreover,
-neither of the two will perhaps sound his words in the way in which
-custom says it is correct to sound them.
-
-Such differences are to be found in many parts of the country. The
-Northumberland miner, the Sheffield steel-worker, the Nottingham
-lace-worker, the Norfolk grazier, and the ‘Zummerzet’ farm-labourer all
-speak ‘English’; but yet they would have no little difficulty in making
-one another understand what their respective English words meant. In
-other words, the districts to which they belong have each a DIALECT or
-FOLK-SPEECH of their own.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Let us see what are some of the peculiarities of the Folk-Speech of our
-East Riding:—
-
-(1) An East Yorkshireman sounds his vowels in his own peculiar way. With
-him I is pronounced as _ah_, warm as _wahrm_, night as _neet_, road as
-_rooad_, cow as _coo_, know as _knaw_, pound as _pund_, come as _coom_,
-and ought as _owt_. He is, moreover, very fond of the EEA sound; for he
-makes cake into _keeak_, meat into _meeat_, home into _heeam_, sure into
-_seear_, school into _skeeal_, look into _leeak_, enough into _eneeaf_,
-and plough into _pleeaf_.
-
-(2) He finds it too much of an effort to sound the whole word ‘the,’ and
-therefore clips it into _t’_; so that with him ‘the cow is in the close’
-becomes _t’ coo is i’ t’ clooase_. If he is a Holderness man even that
-effort will probably be too great for him, and what he will say is _coo
-is i’ clooase_.
-
-(3) In the same way he finds it much easier to drop the final G of words
-ending in ING and to drop an initial H. To make up for the latter,
-however, he may very possibly put in an occasional H somewhere where it
-would not be expected. Thus he may tell us, speaking of his companions,
-that _hivvry yan on em is gannin t’ ’Ool t’ morn_.
-
-(4) He has a very simple method of dealing with the inflections of the
-verb. I am, thou art, he is; and I do, thou dost, he does, are levelled
-into:—
-
- _Ah is_ _Ah diz_
- _Thoo is_ _Thoo diz_
- _He is_ _He diz_
-
-—while, in speaking of his sheep, he may even tell us that _Them’s good
-uns_.
-
-(5) The plural words cows, eyes, children, are not at all to his liking.
-He much prefers to speak of such things as _ky_, _een_, and _childer_.
-Nor does he take kindly to the ‘apostrophe s’ as a sign of the
-possessive case; but will tell his boy to _stan bi t’ hoss heead_.
-
-(6) He is very fond of doubling his negatives, and occasionally he is
-not even satisfied with the doubling process. It is said of an East
-Yorkshireman whose apple trees were the aim of many a schoolboy’s stone,
-that his lamentation took the form of _neeabody’s neea bisniss ti thraw
-nowt inti neeabody’s gardin_.
-
-(7) He is also very fond of ‘strong’ past tenses and of past participles
-ending in EN. The past tenses beat, crept, snowed, are with him _bet_,
-_crop_, and _snew_; while the past participles burst, fought, got, held,
-let, put, become _brussen_, _fowten_, _gotten_, _ho’dden_, _letten_, and
-_putten_. So firmly fixed in popular favour are these forms in EN that
-it is told of a small boy who had been receiving a lesson on their
-incorrectness, that in a state of momentary excitement he informed his
-mistress: _Pleease, miss, Billy Jooanes ha’ putten ‘putten’ wheer he owt
-ti ha’ putten ‘put.’_
-
-(8) The East Yorkshireman has a host of words that are all his own. Thus
-he will tell us that _theer war nobbut yah coo i’ t’ helm at t’ far-end
-o’ t’ pastur_; and that he _doots t’ awd meer’s boon ti dee, but happen
-she mud live whahl Moon da_.[67]
-
-Footnote 67:
-
- _nobbut_=only. _boon_=ready.
- _helm_=shed. _happen_=possibly.
- _far-end_=opposite side. _mud_=might.
- _doots_=fears. _whahl_=until.
-
-(9) He has likewise his own way of expressing his thoughts, and no other
-will serve his purpose so well. ‘Well, my boy, who are you?’ a country
-parson freshly arrived from the South is said to have asked a village
-boy. _Ah’s weel, hoo’s yersen?_ was the unexpected reply that the parson
-received. But, of course, he should have known that in East Yorkshire
-the correct way of asking his question is ‘What do they call you?’
-
-There are very many of these special modes of expression. To spread a
-report is _to set it aboot_, to scold a person is _to call_ him, to call
-a person is _to call of_ him, to pour hot water on tea-leaves is _to
-mash t’ tay_, to be going to the bad is _to be at a loose end_, to leave
-off doing a thing is _to give ower_, and to give good promise of success
-is _to fraame middlin_.
-
-If an East Yorkshireman wishes to make known that he saw his brother
-Sam, he will say _Ah seed oor Sam_. Of one who cannot look after himself
-he will say that _t’ awd chap canna fend for hissen_, and of one who is
-not getting better from an illness it will be said that _he dizn’t mend
-onny_.
-
-Sometimes the result of the change of expression becomes ludicrous, as
-it was in the case of the cottager who, telling of a lodger that he
-prepared his own food and she did his washing for him, explained: _He
-meeats hissen an’ ah weshes him_.
-
-The East Yorkshireman, like many other people, likes making comparisons;
-but he has his own idea of what forms a fit and proper comparison. Thus,
-in speaking of the steepness of a cliff he will tell us that it is _as
-brant as a hoose sahd_, or he will explain that his grandfather is _as
-deeaf as a yat-stowp_.[68] Concerning a person of whose capabilities he
-does not think highly, he will tell us that he is _as fond as a
-billy-gooat_, or _as green as a yalla cabbish_, or even _as soft as a
-boiled tonnap_.
-
-Footnote 68:
-
- _Yat-stowp_=gate-post.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Many other examples of the peculiarities of the East Yorkshire
-Folk-Speech might be given. What shall we say about them? Shall we smile
-at what we are pleased to consider mis-pronunciations and awkward
-attempts to speak the English language? When the farm-labourer, who had
-been beguiled into buying a ‘solid gold-plated keyless watch jewelled in
-seven holes’ from a cheap-jack in Beverley Market Place, was told by his
-companion to _ax_ where the key was, and proceeded to bawl out _Wheer’s
-t’ kay?_ was he to be laughed at for murdering the King’s English?
-
-If we wish to laugh at those who thus speak ‘broad Yorkshire’ let us do
-so. But at the same time let us remember that what we are pleased to
-call ‘broad Yorkshire’ is often much truer English than what we
-ourselves customarily use.
-
-A thousand years ago our ancestors called a key _cæg_ (pronounced
-_kaig_), and used the verb _acsian_ where we should use ‘ask.’ They also
-used the word _cy_ (pronounced _kee_) for the plural of _cu_ (pronounced
-_koo_), and the word _cilder_ (pronounced _kilder_) for the plural of
-_cild_.
-
-So really the East Yorkshire farm-labourers are speaking the language of
-their ancestors much more truly than we who mis-pronounce words and make
-them into _cows_ and _ask_, and who manufacture such a double plural as
-the word _child(e)r-en_.
-
-In numerous instances is the East Yorkshire Folk-Speech nearer to the
-true English than is the commonly accepted ‘English’ of to-day. The
-following examples might be multiplied indefinitely:—
-
- OLD ENGLISH WORDS. STANDARD ENGLISH WORDS. EAST YORKSHIRE
- WORDS.
-
- (IN USE A.D. 912). (IN USE A.D. 1912).
-
- AFYRHT (pron. afraid AFEEARD
- _afeert_)
-
- GIF if GIF
-
- GRAFAN (pron. to dig GRAAVE
- _grahvan_)
-
- HAGOL hail HAGGLE
-
- HRYCG (pron. _hrig_) back or ridge RIG
-
- LICGAN (pron. to lie LIG
- _liggan_)
-
- SETL seat SETTLE
-
- SWELAN to gutter (of a candle) SWEEL
-
- THAEC (pron. _thak_) thatch THAK
-
- WANCOL unsteady WANKLE
-
-At Beverley there are three very interesting examples of the survival of
-old English words, which have elsewhere dropped entirely out of use. The
-Beverley _Frith-Stool_ has preserved its name unchanged from the days
-when the word which meant peace was _frith_. The street known to-day as
-_Toll Gavel_ preserves memories of the time when _gafol_ meant a tax or
-toll, and it is clear that tolls continued to be paid in it long after
-the original meaning of this word had become forgotten. Similarly the
-_Hurn_, or freemen’s pasture which was once a corner of Beverley
-Westwood, has kept its name from the days when _hyrne_ meant a corner.
-
-Another example of how the original meaning of a word may be kept in one
-instance only occurs in the descriptive name which is so commonly
-applied to England’s largest shire. Yorkshire is known far and wide as
-the ‘Land of the Broad Acres.’ But to how many who use this expression
-does it convey any meaning? Are the acres in Yorkshire ‘broader’ than
-they are elsewhere in Britain? If they are not, what sense is there in
-the expression?
-
-As a matter of fact, the expression is a most suitable one. But it is so
-only if we know that the word _aecer_ (pronounced _akker_)[69]
-originally meant not a certain area of land, but merely a ploughed
-field. Yorkshire is still the ‘Broad-acred Shire,’ for in no other part
-of our country shall we find _fields_ of waving corn that measure as
-much as a hundred acres in extent.
-
-Footnote 69:
-
- The local pronunciation of ‘acre’ in the East Riding is _yakker_; so
- that the old sound of the word has been here kept, even though its
- meaning has universally changed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In Chapter VIII. we read how the fierce Northmen settled in our land,
-and on pages 59–61 it was shown how numerous are Danish place-names in
-the East Riding of Yorkshire. But it is not only in the place-names of
-the district that we find proofs of the presence of the Northmen. There
-are in common use among the inhabitants of the East Riding scores of
-words that are purely Danish words, handed down from father to son,
-almost or quite unchanged during more than a thousand years. Some are as
-follows:—
-
- WORDS USED BY THE MODERN STANDARD WORDS USED IN EAST
- NORSEMEN 1000 YEARS ENGLISH. YORKSHIRE TO-DAY.
- AGO.[70]
-
- AT that (conjunction) AT
-
- BAND string, cord BAND
-
- BARN child BA’AN or BARN
-
- BELJA to cry, shout out BEEAL
-
- BUINN ready BOON
-
- DALIGR dismal, lonely DOWLY
-
- DENGJA to strike DING, DENG
-
- FLYTJA to change one’s abode FLIT
-
- FRA from FRA
-
- GARTHR yard GARTH
-
- GATA road, way GATE
-
- GAUKR cuckoo GOWK
-
- GYMBR female lamb GIMMER
-
- HLAUPA to leap LOWP
-
- HNEFI fist NEEAF
-
- KETLINGR kitten KITLIN
-
- KJARR low-lying land CARR
-
- KLEGGI horse-fly KLEG
-
- LEIKA to play LAIK
-
- MEGIN very MAIN
-
- MOLDVARPA mole MOODIEWARP
-
- MUNU must MUN
-
- REYKR smoke REEK
-
- SKAELA to overturn SKEL UP
-
- SKJAPPA basket SKEP
-
- SLAKKI hollow SLACK
-
- SLEIPR slippery SLAAPE
-
- STIGI ladder STEE
-
- THETTR watertight THEET
-
- THRONGR busy THRONG
-
-Footnote 70:
-
- In reading these, it should be remembered that the Norse J=_y_,
- AU=_ow_, EI or EY=_ai_, and V=_w_.
-
-Other proofs of the great influence of the Old Norse tongue on the
-language of East Riding folk are seen in their liking for the sound of K
-where modern standard English demands that of CH. The words _benk_ (or
-_bink_), _birk_, _breeks_, _caff_, _kirk_, _kist_, _pickfork_, and
-_thack_, are commonly heard used in place of the Southern English forms
-bench, birch, breeches, chaff, church, chest, pitchfork, and thatch. So
-also _hask_ or _’ask_ is the East Riding pronunciation of harsh, and
-_brig_ is universally used for the different meanings of the word
-bridge.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the Rev. M. C. F. Morris’s history of Nunburnholme the author gives
-an amusing example of the East Riding Folk-Speech. But it is really
-something more than this. For we can see from it very clearly how much
-truer English is spoken by the East Yorkshire farm-labourer than by the
-fine fellow who prides himself on his knowledge of the English language.
-
-Let us take Mr. Morris’s story—the Fable of ‘The Bear and the Bees’—in
-two forms. Here is one of them:—
-
- ‘A bear happened to be stung by a bee, and the _pain_ was so _acute_
- that in the madness of _revenge_ he ran into the _garden_ and
- overturned the hive. This _outrage_ _provoke_d their anger to a high
- _degree_, and brought the _fury_ of the whole swarm upon him. They
- _attack_ed him with such _violence_ that his life was in _danger_,
- and it was with the utmost _difficulty_ that he made his _escape_,
- wounded from head to tail.
-
- ‘In this _desperate_ _condition_, _lament_ing his mis_fortunes_ and
- licking his sores, he could not forbear _reflect_ing how much more
- _advisable_ it had been to have _acquiesce_d _patient_ly under one
- _injury_ than thus by an un_profitable_ _resentment_ to have
- _provoke_d a thousand.’
-
-Now this version of the fable contains just over eighty different words;
-and, if we turn over the pages of a French dictionary, we shall find
-that twenty-one of the twenty-five words printed in italics were not
-originally English words at all, but are words introduced into our
-language from the French. Some of them ‘came over with the Conqueror’
-undoubtedly. Others were introduced in more recent times. The remaining
-four words—_acute_, _desperate_, _reflect_ing, and _acquiesce_d—are
-purely Latin words.
-
-Let us now take the East Yorkshireman’s account of what happened:—
-
- ‘Yah daay yan o’ them girt beears gat hissen sadly tenged wi’ a bee.
- He wer seea _despe’t_ly ho’tten was t’ beear at he wer wahld
- ommeeast. Noo, they’re a varry _lungeous_ thing is a beear, an’ seea
- ti mak ’em think on t’ next tahm, he maks nowt ti deea bud he off ti
- t’ _gardin_ an’ clicks t’ beeskep ower wi sikan a bat. Noo, by that,
- mun, ther was a bonny ti-deea; t’ bees was sairly putten aboot, an’
- seea they all com at t’ beear, an’ leeted on him; an’ he wer that
- tenged all ower, whahl it leeaked agin they wer boun ti rahve him i’
- bits; an’ he wer hard set ti ger awaay frev ’em wick.
-
- ‘Varry seean he was swidgin’ an’ warkin’ awhahl he could hardlins
- bahd; bud, hooivver, he set hissen doon upo’ t’ grund an’ started ti
- beeal, an’ he shakk’d his heead an’ scratted his lugs an’ sike
- leyke. Eftther he’d gotten sattled doon a bit, thinks he tiv hissen,
- ah mebbe mud as weel ae tae’n neea _noatis_ eftther t’ fo’st bee
- tenged ma, as ti a’e meead sikan a _durdam_ amang t’ others, awhahl
- they were fit ti modther ma; an’ it wer all ti neea use at t’
- _finish_.’
-
-All the long French words have disappeared, and in the whole account
-only five French words and one Latin word are used. The difference is
-striking, and the reason for the difference is not far to seek.
-
-The language of the former version is that which has come down to us
-from the Court, and the Court language was for centuries Norman-French.
-The words used by the East Yorkshire farm-labourer are those of his
-humble forefathers who knew no _bewk-larning_, and who learned their
-English tongue by word of mouth, picking up here and there only an
-occasional French word.
-
-In other words, the language of the farm-labourer is almost exactly the
-same as that used by his ancestors four or five centuries ago. In fact,
-as Mr. Morris puts it, ‘if old Tommy Smith who died in 1500, aged 80,
-and old Willie Ward who died in 1900, aged 80, could come to life again
-and hold converse with one another, they would understand each other
-perfectly.’
-
-
-
-
- XXIX.
- HOW THE EAST RIDING GOVERNS ITSELF.
-
-
-Every ten years a census is taken of the people inhabiting the British
-Isles. The latest counting of the people took place in 1911, when it was
-found that there were living in the East Riding of Yorkshire 432,804
-persons. This large number of people is made up of men, women, and
-children who live in groups or communities very greatly varying in size.
-The number of persons living in the great city of Hull was 278,024; the
-number living in the little village of Wilsthorpe was only one.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ANCIENT ARMS
- OF BEVERLEY.
-]
-
-But whether the inhabitants of the East Riding are living together in
-large communities or in small ones, they live at peace with one another;
-and any disorderly person who disturbs the peace of the community is
-quickly brought to book. Now, seeing that man is by nature somewhat
-inclined to be a quarrelsome animal, how is this very desirable state of
-affairs brought about?
-
-The answer to this is that all the men, women, and children of the East
-Riding are living under certain wise laws by which their lives are
-governed. Probably they do not often recognise the fact that their lives
-are being governed or ruled. If they did, they would almost certainly
-begin to kick against the rules and say that it is an Englishman’s
-privilege to do just as he likes.
-
-But that is just the secret of the quiet, peaceful lives led by the
-great majority of English people. They submit to be governed without
-their knowing it; and they do not realise that they are being governed
-because, very largely, they govern themselves.
-
-The laws by which the lives of the inhabitants of the East Riding are
-ruled are made at Westminster by the British Parliament. This consists
-of two ‘Houses’—the House of Commons and the House of Lords.
-
-Among the 670 men who make up what is called the House of Commons there
-are six who are chosen by the people of the East Riding to represent
-them in Parliament. The city of Hull supplies three of these; and the
-remaining portion of the East Riding supplies the other three. For
-voting purposes, when the elections of these _Members of Parliament_ are
-held, Hull is split up into three Divisions—East Hull, West Hull, and
-Central Hull; and the rest of the East Riding is similarly split up into
-the Buckrose Division, the Holderness Division, and the Howdenshire
-Division.[71]
-
-Footnote 71:
-
- Hedon sent two members to Parliament from the time of Edward I. until
- 1832, when it was disfranchised as one of the ‘rotten boroughs.’
- Beverley also was represented by two members till 1870.
-
-In what is known as the House of Lords the East Riding is
-represented—though not through the process of election—by the Earl of
-Londesborough, Baron Middleton of Settrington House, Baron Leconfield,
-Baron Deramore of Heslington Hall, and Baron Nunburnholme of Ferriby
-Hall.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But the British Parliament only says what the laws of the whole country
-shall be. To see that these laws are rightly administered, there are in
-London what are called ‘Government Departments,’ such as the Board of
-Trade and the Board of Agriculture. A great deal of the work of these
-Departments, however, cannot be conveniently carried on from London, and
-the country is therefore split up into _Shires_, or _Counties_, to each
-of which is given the work of seeing that certain of the laws made by
-Parliament are properly kept.
-
-The East Riding of Yorkshire is one of these counties, and in addition
-to seeing that the laws of the country are properly kept, it has the
-duty of making less important laws which concern only its own
-inhabitants. The latter are known as _by-laws_, or, as the word is often
-written, _bye-laws_.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- MODERN ARMS OF
- BRIDLINGTON.
-]
-
-Again, just as Britain is split up into different counties, each of
-which makes for itself the by-laws which it considers best, so the East
-Riding is split up into different portions, each of which makes its own
-by-laws.
-
-This sort of arrangement is by no means a modern invention. A thousand
-years ago each ‘town,’ or group of farm dwellings, in the East Riding
-had its meeting to arrange the rules by which it should be governed. So
-also each ‘wapentake,’ or wider district, had its meeting, which was
-attended by representatives from the different ‘towns’ composing it.
-Lastly the whole ‘shire,’ the East Riding itself, had its meeting,
-attended by representatives from the different wapentakes.
-
-Now we will see how this very ancient system is followed out to-day; but
-first we must put on one side the city of Hull, and the towns of
-Beverley, Bridlington, and Hedon.
-
-Taking the rest of the East Riding, what was the _tūn mōt_ of the Angles
-is our PARISH COUNCIL. There are in the East Riding 131 Parish Councils,
-each of which is attended by chosen representatives of the village or
-township, and each of which looks after its own good management of
-affairs.
-
-Similarly the _waepentac_ or _hundred mōt_ of the Angles is our URBAN or
-RURAL DISTRICT COUNCIL. In the East Riding there are eight groups of
-townships to which the name ‘Urban District’ is given; these have for
-their respective centres Cottingham, Driffield, Filey, Hessle, Hornsea,
-Pocklington, Norton, and Withernsea. There are also twelve groups of
-townships which we know as ‘Rural Districts.’
-
-[Illustration:
-
- LOCAL GOVERNMENT AREAS IN THE EAST RIDING
-]
-
-As you will see from the map on this page, the difference between an
-Urban and a Rural District is that in the latter the people are spread
-over a much wider area than in the former. The Urban Districts are, in
-other words, the more thickly populated parts of the country.
-
-Similarly, too, the _scīr mōt_ of the Angles is the COUNTY COUNCIL of
-our day. This exercises authority over both the smaller Councils.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The EAST RIDING COUNTY COUNCIL is made up of representatives from
-different districts throughout the County, and consists of:—
-
-/* Members elected for Beverley 4 Members elected for Bridlington 3
-Members elected for the rest of the East Riding 45 — Total of Elected
-Members 52 County Aldermen 17 — Total of Members 69 */
-
-For purposes of local government the city of Hull is entirely, and the
-towns of Beverley, Bridlington, and Hedon are partly, outside the East
-Riding. Hull ranks as a COUNTY BOROUGH, its full title being the ‘City
-and County of Kingston-upon-Hull,’ and it is governed by a Corporation,
-consisting of a Mayor, sixteen Aldermen, forty-eight Councillors, a
-Recorder, and a Sheriff.
-
-Beverley, Bridlington, and Hedon rank as MUNICIPAL BOROUGHS. That is
-equal to saying that at some time or other each has received from the
-reigning Sovereign a charter granting it the right to rule its own
-affairs. Each Municipal Borough has a Mayor for its chief townsman.
-
-In addition to their Mayors, Beverley and Bridlington have each six
-Aldermen and eighteen Councillors, while Hedon is governed by its Mayor,
-three Aldermen, and nine Councillors. For the election of Councillors
-Bridlington is divided into three wards—Bridlington Ward, Quay Ward, and
-Hilderthorpe Ward—and Beverley into two. The latter are named
-respectively Minster Ward and St. Mary’s Ward.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The work to be got through by a County Council or a Town Council is so
-large in amount that the members would not be able to carry out their
-duties satisfactorily if they did not arrange themselves in groups or
-_Committees_, each of which can undertake one kind of work. Often these
-Committees are again arranged in _Sub-Committees_.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE HEDON MACE—THE
- OLDEST CIVIC MACE IN
- ENGLAND.[72]
-]
-
-Footnote 72:
-
- This mace dates from the reign of Henry VI. In the enlarged portion
- are shown the _lions_ of England quartered with the _fleur-de-lis_ of
- France.
-
-Thus the sixty-nine members of the East Riding County Council arrange
-themselves in the following nine groups, each of which has its Chairman
-and Deputy Chairman:—
-
- 1. Finance Committee.
- 2. Highways and Bridges Committee.
- 3. Asylum Committee.
- 4. Cattle Plague Committee.
- 5. General Purposes Committee.
- 6. Public Health Committee.
- 7. Small Holdings Committee.
- 8. Education Committee.
- 9. Old-Age Pensions Committee.
-
-Each Committee conducts the affairs entrusted to it, and makes reports
-to the whole Council at stated intervals.
-
-The _Finance Committee_ examines and recommends for payment all bills
-and accounts; it also has the management and control of all County
-Council buildings.
-
-The _Cattle Plague Committee_ deals with the outbreak of contagious
-diseases on farms—such as swine fever, foot and mouth disease, sheep
-scab, and the most dreaded anthrax. It has to see that the various Acts
-of Parliament concerning these are fully carried out. Hence it may have
-to order the immediate slaughter of all the cattle or sheep on a farm,
-or perhaps to order that no animals are moved from one farm to any
-other. Should there be during a hot summer a plague of destructive
-insects, it issues instructions to farmers how to fight the plague, and
-moreover it can compel farmers to carry out these instructions.
-
-The work of the _General Purposes Committee_ is very varied. It is
-concerned with the protection of wild birds during the nesting-season,
-the testing of the weights and measures used in some seven thousand
-shops, the inspection of places where ‘Living Pictures’ are shown, the
-granting of licenses for these, and the choice of places at which men
-and women shall record their votes at the time of an election.
-
-Under the notice of the _Public Health Committee_ come all proposals for
-the planning of new town-districts and all those dealing with
-sanitation; under the _Small Holdings Committee_ come all requests for
-allotments. The applicant for an old-age pension must prove to the
-_Old-Age Pensions Committee_ that he or she is seventy years old, and
-has not a greater income than £31 10s. a year. The control and repair of
-roads and bridges, and the management of the County Asylum at
-Walkington, are in the hands of the _Highways and Bridges Committee_ and
-the _Asylums Committee_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But of greatest influence over the lives of schoolboys and schoolgirls
-is the work of the _Education Committee_. The work is felt to be so
-important that the Committee is divided into Sub-Committees. These are
-called respectively:—
-
- The Higher Education Sub-Committee.
- The School Management Sub-Committee.
- The School Attendance Sub-Committee.
- The School Buildings and Sites Sub-Committee.
- The Finance Sub-Committee.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- CREST OF THE EAST RIDING
- COUNTY COUNCIL.
-]
-
-Each of these Sub-Committees has its particular work, the nature of
-which can be recognised from its name. The Sub-Committee which
-exercises, perhaps, the greatest amount of influence is that whose name
-stands first in the list. It is the _Higher Education Sub-Committee_,
-which provides funds for the carrying on of the Bridlington,
-Pocklington, and Beverley Grammar Schools; which founded the Bridlington
-and Beverley High Schools for Girls; which provides the villages of the
-East Riding with lectures on Dairy Farming, Poultry Keeping, Gardening,
-and Beekeeping; which organises classes for Cookery, Laundry-Work,
-Dressmaking, Carpentry, Wood-Carving, and Domestic Economy; which grants
-Scholarships to deserving boys and girls who wish to continue their
-education at a Secondary or a Technical School.
-
-A very special kind of work carried on by the East Riding County Council
-is that known as the _Registration of Deeds_. As a result of this work
-the Council possesses a record of all sales of land in the East Riding
-since the year 1706. There are only two counties in Britain that keep
-such records, Yorkshire being one and Middlesex the other.
-
-For carrying on its numerous branches of work the County Council needs
-large supplies of money. In the year 1901–2 its total receipts were
-£61,760; in the year 1910–11 they had grown to £190,927. These figures
-show how the work of the Council increased during the nine intervening
-years.
-
-About one-fifth of this large sum of money is provided by the
-Government, the rest of it by the inhabitants of the Riding. The latter
-is made up of rates, rents, licenses for traction engines and motor
-cars, fees for pedlars’ and chimney sweeps’ certificates, fines imposed
-by magistrates, and so on.
-
-Of course very accurate accounts have to be kept of all items of Income
-and Expenditure. In the accounts for 1910–11 there are such items as the
-following:—
-
- _Income Account_:— £ s. d.
- Charge for Loan of Hose Pipe 0 15 0
- Sale of Old Hurdles, etc. 0 8 3
- Cash found on Drowned Person 0 16 6
- _Expenditure Account_:—
- Caution Posts—Painting and Repairing 18 9 6
- Skerne—Tree-Topping 2 9 0
- Taking Samples of Bread and Expenses 0 0 1
-
-All moneys received and all moneys paid away must be accounted for, and
-the accounts for 1910–11 show that for the whole year the _Receipts_
-amounted to £190,927, while the _Payments_ amounted to £191,161. You
-may, perhaps, think that you see in these figures something like a
-mathematical impossibility; but that is only because you have not
-reached the higher stages of commercial arithmetic.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The meetings of the County Council and those of its different Committees
-and Sub-Committees are held at the COUNTY HALL, Beverley.[73] That is
-the reason Beverley, though only a small town, is called the ‘Capital of
-the East Riding.’
-
-Footnote 73:
-
- The meetings of the Hull City Council, and the Beverley, Bridlington
- and Hedon Town Councils are held in their respective _Town Halls_.
-
-[Illustration: THE COUNCIL CHAMBER AT THE COUNTY HALL, BEVERLEY.]
-
-The full meetings of the Council take place in the _Council Chamber_
-four times each year—in the months of January, May, July, and October.
-Each meeting is presided over by the Chairman, or in his absence, by the
-Deputy-Chairman; and the conduct of the meeting is in accordance with a
-set of rules known as the _Standing Orders of the East Riding County
-Council_. To each resolution brought forward and put to the vote the
-members give their assent, or refuse it, by the words _Aye_ and _No_.
-
-Both the County Council and the Town Councils have a body of officers to
-see that their wishes are properly carried out. They comprise a _Clerk_,
-_Treasurer_, _Accountant_, _Surveyor_, _Medical Officer of Health_,
-_Inspector of Weights and Measures_, _Analyst_, and so on, down perhaps,
-to the _Gardener_. In the case of the County Council the adjective
-_County_ is prefixed to the name of the office; in the case of a city or
-town, the word _Borough_. The chief officer in each is known as the
-_Clerk of the Council_ and the _Town Clerk_.
-
-The Urban and Rural District Councils, and also the Parish Councils,
-have each a smaller body of officers whose duties resemble those of the
-officers mentioned above.
-
-
-
-
- XXX.
- EAST RIDING SCHOOLS.
-
-
-To have behind it a history that goes back certainly for eight hundred
-years, and in all probability for a thousand, is something of which a
-school may be proud. Such is the rightful boast of the BEVERLEY GRAMMAR
-SCHOOL.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ARMS OF BEVERLEY GRAMMAR
- SCHOOL.
-]
-
-As far back as the year 1100 there is mention of the schoolmaster in the
-Minster records. But the earliest known mention of the school is
-contained in a letter written in 1276 by Walter Giffard, Archbishop of
-York, to his bailiff at Beverley. In this letter the bailiff is directed
-to
-
- maintain John Aucher and his two companions attending school at
- Beverley from Michaelmas last, with 2s. a week, and their small
- necessaries in fitting style; and pay 36s. for three gowns for their
- use.
-
-But centuries before this the Beverley Grammar School must have been in
-existence. For it was part and parcel of the Collegiate Church of Saint
-John of Beverley, and one of the first duties of a collegiate church was
-to establish and maintain a school for the education of youth.
-Therefore, just as the Minster of St. Peter at York maintained a
-school—and a very famous one too—as early as the year 730, so the
-Minster of St. John of Beverley will undoubtedly have maintained a
-school for many years before the Norman Conquest. Its foundation is, in
-fact, believed to date from the eighth century.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ARMS OF HOWDEN
- GRAMMAR SCHOOL.
- (_Originally the Arms of Bishop Skirlaw_)
-]
-
-Beverley Grammar School is, far and away, the oldest school in the East
-Riding. But not long after, if not before, the date of the first written
-evidence of it, there was in existence another East Riding School—the
-HOWDEN GRAMMAR SCHOOL. Its origin was similar to that of the Beverley
-school, for in 1265 the parish church of Howden was turned into a
-collegiate church, and the rector was replaced by a body of canons,
-whose duty it became to establish a school. This duty they fulfilled,
-and the Howden Grammar School thus came into being some time before
-1312.
-
-[Illustration: ARMS OF BRIDLINGTON GRAMMAR SCHOOL.]
-
-The beginnings of BRIDLINGTON GRAMMAR SCHOOL are shrouded in mystery. It
-was originally a school attached to the Bridlington Priory, and its
-earliest mention occurs in a document promising that a royal grant
-formerly paid to the ‘Prior and Convent of St. Marie, Byrdlington,’
-should be continued, whereas other similar grants were then being
-withdrawn. This was in the year 1450.
-
-The fact that this document was issued by King Henry VI. gives the
-Bridlington Grammar School some claim to the title of ‘A Once Royal
-School.’ The royal grant was made—using the King’s words—‘for the great
-affection and singular devotion that we have to the glorious confessor,
-Saint John of Bridlington’; and by it the Prior and Canons of
-Bridlington were bound
-
- as in finding of XII. Quarasters, and a maister to teach them both
- gramer and song.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The HULL GRAMMAR SCHOOL is a notable example of a chantry school. It
-owes its existence to the piety of John Alcock, Bishop of Rochester, who
-in 1482 founded ‘The Chauntrie of Bisshoppe Alcocke in the parish
-churche of the Trinities in Hull.’
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ARMS OF THE HULL
- GRAMMAR SCHOOL.
-]
-
-This means, in other words, that the founder purchased lands and gave
-them to the Church, on the understanding that the rent of these lands
-was for ever to be used for the stipend of a priest who should each day
-
- at th’aulter of Our Ladie and St. John the Evangelist ... pray for
- the soules of King Edward IV., the founder, and all christien
- sowles.
-
-But Bishop Alcock’s chantry priest was to do more than this. For the
-license granted by the King states that he
-
- is bounde to kepe a fre scole of grammer within the saide towne of
- Hull, and teche all scolers within the saide towne of Hull, and
- teche all scholers thither resorting, without taking any stipend or
- wages for the same, and should have for his own stipende £10, and
- shoulde paie yerelie to the clarke to teche children to sing 40s.,
- and to 10 of the best scolers in the scole every of them 6s. 8d. by
- yere.
-
-The Grammar Schools of Hull and Pocklington resemble each other in that
-each was founded by a distinguished churchman and associated with a
-parish church. As John Alcock, Bishop of Worcester, founded the one, so
-John Dowman, Canon of St. Paul’s and Archdeacon of Suffolk, founded the
-other.
-
-But whereas the Hull school was founded in connection with a chantry,
-the POCKLINGTON GRAMMAR SCHOOL was closely associated with a Religious
-Gild. Its foundation deeds—dated 1514—speak of it as the foundation of
-
- the Master, Wardens and Brethren of the Brotherhood or Gild of the
- Name of Jesus, the Blessed Virgin Mary and St. Nicholas in the
- parish church of Pocklington.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ARMS OF POCKLINGTON
- GRAMMAR SCHOOL.
-]
-
-The same deeds state that the founder, John Dowman, endowed the school
-with lands sufficient to pay £13 6s. 8d. a year to the Master and
-Wardens of the Gild for
-
- finding with the same a fit man sufficiently learned in the science
- of grammar to teach and instruct all and singular scholars resorting
- to the town of Pocklington for the sake of education.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration:
-
- AT SCHOOL IN THE FOURTEENTH CENTURY.
- (_From an old Manuscript_).
-]
-
-Each of the five East Riding Schools mentioned has been spoken of as a
-_Grammar School_. This name exactly describes their purpose; for they
-existed in order that boys might learn the mysteries of Latin Grammar.
-Together with the study of this went the reading of Latin authors,
-usually taken in the following order:—Aesop and Terence, Vergil, Cicero,
-Sallust and Cæsar, Horace and Ovid.
-
-If you should find yourself wondering why this great attention to the
-study of Latin, there is a very simple explanation to be given. Latin
-was then the universal language of professional men. It was written,
-spoken, and read by all those of the educated classes. Priests, doctors,
-lawyers, merchants—all used it. The building-accounts for the Beverley
-North Bar are written in Latin, the Minster records are written in
-Latin, the Town records are written in Latin. A knowledge of Latin Cwas
-the gateway to a commercial as well as a professional career.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- PART OF THE SEAL OF A
- LINCOLNSHIRE GRAMMAR
- SCHOOL, A.D. 1552.
-]
-
-Until 1349 it was the custom for boys to translate their Latin authors
-into Norman-French, this being the ordinary language of ‘gentlefolk.’
-But then the change of making English the medium of translation was
-introduced; and thirty-six years later an English chronicler lamented
-that, because of the change, ‘grammar-school children knew no more
-French than did their left heel.’
-
-What a lively time the schoolboy had in those ‘good old days’! Hours of
-study, from early morning till bedtime; subjects taught, Latin grammar
-and Latin authors—these being plentifully varied with such pleasant
-interludes as that pictured in the seal of Louth Grammar School. Little
-wonder that Shakespeare, himself an ‘old boy’ of the Stratford-on-Avon
-Grammar School, had memories of
-
- ... the whining schoolboy, with his satchel
- And shining morning face, creeping like snail
- Unwillingly to school.
-
-Little wonder, also, that in the churchwardens’ accounts for Howden
-there occur numerous payments for ‘glasse for repairing the schollehouse
-windows.’ Boys will, of course, be boys, as long as the world lasts, and
-even in the seventeenth century they had to work off their excess of
-high spirits somehow or other.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Grammar Schools_ were not the only class of schools in existence during
-former days. There were two other kinds. _Song Schools_ were closely
-connected with the services in large churches. They ranked below the
-Grammar Schools, and their scholars were taught to read, write, and
-figure, as well as to sing the various portions of the church service.
-The Choir School attached to Holy Trinity Church, Hull, is a modern
-representative of the mediæval Song School.
-
-Of less rank, again, were the _Reading Schools_. Populous towns might
-possess a school of each kind, as did Howden in 1401. But often the Song
-School and the Reading School were combined in one; and sometimes, as at
-Bridlington, the Grammar School was also a Song School.
-
-But generally the vicar or the chantry priest was the master of the
-Grammar School, while the parish clerk was the master of the Song
-School. Any decrepit old man who had sufficient learning, but who had
-fallen on evil days, might be the master of the Reading School; where it
-would be his duty to teach the _petits_, or little ones, their ABC.
-Sometimes the _petits_ had their name changed into English, and were
-then known as the _Petties_, or as the _ABCies_. The latter of these two
-names was usually written in a very quaint form—_abseies_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the extracts from the foundation deeds of the Hull and Pocklington
-Grammar Schools given on pages 325 and 326 are two noticeable points.
-First, in both the master is to teach all boys who may come to the
-school, and in the one first quoted it is expressly stated that he is
-not to take ‘any stipend or wages for the same.’ The school was to be a
-_Free Grammar School_.
-
-This does not mean that no charges at all were to be made. The teaching
-was free; but all boys were expected to pay for luxuries, such as fires,
-candles, writing and washing materials, cock-fights, and birchings.
-Cock-fights, especially on Shrove Tuesday, were a regular school
-institution, and Pocklington Grammar School still preserves its silver
-cock-fighting bell. Doubtless school cock-fights were well worth a
-special fee, but fancy having to pay a fee for the privilege of being
-birched—a sure case of insult added to injury!
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ANCIENT COCK-FIGHTING BELL OF
- POCKLINGTON SCHOOL, A.D. 1666.
-]
-
-Boarders, too, were not kept for nothing. Far from it. John Aucher and
-his two companions at Beverley Grammar School had their board paid for
-at the rate of 8d. each per week, and they were also provided with
-pocket-money for their ‘small necessaries.’
-
-The foundation of a Free Grammar School was looked upon as a great
-benefit to the town in which it was established. This we see clearly in
-the complaint made in 1660 by the Vicar of Pocklington on behalf of the
-inhabitants of the town. The complaint stated that there were then
-
- not above eight or nine little boys in the school, whereas formerly,
- by the pains and industry of some former masters, there had been six
- or seven score scholars in our school, of which three or four score
- of them hath been _tablers_, gentlemen’s sons, which was a great
- benefit to this our town.
-
-Secondly, the salaries paid to the masters of the Hull and Pocklington
-Grammar Schools are interesting. The Pocklington master was to be paid
-£13 6s. 8d. a year, the Hull master £3 6s. 8d. less. But in a few years’
-time the salary of the latter had risen to be almost as high as that of
-the more-favoured master at Pocklington.
-
-In 1548, ‘John Olyver, Bachelor of Artes, incumbente, being of thaidge
-of 46 yeres, of honeste conversacione and lyvinge, and well lerned,’ was
-to receive a ‘yerely stipend of £13 2s. 3d.’ Shameful to say, this was
-not paid in full, the amount actually received by John Olyver being
-first £13 2s. 2¾d., and later £13 2s. 2½d. Then, the source of income
-becoming stopped, the poor master got nothing, until the Mayor and
-burgesses took up his cause and successfully sued the Court of Exchequer
-for the amount due yearly.
-
- * * * * *
-
-With the Reformation there came in 1548 what was called the CHANTRIES
-ACT. This, by confiscating their revenues, put an end to all such
-chantries as that founded by Bishop Alcock. It proved also a death-blow
-to all Song Schools and to many Grammar Schools. Their ancient
-endowments were seized by the Government, which engaged itself to
-replace the endowments of the Free Grammar Schools with fixed annual
-payments; but as it promptly forgot all about its engagements these did
-not prove of much value.
-
-[Illustration: A BOYS’ PLAY-GROUND IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY.]
-
-Under these circumstances the inhabitants of Beverley made known their
-grievances to King Edward VI. Their town was, they said—
-
- a market towne and the greatest within all Estryding of your
- Majesties countie of York, having a grete nombre of youthe within
- the same, and fife thowsaund persons and above, whereof some of them
- be apte and mete to be brought up in learning, whiche are not, for
- so much as there is neither gramer schole, or any other schole, as
- yet founded, wherewith they might be brought up in any vertuous
- studdie.
-
-No satisfactory reply was forthcoming to the inhabitants’ petition that
-the King would, out of the confiscated revenues of the Minster of St.
-John, found ‘one Fre Gramer Scole’ in their town. So it was left to the
-Town Governors to take over the finances of the old school. The school
-which had its origin in the Minster was thus re-established by the
-Town—an historic event which is embodied in its modern coat-of-arms.
-
-The town records contain mention of many interesting payments made on
-behalf of the school by the Town Governors. In 1567 there occur the
-following:—
-
- Item gyven to the Schole maister his players 17s.
-
- Item payd to the waits for playing when the 3s. 4d.
- Schole maister’s players played
-
-In 1606 a new school was built in the Minster Garth, and during the
-following years there are several records of the purchase of books for
-the school:—
-
- Item for a dictionary for the Schollers 3s. 4d.
-
- Item for another booke bought at Crossfaier, 6s. 6d.
- and for bringinge one fro Cambridge
-
- Item for a booke and for chaines for two 18s. 10d.
- other bookes in the schole
-
-The Beverley Grammar School still possesses its ancient library of
-books; among which are an edition of _Vergil_ printed in black letter at
-Florence, one of _Terence_ printed at Paris in 1552, one of _Cicero_
-printed at Basle in 1553, and a very early edition of Foxe’s _Book of
-Martyrs_, containing gruesome illustrations of practical methods of
-torture. But there is now no need for chains to preserve these books
-from being surreptitiously ‘borrowed.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Grammar School at Hull also had its revenues confiscated, but these
-were afterwards in part restored. In the reign of Queen Elizabeth the
-school was rebuilt, mainly at the expense of Alderman Gee, who
-contributed for the purpose the sum of eighty pounds and twenty thousand
-bricks. In his will, Alderman Gee put a further bequest thus:—
-
- I give and bequeath to the schoole of Hull which I builded through
- God’s goodnes, two houses in the Butchery.... I give these houses
- for ever for and towards the said Schoolmaster’s fee for his good
- teachinge and bringinge upp youth.
-
-Pocklington Grammar School was saved through the efforts of Thomas
-Dowman, the nephew of its founder, who obtained a private Act of
-Parliament to continue the existence of the school.
-
-What happened to Bridlington Grammar School is uncertain. But we know
-that in 1636 an inhabitant of Bridlington, by name William Hustler, gave
-‘forty pounds yearly out of his estates for the maintenance of a
-schoolmaster and usher in a school-house, by him to be founded and
-erected.’ This endowment still forms a part of the revenues of the
-school.
-
-Howden Grammar School also managed to survive, and lives to-day in the
-side chapel of the parish church that has been its home for several
-centuries.
-
-Other smaller Grammar Schools, founded by private individuals, formerly
-existed in the East Riding. Marmaduke Langdale founded one at SANCTON in
-1610, Lord D’Arcy founded another at KILHAM in 1633, and John Blanchard
-in 1712 left funds for the salary of a grammar school master at
-BARMBY-ON-THE-MARSH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have now reached the beginning of the eighteenth century, and there
-has so far been no mention made of Girls’ Schools. The reason is not far
-to seek. There were no schools for girls in the far-off days when the
-Grammar Schools of Beverley, Howden, Bridlington and Hull came into
-being.
-
-[Illustration: THE OLD GRAMMAR SCHOOL, HULL. BUILT 1583.]
-
-Girls were then not considered to need any more education than that
-which they could get at home. To know how to cook a meal, to make wool
-into cloth, and to make cloth into clothes—what more was it possible for
-girls to learn? These very useful lessons they could learn at home. A
-few specially favoured girls of high birth were probably brought up and
-taught book-learning in some of the nunneries of the East Riding; but of
-this there are no records.
-
-The first endowed school for girls as well as boys was founded in 1655,
-and from this date onward numerous girls’ schools came into existence.
-Some of these were styled _Boarding Academies for Young Ladies_; others
-of a humbler nature were known as _Charity Schools_.
-
-One of the latter was that founded by Alderman Cogan at Hull in 1753.
-This provided clothing and instruction for twenty poor girls, each of
-whom could remain at the school for three years. The number of girls was
-afterwards increased to sixty. They wore white straw bonnets, brown
-merino frocks, and blue cloth cloaks, all trimmed with orange. The COGAN
-CHARITY SCHOOL still flourishes, but the old-time charity costume is no
-longer worn.
-
-Several old charity schools formerly existed in the towns of the East
-Riding. Bridlington had a SPINNING SCHOOL in which twelve poor girls
-were taught ‘carding, spinning, and knitting.’ Beverley had its
-BLUE-COAT SCHOOL for boys, a school afterwards amalgamated with the
-Grammar School; and three other Spinning Schools were in existence in
-Hull at the close of the eighteenth century.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_Turner & Drinkwater_
-
- The High School for Girls, Bridlington.
- (_Founded 1905_).
-
-]
-
-Of the same class is the MARINE or NAVIGATION SCHOOL belonging to the
-Hull Trinity House. This, founded in 1786, now provides board, clothing,
-and education for about 150 boys, who are intended for a sea-faring
-life. So valuable is the education they receive in all that belongs to a
-sailor’s life, that each of the ‘white-ducked’ boys is said to ‘carry a
-captain’s certificate in his pocket’ when he leaves the school.
-
-[Illustration: SEAL OF THE GIRLS’ HIGH SCHOOL, HULL.]
-
-A school of a very special kind was that conducted on board the H.M.
-TRAINING SHIP ‘SOUTHAMPTON.’ The _Southampton_, an old ‘three-decker,’
-after serving as a battleship in the early years of last century, was
-sent to the Humber to become a floating _Industrial School_. For
-forty-three years it fulfilled its duty, during which time some 2,600
-boys were educated on it for a life at sea.[74]
-
-Footnote 74:
-
- A photograph of the _Southampton_ is given on page 299.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In towns private schools of all classes were increasing rapidly when the
-nineteenth century opened. _A Directory of Hull_ for the year 1831 shows
-that there were then in the town seven Ladies’ Boarding Academies, four
-Gentlemen’s Boarding Academies, twelve Classical and Commercial
-Academies, and no fewer than seventy-four Day Schools.
-
-The following is the advertisement issued by the Principal of a
-_Commercial and Mathematical Academy_ in the year 1787. In it the
-mysterious letters appended to the Principal’s name may be taken to
-stand for ‘Writing Master.’
-
- HULL, JULY 11th, 1787.
-
- _At the Commercial and Mathematical Academy._
-
- On the SOUTH-SIDE of the DOCK,
-
- Facing the NEW-BRIDGE;
-
-GENTLEMENS’ CHILDREN are instructed in the first principles of English,
-so as to be enabled to read and write their native Language with
-elegance and propriety; the English Grammar agreeable to the strictest
-rules of Syntax, resolving a sentence into its different parts of
-speech. The free and natural method of Writing, and striking by command
-of hand; Arithmetic, Merchants’ Accounts, or the Italian Method of
-Book-Keeping; Mensuration; Gauging; Surveying of Land; Plain and
-Spherical Trigonometry; Euclids Elements; Navigation; Algebra, and the
-Use of the Globes.
-
- By _J. WATSON_, W. M.
-
-YOUNG GENTLEMEN are Boarded and taught Geography, by familiar lectures,
-founded on rational principles and demonstration, and such as are of age
-and capacity taught to read Milton and Young, with proper emphasis and
-cadence.
-
- N.B. A separate Apartment for YOUNG LADIES.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Meanwhile many of the old Grammar Schools in England had fallen on very
-evil days. In 1840 some of those to which the term ‘decayed’ could be
-most fitly applied were converted into _Elementary Schools_. Twenty-four
-years later a Schools’ Enquiry Commission was appointed by the
-Government to enquire into the condition of the Grammar Schools
-throughout the country. The following are details from the report of the
-Commissioners.
-
-At Beverley in 1865 there were only fifteen boys, and the school
-premises were ‘dirty and the furniture out of repair.’ At Hull no
-classics were taught; only two boys out of sixty-seven were learning
-French, and two German; Algebra and Euclid were ‘not attempted.’ At
-Sancton the children paid nothing, and ‘received instruction which was
-worth nothing.’ At Barmby-on-the-Marsh the vicar was receiving £97 from
-the Grammar School endowment, and out of it paying £2 to the village
-school.
-
-Bridlington Grammar School was, we know, held in 1866 in a room near the
-Corn Exchange in the ‘Old Town’; and some eight or ten scholars were in
-attendance. It was then temporarily closed, and its funds were carefully
-nursed by Mr. Thomas Harland, who meanwhile succeeded in interesting
-others in its refoundation.
-
-As the result of Mr. Harland’s labours, various funds were amalgamated,
-including those of the Spinning School previously mentioned; and
-eventually a site for the school was obtained, and new buildings were
-erected. These were opened in 1899 by Lord Herries, the Lord Lieutenant
-of the East Riding, and have since been twice enlarged.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It has been shown how Hull and Pocklington owe their Grammar Schools to
-pious founders. That the days of pious founders are not wholly past and
-gone, we have proved to us in the existence of HYMERS COLLEGE at Hull.
-
-‘Hymers’ owes itself to two brothers, John and Robert Hymers, each a
-native of the North Riding and an ‘old boy’ of Sedbergh School.
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_Turner & Drinkwater_
-
- Bridlington Grammar School.
-
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ARMS OF HYMERS
- COLLEGE.
-]
-
-The elder of these two brothers, who was born in 1803 at Ormesby in
-Cleveland, became a distinguished mathematical scholar, and a Fellow of
-St. John’s College, Cambridge. Somewhat late in life he was appointed
-rector of Brandesburton, where he spent his last thirty-five years. On
-his death in 1887 it was discovered that he had left almost his whole
-fortune for the foundation of a Grammar School. The wording of a portion
-of his will ran as follows:—
-
- And, subject to the payment of my debts ... I give and bequeath all
- the residue of my real and personal estate and effects whatsoever
- and wheresoever to the Mayor and Corporation of the port of
- Kingston-upon-Hull, in the county of York, wherewith to found and
- endow a Grammar School in their town on the model of the Grammar
- Schools at Birmingham and Dulwich, for the training of intelligence
- in whatever social rank of life it may be found amongst the vast and
- varied population of the town and port of Hull.
-
-The amount of money thus bequeathed was roughly £200,000. But,
-unfortunately for the testator’s wishes, the will was declared to be
-null and void, because by the use of the words ‘found and endow’ it
-violated an ancient law. By the _Statute of Mortmain_, passed by
-Parliament in the year 1279, money might not be left to found and endow
-what was really a religious institution. Had the will said ‘to found
-_or_ endow,’ things would have been all right. But, as it was, the
-_Statute of Mortmain_, though passed six hundred years before, was then
-still the law of the land; and in the eyes of the law the testator’s
-wishes counted for nought. [Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] Hymers College. [_Turner & Drinkwater_
-
-]
-
-However, by the goodwill and generosity of the younger of the two
-brothers, a sum of £50,000 was devoted to the carrying out of Dr. John
-Hymers’ wishes. With this the estate known as the Botanic Gardens was
-purchased and the College buildings erected, a portion being set aside
-to provide the necessary endowment for carrying on the school. Within
-the last few years the Mayor and Corporation have provided funds for the
-addition of a wing devoted to the teaching of Science and Art.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: A TYPICAL SCHOOL ON THE YORKSHIRE WOLDS—LUTTONS AMBO.]
-
-Right through the nineteenth century efforts were being made to give a
-real education to the poorer classes. The great force at work during the
-early years of the century was the _National Society for Promoting the
-Education of the Poor_. This Society was established in 1809, and by
-1831 had more than 1300 schools; all of which were not only built but
-also carried on by voluntary subscriptions. Ten years ago there were 173
-NATIONAL SCHOOLS in the East Riding.
-
-By the _Education Acts_ of 1870 and 1880 a system of elementary
-education was established, and in 1891 this education became free.
-[Illustration:
-
-_Photo by_] [_Parrish & Berry_
-
- A Modern City Council School, Southcoates Lane, Hull.
-
-]
-
-Since the last-mentioned year the strides made have been enormous. The
-education of the children of the East Riding has been taken in hand by
-the East Riding Council, the Hull City Council, and the Town Councils of
-Beverley and Bridlington. Old and useless schools have been replaced by
-new and up-to-date ones; new Elementary, Secondary and Technical
-Schools, and High Schools for Girls have been built and equipped; and a
-School of Art and a Navigation School for adults have been established.
-Most important of all, however, is the system of _Scholarships_ by which
-many boys and girls are now climbing from the village school to the
-‘Varsity’ college.
-
-
-
-
- XXXI.
- THE EAST RIDING ROLL OF HONOUR.
-
-_A brief record of the most famous lives in local history. Each of the
-persons named was born in the East Riding, and living persons are
-excluded._
-
-SAINT JOHN OF BEVERLEY. Born at Harpham, and died in A.D. 721. Became
-Bishop of Hexham and of York. Was canonised by the Church in 1037, and
-afterwards became one of the most famous saints of the north of England.
-_See pages 135–140._
-
-ALURED, OR ALFRED, OF BEVERLEY. Born at Beverley in 1109. Became
-Treasurer of the Church of St. John of Beverley, and Abbot of the
-Cistercian Abbey of Rievaulx. Wrote a history in Latin, entitled _Annals
-of the Deeds of the Kings of Britain_, and a _Life of St. John of
-Beverley_.
-
-ROGER OF HOWDEN. Born at Howden, and died in 1201. Became a Clerk, or
-Secretary, to Henry II., and later a King’s Justice for Yorkshire. Was
-the author of a Latin history of England from A.D. 732 to A.D. 1201.
-
- _See pages 269–270._
-
-WILLIAM OF NEWBURGH. Born at Bridlington in 1136. Was brought up at the
-Priory of Newburgh, and wrote in Latin a _History of English Affairs_,
-which takes rank as ‘the finest historical work left to us by an
-Englishman of the twelfth century.’ _See page 269._
-
-PETER OF LANGTOFT. Born at Langtoft, and died in 1307. Was a Canon of
-Bridlington Priory, and author of a _Chronicle of England_, written in
-Anglo-Norman verse. _See page 269._
-
-JOHN HOTHAM. Born at Scorborough, and died in 1336. Became Bishop of
-Ely, and twice Lord Chancellor of England.
-
-JOHN OF BRIDLINGTON. Born at Thwing about 1324. Was successively
-Precentor, Almoner, Sub-Prior, and Prior of Bridlington Priory. Became
-so famed for his piety that after his death many miracles were believed
-to be wrought at his tomb.
-
-SIR MICHAEL DE LA POLE, first EARL OF SUFFOLK. Born at Hull, and died in
-1389. Became, successively, Mayor of Hull and Admiral of the King’s
-Fleets in the Northern Parts, a Knight of the Garter, Lord Chancellor of
-England, and the first Earl of Suffolk. His is the first example in
-British history of a prosperous merchant’s becoming a peer of the realm.
-_See page 116._
-
-WALTER SKIRLAW, LL.D., Born at South Skirlaugh, and died in 1406. Became
-Bishop, successively, of Lichfield, Bath, and Durham. Built the tower
-and chapter house of Howden, and Skirlaugh Chapel—now the parish church.
-Also built several bridges in the north of England, and helped to build
-the central tower of York Minster.
-
-JOHN ALCOCK, D.D. Born at Hull about 1428. Became Bishop, successively,
-of Rochester, Worcester, and Ely. Was a Privy Councillor and twice Lord
-Chancellor of England. Founded the Hull Grammar School and Jesus
-College, Cambridge. _See pages 270–271._
-
-JOHN FISHER, D.D. Born at Beverley in 1459. Became Chancellor of the
-University of Cambridge, and Bishop of Rochester. Was famed for his
-‘grete and singular virtue,’ and was beheaded on Tower Hill for refusing
-to acknowledge Henry VIII. as the ‘Supreme Head of the Church.’ Was
-largely instrumental in founding St. John’s College, Cambridge, and
-formed a library which was considered to be ‘the finest in Christendom.’
-_See pages 270–272._
-
-SIR JOHN PICKERING, Kt. Born at Flamborough in 1544. Was the son of very
-poor parents, yet became a Privy Councillor and Lord Keeper of the Privy
-Seal. Was twice chosen Speaker of the House of Commons, and was knighted
-by Queen Elizabeth.
-
-SIR JOHN LISTER, KT. Born at Hull in 1585. Became twice Mayor of Hull,
-and was five times elected M.P. for his native city. Entertained King
-Charles I. on his visit to Hull in 1639. Founded in 1642 the ‘Lister
-Hospital’ for six poor men and six poor women.
-
-LUKE FOX. Born at Hull in 1586. Was a Younger Brother of the Trinity
-House, and revived the attempt to discover the North-West Passage,
-whence he gained the nickname ‘North-West Fox.’ Explored in 1631 the
-Channel west of Baffin Land which now bears his name.
-
-THOMAS LAMPLUGH, D.D. Born at Octon, near Thwing, in 1615. Was a Fellow
-of Queen’s College, Oxford, and became successively Dean of Rochester,
-Bishop of Exeter, and Archbishop of York.
-
-SIR PHILIP MONKTON, Kt. Born at Cavil, near Howden, about 1620. Was a
-devoted supporter of King Charles I., for whom he fought bravely at the
-battles of Atherton Moor, Naseby, and Rowton Heath. Was knighted for his
-bravery in 1644.
-
-ANDREW MARVELL. Born at Winestead in 1621. Was an ‘old boy’ of the Hull
-Grammar School, became Assistant Latin Secretary to the Council of
-State, and was M.P. for Hull for nineteen years. Also gained
-considerable reputation as a poet, but is best remembered as ‘a
-pure-minded patriot in the most corrupt times.’ _See pages 272–275._
-
-CHRISTOPHER NESSE. Born at North Cave in 1621. Was the son of a
-husbandman, but became a notable Non-conformist preacher, and suffered
-much persecution after the Restoration.
-
-THOMAS WATSON, D.D. Born at North Ferriby in 1637. Was the son of a
-seaman, and an ‘old boy’ of the Hull Grammar School. Became a Fellow of
-St. John’s College, Cambridge, and afterwards Bishop of St. David’s. Was
-a liberal benefactor to his old school, and rebuilt the alms-houses
-known as ‘Watson’s Hospital.’
-
-RICHARD BOYLE, K.G., third EARL OF BURLINGTON. Born at Londesborough in
-1695. Was Lord Lieutenant of the West Riding of Yorkshire, and Lord High
-Treasurer of Ireland. Became famous as an amateur architect. Rebuilt
-Burlington House, London, and carried out large schemes of plantation at
-Londesborough Hall.
-
-RICHARD OSBALDESTON, D.D. Born at Hunmanby, and died in 1764. Became
-successively Dean of York, Bishop of Carlisle, and Bishop of London.
-
-JOHN GREEN, D.D. Born at Beverley in 1706. Was an “old boy” of Beverley
-Grammar School, and became Dean of Lincoln and later Bishop of Lincoln.
-In 1772 was the only Bishop in the House of Lords ‘to vote in favour of
-the Bill for the relief of Protestant Dissenters.’
-
-WILLIAM MASON. Born at Hull in 1724. Was a son of the Vicar of Holy
-Trinity and became a Fellow of Pembroke College, Cambridge, and Chaplain
-to the King. Gained considerable renown as a poet, and would have been
-appointed Poet Laureate but for his political opinions.
-
-SIR SAMUEL STANDIDGE, Kt. Born at Bridlington Quay in 1725. Took a
-leading part in establishing the Greenland Fishery Trade, and fitted out
-a ship for the discovery of the North Pole. Was knighted when Mayor of
-Hull in 1795, and was four times elected Warden of the Hull Trinity
-House.
-
-SIR CHRISTOPHER SYKES, Bart. Born at Roos in 1749. Was distinguished as
-a mathematician, architect, banker, and M.P. for Beverley. Refused a
-baronetcy from Mr. Pitt, but asked that it should be given to his
-father, the rector of Roos.
-
-ROBERT THEW. Born at Patrington in 1758. Was the son of an innkeeper,
-and became engraver to the Prince of Wales.
-
-WILLIAM WILBERFORCE. Born at Hull in 1759. Became M.P. for his native
-town at the age of twenty-one, and was for twenty-eight years one of the
-two M.P.’s for Yorkshire. Devoted his whole life and all his wealth to
-obtaining the Abolition of Slavery in the British Colonies, the Act for
-which was passed a few days after his death in 1833. _See pages
-275–279._
-
-ADRIAN HARDY HAWORTH. Born at Hull in 1767. Became a renowned botanist
-and entomologist, and formed a collection of 40,000 insects, the most
-important of which are now in the British Museum.
-
-SIR BENJAMIN F. OUTRAM, Kt., M.D. Born at Kilham about 1770. Entered the
-Medical Naval Service, and became Medical Inspector of Naval Hospitals.
-Was knighted in 1850.
-
-SIR MARK MASTERMAN SYKES, Bart. Born at Sledmere in 1771. Was M.P. for
-the city of York for thirteen years. Raised in 1802 two squadrons of
-Yeomanry, known as the ‘East Yorkshire Wold Yeomanry.’ Was a great lover
-of books, and formed at Sledmere ‘one of the finest private libraries in
-England,’ which in 1824 was sold for £20,000.
-
-SIR TATTON SYKES, Bart. Born at Sledmere in 1772. Devoted himself to
-sheep-farming and the breeding of race-horses, and, by the introduction
-of bone manure, wrought great improvements in the cultivation of the
-Wolds. Was a fearless sportsman, and a true specimen of ‘The Fine Old
-English Gentleman.’ _See pages 279–281._
-
-THOMAS JACKSON. Born at Sancton in 1783. Was the son of a farm labourer,
-and became ‘in spite of the adverse circumstances of poverty and lack of
-education,’ a famous Wesleyan divine. Was twice elected President of the
-Wesleyan Conference.
-
-WILLIAM SPENCE, F.R.S. Born at Bishop Burton in 1783. Was an ‘old boy’
-of Beverley Grammar School, and became one of the founders of Blundell,
-Spence, & Co., Ltd., Hull. Was deeply interested in Entomology, and was
-one of the authors of Kirby and Spence’s _Introduction to Entomology_,
-the most popular natural history book of its day.
-
-SIR JAMES ALDERSON, Kt., M.D., F.R.S. Born at Hull in 1795. Succeeded
-his father as physician of the Hull Royal Infirmary, and became
-President of the Royal College of Physicians. Was knighted by Queen
-Victoria in 1869.
-
-FREDERICK HUNTINGDON, M.D. Born at Hull in 1796. Was surgeon of the Hull
-Royal Infirmary for thirty-four years, and is recorded on his monument
-in Christ Church, Hull, as ‘one of Nature’s gentlemen, whose life was
-passed in doing good.’
-
-JAMES HALL. Born at Scorborough in 1801. Was a ‘model country squire ...
-and a devoted upholder of English field sports,’ and held the Mastership
-of the Holderness Hunt for thirty years.
-
-SIR HENRY COOPER, Kt., M.D. Born at Hull in 1807. Was physician of the
-Hull Royal Infirmary for twenty-seven years, and as Mayor of Hull was
-knighted when Queen Victoria visited the town in 1854. Was the first
-Chairman of the Hull School Board, and has his memory perpetuated in the
-‘Sir Henry Cooper Schools.’
-
-THOMAS EARLE. Born at Hull in 1810. Was a gold medallist of the Royal
-Academy, and designed the statue of George the Fourth in Trafalgar
-Square, London, and that of Queen Victoria in Pearson Park, Hull, beside
-many others.
-
-SIR JAMES HUDSON, K.C.B. Born at Bessingby in 1810. Entered the
-Government Service and held many important posts in the United States,
-South America and Italy. Was created a Knight Commander of the Bath in
-1855.
-
-HENRY DAWSON. Born at Hull in 1811. Was the son of poor parents, and
-became a self-taught artist. Struggled hard against adversity, and
-gained renown as a landscape painter only towards the end of his life.
-
-HUGH EDWIN STRICKLAND. Born at Reighton in 1811. Was a notable student
-of natural history, and became Reader in Geology at the Oxford
-University. Was accidentally killed in a railway tunnel.
-
-CHARLES HENRY BROMBY. Born at Hull in 1814. Was a son of the Vicar of
-Holy Trinity, and an ‘old boy’ of the Hull Grammar School. Became the
-first Bishop of Tasmania.
-
-SIR JOSEPH HENRY GILBERT, LL.D. Born at Hull in 1817. Became a
-distinguished scientist, and was knighted by Queen Victoria for his
-discoveries in agricultural chemistry.
-
-HUMPHRY SANDWITH, C.B., D.C.L. Born at Bridlington in 1822. Travelled
-widely, became Inspector-General of Hospitals in the Russo-Turkish War,
-and helped to defend the fortress of Kars. Was decorated by Queen
-Victoria as a Companion of the Order of the Bath.
-
-JOHN BACCHUS DYKES, Mus. Doc. Born at Hull in 1823. Was a grandson of
-the Vicar of St. John’s, and became Minor Canon and Precentor of Durham
-Cathedral. Composed more than two hundred hymn tunes, and was joint
-editor of _Hymns, Ancient and Modern_. After his death, a public
-subscription of £10,000 was raised in his honour to found musical
-scholarships.
-
-CHARLES ALFRED LEE, M.D. Born at Hull in 1825. Took a large share in the
-support of the Hull Royal Infirmary and the Newland Orphan Homes, and,
-on his death in January 1912, bequeathed £150,000 for the foundation of
-‘Rest Houses’ for the aged poor.
-
-SIR WILLIAM CHRISTOPHER LENG. Born at Hull in 1825. Was an ‘old boy’ of
-the Hull Grammar School. Took up journalism after some years spent as a
-chemist, and became the editor of the _Sheffield Daily Telegraph_. Was
-knighted for his public services in 1887.
-
-THE HON. SIR JOHN HALL, K.C.M.G. Born at Hull in 1824. Emigrated to New
-Zealand, entered Parliament, and became Premier in 1879. Was decorated
-by Queen Victoria as a Knight Commander of the Order of St. Michael and
-St. George.
-
-JOHN ROBERT MORTIMER. Born at Fimber in 1825. Devoted more than fifty
-years of a long life to the most thorough exploration of the earthworks
-and burial mounds around Driffield, and did more than anyone else to
-extend our knowledge of the early inhabitants of the East Yorkshire
-wolds.
-
-CHARLES HENRY WILSON, first BARON NUNBURNHOLME. Born at Hull in 1833.
-Became, in 1867, senior partner in the shipping firm of Thomas Wilson,
-Sons & Co., and built up the largest privately-owned fleet of steamships
-in the world. Sat in Parliament as M.P. for his native town for
-thirty-two years, and was raised to the peerage in 1906. _See pages
-280–283._
-
-ARTHUR WILSON. Born at Hull in 1836. Became a partner in the firm of
-Thomas Wilson, Sons & Co. in 1867. Was a great sportsman, and was M.F.H.
-to the Holderness Hunt for twenty-five years. _See pages 280–283._
-
-
-
-
- PRINTED AT BROWNS’ SAVILE PRESS,
- SAVILE STREET AND GEORGE STREET, HULL.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE EAST RIDING
- OF
- YORKSHIRE
-
- _Copyright of_
- A. BROWN & SONS, LTD.,
- HULL AND LONDON.
-]
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Transcription of Royal Mail Schedule on p. 241
-
- * * * * *
-
- HULL, JULY 1787.
-
- HULL AND YORK
- _ROYAL MAIL-COACH_,
- WITH A GUARD,
- _WELL ARMED._
-
-Sets out every Day about _Half-past Three_ in the Afternoon, from Mr.
-_BAKER’s_, the _Cross-Keys_, in the _Market-Place_, _HULL_, and arrives
-at Mr. _PULLEINE’s_, the Tavern in _YORK_, in SIX HOURS; returns from
-thence about _Half-past Twelve_ at Night, or immediately after the
-Receipt of the LONDON MAIL, and arrives at _HULL_ early in the Morning.
-
-No more than _Four Inside_ and _Two Outside_ Passengers will be taken.
-
- Fare, 10s. 6d. INSIDE; OUTSIDE 5s. 3d.
- Short Passengers Threepence-halfpenny _per_ Mile.
-
-Parcels from 3d. to 6d. if above a Stone Weight One Halfpenny _per_
-Pound.
-
-For Places or Entry of Parcels, apply to _Henry Cawood_, at the
-Post-Office, _Hull_, Mr. _Pulleine_, _York_; Mr. _Bland_, _Beverley_,
-and to Mr. _Gill_, King’s Arms, _Market-Weighton_, from those Towns
-respectfully for _Hull_, _York_, _London_, _or_ _Edinburgh_.
-
-Conveyance may be secured for Passengers and Parcels from _Hull_ to
-_London_ (Fare 3l. 13s. 6d.) by the MAIL COACH, the whole Way, except
-the Places be previously disposed of at _York_, in which Case Mr.
-_Pulleine_ engages to send the Passengers forward in a Post-Chaise at
-the same Expence and accompanying the MAIL COACH; the same from _Hull_
-to _Edinburgh_, 3l. 13s. 6d. or any intermediate Places at Fares in the
-Proportion of Distance.
-
- ⁂ The Proprietors give Notice, that they will not be accountable for any
- Parcel exceeding
- the Value of Five Pounds.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Transcription of Document on p. 248
-
- * * * * *
-
- HULL AND SELBY, OR HULL AND LEEDS JUNCTION, RAILWAY.
-
- OPENING OF THE LINE
-
- =FOR PASSENGERS AND PARCELS ONLY,=
-
- ON THURSDAY, JULY THE 2nd, 1840
-
-The Public are respectfully informed that this RAILWAY will be OPENED
-THROUGHOUT from HULL to the JUNCTION with the LEEDS and SELBY RAILWAY,
-at Selby, on WEDNESDAY, the First Day of July next, and that PASSENGERS
-and PARCELS only will be conveyed on THURSDAY, July 2nd; thus presenting
-a direct Railway Conveyance from Hull to Selby, Leeds, and York without
-change of Carriage.
-
- TRAINS WITH PASSENGERS WILL START FROM HULL AS UNDER
-
- AT SEVEN O’CLOCK, A.M. AT THREE O’CLOCK, P.M.
- AT TEN O’CLOCK, A.M. AT SIX O’CLOCK, P.M.
-
- ON SUNDAYS, AT SEVEN O’CLOCK, A.M., AND SIX O’CLOCK, P.M.
-
-The Trains from LEEDS and YORK, for HULL, will depart from those Places
-at the same Hours; and Passengers and Parcels may be Booked through at
-the Leeds, York, and Hull Stations. Arrangements are also in progress
-for Booking Passengers to Sheffield, Derby, Birmingham, and London.
-
- THE FARES TO BE CHARGED ARE AS UNDER:
-
- _First Class._ _Second Class._ _Third Class._
- Hull to Selby 4_s._ 6_d._ 4_s._ 0_d._ 2_s._ 6_d._
- Hull to York 8_s._ 0_d._ 6_s._ 6_d._ 4_s._ 6_d._
- Hull to Leeds 8_s._ 0_d._ 6_s._ 6_d._ 4_s._ 6_d._
-
-No Fees are allowed to be taken by the Guards, Porters, or any other
-Servants of the Company.
-
-The Trains, both up and down, will call at the Stations on the Line,
-viz.:—Hessle, Ferriby, Brough, Staddlethorpe, Eastrington, Howden, and
-Cliff.
-
-Arrangements for carrying Goods, Cattle, Sheep, &c., will be completed
-in a short time, of which due Notice will be given.
-
- By Order,
-
- GEORGE LOCKING, Secretary.
-
-_Railway Office, Hull, June 24th, 1840._
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Transcriber’s Note
-
-The table of illustrations has the wrong page (p. 116) for the image on
-p. 117, and has been corrected.
-
-Errors deemed most likely to be the printer’s have been corrected, and
-are noted here.
-
- 52.5 we have no means of knowing[.] Added.
-
- 100.12 the records remain[s] to our day. Removed.
-
- 115.28 to hold this office[.] Thus Added.
-
- 116.2 Edward III[.], so his son Added.
-
- 118.16 Shakspeare’s [P/p]lay Replaced.
-
- 134.2 themselves in populous towns[.] Added.
-
- 148.30 your dewte in ryngyng....[’] Added.
-
- 187.31 of the building[.] They were a wealthy Added.
-
- 215.32 [s]ustained during the war. Added.
-
- 227.24 Let the best fashioned and apparrell[ /e]d Replaced.
- Servants
-
- 231.21 This was between the years 1703 and 1753[.] Added.
-
- 245.11 horses could not[,] contend against the wind. Removed.
-
- 296.1 and Strong Beer.[’] Added.
-
- 324.20 teche all [scholers] thither _sic_
-
- 330.14 to the inhabitants[’] Added.
-
- 331.24 at Paris in 1552[./,] one of _Cicero_ printed Replaced.
-
- 332.33 Bridlington and Hull came into being[.] Added.
-
- 349.11 R[o/a]ised in 1802 two squadrons of Yeomanry Replaced.
-
- 350.22 Royal A[d/c]ademy Replaced.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Story of the East Riding of
-Yorkshire, by Horace Baker Browne
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF THE EAST RIDING ***
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