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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #53820 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/53820)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Short History of the Worshipful Company
-of Horners, by H. G. Rosedale
-
-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: A Short History of the Worshipful Company of Horners
-
-Author: H. G. Rosedale
-
-Release Date: December 28, 2016 [EBook #53820]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SHORT HISTORY--COMPANY OF HORNERS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- A SHORT HISTORY
-
- OF
-
- The Worshipful
- Company of Horners
-
- ------------------
-
- Price Five Shillings net.
-
- ------------------
-
-
-
-
- London:
- BLADES, EAST & BLADES, 23, ABCHURCH LANE, E.C.
-
- -------
-
- JANUARY, 1912.
-
-
-
-
- The Worshipful Company of Horners.
-
- ------------------
-
-
- Master:
-
- CHARLES EVES, Esq., Capel House, 62, New Broad Street, E.C.
-
-
- Upper Warden:
-
- W. B. CRANFIELD, Esq., 6, Poultry, E.C.
-
-
- Renter Warden:
-
- Capt. L. G. MARCUS, C.C., 65, London Wall, E.C.
-
-
- Court of Assistants:
-
- *Mr. Deputy MILLAR WILKINSON, Seatonross, Christchurch Park, Sutton,
- Surrey.
- Sir DAVID STEWART, Banchory House, Aberdeen.
- *W. SPENCER CHAPMAN, Esq., The Cottage, Warminster, Wilts.
- *A. W. TIMBRELL, Esq., C.C., 44, King William Street, E.C.
- *Dr. W. J. HILL, 25, Craven Street, Strand, W.C.
- *H. BURT, Esq., J.P., Parkfield, Potters Bar.
- *Col. Sir J. ROPER PARKINGTON, J.P., D.L., 58, Green Street, Park Lane,
- W.
- *W. PHENE NEAL, Esq., C.C., 62, London Wall, E.C.
- *P. H. P. WIPPELL, Esq., LL.M., B.A., 4, Paper Buildings, Temple, E.C.
- *J. DIX LEWIS, Esq., J.P., 85, Gresham Street, E.C.
- *Rev. C. C. HOYLE, M.A., New Westminster, Canada.
- CECIL HARTRIDGE, Esq., 17, Old Broad Street, E.C.
- *H. S. FOSTER. Esq., J.P., Grosvenor Mansions, 82, Victoria Street,
- Westminster, S.W.
- *J. T. EDMONDS, Esq., 19, Great Winchester Street, E.C.
- W. R. TAYLOR CARR, Esq., 108a, Cannon Street, E.C.
- A. GOODINCH WILLIAMS, Esq., Union Place, Stonehouse, Plymouth.
- Major CHARLES WALLINGTON, V.D., 4, Tokenhouse Buildings, Bank, E.C.
- G. R. BLADES, Esq., 23, Abchurch Lane, E.C.
- Ald. JAMES ROLL, Adelaide Place, London Bridge, E.C.
- Rev. H. G. ROSEDALE, D.D., F.S.A., 7, Gloucester Street, Victoria, S.W.
- A. F. BLADES, Esq., 23, Abchurch Lane, E.C.
- E. PARNELL, Esq., Devon Lodge, 14, Wickham Road, Brockley, S.E.
- Col. and Ald. Sir W. H. DUNN, 11, St. Helen’s Place, Bishopsgate, E.C.
- G. R. GLANFIELD, Esq., 58, Canfield Gardens, Hampstead, N.W.
- Rev. H. T. CART DE LAFONTAINE, M.A., 49, Albert Court, Kensington Gore,
- S.W.
- JAMES WEBSTER, Esq., 38, Wickham Road, Brockley, S.E.
- HUGH T. TAYLOR, Esq., 9, Wood Street, E.C.
- HORACE E. BOWLES, Esq., 66, Bishopsgate Street, E.C.
- A. H. MICHELL, Esq., 5, Devonshire Place, W.
- M. R. SEWILL, Esq., C.C., 2, Porchester Square, Hyde Park, W.
- JAMES CURTIS, Esq., 179, Marylebone Road, N.W.
-
-
- Hon. Chaplain:
-
- Rev. H. G. ROSEDALE, D.D., F.S.A., 7, Gloucester Street, Victoria, S.W.
-
-
- Clerk and Solicitor:
-
- HOWARD DEIGHTON, Esq., C.C., 44, King William Street, E.C.
-
- ------------------
-
- Those marked (*) have served the office of Master.
-
-[Illustration: shield]
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE.
-
-
-The discovery of the “Old Book of the Worshipful Company of Horners,”
-which has probably been missing for some 250 years, has brought added
-interest to the consideration of what is, perhaps, the oldest of the
-City Gilds.
-
-In studying the documents and compiling the account of that book,
-recently distributed to the members of the Company by the kindness of
-the late Master, Mr. Edmonds, I was drawn to take in hand the lengthy
-and difficult task of reconstructing the life history of this
-interesting Craft Gild. Such a work is the product only of years of
-patient labour, but, in the meantime, at the request of the Court, I am
-glad to offer some preliminary details which may serve at least to show
-the age and dignity of the Worshipful Company of Horners.
-
-I have endeavoured, where possible, to incorporate passages from the
-late Mr. Compton’s paper before the British Archæological Society, but,
-owing to many discoveries having been made which were not at his
-disposal, I have had to take a different course in some respects.
-
-I wish, however, to state that this short history cannot in any sense be
-considered a complete or even sufficient account of the Company, but
-must hide behind the expressed wish of the Court that, in this instance,
-it should be of modest dimensions.
-
- H. G. ROSEDALE, D.D.
-
-[Illustration: Casket presented to King Edward VII]
-
-
-
-
- A SHORT HISTORY OF
- THE WORSHIPFUL COMPANY
- OF HORNERS.
-
- -------
-
-[Sidenote: Origin of Gilds.]
-
-The study of Gilds, their origin and development, is amongst the most
-fascinating of all literary pursuits, but though many whose names rank
-high in the world of letters have gone deeply into the problems which
-the subject presents, the early days of gild life, at least, in this
-country, are still to some extent shrouded in the mists of speculation.
-
-Whether Craft Gilds came to England from the far-off glories of Greece
-and Rome, whether they were the descendants of the early Saxon or Danish
-“blood brotherhoods,” or even derived partly from the one and partly
-from the other, is still a moot point.
-
-There are practically no records of any importance of Craft Gilds in
-this country before the arrival of the Normans, though during the time
-of the Roman occupation there must have been many such extant. At quite
-an early period of the Roman occupation, we know that the Gild of
-Smiths, “Collegium Fabrorum,” existed in this country.
-
-At a later period it is clear that England was covered with a network of
-Frith Gilds, but whether these were Trade Gilds in the accepted sense or
-not has yet to be shown. It seems probable, however, that they were
-Agricultural Gilds enforced upon the inhabitants by their Saxon
-conquerors, and that in the more populous neighbourhoods and towns,
-craftsmen and merchants were included under their own special “tything”
-or possibly even had their own “hundred”.
-
-Whether this were the case or not, it will be obvious to all that in
-Saxon and Norman England alike, wherever several persons were plying the
-same trade, there must have existed some sort of organization for mutual
-protection and for the instruction of others. Throughout the known world
-from the very earliest periods, workmen of the different classes have
-always formed their own aggregations and have always associated
-themselves together for mutual assistance and protection. The need for
-something of this sort must have been very urgent in days when there was
-less security to life and property, and in days when, as we are led to
-suppose, the Saxon rulers felt scant sympathy for the towns where trades
-would be found to exist most extensively.
-
-[Sidenote: Antiquity of Gilds in England.]
-
-The more we study mediæval life in our own country, the more impossible
-it becomes to imagine any regular trade as existing apart from some
-official or semi-official organization, combining one or more of the
-following obligations: Control of the workers, education of novices,
-civil representation (generally through some influential patron or
-head), and nearly always carrying out the work of a burial and insurance
-society. That such a banding together of those, whether merchants or
-craftsmen, interested in any particular occupation, must have existed
-during the Saxon period with the object of promoting one or more of the
-objects mentioned, is hardly open to doubt. It would be specially in the
-towns, such as London, in which, as Sir Lawrence Gomme has pointed out,
-the Roman ideals of organization still persisted, even into Norman
-times, that Gild life or its analogue would be most definitely marked.
-
-[Sidenote: Gild, not Guild.]
-
-Such Societies, Unions, or Combinations for common interests, whether of
-Trade, Religion, or social needs, were called Gilds, the word being
-derived from the Anglo-Saxon _Gildan_ or _Gildare_, to pay, an allusion
-to the contribution demanded from every member towards the common fund.
-
-[Sidenote: Antiquity of the Horner’s Craft.]
-
-It may be justly claimed that amongst the earliest trades or crafts of
-this country was that of the Horner, who was indispensable to the
-community, inasmuch as he was the purveyor of many articles absolutely
-necessary for domestic purposes. In the days, for instance, of Kings Ina
-and Alfred metals of any kind were rare and consequently costly.
-Articles required for eating and drinking, such as cups, plates, forks,
-etc., as well as vessels for the preservation of liquids and powders,
-were made from horn, that being the least expensive and the most easily
-attainable material for those who had risen above the use of wooden
-articles for similar purposes.
-
-[Sidenote: Laws of Ina.]
-
-That trades did exist throughout the Saxon period is clear, nor should
-it be doubted that among the more important of those trades was that of
-the Horner. Indeed, though little else of a commercial character is
-alluded to in the laws of King Ina (A.D. 688-726), those laws lay down
-the price at which horns are to be bought and sold, and thereby indicate
-the importance of the horner to the community. “Bovis cornu decem
-denariis valeat Vaccæ cornu duobus denariis valeat.”—No mean price,
-surely, at that early period.
-
-[Sidenote: Horn Tenure.]
-
-Not only are horns mentioned in the early Norse Runic inscriptions (see
-_Deutsches Literatur Zeitung_, April 2nd, 1910), but there have been,
-from the earliest days, many well-known instances of beautifully worked
-horns used as a method of conveyancing property. Ulphus’s Horn, a
-drinking horn now at York, is, perhaps, the best known example. It was
-presented by him to the Church in token of the conveyance of his lands
-to the Church Authorities. King Edgar granted privileges to Glastonbury
-Abbey by means of a horn. For a very long period the family of Pusey
-held the village of Pusey by virtue of a horn, given to William Picoli
-by King Canute. Edward the Confessor granted the Rangership of Bernwode
-Forest, Bucks, to be held by a horn, while Randal de Meschines, third
-Earl of Chester, conferred on Allan Silvestris the Bailywick of the
-Forest of Wirall by delivering to him a horn, which was ever after
-preserved at Hooton. Ingulphus, Abbot of Croyland, mentions the horn
-amongst those things whereby land was conveyed in the Conqueror’s reign.
-This recalls the lines of Wordsworth in the “Horn of Egremont Castle.”
-
- “Eustace pointed with his lance
- “To the horn which there was hanging,
- “Horn of the Inheritance.”
-
- * * *
-
- “Who of right claimed the Lordship
- “By the proof upon the Horn.”
-
-[Sidenote: Drinking Horns.]
-
-Both Pliny and Cæsar allude to the elaborate horn cups of their period.
-Johannis Salisburiensis tells us that the Danes used horns as well as
-the Saxons, and Giraldus Cambrensis mentions the Horn of St. Patrick.
-
-Sometimes these horns were so skilfully made that they could be used
-both for blowing and drinking; _vide_ Chaucer’s “Frank Tale,” l. 2,809:
-“And drinketh of his bugle horn the wine.” Perhaps, however, the most
-interesting and historic horn cup was that which Witlaf, King of Mercia,
-gave to the Abbey of Croyland, “cornu mensæ suas ut,” etc.—the horn from
-his own table that the elder monks might drink out of it on Festivals
-and Saints’ Days, and that when they gave thanks, they might remember
-the soul of Witlaf the donor. Ingulphus mentions that when the Monastery
-was almost burnt down this horn was saved.
-
-[Sidenote: Medical Horns.]
-
-From Payne’s “English Medicine in Anglo-Saxon Times” we ascertain that
-during the tenth and eleventh centuries, at least, the Horners’ trade
-was called into use by the apothecary. The author relates that in
-“cupping” operations and the administration of clysters, horns were
-used, indicating a nicety of manufacture which must have placed the
-trade on a high level.
-
-[Sidenote: Importance in Saxon times.]
-
-To such a pitch of development had the trade of a Horner attained at
-least 250 years before the Norman Conquest, that even the patens and
-chalices used at the Church services were made of this substance, as may
-be evidenced from the fact that at the Council of Chelsea, held A.D.
-789, after careful discussion, it was decided that the chalices and
-patens used for ecclesiastical purposes should no longer be made of
-horn, but of metal, no doubt to distinguish them from similar articles
-which had already come into general use for common and domestic
-purposes.
-
-At this time glass was probably almost, if not entirely, unknown in
-England, and, in consequence, thin sheets of horn had to be manufactured
-to serve many of the purposes to which glass is now applied.
-
-These facts, and the general tendency of town life in this country, make
-it practically certain that long before the tenth century the Horner’s
-trade, in common with some others, was in full swing, and with it that
-which we may deem inseparable from any considerable trade at that time,
-something in the nature of what we now call a Trade or Craft Gild.
-
-[Sidenote: Horners’ probably the oldest City Gild.]
-
-Both tradition and documentary evidence are agreed that the Horners’
-Gild dates back to the far off ages of antiquity, and we may justly
-claim that its foundation is as early as, if not anterior to, any of the
-existing City Companies.
-
-[Sidenote: Old book of the Worshipful Company of Horners.]
-
-Considerable light has been thrown on the vicissitudes of the Horners’
-Gild by the recent discovery, as well as recovery, of the most
-interesting and ancient MSS. book already alluded to. The existence of
-this book, which formerly belonged to the Company, and was, in fact, its
-official record, was brought to the notice of the Clerk of the Company
-by Dr. Warner, of the British Museum. After many negotiations between
-Mr. Howard Deighton and the then owners of the volume, it was purchased
-for the sum of £40.
-
-A detailed account of this precious possession has been given in the
-form of a publication entitled “Some Notes on the Old Book of the
-Worshipful Company of Horners,” which was distributed to the members of
-the Company and their guests at their last Livery Dinner, by the late
-Master, Mr. J. T. Edmonds.
-
-Though records relating to Craft Gilds in the eleventh, twelfth and
-thirteenth centuries are very meagre and difficult to discover, the “Old
-Book of the Worshipful Company of Horners” has proved extremely useful
-in helping to build up a consecutive history of this extremely early
-Gild. It demonstrates the fact that at least as early as the fourteenth
-century, both Horners and Bottlemakers were taking their full share of
-civic and commercial life.
-
-[Sidenote: The Gild in Saxon days.]
-
-Probably, during the Saxon period, the workers in horn, in common with
-other craftsmen, were enrolled amongst the members of the Frith Gild and
-not differentiated until the Anglo-Norman period. It might even be
-admitted that the Horners’ Gild was a subdivision of one of the many
-“Gilds Merchant” so prominent as mercantile forces in the eleventh and
-twelfth centuries; but it is more than probable that before the end of
-the eleventh century, so important a trade as that of the Horner would
-have begun to assert itself separately and individually, more especially
-as there does not seem to have been any larger or more important Gild
-under which it could have found shelter.
-
-[Sidenote: Horn Fair, 1268.]
-
-[Sidenote: Horners’ Statutes in 1284.]
-
-We do not know whether the Horners’ Company had any connection with
-“Horn Fair,” which took place at Charlton, in Kent, and for which Henry
-III granted a Charter in 1268. Of this fair, Philpot, writing in 1639,
-tells us it was called Horn Fair because of “the great plenty of all
-sorts of winding horns, cups and other vessels of horn there bought and
-sold.” We are, however, on sure ground when we point to an interesting
-proof of the great antiquity of the Horners’ Company, which comes to us
-from the official letter books of the City of London. In Letter Book A,
-fol. 40, 12th Edward I (September 8th, 1284), we find that the ancient
-Gilds are drawing up Rules for revision by the authorities, an event
-which, no doubt, took place every few years in early times. The entry
-includes the following:—“The same day the said John (Pesemers) received
-the Statutes of the Horners for correction.”
-
-[Sidenote: Notable Horners in 1303.]
-
-In 1303 (31st of Edward I), an incident took place which illustrates at
-once the prominence of Horners at the time and the variety of persons
-who were members of the Gild. The Royal Treasury at Westminster had been
-robbed. Richard of Pudlicote and William du Palais were accused. During
-the Inquisition held by the Bishop of London it transpired that amongst
-the friends of this Richard were several persons, notably one “Jacobus
-le Horner et Boten^r manens apud Kandelwickestrate,” whose character is
-described thus:—“It is unknown whether they were aware of the felony—tñ
-male credunt de eis” (_i.e._, they have a bad name). As a set-off,
-however, against this undesirable person, it is recorded that two other
-Horners, viz., Rogerus le Cornur and Stephanus le Cornur succeeded in
-arresting Robert le Convers, another actor in the drama.
-
-[Sidenote: Notable Horners in 13th and 14th centuries.]
-
-Throughout the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries there is frequent
-mention made of Horners, many of whom seem to have been persons of great
-importance. In 1284 we have recorded the name of Thomas att or de
-Corner, and in 1285 Clement le Cornur. In 1295, of William le Horner,
-and others are mentioned in the years 1226, 1320, 1342, 1346, 1352 as
-doing some official act. This frequent mention of Horners to be found in
-early records does not apply to London only, but to other places. For
-instance, Peter le Horner, resident at the Heywarde, Cambridge, is
-mentioned as paying taxes in that town in 1314-1315.
-
-[Sidenote: 15th century.]
-
-In 1441 (20th of Henry VI), we are told that “at the instance of
-‘Sympkin horner of London,’ together with two others, the King directed
-letters to the Mayor and Bayliffs of Hampton Sandwys, asking how
-Englishmen repairing to ‘Pruce, Hanze and Danske’ are treated.”
-
-Well might a learned legal luminary, delivering judgment in 1692,
-say:—“A Horner is a particular Trade and a very ancient Company in
-London!”
-
-[Sidenote: Horners take Bottlemakers under their protection.]
-
-In the year 1362 the Horners were in so flourishing a state that another
-Craft Gild, the Bottlemakers, who, as we read in the MS. book just
-referred to, dated back, like the Horners, to “time out of mind,” found
-it desirable to place themselves under the protection of the Horners’
-Company, and, for a period of 115 years, remained under its protection,
-until, in the sixteenth year of Edward IV the two Companies became
-amalgamated. The interesting document which authorized the fusion of the
-two Companies is to be found in Letter Book L, fol. cxvi, of the City of
-London. It prays that the Company of “Bottell Makers,” which had been
-for some time intimately associated with the Horners, be united with it
-and become one and the same Company, and “that from hensfurth the saide
-persones of both the said Crafts may be as bretheren and accupie and
-Joyne together as well in all things to be borne and doone within the
-said Cettie. As in observing,” etc.
-
-The petition to the Mayor and Aldermen was granted, and from that day
-forward the three bottles as well as three horns have emblazoned the
-arms of the Horners’ Company.
-
-[Sidenote: Important Record.]
-
-In the very ancient and interesting book belonging to the Horners’
-Company there are two early entries relating to the period during which
-the two Companies were legally separated though in a certain close
-relation to each other. The entries, which are identical, are as
-follows:—“The bottellmakers have continued in the Company of the Horners
-a hundred fourscore nine yeres and nine monthes, wrytten the last daie
-of November Anno Dni One Thousand five hundred fiftie and seaven.”
-
-[Sidenote: Horners, the 26th City Gild in 1376.]
-
-Following upon this remarkable evidence of official recognition as a
-Craft Gild, carrying with it all the legal privileges which were later
-conferred by recorded Charters, we find as early as 1376 an entry of the
-fact that the Horners’ Gild was recognized as the twenty-sixth out of
-forty-eight “mysteries of the City of London,” and successively sent two
-of its members to the Court of Common Council, not only to represent the
-members of the Gild in the election of a Mayor and other officers of the
-City, but also to form a representative body to withstand all
-encroachments on their liberties and those of the City generally, which
-the claims and pretensions of Edward III seemed to threaten.
-
-[Sidenote: Petition to regularize Proceedings granted 1391.]
-
-This event preceded a time of great commercial activity, when many
-political circumstances compelled the City Craft Gilds to legalize
-themselves by obtaining from the Civic authorities (now so considerably
-strengthened by the success of the resistance offered to Edward III), a
-recognition of the practices which for a very lengthy period they had
-made use of, in the conduct of their affairs.
-
-[Sidenote: Gild Officials and their importance.]
-
-Such an application took place in 1391, during the reign of Richard II,
-on the part of the Horners’ Company. The petition was mainly concerned
-with the recognition of their right to elect two Wardens to preside over
-the Horners in accordance with the ancient practice common amongst other
-Gilds. At this time it would appear that there were no Masters elected,
-but that the position of Master of a Gild was filled either by the
-Alderman of the Ward or some other influential and important person,
-called the “Guardian,” who represented the interests of the Craft on the
-Council of the Mayor and Aldermen.
-
-According to Madox, in his “Firma Burgi,” it would appear that a still
-earlier form was to elect an Alderman and two Masters for each Gild.
-This will readily account for the fact that some aldermanries were
-territorial, as in the case of the Knighten Gild, whose ruler was
-Alderman of the Portsoken Ward, others were connected with Gilds apart
-from locality, and possibly some were ecclesiastical or even commercial.
-A quaint illustration of this practice is found in the Confirmation of a
-Norwich Fraternity by Henry V. The members are authorized to elect an
-Alderman and two Masters, who, when the name of Gild was changed to that
-of Craft Mystery, became respectively the Guardian or Alderman and
-Wardens of the Mystery.
-
-The privilege of electing Wardens was always in the forefront of every
-grant, since it was of great importance to the Crafts to have this right
-at a time when constant efforts were made to put in representatives and
-nominees of the monarch, in order to bring the Crafts, and, through
-them, the City of London, into subjection.
-
-[Sidenote: William Karlile and Richard Baroun.]
-
-It is highly probable that in 1391 the deputation from the Horners’ Gild
-on presenting its petition was introduced by one Richard Baroun, Horner,
-of London, Alderman of Aldgate, and Master of the Gild in 1391. He was
-not only the Guardianus or Master of the Gild, but a person of great
-importance during the reign of Richard II, being Horner to the King. His
-predecessor in the office of Alderman, it is interesting to note, was
-one William Karlile, Master of the Bottlemakers’ Gild. This fact will
-help to explain the close relations existing between the two Crafts.
-
-[Sidenote: Confiscation of Charters and their return in 1397.]
-
-In a newly discovered MS. of great interest which is being edited by E.
-H. Dring, Esq., there appears the following passage, A.D. 1397 (?
-1398):—“And thanne after the presentacion of the said supplication (from
-the Citizens of London to the King) ther were made mony blank charteres
-and all the men of every crafte of the said Cite as well as all manne
-servaunts and maisters were charged to come to the Guylde halle to sette
-her seales to the said blank charteres.” It must, have been from this
-MS. that Stow gathered much of his information, and this passage was
-copied by Fabian in 1516, Grafton in 1659, and Hollingshead in 1577.
-
-Richard II, furious with the citizens of London for assisting the Duke
-of Arundel, had taken the opportunity of a brawl in the City, to
-humiliate the citizens. He confiscated their charters and laid the City
-under a fine of £1,000,000. This was late in 1397, and the following
-Spring (which until March 25th was A.D. 1397, and after that date A.D.
-1398, whence possibly the confusion in dates) the City, which, as we
-have seen, would be the Common Council, more especially as the King had
-imprisoned the Mayor and put in a “Custos” to govern, bought back the
-King’s favour, and, consequently, their own charters, by the most
-expensive procession and gifts. All the brethren of each Gild, in return
-for this forgiveness, had to put their seals to these blank charters,
-which were an acknowledgment of the King’s power and their willingness
-to do and pay what was left in blank in that charter, so that the King
-could insert what he chose in the blank spaces, or, as Grafton puts it,
-“by which he might, when he would, undo any of his subjects.”
-
-Amongst the Companies called upon to do this was certainly the Horners,
-who would not have been foolish enough to seal the “charters” had they
-not needed the support of the City in the maintaining their own
-prescriptive rights based on Royal grants. The term sealing is quite a
-natural one, inasmuch as no charters were signed until Tudor times.
-
-[Sidenote: Renewed activity.]
-
-Doubtless the troubles of the period and the expenses to which the
-fraternity had been put, caused the Gild to value its rights and to
-claim further recognition, even to the extent of promoting a special Act
-of Parliament. They did not seek to obtain a charter, be it noted, which
-rarely meant any advantage to the unfortunate persons who were
-practically compelled to accept such charters, but, on the contrary, in
-most cases proved to be an invasion by the Crown of former prescriptive
-privileges.
-
-The Horners were successful in obtaining a special Act of Parliament in
-the year 1465. The Act is worth quoting as showing to what importance
-the Horners’ Company must have risen by that date.
-
-
- IV EDWARD IV, C. 8.
-
-[Sidenote: The Horners’ Act.]
-
-“Our soveraigne lord the Kyng perceyving by grevous complaint made in
-this Parliamente, by men of occupation of horners beynge enfraunchysed
-in the Cytie of London, howe that the people of straunge landes hath
-come into this lande, and into dyvers partyes thereof, and hath boughte
-by the handes of theyr hostes and guydes, the great and chiefe stuffe of
-Englyshe hornes unwrought, of tanners & bochers, & cary the same over
-the sea, and there employ the same in dyvers workes, to the great damage
-of this land and to the finall preiudice of a great numbre of men beinge
-of the same occupacion: hath by the advice and assent of the sayd
-Lordes, & at the request of the sayd commons, and by the auctority
-aforesayd, ordeined established & enacted, that from the feast of
-Easter, which shall bee in the yere of our Lord God M.CCCCLXV, no maner
-straunger nor alien by himselfe or by any other, shal buy any Englysh
-hornes unwrought of any Tanners, bochers, or any other persons Gathered
-or growing within the sayd city and, xxiii myles on every syde of the
-sayd city next adioyning. And that no Englishman nor other personne sell
-anye Englyshe hornes unwrought to any straunger or cause them to be
-sente over the sea, so that the sayd horners will buy the sayd hornes at
-lyke pryc as they be at the tyme of the making of this acte, uppon payne
-of forfayture of all suche hornes so bought, sold, or sent. And that the
-Wardeins of the sayd mistery for the tyme beyng by the sayd authority
-shall have full power to serch all manner ware perteyning to their
-mistery wrought or to be wrought in all places within the sayd citye of
-London, and xxiii miles on every syde next adioyning to the same citye,
-and within the Feyres of Sturbrydge and Ely in whose handes they may be
-founde, and if they by theyr serch fynd any suche ware or stuffe in any
-place within the sayd citye of London and xxiii miles next adioyning to
-the same citye or within the Feyres of Sturbrydge and Elye, in whose
-handes soever they be to sell, that is defective & insuffycient. It
-shall be lawful to them to take the same ware and stuffe, and bring it
-before the Mayre of the same citye of London, the mayre & bayliffes of
-the foresayd Feyres for the tyme beynge, and the same there beyng proved
-defective to be forfayt: the one halfe thereof to oure Soveraigne lord
-the king, and the other halfe to the sayd wardens, to be ordred at their
-pleasure. Provyded alwayes that after that me of the sayd occupacion
-within this land have taken out & chosen such as many hornes as shal bee
-nedefull to theyr occupacions: that then it shal be lawfull to them all
-and every of them and other persons of this realme of Englande, to sel
-and deliver al the hornes refused, which be not able to be occupyed in
-theyr mistery to any straunger or other persons to send or cary beyond
-the sea or elles where, as shal please them.”
-
-[Sidenote: Bottlemakers absorbed by Horners in 1477.]
-
-This Act of Parliament must have proved of great benefit to the Horners;
-but with it came greater demands from the Company on the part of the
-King and the City. The frugal minds of the Craft rulers at once saw the
-advantage of paying one set of assessments instead of two, and asked
-that in future the Horners and Bottlemakers might be treated as one
-Company, and not be called upon to pay the shares of two separate
-Companies. Thus the prosperity of the Horners, coupled with the
-increasing demands for money made on the City Gilds, led to the union of
-the Horners and Bottlemakers just twelve years after the passing of the
-Horners’ Act, _i.e._, in 1477 (sixteenth year of Edward IV), facts
-indicating in no uncertain way that the Horners must have been very
-firmly established and legally constituted at the time, both in order to
-make the assessments possible as well as to give them the right to
-absorb the Bottlemakers.
-
-[Sidenote: Deeds of Agreement.]
-
-[Sidenote: Deed of 1590.]
-
-[Sidenote: Deed of 1599.]
-
-In the reign of Elizabeth we find the Horners’ Company carrying on its
-work as a Joint Stock Company. The stock being held in shares or
-half-shares, it therefore became necessary to place the Wardens, who
-alone had under the Act just mentioned, power to purchase horns, under
-some agreement to do so only for and on behalf of the members of the
-Gild. No doubt many such deeds were executed, but amongst the archives
-of the Company there are still two extant, the one dated 1590 and the
-other 1599. The parties to the deed are the Wardens and the rest of the
-members. The Wardens therein bind themselves to buy, and the other
-members not to buy, horns in London or twenty-four miles round. The
-horns bought by the Wardens are to be purchased for the use of the whole
-Company and to be divided equally between them by the Wardens. In the
-deed of 1599 the limit within which the purchase and sale of horns was
-prohibited was altered from twenty-four to one hundred miles “next in
-and about the City of London.”
-
-[Sidenote: Horn industry an English secret.]
-
-From a document in the possession of the Company it would appear that
-the horn industry was, during the fifteenth century at least, an English
-monopoly, and from the official documents of Germany, Holland and France
-the writer has been unable to discover a single record of such an
-industry existing before 1600. The following interesting sentence from a
-document which is dated 1455 (thirty-third year of Henry VI),
-illustrates the contention:—
-
-“Inasmuch as the making of Hornes and other workes perteyning unto the
-said mystery be not perfectly had nor knowne in any region or place of
-the world, except in this land only: which causeth the people of other
-lands & places to resort & repaire unto this Citie for Hornes yeerly,
-unto the great proffitt & worship of the same Citie, whereas if such
-people of strange lands might cleerly & perfectly understand the cunning
-& feat of making of such English Hornes, would not heder repaire yeerly
-to buy such English chaffer,” etc.
-
-Consequently, the Wardens were expressly authorized the same year by the
-Mayor and Aldermen to punish any who should reveal the secret of the
-Craft to any stranger.
-
-[Sidenote: Exportation of Horns.]
-
-So valuable a trade, however, could not remain long unknown to the
-Continental nations, who were, in other respects, far in advance of
-England, and consequently the demand for English horns on the Continent
-became so great that, in spite of the Act forbidding the export of
-horns, the members of the Gild seem to have done a considerable trade in
-exporting horns, on the excuse that they were refuse horns. Indeed, so
-profitable did they find this traffic that, about 1590, two City men,
-the one a merchant and the other a scrivenour, entered into competition
-with them and managed to secure from Queen Elizabeth,—no doubt for a
-substantial payment,—permission to export horns to the Continent, though
-not themselves members of the Horners’ Company.
-
-[Sidenote: Competition by Furner and Crayford.]
-
-The controversy which this occasioned between the Horners and their
-opponents, Symon Furner and John Crayford, is to be found amongst the
-records in the Manuscript Department of the British Museum.
-
-Lord Burleigh attempted to bring about a compromise, and instructed a
-Mr. Carmarthen to endeavour to arrive at some arrangement between the
-contending parties, but in vain. The issue at stake was a vital one. The
-Horners claimed exclusive privileges under some Charter which they were
-evidently able to produce, accorded them by one of the Kings of England,
-whilst Messrs. Furner and Crayford argued their privileges under the
-“letters patent” granted by the Queen.
-
-It would seem that the wealth and influences behind the private
-adventurers were stronger than those of the Company, which was already
-beginning to feel the pressure of competition from the Pouchmakers and
-Leathersellers, who dealt in the same kinds of wares, as well as from
-the introduction of glass vessels, etc., which took place in the
-sixteenth century.
-
-[Sidenote: Withdrawal from public life.]
-
-From the year 1455 onwards, the Horners seem to have fallen into the
-background and to have disappeared from the arena of public life. This
-is not altogether to be wondered at, for, towards the end of the
-fifteenth century, and for nearly 200 years after, City Crafts or
-Mysteries were the object of predatory attacks of so deadly a character,
-that though in 1455 we find forty-eight Crafts openly representing the
-City, in 1575 only twenty-eight Companies were to be found on whom the
-assessment for wheat could be placed. What the remaining Mysteries did
-is difficult to say, but no doubt they attempted to carry on their work
-unnoticed, either urging prescriptive rights, or claiming none, in order
-to avoid spoliation.
-
-[Sidenote: Horners forced to re-appear.]
-
-The once important trade, but now the “little craft of Horners” was
-evidently in this category, and had it not been for the necessity of
-fighting for very existence, when the export of horns was making their
-trade impossible by the increase in price of the raw material, they
-doubtless would have preferred to keep in the background, even at the
-end of Queen Elizabeth’s reign. This contention would seem the more
-reasonable from the fact that had not the previous Charters or Royal
-grants to the Horners’ Company been of very ancient date, and,
-consequently, almost forgotten, and had that Craft not been, as it were,
-keeping from the glare of public observation in order to avoid the cost
-of “Inspeximus’s,” it is unlikely that the advisers of Queen Elizabeth
-would have laid her open to the controversy which the grant of letters
-patent to Furner and Crayford was bound to produce.
-
-[Sidenote: 1604. Repeal of Horners’ Act.]
-
-[Sidenote: Petition to Parliament, 1610, and revival of Horners’ Act.]
-
-It must have been a great blow to the Company when, in the first year of
-the reign of James I, an Act (c. 25) was passed which repealed the
-Statute of 4 Edward IV; but in the seventh year of that King’s reign the
-Horners presented their petition to Parliament, stating, “that by reason
-of the repeal of the prohibition, the Company had grown so poor and
-decayed, as in a short time, if remedy be not provided, they and theirs
-shall be utterly undone;” and the Act is thereby revived except as to
-the powers of search in Stourbridge and Ely fairs, and a limitation of
-the price of horns thereby secured. A penalty was imposed of double the
-value of English horns sold unwrought to any stranger or sent over the
-sea; one moiety of the penalty to go to the informer and one moiety to
-the King.
-
-[Sidenote: 1627. Letters patent from the King.]
-
-Notwithstanding this Statute, the exportation of horns still continued,
-and Letters Patent were granted by King Charles I, in the third year of
-his reign, 1627, again prohibiting the exportation of horns until the
-Company should first have made choice of the best and most convenient
-number of the horns to supply the necessary occasions of the realm.
-
-In spite of the protection afforded by these Acts and Letters Patent,
-the exportation of horns continued.
-
-[Sidenote: Evil days.]
-
-[Sidenote: 1635. New Orders allowed.]
-
-These were evil days for the Horners’ Craft, and it would appear that
-the Horners themselves were not entirely guiltless in the matter.
-Consequently, in 1635, to stem the tide of ill-fortune which seemed to
-have set in, the Company approached the Mayor and Aldermen to give them
-fresh rules “for the reformation of the Crafte.” The following rules
-were allowed and confirmed by the then Lord Mayor, Christopher
-Clitherow:—
-
- 1. Horns to be bought for the General good.
-
- 2. None to buy Horns within 20 miles of London.
-
- 3. Everyone to pay for his share as the Wardens shall think fit.
-
- 4. None to keep above one apprentice, except he hath been a partner
- or sharer with the said Company seven years at least, in which
- case he may keep two apprentices.
-
- 5. Apprentices shall be bound.
-
- 6. No one to be set to work at the trade unless he have served
- seven years.
-
- 7. Every journeyman to serve two years after having been made “free
- of the Company.”
-
- 8. None to enter for their shares until called by the Wardens.
-
- 9. Anyone elected a Warden must serve the office or pay a fine
- of 20 shillings.
-
- 10. None shall sue or arrest another without permission from the
- Wardens.
-
- 11. The Wardens may commit offenders to prison with the consent of
- the Mayor.
-
-For two years the Company exercised their powers under these new rules,
-but still harder times were in store for the Company.
-
-[Sidenote: Further troubles.]
-
-Whether as the result of an information laid by some member who was
-suffering under these stringent regulations, or, as would appear most
-probable, the King’s growing need of money to carry on the coming
-political struggle between himself and his people, the Horners were
-suddenly discovered to be acting illegally. Under the powers conferred
-by the Act of 19 Henry VII, which was no doubt revived for the purpose,
-no Master, Wardens, or Companies could make any acts or ordinances
-except such as should be approved by the Chancellor and Treasurer of
-England or Chief Justice of either Bench, or three of them.
-
-[Sidenote: The Legal Plight of the Company.]
-
-Though doubtless this Act was never intended to apply to alterations or
-additions to regulations already in force, but rather to the
-establishment of new Companies, it became necessary for the Horners to
-comply with the regulations, and though it does not transpire whether
-they were compelled to pay any fines or not, they finally obtained
-confirmation of their new rules under the hands of Thomas Coventrie,
-Lord Chancellor, and Chief Justices John Branston and John Finch, but
-not until after they applied for and obtained a Royal Charter, and as
-Charles I, in order to assert Sovereign rights, was unwilling to admit
-ancient prescriptive claims, care was taken to justify this subversion
-of the ancient rights of the Gild, by stating in the Charter that the
-Horners had never been “incorporated.”
-
-[Sidenote: Grave peril.]
-
-[Sidenote: Difficulty evaded by purchase of new Charter.]
-
-The examination of the New Rules by the Judges just mentioned, had
-revealed the fact that the Horners were a Joint Stock Company holding
-property in perpetuity in opposition to the Statute of Mortmain. Here
-was a splendid opportunity for the King to reap a harvest, and nothing
-remained for the authorities of the Company but to obtain a Charter as
-soon as possible and to avoid the heavy penalties to which they would
-otherwise be subjected by assenting to the legal fiction that they had
-not acted as a corporation, and never had been one, but merely an
-association in existence from year to year, acting under ancient and
-well-recognized privileges. Whether this claim was technically correct
-or not, the antiquity of the Company was so great and the process of
-proving any breach so lengthy and difficult that no doubt Charles I
-thought it best to take the cash payment which always accompanied grants
-and so close the matter. Thus the Charter of 1638, which is the only one
-now extant, was obtained, and the proceedings of the Company as a joint
-stock concern holding property in perpetuity were again legalized,
-though doubtless long before that time the right to hold property and to
-do all that was required of them as a Craft Gild had been regularly
-accorded to the members in the persons of their several “Guardians.”
-
-[Sidenote: Charters of little value in determining dates of origin.]
-
-Like many other City Companies, the Horners have been accustomed to
-believe that this Charter, which in its preamble for obvious reasons
-takes for granted no previous Charter, was the first and only legal
-instrument authorizing them to carry on their work as a Gild. Very
-little reliance, however, is to be placed on the statements of the
-Charters of this period, which were often little more than a temporary
-instrument of protection against further encroachments on their
-resources and powers by the ruling monarch. For this very uncertain
-privilege large sums had to be paid, sums wrung again and again from the
-unfortunate City Gilds by threats of suppression.
-
-It is mere than probable that at all times Charters were freely
-purchasable by those who could afford to pay for them, and, having
-served their particular purpose, were as easily lost or mislaid. For all
-practical purposes, however, until the sixteenth century at least, they
-offer no indication whatever of the antiquity of any Company, even where
-they seem to state in the preamble that there has been no previous
-Charter, a statement which should be taken only to indicate that the
-Sovereign granting the Charter wishes it to be supposed that he, and he
-alone, is the person to whom the Company is indebted for its privileges,
-privileges which often existed only in name. In many cases the Charters
-were really encroachments by the State on the ancient privileges which
-had been inherited from the earliest times, and which were supported by
-Municipal law, against which State law waged continuous warfare.
-
-[Sidenote: Previous Incorporations.]
-
-It is widely held by students who are not satisfied to be merely
-superficial that in very early days aggregate bodies were deemed to have
-perpetual succession without being “incorporated.” When the King granted
-to a set of men to be a mercantile community, assembly, or meeting, this
-was considered sufficient to incorporate them. As illustrating this
-virtual “incorporation” we may note the words of the eminent jurist, Dr.
-Williams, in his “Law of the Universities,” published only last year. He
-says:—“A corporation, the creature of the Crown, may exist by Charter or
-‘prescription,’ which presumes a Charter, even in cases where historical
-evidence makes it morally certain that no Charters ever existed.”
-Consequently, in the Charters of Edward III (which meant little and were
-but a receipt for moneys loaned or given), there is no provision for a
-common seal, liberty to accept or buy land, or to sue and be sued, etc.,
-all these being naturally taken for granted in the case of Gilds or
-similar organizations then existing. It is no doubt true that in the
-reign of Edward III Craft Gilds were generally chartered, _i.e._, had
-their privileges _confirmed_ by Letters Patent; yet, in still earlier
-days, as well as after the death of Edward III, it would seem that these
-bodies exercised their functions under special protection or on
-suffrance, probably always in return for their “fermes” or annual
-payment to the King.
-
-[Sidenote: Horners never an adulterine Gild.]
-
-If further illustration were required, to demonstrate how great is the
-right of the Horners’ Company to rank amongst the earliest of the
-acknowledged Trade Gilds, that proof is to be found in the study of what
-are known as “Adulterine” Gilds. These were unwarranted or unlicensed
-Gilds, and from time to time were heavily fined. There is no mention,
-however, of the Horners having been among such Gilds thus swooped down
-upon by the King, though lists are given of those who were mulcted from
-the twelfth century. The Horners could not have escaped had they been
-unwarranted at the time, and must, therefore, have possessed
-indisputable rights.
-
-Reference has been made to Richard Baroun and William Karlile.
-
-[Sidenote: Royal Grants must have existed.]
-
-Richard Baroun, we read, was one “whom the King retained to serve him
-with Horns & other things pertaining to his Mistery, & to whom was
-granted the King’s livery of clothing every year, in the great wardrobe,
-as other Horners of his condition had been wont to receive.” Thus
-William Karlile was a man of considerable importance in his own time,
-and a man of great wealth. To suppose that so important a Craft Gild,
-under the patronage of such influential persons, would neglect to arm
-itself with every possible weapon of defence, such as Grants and
-Charters, is to suppose the impossible, and, indeed, in the year 1455,
-towards the end of the reign of Henry VI, on petitioning to have further
-powers of administration conferred upon it, this Gild is expressly
-mentioned as having been already “enfranchised in the City of London,” a
-proceeding which could not possibly have been accomplished without
-something in the nature of a Royal grant. It would seem that owing to
-the very great antiquity of the Horners’ Company it held certain
-prescriptive privileges originally obtained by it or its “Guardianus” in
-exchange for certain goods from time to time supplied to the Royal
-household, and on this point further light may still be thrown. One such
-instance has come to light. Either the Company or the Guardianus in his
-official capacity as Horner to the King, would provide the Horn Comb
-used at the Coronation of every Sovereign until the time of Charles II.
-We have evidence that amongst the Coronation relics connected with
-Charles I which were sold, was a “Horn Comb.” This, in accordance with
-the practice even now in vogue at the Consecration of Roman Catholic
-Bishops, was used ceremonially after anointing the King’s head with oil.
-
-[Sidenote: Proof of earlier Charter.]
-
-As a culminating proof that the Caroline Charter was not the first and
-only Royal grant held by the Horners’ Company, we have but to turn to
-the Correspondence recently found in the British Museum, and it will at
-once become evident that the Horners were possessed of a Charter long
-before 1638. Mr. Carmarthen, writing to Lord Burghley in 1597, says:
-
-“The question resteth upon one word cheefly in thyr Charter,” etc., or,
-again, “By the king’s grant in theyre Charter,” etc. This may allude to
-a Charter granted by Edward IV, or, as seems probable, that in reality
-the “Cornuarii” were well established as a legalized Gild certainly not
-later than Richard II, and, in all probability, owned Charters of a much
-earlier date, which would be in the nature of special grants to the
-Guardian of the Gild, held by him, and would therefore at a later period
-not necessarily be in the possession of the Company. Moreover, on 30th
-of March, 1815, the Clerk of the Company stated, as appears by an entry
-in the Minute Book, that he had opened and examined the chest containing
-the documents relating to the Company, and he found that it contained
-... “also the original Charters granted for establishing the Company,”
-etc. Had there been but one, it is improbable that the word would have
-been used in the plural.
-
-Thus it will be seen that the Charter of 1638 is but an instrument
-reiterating and once more legalizing the acts which had been in vogue
-amongst the Horners for a very considerable time.
-
-[Sidenote: 1638. Charter of Charles I.]
-
-The Charter of Charles I provides that the Horners, Freemen of the City
-of London and Westminster and liberties and suburbs of the same, are
-incorporated by the name of “Master, Wardens, Assistants, and Fellowship
-of the Mistery of Horners of the City of London,” with power to purchase
-and hold freehold and leasehold estates of every kind and all manner of
-goods and chattels, and to grant, alien and dispose of the same, and by
-the same name to plead and be impleaded, and to have a Common Seal.
-
-One of the said Fellowship is to be chosen the Master, two to be chosen
-Wardens, and ten or more of the Fellowship, Assistants. The Master,
-Wardens and Assistants, or the greater part of them, whereof the Master
-and one of the Wardens are always to be two, have power to make and
-alter, amend or make new, “reasonable laws and constitutions touching
-the Trade, Art, or Mistery, and for punishment and reformation of
-abuses, wrongful practices and misdemeaners, and for defraying the
-charges of maintaining and continuing the Corporation, and after what
-order they shall demean themselves in their office mistery and work.”
-And to impose such fines, amerciaments, or other lawful punishments upon
-all offenders as shall seem necessary; such fines, etc., to be raised
-for their own uses.
-
-Robert Baker was appointed the first Master to continue in office until
-the 2nd February, 1638, and until another person was elected in his
-place. Christopher Peele and Thomas White were appointed first Wardens
-under the new rules and Charter. Ten brethren were appointed the first
-Assistants during their lives or good behaviour, and the Master and
-Wardens were upon retirement from their offices, to be assistants in the
-same manner. The Master and Wardens were to take oaths before the Master
-in Chancery to “well and truly execute their offices” before entering
-upon the same.
-
-Power is given to the Master, Wardens, Assistants, and Fellowship to
-meet in their Common Hall or other convenient place upon the 2nd of
-February, if it be not Sunday, and if it be Sunday, then upon the next
-day after, to elect a Master and Two Wardens for the ensuing year; and
-they are to take their oaths of office before the late Master and
-Wardens, or two of them; and like power of election is given until the
-next 2nd of February in case of the death or removal for misbehaviour of
-any Master or Warden during his term of office, and also in like manner
-to elect an Assistant on the death or removal of any of the Assistants
-appointed by the Charter.
-
-Power is given of oversight, rule and search of all persons occupying,
-importing, exporting, or using the art or mistery of Horners within the
-cities of London and Westminster, and the liberties and precincts
-thereof, and of all manner of wares thereunto appertaining, to the
-intent that all delinquents may be discovered and punished. They may
-purchase for ever one house for a Hall not exceeding the yearly value of
-£40.
-
-They are to elect one honest and discreet person as Clerk, and also
-appoint a Beadle.
-
-[Sidenote: Exercise of Rights, 1689.]
-
-[Sidenote: Buying Horns, 1739.]
-
-The control continuously exercised by the Company over the trade, and
-finally secured to them in the Charter just mentioned, has never been
-abandoned, though at any rate for the present it is not exercised. In
-the first year of William III (1689) the Horners’ Company successfully
-prosecuted a Comb maker for pressing horns, he not being a “Horner.”
-Maitland, who published his work in 1739, tells us that the Company “had
-of late appointed diverse of their members to attend the market of
-Leadenhall & those of the neighbouring counties for the buying of horns”
-to be sent to their common warehouse in Wentworth Street, Spitalfields,
-where they were made up into lots and divided amongst the several
-members, not omitting the widows and orphans, who also received their
-several shares.
-
-[Sidenote: Last legal claim, 1745.]
-
-[Sidenote: Ceases as a trading body.]
-
-The last occasion on which the Court exercised its rights against
-persons infringing its monopoly was in the year 1745. Having ascertained
-that certain persons not free of the Company had bought rough horns and
-pressed them into lantern leaves, and were disposing of them within the
-City of London and twenty-four miles distant, proceedings were ordered
-to be taken against them, and, as a result, the Company successfully
-established its right to the monopoly in the manufacture of horn work in
-the City of London and twenty-four miles round. From that time forward
-the trade in horn declined, and during the second half of the eighteenth
-century, the Company finally ceased to be a trading community. Thus
-ended the operative existence of a Craft Gild which from “time out of
-mind” until the present moment has had a useful and honourable career.
-The Horners’ Company has been practically contemporaneous with the
-history of England, and is, it may be believed, still destined to serve
-many a useful purpose.
-
-[Sidenote: Property.]
-
-In spite of legal incorporation the property of the Company has, from
-time to time, been vested in certain trustees, the last trust deed being
-dated 1756.
-
-[Sidenote: Minutes.]
-
-[Sidenote: Annual Dinner.]
-
-The earliest Minute Book in the possession of the Company covers the
-period 1731 to 1796, and is extremely interesting as showing the care
-taken in the apprenticing of novices to the trade, in the appointment of
-its officers, and, perhaps most of all, in the unbroken continuity of
-the annual dinner held generally at some place outside the City, which
-though, at the time, partaken of only by the members of the Court,
-represented the annual feast of the mediæval Gilds, and finds its
-successor to-day in the Livery Dinner, which has become almost a matter
-of civic importance.
-
-This ancient practice has long been associated with Trade Gilds,
-certainly as far back as 700 B.C. We may believe that the _deipnon_ or
-feast of the _hetairoi_, or Greek Trade Gilds, must have had a long
-history before the time when such distinguished members as Lysymachus,
-son of Milesias, and the son of Thucydides, joined in them.
-
-[Sidenote: Favourite Inns.]
-
-During the eighteenth and first part of the nineteenth century the
-favourite inns selected for the annual dinner seem to have been the
-“Crown and Sceptre” at Greenwich, the “Plough,” or “Folly House,”
-Blackwall, the “Star and Garter,” Richmond, and, in much later days, the
-“North and South American Coffee House,” which latter, however, was
-probably used more for the ordinary meetings of the Company than for the
-annual dinner.
-
-[Sidenote: Aldgate the Horners’ Home.]
-
-It is a little difficult to define the area in which the Horners of
-London were originally located, but it may be somewhat vaguely described
-as the district of Aldgate. Many were the streets and alleys to which
-Horners have given a name, and one well-known Horn Alley was, until a
-comparatively late date, to be found on the East side of Bishopsgate
-Street, and in Korneman’s book on “Old Street Signs and Tablets” is an
-allusion to one with the following inscription:—“This is Horn Alley,
-1670.” In Stow’s “Survey of London,” 1633, the following passage
-occurs:—“I read in the 26th of Henry VI (1447), that in the parish of
-St. Dunstan’s in the East a tenement called Horners Key was granted to
-William Harrington, Esq.” Doubtless this alludes to a building used by
-the Horners for the purposes of their trade, at a time when all was
-_couleur de rose_ with them, and it is extremely likely that upon
-further investigation this William Harrington will be found to be the
-Guardianus or Alderman of the Gild.
-
-[Sidenote: The warehouses of the Gild.]
-
-Time, however, brought its changes, and when, in 1603-4, the Horners’
-Act was repealed, it would seem likely that they found it either
-impossible to continue to pay the rent, or, realising that disaster
-awaited them, may have sold the property, if it were theirs to sell. It
-is, however, certain that in 1604 the Company leased a house with
-storehouses and sheds in Wentworth Street, Whitechapel, for the term of
-1,000 years at a ground rent of £4. When, in 1789, these premises were
-no longer required for the use of the trade, which had declined, they
-were let for £30 a year, and in 1879 were sold to the Metropolitan Board
-of Works and the money invested on behalf of the Horners’ Company.
-
-[Sidenote: Was there a Horners’ Hall?]
-
-It has been stated that the Horners’ Company never had a Hall. It is
-difficult to see quite why this statement has been made, for there is
-much to make the student of Gild lore think otherwise. The Charter of
-1638 expressly provides for one, and, as in every other respect, it
-simply imposes the absolute conditions then existing, there would seem
-no reason to doubt that the sum of £40 per annum therein mentioned was
-the exact value of the property then held. The Bottlemakers would not
-have joined the Horners had the latter Company not had a hall or meeting
-place.
-
-As with other Craft Gilds, the Fire of London probably proved very
-disastrous to the Company, and, no doubt, very little was saved.
-
-The fact that there are hardly any deeds of importance anterior to 1666,
-that the Old Book of the Company, which has recently been recovered,
-after wandering so long, ceases to have an entry after 1636, together
-with the fact that the two or three early deeds which ante-date the Fire
-of London are in a deplorable condition, as well as the fact that the
-Company owned a considerable amount of silver plate, which was sold in
-1789, makes it not improbable that the Horners, like every other City
-Gild, had its regular Hall or meeting place.
-
-[Sidenote: Arms.]
-
-The coat of arms of the Company is Ar. on a Chevron sa., three bugles of
-the first between three leather bottles of the second.
-
-[Sidenote: Destruction of Gild monopolies.]
-
-In 1835 the Municipal Corporations Act gave the _coup de grâce_ to any
-remnants of monopoly exercised by the extant City Gilds. That Act gave
-liberty to all either to buy or sell, and, by so doing, compelled most
-of the City Companies, _nolens volens_, to seek for a sphere of
-usefulness in other directions.
-
-[Sidenote: 1837. Revived importance.]
-
-Though, as a trading Gild, the Horners’ Company declined, it has
-steadily risen in reputation as one of the ancient mysteries of the City
-of London, and, in 1837, the Commissioners on Municipal Corporations
-classed it as fifty-fourth out of eighty-nine Companies there
-enumerated. In 1846 the Company petitioned the Court of Aldermen for a
-livery which was granted them, the number of liverymen being limited to
-sixty.
-
-[Sidenote: 1882. Exhibition of Horn work.]
-
-In 1882 the Court of the Horners’ Company organized an exhibition of
-Hornwork, both ancient and modern, which was held by the kindness of the
-then Lord Mayor, Sir Henry Knight, at the Mansion House. By a strange
-coincidence, and without any premeditation on the part either of the
-Lord Mayor or the Company, it was held on October the 18th, St. Luke’s
-Day, which was the day on which the annual Horn Fair at Charlton took
-place. The exhibition of Horns and Hornwork far exceeded, both as
-regards quantity and quality, the most sanguine expectations of the
-promoters. So great was the interest shown by the public that it became
-necessary to keep it open for an extra day, and, during the four days of
-the exhibition, it was visited by no fewer than 7,000 persons. Amongst
-the exhibitors was Her Most Gracious Majesty the late Queen Victoria,
-who sent some interesting specimens from her treasures at Windsor
-Castle. In acknowledgment, of Her Majesty’s kind consideration, and by
-her gracious permission, the Company presented to Her Majesty a print of
-the descriptive catalogue and the account of the Company mentioned in
-the preface, bound in horn leaves, ornamented with a beautiful design
-from the South Kensington School of Art, selected after competition by
-the scholars. It is now in the King’s private suite of rooms at Windsor
-Castle.
-
-[Sidenote: 1900. Royal Casket.]
-
-In the course of the year 1900, at the instance of Mr. A. W. Timbrell,
-C.C., it was decided to present Queen Victoria with a horn casket in
-order to fittingly commemorate the new century. On being approached upon
-the subject, Her Majesty graciously accepted the offer. Before, however,
-the presentation could be made, her lamented death occurred. It was then
-decided to present the casket to King Edward, and on March 28th, 1901,
-the late King’s Secretary wrote to the Clerk of the Company expressing
-His Majesty’s pleasure in accepting the proposed gift.
-
-The casket was made of selected specimens of the finest British bullock
-horn, mounted with massive silver and gilt straps, and ornaments of the
-Early English style of chasing. It is supported upon four pierced feet,
-the whole resting upon an ebony plinth, upon which is a silver plate
-bearing the names of the Master, the Wardens, and the Clerk. The whole
-enclosed in a handsome morocco case, forms one of the finest specimens
-of the Horner’s art. Sir Francis Knollys, in acknowledging the
-presentation, stated that he was commanded by the King to renew the
-expressions of His Majesty’s thanks to the Worshipful Company of Horners
-for the casket which they had presented to him, and that His Majesty
-admired it greatly and considered that it would form a great addition to
-the Horn Room at Osborne.
-
-[Sidenote: Another Royal Casket.]
-
-A similar casket, slightly different in design, was presented to His
-Majesty King George V on the occasion of his Coronation, and this, like
-the one presented to his revered father, has been designed and carried
-out by Mr. Deputy Millar Wilkinson, of Cornhill, the present Father of
-the Court.
-
-[Illustration: Casket presented to King George V]
-
-It was constructed in the form of a cigar box, mounted with finely
-worked silver-gilt applied strap work, chased with lions’ heads and
-dolphins, chased end handles; on the front is a circular plaque
-representing the arms of the Horners’ Company. The casket is surmounted
-by a figure of St. George and the Dragon, the whole resting upon an
-ebony plinth, upon which is a silver-gilt plate bearing the names of the
-Master, the Wardens, and the Clerk. Enclosed in a handsome red morocco
-case, it forms a beautiful and unique specimen of the Horners’ art.
-
-The deputation which made the presentation was headed by the Worshipful
-Master, who, in the course of his address to His Majesty, said:—
-
-“The Horners’ Company, which is one of the most ancient of the City
-Guilds, in tendering the casket, desire to assure Your Majesty of their
-loyalty to Your Throne and Person, and convey their respectful wishes
-for a long and prosperous reign.”
-
-The King, in receiving the casket, remarked that it was a very beautiful
-piece of workmanship, and that he would value it the more inasmuch as it
-was presented to him during his Coronation year.
-
-[Sidenote: Further increase in Livery.]
-
-In consequence of the continued prosperity of the Horners’ Company, due
-to many causes, doubtless, at a time when little life was being evinced,
-to the work of Mr. James Curtis, but especially in the present activity
-of its esteemed Clerk, Mr. Howard Deighton, it was found necessary in
-1905 to apply again to the Court of Aldermen for an increase in the
-livery to the number of 100, which was granted subject to the livery
-fine being increased to £30.
-
- _Sic floreant Cornuarii!_
-
-[Illustration: colophon]
-
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-
-Italicized phrases are presented by surrounding the text with
-_underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Short History of the Worshipful
-Company of Horners, by H. G. Rosedale
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Short History of the Worshipful Company
-of Horners, by H. G. Rosedale
-
-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
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-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: A Short History of the Worshipful Company of Horners
-
-Author: H. G. Rosedale
-
-Release Date: December 28, 2016 [EBook #53820]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SHORT HISTORY--COMPANY OF HORNERS ***
-
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-
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c000'><b><span class='large'>A SHORT HISTORY</span></b> <br /> <br /> <b><span class='small'>OF</span></b> <br /> <br /> <b><span class='xlarge'>The Worshipful</span></b> <br /> <b><span class='xlarge'>Company of Horners</span></b></h1>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c001' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><b>Price Five Shillings net.</b></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c002' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><b><span class='small'>London:</span></b></div>
- <div><b><span class='small'>BLADES, EAST &amp; BLADES, <span class='sc'>23, Abchurch Lane, E.C.</span></span></b></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c004' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><b><span class='small'><span class='sc'>January, 1912.</span></span></b></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'>The Worshipful Company of Horners.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c007'>
- <div><b>Master:</b></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>CHARLES EVES, Esq., Capel House, 62, New Broad Street, E.C.</div>
- <div class='c007'><b>Upper Warden:</b></div>
- <div class='c008'>W. B. CRANFIELD, Esq., 6, Poultry, E.C.</div>
- <div class='c007'><b>Renter Warden:</b></div>
- <div class='c008'>Capt. L. G. MARCUS, C.C., 65, London Wall, E.C.</div>
- <div class='c007'>Court of Assistants:</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<ul class='index'>
- <li class='c009'>*Mr. Deputy MILLAR WILKINSON, Seatonross, Christchurch Park, Sutton, Surrey.</li>
- <li class='c009'>Sir DAVID STEWART, Banchory House, Aberdeen.</li>
- <li class='c009'>*W. SPENCER CHAPMAN, Esq., The Cottage, Warminster, Wilts.</li>
- <li class='c009'>*A. W. TIMBRELL, Esq., C.C., 44, King William Street, E.C.</li>
- <li class='c009'>*Dr. W. J. HILL, 25, Craven Street, Strand, W.C.</li>
- <li class='c009'>*H. BURT, Esq., J.P., Parkfield, Potters Bar.</li>
- <li class='c009'>*Col. Sir J. ROPER PARKINGTON, J.P., D.L., 58, Green Street, Park Lane, W.</li>
- <li class='c009'>*W. PHENE NEAL, Esq., C.C., 62, London Wall, E.C.</li>
- <li class='c009'>*P. H. P. WIPPELL, Esq., LL.M., B.A., 4, Paper Buildings, Temple, E.C.</li>
- <li class='c009'>*J. DIX LEWIS, Esq., J.P., 85, Gresham Street, E.C.</li>
- <li class='c009'>*Rev. C. C. HOYLE, M.A., New Westminster, Canada.</li>
- <li class='c009'>CECIL HARTRIDGE, Esq., 17, Old Broad Street, E.C.</li>
- <li class='c009'>*H. S. FOSTER. Esq., J.P., Grosvenor Mansions, 82, Victoria Street, Westminster, S.W.</li>
- <li class='c009'>*J. T. EDMONDS, Esq., 19, Great Winchester Street, E.C.</li>
- <li class='c009'>W. R. TAYLOR CARR, Esq., 108a, Cannon Street, E.C.</li>
- <li class='c009'>A. GOODINCH WILLIAMS, Esq., Union Place, Stonehouse, Plymouth.</li>
- <li class='c009'>Major CHARLES WALLINGTON, V.D., 4, Tokenhouse Buildings, Bank, E.C.</li>
- <li class='c009'>G. R. BLADES, Esq., 23, Abchurch Lane, E.C.</li>
- <li class='c009'>Ald. JAMES ROLL, Adelaide Place, London Bridge, E.C.</li>
- <li class='c009'>Rev. H. G. ROSEDALE, D.D., F.S.A., 7, Gloucester Street, Victoria, S.W.</li>
- <li class='c009'>A. F. BLADES, Esq., 23, Abchurch Lane, E.C.</li>
- <li class='c009'>E. PARNELL, Esq., Devon Lodge, 14, Wickham Road, Brockley, S.E.</li>
- <li class='c009'>Col. and Ald. Sir W. H. DUNN, 11, St. Helen’s Place, Bishopsgate, E.C.</li>
- <li class='c009'>G. R. GLANFIELD, Esq., 58, Canfield Gardens, Hampstead, N.W.</li>
- <li class='c009'>Rev. H. T. CART DE LAFONTAINE, M.A., 49, Albert Court, Kensington Gore, S.W.</li>
- <li class='c009'>JAMES WEBSTER, Esq., 38, Wickham Road, Brockley, S.E.</li>
- <li class='c009'>HUGH T. TAYLOR, Esq., 9, Wood Street, E.C.</li>
- <li class='c009'>HORACE E. BOWLES, Esq., 66, Bishopsgate Street, E.C.</li>
- <li class='c009'>A. H. MICHELL, Esq., 5, Devonshire Place, W.</li>
- <li class='c009'>M. R. SEWILL, Esq., C.C., 2, Porchester Square, Hyde Park, W.</li>
- <li class='c009'>JAMES CURTIS, Esq., 179, Marylebone Road, N.W.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c007'>
- <div><b>Hon. Chaplain:</b></div>
- <div class='c008'>Rev. H. G. ROSEDALE, D.D., F.S.A., 7, Gloucester Street, Victoria, S.W.</div>
- <div class='c007'><b>Clerk and Solicitor:</b></div>
- <div class='c008'>HOWARD DEIGHTON, Esq., C.C., 44, King William Street, E.C.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c002' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>Those marked (*) have served the office of Master.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i004.jpg' alt='shield' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'>PREFACE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'>The discovery of the “Old Book of the
-Worshipful Company of Horners,” which has
-probably been missing for some 250 years, has
-brought added interest to the consideration of what
-is, perhaps, the oldest of the City Gilds.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>In studying the documents and compiling the
-account of that book, recently distributed to the
-members of the Company by the kindness of the
-late Master, Mr. Edmonds, I was drawn to take in
-hand the lengthy and difficult task of reconstructing
-the life history of this interesting Craft Gild. Such
-a work is the product only of years of patient labour,
-but, in the meantime, at the request of the Court, I
-am glad to offer some preliminary details which
-may serve at least to show the age and dignity of
-the Worshipful Company of Horners.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>I have endeavoured, where possible, to incorporate
-passages from the late Mr. Compton’s paper before
-the British Archæological Society, but, owing to
-many discoveries having been made which were not
-at his disposal, I have had to take a different course
-in some respects.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>I wish, however, to state that this short history
-cannot in any sense be considered a complete or even
-sufficient account of the Company, but must hide
-behind the expressed wish of the Court that, in this
-instance, it should be of modest dimensions.</p>
-
-<div class='c012'><span class='sc'>H. G. Rosedale</span>, D.D.</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i008.jpg' alt='Casket presented to King Edward VII' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>
- <h2 class='c005'><b>A SHORT HISTORY OF</b> <br /> <b>THE WORSHIPFUL COMPANY</b> <br /> <b>OF HORNERS.</b></h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Origin of Gilds.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The study of Gilds, their origin and development,
-is amongst the most fascinating of all
-literary pursuits, but though many whose names rank
-high in the world of letters have gone deeply into
-the problems which the subject presents, the early
-days of gild life, at least, in this country, are still
-to some extent shrouded in the mists of speculation.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Whether Craft Gilds came to England from the
-far-off glories of Greece and Rome, whether they
-were the descendants of the early Saxon or Danish
-“blood brotherhoods,” or even derived partly from
-the one and partly from the other, is still a moot
-point.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>There are practically no records of any importance
-of Craft Gilds in this country before the arrival
-of the Normans, though during the time of the
-Roman occupation there must have been many such
-extant. At quite an early period of the Roman
-occupation, we know that the Gild of Smiths, “Collegium
-Fabrorum,” existed in this country.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At a later period it is clear that England was
-covered with a network of Frith Gilds, but whether
-these were Trade Gilds in the accepted sense or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>not has yet to be shown. It seems probable, however,
-that they were Agricultural Gilds enforced
-upon the inhabitants by their Saxon conquerors, and
-that in the more populous neighbourhoods and towns,
-craftsmen and merchants were included under their
-own special “tything” or possibly even had their
-own “hundred”.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Whether this were the case or not, it will be obvious
-to all that in Saxon and Norman England alike,
-wherever several persons were plying the same trade,
-there must have existed some sort of organization
-for mutual protection and for the instruction of
-others. Throughout the known world from the very
-earliest periods, workmen of the different classes have
-always formed their own aggregations and have
-always associated themselves together for mutual
-assistance and protection. The need for something
-of this sort must have been very urgent in days when
-there was less security to life and property, and in
-days when, as we are led to suppose, the Saxon rulers
-felt scant sympathy for the towns where trades would
-be found to exist most extensively.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Antiquity of Gilds in England.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The more we study mediæval life in our own
-country, the more impossible it becomes to imagine
-any regular trade as existing apart from some
-official or semi-official organization, combining one
-or more of the following obligations: Control of
-the workers, education of novices, civil representation
-(generally through some influential patron or head),
-and nearly always carrying out the work of a burial
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>and insurance society. That such a banding together
-of those, whether merchants or craftsmen, interested
-in any particular occupation, must have existed
-during the Saxon period with the object of promoting
-one or more of the objects mentioned, is hardly
-open to doubt. It would be specially in the towns,
-such as London, in which, as Sir Lawrence Gomme
-has pointed out, the Roman ideals of organization
-still persisted, even into Norman times, that Gild life
-or its analogue would be most definitely marked.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Gild, not Guild.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Such Societies, Unions, or Combinations for common
-interests, whether of Trade, Religion, or social
-needs, were called Gilds, the word being derived from
-the Anglo-Saxon <i>Gildan</i> or <i>Gildare</i>, to pay, an allusion
-to the contribution demanded from every member
-towards the common fund.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Antiquity of the Horner’s Craft.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>It may be justly claimed that amongst the earliest
-trades or crafts of this country was that of the
-Horner, who was indispensable to the community,
-inasmuch as he was the purveyor of many articles
-absolutely necessary for domestic purposes. In the
-days, for instance, of Kings Ina and Alfred metals
-of any kind were rare and consequently costly.
-Articles required for eating and drinking, such as
-cups, plates, forks, etc., as well as vessels for the preservation
-of liquids and powders, were made from
-horn, that being the least expensive and the most
-easily attainable material for those who had risen
-above the use of wooden articles for similar purposes.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Laws of Ina.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>That trades did exist throughout the Saxon period
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>is clear, nor should it be doubted that among the
-more important of those trades was that of the
-Horner. Indeed, though little else of a commercial
-character is alluded to in the laws of King Ina
-(A.D. 688-726), those laws lay down the price at
-which horns are to be bought and sold, and thereby
-indicate the importance of the horner to the community.
-“Bovis cornu decem denariis valeat Vaccæ
-cornu duobus denariis valeat.”—No mean price,
-surely, at that early period.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Horn Tenure.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Not only are horns mentioned in the early Norse
-Runic inscriptions (see <i>Deutsches Literatur Zeitung</i>,
-April 2nd, 1910), but there have been, from the earliest
-days, many well-known instances of beautifully
-worked horns used as a method of conveyancing
-property. Ulphus’s Horn, a drinking horn now
-at York, is, perhaps, the best known example. It
-was presented by him to the Church in token of the
-conveyance of his lands to the Church Authorities.
-King Edgar granted privileges to Glastonbury Abbey
-by means of a horn. For a very long period the
-family of Pusey held the village of Pusey by virtue
-of a horn, given to William Picoli by King Canute.
-Edward the Confessor granted the Rangership of
-Bernwode Forest, Bucks, to be held by a horn, while
-Randal de Meschines, third Earl of Chester, conferred
-on Allan Silvestris the Bailywick of the Forest
-of Wirall by delivering to him a horn, which was ever
-after preserved at Hooton. Ingulphus, Abbot of
-Croyland, mentions the horn amongst those things
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>whereby land was conveyed in the Conqueror’s reign.
-This recalls the lines of Wordsworth in the “Horn
-of Egremont Castle.”</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Eustace pointed with his lance</div>
- <div class='line'>“To the horn which there was hanging,</div>
- <div class='line'>“Horn of the Inheritance.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in8'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Who of right claimed the Lordship</div>
- <div class='line'>“By the proof upon the Horn.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Drinking Horns.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Both Pliny and Cæsar allude to the elaborate
-horn cups of their period. Johannis Salisburiensis
-tells us that the Danes used horns as well as the
-Saxons, and Giraldus Cambrensis mentions the Horn
-of St. Patrick.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Sometimes these horns were so skilfully made that
-they could be used both for blowing and drinking;
-<i>vide</i> Chaucer’s “Frank Tale,” l. 2,809: “And
-drinketh of his bugle horn the wine.” Perhaps, however,
-the most interesting and historic horn cup was
-that which Witlaf, King of Mercia, gave to the Abbey
-of Croyland, “cornu mensæ suas ut,” etc.—the horn
-from his own table that the elder monks might drink
-out of it on Festivals and Saints’ Days, and that
-when they gave thanks, they might remember the
-soul of Witlaf the donor. Ingulphus mentions that
-when the Monastery was almost burnt down this horn
-was saved.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Medical Horns.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>From Payne’s “English Medicine in Anglo-Saxon
-Times” we ascertain that during the tenth and
-eleventh centuries, at least, the Horners’ trade was
-called into use by the apothecary. The author relates
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>that in “cupping” operations and the administration
-of clysters, horns were used, indicating a nicety of
-manufacture which must have placed the trade on a
-high level.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Importance in Saxon times.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>To such a pitch of development had the trade
-of a Horner attained at least 250 years before the
-Norman Conquest, that even the patens and chalices
-used at the Church services were made of this substance,
-as may be evidenced from the fact that at the
-Council of Chelsea, held A.D. 789, after careful
-discussion, it was decided that the chalices and patens
-used for ecclesiastical purposes should no longer be
-made of horn, but of metal, no doubt to distinguish
-them from similar articles which had already come
-into general use for common and domestic purposes.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At this time glass was probably almost, if not
-entirely, unknown in England, and, in consequence,
-thin sheets of horn had to be manufactured to serve
-many of the purposes to which glass is now applied.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>These facts, and the general tendency of town life
-in this country, make it practically certain that long
-before the tenth century the Horner’s trade, in common
-with some others, was in full swing, and with
-it that which we may deem inseparable from any
-considerable trade at that time, something in the
-nature of what we now call a Trade or Craft Gild.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Horners’ probably the oldest City Gild.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Both tradition and documentary evidence are
-agreed that the Horners’ Gild dates back to the far
-off ages of antiquity, and we may justly claim that
-its foundation is as early as, if not anterior to, any
-of the existing City Companies.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Old book of the Worshipful Company of Horners.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>Considerable light has been thrown on the vicissitudes
-of the Horners’ Gild by the recent discovery, as
-well as recovery, of the most interesting and ancient
-MSS. book already alluded to. The existence of this
-book, which formerly belonged to the Company, and
-was, in fact, its official record, was brought to the
-notice of the Clerk of the Company by Dr. Warner,
-of the British Museum. After many negotiations
-between Mr. Howard Deighton and the then owners
-of the volume, it was purchased for the sum of £40.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A detailed account of this precious possession has
-been given in the form of a publication entitled
-“Some Notes on the Old Book of the Worshipful
-Company of Horners,” which was distributed to the
-members of the Company and their guests at their
-last Livery Dinner, by the late Master, Mr. J. T.
-Edmonds.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Though records relating to Craft Gilds in the
-eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth centuries are very
-meagre and difficult to discover, the “Old Book of
-the Worshipful Company of Horners” has proved
-extremely useful in helping to build up a consecutive
-history of this extremely early Gild. It demonstrates
-the fact that at least as early as the fourteenth
-century, both Horners and Bottlemakers were taking
-their full share of civic and commercial life.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>The Gild in Saxon days.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Probably, during the Saxon period, the workers in
-horn, in common with other craftsmen, were enrolled
-amongst the members of the Frith Gild and not
-differentiated until the Anglo-Norman period. It
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>might even be admitted that the Horners’ Gild was a
-subdivision of one of the many “Gilds Merchant”
-so prominent as mercantile forces in the eleventh and
-twelfth centuries; but it is more than probable that
-before the end of the eleventh century, so important
-a trade as that of the Horner would have begun to
-assert itself separately and individually, more especially
-as there does not seem to have been any larger
-or more important Gild under which it could have
-found shelter.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Horn Fair, 1268.<br /><br />Horners’ Statutes in 1284.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>We do not know whether the Horners’ Company
-had any connection with “Horn Fair,” which took
-place at Charlton, in Kent, and for which Henry III
-granted a Charter in 1268. Of this fair, Philpot,
-writing in 1639, tells us it was called Horn Fair
-because of “the great plenty of all sorts of winding
-horns, cups and other vessels of horn there bought
-and sold.” We are, however, on sure ground when
-we point to an interesting proof of the great antiquity
-of the Horners’ Company, which comes to us from
-the official letter books of the City of London. In
-Letter Book A, fol. 40, 12th Edward I (September
-8th, 1284), we find that the ancient Gilds are drawing
-up Rules for revision by the authorities, an event
-which, no doubt, took place every few years in early
-times. The entry includes the following:—“The
-same day the said John (Pesemers) received the Statutes
-of the Horners for correction.”</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Notable Horners in 1303.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>In 1303 (31st of Edward I), an incident took place
-which illustrates at once the prominence of Horners
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>at the time and the variety of persons who were
-members of the Gild. The Royal Treasury at Westminster
-had been robbed. Richard of Pudlicote and
-William du Palais were accused. During the Inquisition
-held by the Bishop of London it transpired
-that amongst the friends of this Richard were several
-persons, notably one “Jacobus le Horner et Boten<sup>r</sup>
-manens apud Kandelwickestrate,” whose character is
-described thus:—“It is unknown whether they were
-aware of the felony—tñ male credunt de eis” (<i>i.e.</i>,
-they have a bad name). As a set-off, however, against
-this undesirable person, it is recorded that two other
-Horners, viz., Rogerus le Cornur and Stephanus le
-Cornur succeeded in arresting Robert le Convers,
-another actor in the drama.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Notable Horners in 13th and 14th centuries.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Throughout the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries
-there is frequent mention made of Horners,
-many of whom seem to have been persons of great
-importance. In 1284 we have recorded the name of
-Thomas att or de Corner, and in 1285 Clement le
-Cornur. In 1295, of William le Horner, and others
-are mentioned in the years 1226, 1320, 1342, 1346,
-1352 as doing some official act. This frequent mention
-of Horners to be found in early records does not
-apply to London only, but to other places. For instance,
-Peter le Horner, resident at the Heywarde,
-Cambridge, is mentioned as paying taxes in that town
-in 1314-1315.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>15th century.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>In 1441 (20th of Henry VI), we are told that
-“at the instance of ‘Sympkin horner of London,’
-together with two others, the King directed letters
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>to the Mayor and Bayliffs of Hampton Sandwys,
-asking how Englishmen repairing to ‘Pruce, Hanze
-and Danske’ are treated.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Well might a learned legal luminary, delivering
-judgment in 1692, say:—“A Horner is a particular
-Trade and a very ancient Company in London!”</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Horners take Bottlemakers under their protection.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>In the year 1362 the Horners were in so flourishing
-a state that another Craft Gild, the Bottlemakers,
-who, as we read in the MS. book just referred to,
-dated back, like the Horners, to “time out of mind,”
-found it desirable to place themselves under the
-protection of the Horners’ Company, and, for a period
-of 115 years, remained under its protection, until, in
-the sixteenth year of Edward IV the two Companies
-became amalgamated. The interesting document
-which authorized the fusion of the two Companies is
-to be found in Letter Book L, fol. cxvi, of the City
-of London. It prays that the Company of “Bottell
-Makers,” which had been for some time intimately
-associated with the Horners, be united with it and
-become one and the same Company, and “that from
-hensfurth the saide persones of both the said Crafts
-may be as bretheren and accupie and Joyne together
-as well in all things to be borne and doone within
-the said Cettie. As in observing,” etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The petition to the Mayor and Aldermen was
-granted, and from that day forward the three bottles
-as well as three horns have emblazoned the arms
-of the Horners’ Company.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Important Record.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>In the very ancient and interesting book belonging
-to the Horners’ Company there are two early entries
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>relating to the period during which the two Companies
-were legally separated though in a certain
-close relation to each other. The entries, which are
-identical, are as follows:—“The bottellmakers have
-continued in the Company of the Horners a hundred
-fourscore nine yeres and nine monthes, wrytten the
-last daie of November Anno Dni One Thousand five
-hundred fiftie and seaven.”</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Horners, the 26th City Gild in 1376.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Following upon this remarkable evidence of official
-recognition as a Craft Gild, carrying with it all the
-legal privileges which were later conferred by recorded
-Charters, we find as early as 1376 an entry
-of the fact that the Horners’ Gild was recognized
-as the twenty-sixth out of forty-eight “mysteries
-of the City of London,” and successively sent two of
-its members to the Court of Common Council, not
-only to represent the members of the Gild in the
-election of a Mayor and other officers of the City, but
-also to form a representative body to withstand all
-encroachments on their liberties and those of the
-City generally, which the claims and pretensions of
-Edward III seemed to threaten.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Petition to regularize Proceedings granted 1391.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>This event preceded a time of great commercial
-activity, when many political circumstances compelled
-the City Craft Gilds to legalize themselves by
-obtaining from the Civic authorities (now so considerably
-strengthened by the success of the resistance
-offered to Edward III), a recognition of the
-practices which for a very lengthy period they had
-made use of, in the conduct of their affairs.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Gild Officials and their importance.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>Such an application took place in 1391, during the
-reign of Richard II, on the part of the Horners’
-Company. The petition was mainly concerned with
-the recognition of their right to elect two Wardens
-to preside over the Horners in accordance with the
-ancient practice common amongst other Gilds. At
-this time it would appear that there were no Masters
-elected, but that the position of Master of a Gild
-was filled either by the Alderman of the Ward or
-some other influential and important person, called
-the “Guardian,” who represented the interests of the
-Craft on the Council of the Mayor and Aldermen.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>According to Madox, in his “Firma Burgi,” it
-would appear that a still earlier form was to elect
-an Alderman and two Masters for each Gild. This
-will readily account for the fact that some aldermanries
-were territorial, as in the case of the Knighten
-Gild, whose ruler was Alderman of the Portsoken
-Ward, others were connected with Gilds apart from
-locality, and possibly some were ecclesiastical or
-even commercial. A quaint illustration of this practice
-is found in the Confirmation of a Norwich
-Fraternity by Henry V. The members are authorized
-to elect an Alderman and two Masters, who, when
-the name of Gild was changed to that of Craft
-Mystery, became respectively the Guardian or Alderman
-and Wardens of the Mystery.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The privilege of electing Wardens was always in
-the forefront of every grant, since it was of great
-importance to the Crafts to have this right at a time
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>when constant efforts were made to put in representatives
-and nominees of the monarch, in order to bring
-the Crafts, and, through them, the City of London,
-into subjection.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>William Karlile and Richard Baroun.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is highly probable that in 1391 the deputation
-from the Horners’ Gild on presenting its petition was
-introduced by one Richard Baroun, Horner, of London,
-Alderman of Aldgate, and Master of the Gild
-in 1391. He was not only the Guardianus or Master
-of the Gild, but a person of great importance during
-the reign of Richard II, being Horner to the King.
-His predecessor in the office of Alderman, it is interesting
-to note, was one William Karlile, Master of
-the Bottlemakers’ Gild. This fact will help to explain
-the close relations existing between the two
-Crafts.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Confiscation of Charters and their return in 1397.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>In a newly discovered MS. of great interest which
-is being edited by E. H. Dring, Esq., there appears
-the following passage, A.D. 1397 (? 1398):—“And
-thanne after the presentacion of the said supplication
-(from the Citizens of London to the King) ther were
-made mony blank charteres and all the men of every
-crafte of the said Cite as well as all manne servaunts
-and maisters were charged to come to the Guylde
-halle to sette her seales to the said blank charteres.”
-It must, have been from this MS. that Stow gathered
-much of his information, and this passage was copied
-by Fabian in 1516, Grafton in 1659, and Hollingshead
-in 1577.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>Richard II, furious with the citizens of London for
-assisting the Duke of Arundel, had taken the opportunity
-of a brawl in the City, to humiliate the citizens.
-He confiscated their charters and laid the City under
-a fine of £1,000,000. This was late in 1397, and the
-following Spring (which until March 25th was A.D.
-1397, and after that date A.D. 1398, whence possibly
-the confusion in dates) the City, which, as we have
-seen, would be the Common Council, more especially
-as the King had imprisoned the Mayor and put in
-a “Custos” to govern, bought back the King’s favour,
-and, consequently, their own charters, by the most
-expensive procession and gifts. All the brethren
-of each Gild, in return for this forgiveness, had to
-put their seals to these blank charters, which were an
-acknowledgment of the King’s power and their
-willingness to do and pay what was left in blank
-in that charter, so that the King could insert what he
-chose in the blank spaces, or, as Grafton puts it, “by
-which he might, when he would, undo any of his
-subjects.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Amongst the Companies called upon to do this
-was certainly the Horners, who would not have been
-foolish enough to seal the “charters” had they not
-needed the support of the City in the maintaining
-their own prescriptive rights based on Royal grants.
-The term sealing is quite a natural one, inasmuch as
-no charters were signed until Tudor times.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Renewed activity.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Doubtless the troubles of the period and the expenses
-to which the fraternity had been put, caused
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>the Gild to value its rights and to claim further recognition,
-even to the extent of promoting a special Act
-of Parliament. They did not seek to obtain a charter,
-be it noted, which rarely meant any advantage to the
-unfortunate persons who were practically compelled
-to accept such charters, but, on the contrary, in most
-cases proved to be an invasion by the Crown of
-former prescriptive privileges.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Horners were successful in obtaining a special
-Act of Parliament in the year 1465. The Act is worth
-quoting as showing to what importance the Horners’
-Company must have risen by that date.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c007'>
- <div><span class='sc'>IV Edward IV, c. 8.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>The Horners’ Act.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Our soveraigne lord the Kyng perceyving by
-grevous complaint made in this Parliamente, by men
-of occupation of horners beynge enfraunchysed in
-the Cytie of London, howe that the people of
-straunge landes hath come into this lande, and into
-dyvers partyes thereof, and hath boughte by the
-handes of theyr hostes and guydes, the great and
-chiefe stuffe of Englyshe hornes unwrought, of tanners
-&amp; bochers, &amp; cary the same over the sea, and
-there employ the same in dyvers workes, to the great
-damage of this land and to the finall preiudice of a
-great numbre of men beinge of the same occupacion:
-hath by the advice and assent of the sayd Lordes,
-&amp; at the request of the sayd commons, and by the auctority
-aforesayd, ordeined established &amp; enacted,
-that from the feast of Easter, which shall bee in the
-yere of our Lord God M.CCCCLXV, no maner
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>straunger nor alien by himselfe or by any other, shal
-buy any Englysh hornes unwrought of any Tanners,
-bochers, or any other persons Gathered or growing
-within the sayd city and, xxiii myles on every syde
-of the sayd city next adioyning. And that no Englishman
-nor other personne sell anye Englyshe hornes
-unwrought to any straunger or cause them to be sente
-over the sea, so that the sayd horners will buy the
-sayd hornes at lyke pryc as they be at the tyme of
-the making of this acte, uppon payne of forfayture
-of all suche hornes so bought, sold, or sent. And
-that the Wardeins of the sayd mistery for the tyme
-beyng by the sayd authority shall have full power to
-serch all manner ware perteyning to their mistery
-wrought or to be wrought in all places within the
-sayd citye of London, and xxiii miles on every syde
-next adioyning to the same citye, and within the
-Feyres of Sturbrydge and Ely in whose handes they
-may be founde, and if they by theyr serch fynd any
-suche ware or stuffe in any place within the sayd
-citye of London and xxiii miles next adioyning to
-the same citye or within the Feyres of Sturbrydge
-and Elye, in whose handes soever they be to sell,
-that is defective &amp; insuffycient. It shall be lawful to
-them to take the same ware and stuffe, and bring it
-before the Mayre of the same citye of London, the
-mayre &amp; bayliffes of the foresayd Feyres for the
-tyme beynge, and the same there beyng proved defective
-to be forfayt: the one halfe thereof to oure
-Soveraigne lord the king, and the other halfe to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>sayd wardens, to be ordred at their pleasure. Provyded
-alwayes that after that me of the sayd occupacion
-within this land have taken out &amp; chosen
-such as many hornes as shal bee nedefull to theyr
-occupacions: that then it shal be lawfull to them all
-and every of them and other persons of this realme
-of Englande, to sel and deliver al the hornes refused,
-which be not able to be occupyed in theyr mistery to
-any straunger or other persons to send or cary beyond
-the sea or elles where, as shal please them.”</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Bottlemakers absorbed by Horners in 1477.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>This Act of Parliament must have proved of great
-benefit to the Horners; but with it came greater demands
-from the Company on the part of the King
-and the City. The frugal minds of the Craft rulers
-at once saw the advantage of paying one set of assessments
-instead of two, and asked that in future the
-Horners and Bottlemakers might be treated as one
-Company, and not be called upon to pay the shares
-of two separate Companies. Thus the prosperity of
-the Horners, coupled with the increasing demands for
-money made on the City Gilds, led to the union of
-the Horners and Bottlemakers just twelve years
-after the passing of the Horners’ Act, <i>i.e.</i>, in 1477
-(sixteenth year of Edward IV), facts indicating in
-no uncertain way that the Horners must have been
-very firmly established and legally constituted at
-the time, both in order to make the assessments possible
-as well as to give them the right to absorb the
-Bottlemakers.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Deeds of Agreement.<br /><br />Deed of 1590.<br /><br />Deed of 1599.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>In the reign of Elizabeth we find the Horners’
-Company carrying on its work as a Joint Stock
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>Company. The stock being held in shares or half-shares,
-it therefore became necessary to place the
-Wardens, who alone had under the Act just mentioned,
-power to purchase horns, under some agreement
-to do so only for and on behalf of the members
-of the Gild. No doubt many such deeds were executed,
-but amongst the archives of the Company
-there are still two extant, the one dated 1590 and
-the other 1599. The parties to the deed are the
-Wardens and the rest of the members. The Wardens
-therein bind themselves to buy, and the other members
-not to buy, horns in London or twenty-four miles
-round. The horns bought by the Wardens are to
-be purchased for the use of the whole Company and
-to be divided equally between them by the Wardens.
-In the deed of 1599 the limit within which the purchase
-and sale of horns was prohibited was altered
-from twenty-four to one hundred miles “next in and
-about the City of London.”</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Horn industry an English secret.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>From a document in the possession of the Company
-it would appear that the horn industry was,
-during the fifteenth century at least, an English
-monopoly, and from the official documents of Germany,
-Holland and France the writer has been unable
-to discover a single record of such an industry existing
-before 1600. The following interesting sentence
-from a document which is dated 1455 (thirty-third
-year of Henry VI), illustrates the contention:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Inasmuch as the making of Hornes and other
-workes perteyning unto the said mystery be not perfectly
-had nor knowne in any region or place of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>world, except in this land only: which causeth the
-people of other lands &amp; places to resort &amp; repaire
-unto this Citie for Hornes yeerly, unto the great
-proffitt &amp; worship of the same Citie, whereas if such
-people of strange lands might cleerly &amp; perfectly
-understand the cunning &amp; feat of making of such
-English Hornes, would not heder repaire yeerly to
-buy such English chaffer,” etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Consequently, the Wardens were expressly authorized
-the same year by the Mayor and Aldermen to
-punish any who should reveal the secret of the Craft
-to any stranger.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Exportation of Horns.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>So valuable a trade, however, could not remain long
-unknown to the Continental nations, who were, in
-other respects, far in advance of England, and consequently
-the demand for English horns on the Continent
-became so great that, in spite of the Act
-forbidding the export of horns, the members of the
-Gild seem to have done a considerable trade in
-exporting horns, on the excuse that they were refuse
-horns. Indeed, so profitable did they find this traffic
-that, about 1590, two City men, the one a merchant
-and the other a scrivenour, entered into competition
-with them and managed to secure from Queen Elizabeth,—no
-doubt for a substantial payment,—permission
-to export horns to the Continent, though not
-themselves members of the Horners’ Company.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Competition by Furner and Crayford.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The controversy which this occasioned between the
-Horners and their opponents, Symon Furner and
-John Crayford, is to be found amongst the records in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>the Manuscript Department of the British Museum.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Lord Burleigh attempted to bring about a compromise,
-and instructed a Mr. Carmarthen to endeavour
-to arrive at some arrangement between the
-contending parties, but in vain. The issue at stake
-was a vital one. The Horners claimed exclusive privileges
-under some Charter which they were evidently
-able to produce, accorded them by one of the Kings
-of England, whilst Messrs. Furner and Crayford
-argued their privileges under the “letters patent”
-granted by the Queen.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It would seem that the wealth and influences behind
-the private adventurers were stronger than those
-of the Company, which was already beginning to feel
-the pressure of competition from the Pouchmakers
-and Leathersellers, who dealt in the same kinds
-of wares, as well as from the introduction of glass
-vessels, etc., which took place in the sixteenth century.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Withdrawal from public life.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>From the year 1455 onwards, the Horners seem to
-have fallen into the background and to have disappeared
-from the arena of public life. This is not
-altogether to be wondered at, for, towards the end of
-the fifteenth century, and for nearly 200 years after,
-City Crafts or Mysteries were the object of predatory
-attacks of so deadly a character, that though
-in 1455 we find forty-eight Crafts openly representing
-the City, in 1575 only twenty-eight Companies
-were to be found on whom the assessment for wheat
-could be placed. What the remaining Mysteries did
-is difficult to say, but no doubt they attempted to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>carry on their work unnoticed, either urging prescriptive
-rights, or claiming none, in order to avoid spoliation.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Horners forced to re-appear.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The once important trade, but now the “little
-craft of Horners” was evidently in this category,
-and had it not been for the necessity of
-fighting for very existence, when the export of
-horns was making their trade impossible by the increase
-in price of the raw material, they doubtless
-would have preferred to keep in the background,
-even at the end of Queen Elizabeth’s reign. This
-contention would seem the more reasonable from the
-fact that had not the previous Charters or Royal
-grants to the Horners’ Company been of very ancient
-date, and, consequently, almost forgotten, and had
-that Craft not been, as it were, keeping from the glare
-of public observation in order to avoid the cost of
-“Inspeximus’s,” it is unlikely that the advisers of
-Queen Elizabeth would have laid her open to the
-controversy which the grant of letters patent to Furner
-and Crayford was bound to produce.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>1604. Repeal of Horners’ Act.<br /><br />Petition to Parliament, 1610, and revival of Horners’ Act.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>It must have been a great blow to the Company
-when, in the first year of the reign of James I, an Act
-(c. 25) was passed which repealed the Statute of
-4 Edward IV; but in the seventh year of that King’s
-reign the Horners presented their petition to Parliament,
-stating, “that by reason of the repeal of the
-prohibition, the Company had grown so poor and
-decayed, as in a short time, if remedy be not provided,
-they and theirs shall be utterly undone;” and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>the Act is thereby revived except as to the powers of
-search in Stourbridge and Ely fairs, and a limitation
-of the price of horns thereby secured. A
-penalty was imposed of double the value of English
-horns sold unwrought to any stranger or sent over the
-sea; one moiety of the penalty to go to the informer
-and one moiety to the King.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>1627. Letters patent from the King.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Notwithstanding this Statute, the exportation of
-horns still continued, and Letters Patent were granted
-by King Charles I, in the third year of his reign, 1627,
-again prohibiting the exportation of horns until the
-Company should first have made choice of the best
-and most convenient number of the horns to supply
-the necessary occasions of the realm.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>In spite of the protection afforded by these Acts
-and Letters Patent, the exportation of horns continued.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Evil days.<br /><br />1635. New Orders allowed.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>These were evil days for the Horners’ Craft, and it
-would appear that the Horners themselves were not
-entirely guiltless in the matter. Consequently, in 1635,
-to stem the tide of ill-fortune which seemed to have
-set in, the Company approached the Mayor and
-Aldermen to give them fresh rules “for the reformation
-of the Crafte.” The following rules were allowed
-and confirmed by the then Lord Mayor, Christopher
-Clitherow:—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>1. Horns to be bought for the General good.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>2. None to buy Horns within 20 miles of London.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>3. Everyone to pay for his share as the Wardens
-shall think fit.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>4. None to keep above one apprentice, except he
-hath been a partner or sharer with the said
-Company seven years at least, in which case he
-may keep two apprentices.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>5. Apprentices shall be bound.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>6. No one to be set to work at the trade unless he
-have served seven years.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>7. Every journeyman to serve two years after having
-been made “free of the Company.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>8. None to enter for their shares until called by the
-Wardens.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>9. Anyone elected a Warden must serve the office
-or pay a fine of 20 shillings.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>10. None shall sue or arrest another without permission
-from the Wardens.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>11. The Wardens may commit offenders to prison
-with the consent of the Mayor.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For two years the Company exercised their powers
-under these new rules, but still harder times were in
-store for the Company.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Further troubles.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Whether as the result of an information laid by
-some member who was suffering under these stringent
-regulations, or, as would appear most probable,
-the King’s growing need of money to carry
-on the coming political struggle between himself
-and his people, the Horners were suddenly discovered
-to be acting illegally. Under the powers
-conferred by the Act of 19 Henry VII, which was
-no doubt revived for the purpose, no Master, Wardens,
-or Companies could make any acts or ordinances
-except such as should be approved by the
-Chancellor and Treasurer of England or Chief Justice
-of either Bench, or three of them.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>The Legal Plight of the Company.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>Though doubtless this Act was never intended to
-apply to alterations or additions to regulations
-already in force, but rather to the establishment of
-new Companies, it became necessary for the Horners
-to comply with the regulations, and though it does
-not transpire whether they were compelled to pay any
-fines or not, they finally obtained confirmation of
-their new rules under the hands of Thomas Coventrie,
-Lord Chancellor, and Chief Justices John Branston
-and John Finch, but not until after they applied for
-and obtained a Royal Charter, and as Charles I, in
-order to assert Sovereign rights, was unwilling to
-admit ancient prescriptive claims, care was taken to
-justify this subversion of the ancient rights of the
-Gild, by stating in the Charter that the Horners had
-never been “incorporated.”</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Grave peril.<br /><br />Difficulty evaded by purchase of new Charter.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The examination of the New Rules by the Judges
-just mentioned, had revealed the fact that the Horners
-were a Joint Stock Company holding property in perpetuity
-in opposition to the Statute of Mortmain.
-Here was a splendid opportunity for the King to
-reap a harvest, and nothing remained for the authorities
-of the Company but to obtain a Charter as
-soon as possible and to avoid the heavy penalties to
-which they would otherwise be subjected by assenting
-to the legal fiction that they had not acted as a corporation,
-and never had been one, but merely an association
-in existence from year to year, acting under
-ancient and well-recognized privileges. Whether this
-claim was technically correct or not, the antiquity of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>the Company was so great and the process of proving
-any breach so lengthy and difficult that no doubt
-Charles I thought it best to take the cash payment
-which always accompanied grants and so close the
-matter. Thus the Charter of 1638, which is the only
-one now extant, was obtained, and the proceedings of
-the Company as a joint stock concern holding property
-in perpetuity were again legalized, though doubtless
-long before that time the right to hold property and
-to do all that was required of them as a Craft Gild
-had been regularly accorded to the members in the
-persons of their several “Guardians.”</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Charters of little value in determining dates of origin.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Like many other City Companies, the Horners have
-been accustomed to believe that this Charter, which in
-its preamble for obvious reasons takes for granted no
-previous Charter, was the first and only legal instrument
-authorizing them to carry on their work as a
-Gild. Very little reliance, however, is to be placed on
-the statements of the Charters of this period, which
-were often little more than a temporary instrument of
-protection against further encroachments on their resources
-and powers by the ruling monarch. For this
-very uncertain privilege large sums had to be paid,
-sums wrung again and again from the unfortunate
-City Gilds by threats of suppression.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is mere than probable that at all times Charters
-were freely purchasable by those who could afford to
-pay for them, and, having served their particular
-purpose, were as easily lost or mislaid. For all practical
-purposes, however, until the sixteenth century
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>at least, they offer no indication whatever of the
-antiquity of any Company, even where they seem to
-state in the preamble that there has been no previous
-Charter, a statement which should be taken only to
-indicate that the Sovereign granting the Charter
-wishes it to be supposed that he, and he alone, is the
-person to whom the Company is indebted for its
-privileges, privileges which often existed only in
-name. In many cases the Charters were really encroachments
-by the State on the ancient privileges
-which had been inherited from the earliest times, and
-which were supported by Municipal law, against
-which State law waged continuous warfare.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Previous Incorporations.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is widely held by students who are not satisfied
-to be merely superficial that in very early days
-aggregate bodies were deemed to have perpetual
-succession without being “incorporated.” When
-the King granted to a set of men to be a
-mercantile community, assembly, or meeting, this
-was considered sufficient to incorporate them. As
-illustrating this virtual “incorporation” we may note
-the words of the eminent jurist, Dr. Williams, in his
-“Law of the Universities,” published only last year.
-He says:—“A corporation, the creature of the Crown,
-may exist by Charter or ‘prescription,’ which presumes
-a Charter, even in cases where historical evidence
-makes it morally certain that no Charters ever
-existed.” Consequently, in the Charters of Edward
-III (which meant little and were but a receipt for
-moneys loaned or given), there is no provision for a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>common seal, liberty to accept or buy land, or to sue
-and be sued, etc., all these being naturally taken for
-granted in the case of Gilds or similar organizations
-then existing. It is no doubt true that in the reign of
-Edward III Craft Gilds were generally chartered,
-<i>i.e.</i>, had their privileges <i>confirmed</i> by Letters Patent;
-yet, in still earlier days, as well as after the death of
-Edward III, it would seem that these bodies exercised
-their functions under special protection or on
-suffrance, probably always in return for their
-“fermes” or annual payment to the King.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Horners never an adulterine Gild.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>If further illustration were required, to demonstrate
-how great is the right of the Horners’ Company
-to rank amongst the earliest of the acknowledged
-Trade Gilds, that proof is to be found in the study
-of what are known as “Adulterine” Gilds. These
-were unwarranted or unlicensed Gilds, and from time
-to time were heavily fined. There is no mention,
-however, of the Horners having been among such
-Gilds thus swooped down upon by the King, though
-lists are given of those who were mulcted from the
-twelfth century. The Horners could not have escaped
-had they been unwarranted at the time, and
-must, therefore, have possessed indisputable rights.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Reference has been made to Richard Baroun and
-William Karlile.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Royal Grants must have existed.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Richard Baroun, we read, was one “whom the King
-retained to serve him with Horns &amp; other things pertaining
-to his Mistery, &amp; to whom was granted the
-King’s livery of clothing every year, in the great
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>wardrobe, as other Horners of his condition had been
-wont to receive.” Thus William Karlile was a man
-of considerable importance in his own time, and a
-man of great wealth. To suppose that so important
-a Craft Gild, under the patronage of such influential
-persons, would neglect to arm itself with every possible
-weapon of defence, such as Grants and Charters,
-is to suppose the impossible, and, indeed, in the year
-1455, towards the end of the reign of Henry VI, on
-petitioning to have further powers of administration
-conferred upon it, this Gild is expressly mentioned
-as having been already “enfranchised in the City of
-London,” a proceeding which could not possibly have
-been accomplished without something in the nature
-of a Royal grant. It would seem that owing to the
-very great antiquity of the Horners’ Company it held
-certain prescriptive privileges originally obtained by
-it or its “Guardianus” in exchange for certain goods
-from time to time supplied to the Royal household,
-and on this point further light may still be thrown.
-One such instance has come to light. Either the
-Company or the Guardianus in his official capacity as
-Horner to the King, would provide the Horn Comb
-used at the Coronation of every Sovereign until the
-time of Charles II. We have evidence that amongst
-the Coronation relics connected with Charles I which
-were sold, was a “Horn Comb.” This, in accordance
-with the practice even now in vogue at the Consecration
-of Roman Catholic Bishops, was used ceremonially
-after anointing the King’s head with oil.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Proof of earlier Charter.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>As a culminating proof that the Caroline Charter
-was not the first and only Royal grant held by the
-Horners’ Company, we have but to turn to the Correspondence
-recently found in the British Museum,
-and it will at once become evident that the Horners
-were possessed of a Charter long before 1638. Mr.
-Carmarthen, writing to Lord Burghley in 1597, says:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The question resteth upon one word cheefly in
-thyr Charter,” etc., or, again, “By the king’s grant in
-theyre Charter,” etc. This may allude to a Charter
-granted by Edward IV, or, as seems probable, that in
-reality the “Cornuarii” were well established as a
-legalized Gild certainly not later than Richard II,
-and, in all probability, owned Charters of a much
-earlier date, which would be in the nature of special
-grants to the Guardian of the Gild, held by him,
-and would therefore at a later period not necessarily
-be in the possession of the Company. Moreover,
-on 30th of March, 1815, the Clerk of the Company
-stated, as appears by an entry in the Minute
-Book, that he had opened and examined the chest
-containing the documents relating to the Company,
-and he found that it contained ... “also the original
-Charters granted for establishing the Company,” etc.
-Had there been but one, it is improbable that the
-word would have been used in the plural.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Thus it will be seen that the Charter of 1638 is but
-an instrument reiterating and once more legalizing
-the acts which had been in vogue amongst the
-Horners for a very considerable time.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>1638. Charter of Charles I.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>The Charter of Charles I provides that the Horners,
-Freemen of the City of London and Westminster and
-liberties and suburbs of the same, are incorporated
-by the name of “Master, Wardens, Assistants, and
-Fellowship of the Mistery of Horners of the City of
-London,” with power to purchase and hold freehold
-and leasehold estates of every kind and all manner
-of goods and chattels, and to grant, alien and dispose
-of the same, and by the same name to plead and be
-impleaded, and to have a Common Seal.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>One of the said Fellowship is to be chosen the
-Master, two to be chosen Wardens, and ten or more
-of the Fellowship, Assistants. The Master, Wardens
-and Assistants, or the greater part of them, whereof
-the Master and one of the Wardens are always to be
-two, have power to make and alter, amend or make
-new, “reasonable laws and constitutions touching
-the Trade, Art, or Mistery, and for punishment and
-reformation of abuses, wrongful practices and misdemeaners,
-and for defraying the charges of maintaining
-and continuing the Corporation, and after
-what order they shall demean themselves in their
-office mistery and work.” And to impose such fines,
-amerciaments, or other lawful punishments upon all
-offenders as shall seem necessary; such fines, etc., to
-be raised for their own uses.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Robert Baker was appointed the first Master to
-continue in office until the 2nd February, 1638, and
-until another person was elected in his place. Christopher
-Peele and Thomas White were appointed first
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>Wardens under the new rules and Charter. Ten
-brethren were appointed the first Assistants during
-their lives or good behaviour, and the Master and
-Wardens were upon retirement from their offices, to
-be assistants in the same manner. The Master and
-Wardens were to take oaths before the Master in
-Chancery to “well and truly execute their offices”
-before entering upon the same.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Power is given to the Master, Wardens, Assistants,
-and Fellowship to meet in their Common Hall or
-other convenient place upon the 2nd of February,
-if it be not Sunday, and if it be Sunday, then upon
-the next day after, to elect a Master and Two Wardens
-for the ensuing year; and they are to take their
-oaths of office before the late Master and Wardens,
-or two of them; and like power of election is given
-until the next 2nd of February in case of the death
-or removal for misbehaviour of any Master or Warden
-during his term of office, and also in like manner
-to elect an Assistant on the death or removal of any
-of the Assistants appointed by the Charter.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Power is given of oversight, rule and search of all
-persons occupying, importing, exporting, or using the
-art or mistery of Horners within the cities of London
-and Westminster, and the liberties and precincts
-thereof, and of all manner of wares thereunto appertaining,
-to the intent that all delinquents may be
-discovered and punished. They may purchase for
-ever one house for a Hall not exceeding the yearly
-value of £40.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>They are to elect one honest and discreet person as
-Clerk, and also appoint a Beadle.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Exercise of Rights, 1689.<br /><br />Buying Horns, 1739.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The control continuously exercised by the Company
-over the trade, and finally secured to them in
-the Charter just mentioned, has never been abandoned,
-though at any rate for the present it is not
-exercised. In the first year of William III (1689)
-the Horners’ Company successfully prosecuted a
-Comb maker for pressing horns, he not being a
-“Horner.” Maitland, who published his work in
-1739, tells us that the Company “had of late appointed
-diverse of their members to attend the market
-of Leadenhall &amp; those of the neighbouring counties
-for the buying of horns” to be sent to their common
-warehouse in Wentworth Street, Spitalfields, where
-they were made up into lots and divided amongst the
-several members, not omitting the widows and
-orphans, who also received their several shares.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Last legal claim, 1745.<br /><br />Ceases as a trading body.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The last occasion on which the Court exercised its
-rights against persons infringing its monopoly was
-in the year 1745. Having ascertained that certain
-persons not free of the Company had bought rough
-horns and pressed them into lantern leaves, and were
-disposing of them within the City of London and
-twenty-four miles distant, proceedings were ordered
-to be taken against them, and, as a result, the Company
-successfully established its right to the monopoly
-in the manufacture of horn work in the City
-of London and twenty-four miles round. From that
-time forward the trade in horn declined, and during
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>the second half of the eighteenth century, the Company
-finally ceased to be a trading community. Thus
-ended the operative existence of a Craft Gild which
-from “time out of mind” until the present moment
-has had a useful and honourable career. The
-Horners’ Company has been practically contemporaneous
-with the history of England, and is, it may
-be believed, still destined to serve many a useful
-purpose.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Property.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>In spite of legal incorporation the property of the
-Company has, from time to time, been vested in
-certain trustees, the last trust deed being dated 1756.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Minutes.<br /><br />Annual Dinner.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The earliest Minute Book in the possession of the
-Company covers the period 1731 to 1796, and is
-extremely interesting as showing the care taken
-in the apprenticing of novices to the trade, in the
-appointment of its officers, and, perhaps most of all,
-in the unbroken continuity of the annual dinner held
-generally at some place outside the City, which
-though, at the time, partaken of only by the members
-of the Court, represented the annual feast of the
-mediæval Gilds, and finds its successor to-day in the
-Livery Dinner, which has become almost a matter of
-civic importance.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>This ancient practice has long been associated with
-Trade Gilds, certainly as far back as 700 B.C. We
-may believe that the <i>deipnon</i> or feast of the <i>hetairoi</i>,
-or Greek Trade Gilds, must have had a long history
-before the time when such distinguished members as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>Lysymachus, son of Milesias, and the son of Thucydides,
-joined in them.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Favourite Inns.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>During the eighteenth and first part of the nineteenth
-century the favourite inns selected for the
-annual dinner seem to have been the “Crown and
-Sceptre” at Greenwich, the “Plough,” or “Folly
-House,” Blackwall, the “Star and Garter,” Richmond,
-and, in much later days, the “North and South
-American Coffee House,” which latter, however, was
-probably used more for the ordinary meetings of the
-Company than for the annual dinner.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Aldgate the Horners’ Home.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is a little difficult to define the area in which the
-Horners of London were originally located, but it
-may be somewhat vaguely described as the district of
-Aldgate. Many were the streets and alleys to which
-Horners have given a name, and one well-known
-Horn Alley was, until a comparatively late date,
-to be found on the East side of Bishopsgate Street,
-and in Korneman’s book on “Old Street Signs and
-Tablets” is an allusion to one with the following inscription:—“This
-is Horn Alley, 1670.” In Stow’s
-“Survey of London,” 1633, the following passage
-occurs:—“I read in the 26th of Henry VI (1447),
-that in the parish of St. Dunstan’s in the East a tenement
-called Horners Key was granted to William
-Harrington, Esq.” Doubtless this alludes to a building
-used by the Horners for the purposes of their
-trade, at a time when all was <i>couleur de rose</i> with
-them, and it is extremely likely that upon further
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>investigation this William Harrington will be found
-to be the Guardianus or Alderman of the Gild.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>The warehouses of the Gild.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Time, however, brought its changes, and when, in
-1603-4, the Horners’ Act was repealed, it would seem
-likely that they found it either impossible to continue
-to pay the rent, or, realising that disaster awaited
-them, may have sold the property, if it were
-theirs to sell. It is, however, certain that in 1604
-the Company leased a house with storehouses and
-sheds in Wentworth Street, Whitechapel, for the
-term of 1,000 years at a ground rent of £4. When,
-in 1789, these premises were no longer required for
-the use of the trade, which had declined, they were let
-for £30 a year, and in 1879 were sold to the Metropolitan
-Board of Works and the money invested on
-behalf of the Horners’ Company.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Was there a Horners’ Hall?</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>It has been stated that the Horners’ Company
-never had a Hall. It is difficult to see quite why this
-statement has been made, for there is much to make
-the student of Gild lore think otherwise. The Charter
-of 1638 expressly provides for one, and, as in
-every other respect, it simply imposes the absolute
-conditions then existing, there would seem no reason
-to doubt that the sum of £40 per annum therein mentioned
-was the exact value of the property then held.
-The Bottlemakers would not have joined the Horners
-had the latter Company not had a hall or meeting
-place.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As with other Craft Gilds, the Fire of London
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>probably proved very disastrous to the Company,
-and, no doubt, very little was saved.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The fact that there are hardly any deeds of importance
-anterior to 1666, that the Old Book of
-the Company, which has recently been recovered,
-after wandering so long, ceases to have an entry
-after 1636, together with the fact that the two or
-three early deeds which ante-date the Fire of London
-are in a deplorable condition, as well as the fact
-that the Company owned a considerable amount of
-silver plate, which was sold in 1789, makes it not
-improbable that the Horners, like every other City
-Gild, had its regular Hall or meeting place.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Arms.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The coat of arms of the Company is Ar. on a
-Chevron sa., three bugles of the first between three
-leather bottles of the second.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Destruction of Gild monopolies.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>In 1835 the Municipal Corporations Act gave the
-<i>coup de grâce</i> to any remnants of monopoly exercised
-by the extant City Gilds. That Act gave liberty to
-all either to buy or sell, and, by so doing, compelled
-most of the City Companies, <i>nolens volens</i>, to seek
-for a sphere of usefulness in other directions.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>1837. Revived importance.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Though, as a trading Gild, the Horners’ Company
-declined, it has steadily risen in reputation as one of
-the ancient mysteries of the City of London, and, in
-1837, the Commissioners on Municipal Corporations
-classed it as fifty-fourth out of eighty-nine Companies
-there enumerated. In 1846 the Company petitioned
-the Court of Aldermen for a livery which was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>granted them, the number of liverymen being limited
-to sixty.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>1882. Exhibition of Horn work.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>In 1882 the Court of the Horners’ Company organized
-an exhibition of Hornwork, both ancient and
-modern, which was held by the kindness of the then
-Lord Mayor, Sir Henry Knight, at the Mansion
-House. By a strange coincidence, and without any
-premeditation on the part either of the Lord Mayor
-or the Company, it was held on October the 18th,
-St. Luke’s Day, which was the day on which the
-annual Horn Fair at Charlton took place. The exhibition
-of Horns and Hornwork far exceeded, both as
-regards quantity and quality, the most sanguine
-expectations of the promoters. So great was the interest
-shown by the public that it became necessary to
-keep it open for an extra day, and, during the four
-days of the exhibition, it was visited by no fewer
-than 7,000 persons. Amongst the exhibitors was Her
-Most Gracious Majesty the late Queen Victoria, who
-sent some interesting specimens from her treasures
-at Windsor Castle. In acknowledgment, of Her
-Majesty’s kind consideration, and by her gracious
-permission, the Company presented to Her Majesty
-a print of the descriptive catalogue and the account
-of the Company mentioned in the preface, bound in
-horn leaves, ornamented with a beautiful design from
-the South Kensington School of Art, selected after
-competition by the scholars. It is now in the King’s
-private suite of rooms at Windsor Castle.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>1900. Royal Casket.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>In the course of the year 1900, at the instance of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>Mr. A. W. Timbrell, C.C., it was decided to present
-Queen Victoria with a horn casket in order to fittingly
-commemorate the new century. On being
-approached upon the subject, Her Majesty graciously
-accepted the offer. Before, however, the presentation
-could be made, her lamented death occurred. It was
-then decided to present the casket to King Edward,
-and on March 28th, 1901, the late King’s Secretary
-wrote to the Clerk of the Company expressing His
-Majesty’s pleasure in accepting the proposed gift.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The casket was made of selected specimens of the
-finest British bullock horn, mounted with massive
-silver and gilt straps, and ornaments of the Early
-English style of chasing. It is supported upon four
-pierced feet, the whole resting upon an ebony plinth,
-upon which is a silver plate bearing the names of the
-Master, the Wardens, and the Clerk. The whole
-enclosed in a handsome morocco case, forms one of
-the finest specimens of the Horner’s art. Sir Francis
-Knollys, in acknowledging the presentation, stated
-that he was commanded by the King to renew the
-expressions of His Majesty’s thanks to the Worshipful
-Company of Horners for the casket which they
-had presented to him, and that His Majesty admired
-it greatly and considered that it would form a great
-addition to the Horn Room at Osborne.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Another Royal Casket.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>A similar casket, slightly different in design, was
-presented to His Majesty King George V on the
-occasion of his Coronation, and this, like the one
-presented to his revered father, has been designed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>and carried out by Mr. Deputy Millar Wilkinson,
-of Cornhill, the present Father of the Court.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i048.jpg' alt='Casket presented to King George V' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>It was constructed in the form of a cigar box,
-mounted with finely worked silver-gilt applied strap
-work, chased with lions’ heads and dolphins, chased
-end handles; on the front is a circular plaque representing
-the arms of the Horners’ Company. The casket
-is surmounted by a figure of St. George and the Dragon,
-the whole resting upon an ebony plinth, upon which
-is a silver-gilt plate bearing the names of the Master,
-the Wardens, and the Clerk. Enclosed in a handsome
-red morocco case, it forms a beautiful and unique
-specimen of the Horners’ art.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The deputation which made the presentation was
-headed by the Worshipful Master, who, in the course
-of his address to His Majesty, said:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The Horners’ Company, which is one of the most
-ancient of the City Guilds, in tendering the casket,
-desire to assure Your Majesty of their loyalty to
-Your Throne and Person, and convey their respectful
-wishes for a long and prosperous reign.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The King, in receiving the casket, remarked that it
-was a very beautiful piece of workmanship, and that
-he would value it the more inasmuch as it was presented
-to him during his Coronation year.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>Further increase in Livery.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>In consequence of the continued prosperity of the
-Horners’ Company, due to many causes, doubtless, at
-a time when little life was being evinced, to the work
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>of Mr. James Curtis, but especially in the present
-activity of its esteemed Clerk, Mr. Howard Deighton,
-it was found necessary in 1905 to apply again to the
-Court of Aldermen for an increase in the livery to the
-number of 100, which was granted subject to the
-livery fine being increased to £30.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Sic floreant Cornuarii!</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/i050.jpg' alt='colophon' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c008' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><b><span class='large'>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE</span></b></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'>Punctuation has been normalized. Variations
-in hyphenation have been retained as they were in the
-original publication.</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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