TRADE AND INDUSTRY.
There is little means
of establishing the prosperity or size of Devizes
before the 14th century. There is faint evidence
of a 12th-century mint at which both Stephen and
his Angevin opponents may have struck coins. (fn. 1)
The inhabitants were described as burgesses in
1141, (fn. 2) and it is reasonable to conclude that the town
was, or contained, a 'borough' from that time. To
taxes and tallages between 1172 and 1214 the town
was invariably rated below Marlborough. Usually
it was below Wilton and above Salisbury and
Melksham. (fn. 3) In 1212, with Marlborough, Salisbury,
and Wilton, it was one of four Wiltshire towns to
furnish the king with a company of ten for service
overseas. (fn. 4) Its trading position was strengthened by
the grant of a merchant guild in 1218 (fn. 5) and by its
possession of a market, first mentioned in 1228. (fn. 6)
Its Jewish community, some index of the town's
commercial maturity, was settled late. While there
were Jews in Marlborough in 1241 and in Wilton in
1254, (fn. 7) it is not until 1268 that a Devizes jewry begins to emerge. (fn. 8) A Jew then appears to have been
living in the town and four years later the Devizes
Jews are referred to as an established community. (fn. 9)
In 1275 that community was enlarged by the
removal of the jewry at Marlborough to Devizes. (fn. 10)
At the time of the deportation the Devizes jewry
possessed an archa (fn. 11) and a synagogue. (fn. 12) Two
Devizes Jews, one possessed of several books,
suffered in the prosecutions of 1278–9. (fn. 13) After this
Jews do not recur and at the suppression in 1290
only two houses were in Jewish occupation and only
one in Jewish ownership. There were two arche,
but the synagogue was gone. (fn. 14)
When in 1334 it becomes possible to judge the
relative wealth of Wiltshire settlements from tax
assessments Devizes is found in a somewhat low
position. It is not among the eighteen most highly
rated communities, several rural areas ranking well
above it, and only four boroughs, of which Old
Salisbury is one, below it. (fn. 15) In population, however,
judged by the number of poll-tax payers, it stood
thirteenth by 1377 (fn. 16) and though the correlation
between prosperity and population must not be
pressed it is perhaps fair to conclude that it rose in
economic importance as the 14th century wore on.
Such a view is confirmed by its constitutional
development. (fn. 17) It is reasonable to suppose that the
prosperity of early Devizes, such as it was, rested on
its market which supplied the needs of the castle
garrison, but that pure commerce decayed with the
waning military importance of the castle and that
the town's fortunes were restored by the gradual
establishment of industry.
While there was a skinner as early as 1196 (fn. 18) and a
dyer in 1281 (fn. 19) it is only from the early 14th century
that there is any recognizable group of craftsmen.
At first they were all practitioners of the leather
trades: a glover in 1302, a cordwainer in ?1306, a
tanner possibly as early. (fn. 20) A tanner recurs in 1362 (fn. 21)
and another is mentioned several times between 1370
and 1385. (fn. 22) A skinner and a net-maker are mentioned in 1417 (fn. 23) and Thomas Skinner, a glover, in
1425. (fn. 24) The metal trades are also represented early:
in 1379 there was a brazier, before 1416 John
Brasyere had been a resident, (fn. 25) and in 1476 John
Brownsmith was party to a deed. (fn. 26) Metal-working
may have been stimulated by the presence of iron
ore, found in small quantities near by and once
smelted in the old park. (fn. 27)
The origins of the Devizes textile industry
stretch back to a dyer of 1281 (fn. 28) and a Southbroom
weaver of 1347. (fn. 29) When Devizes 'blankets' are first
expressly mentioned in 1429, (fn. 30) west Wiltshire had
become well known for its white woollen broadcloth. Devizes, if on the edge, was a part of that area.
It now had begun to rival Salisbury and ranked
next to that city in an aulnage account of the 1420s. (fn. 31)
A Devizes man farmed the Wiltshire aulnage from
1421 to 1425 (fn. 32) and over ten more townsmen
within the century are named as weavers or clothiers.
One of these is known to have manufactured white
cloth, (fn. 33) another russet, (fn. 34) and two were rich enough
to own lands within the borough. (fn. 35) William Smith,
who largely rebuilt St. Mary's church, is thought to
have been a clothier, (fn. 36) and another clothier, William
Salmon (fl. 1404), the possessor of two looms, was
also a benefactor to the town. (fn. 37)
In the 16th century the town remained an
important source of white broadcloth and now
exported the product direct to London (fn. 38) instead of
through the port of Bristol as heretofore. (fn. 39) The
manufacturers prospered and became locally influential although they no doubt experienced the
slack trade that sometimes prevailed in Henry VIII's
reign. In 1528 something like a riot occurred in
the town probably from this cause. (fn. 40) But prosperity
was general. Of those expressly called 'clothier' or
'clothman', ten were wealthy enough to have their
wills proved in the Prerogative Court. Among the
ten, Henry Morris (probate 1572) (fn. 41) owned a workshop containing at least two broad looms and engaged
in a number of long-term transactions. (fn. 42) He, Walter
Bayly (probate 1560), (fn. 43) Richard Batt (probate
1569), (fn. 44) and John Batt (d. 1600) (fn. 45) owned land
within the borough and without. (fn. 46) Moreover
Richard Batt was taxed on the level of most country
gentry. (fn. 47) The Batts, Morris, and Thomas Hull
(probate 1576) (fn. 48) were more than once mayors (fn. 49) and
Hull a borough M.P. At least ten other clothiers can
be detected, even if not always so labelled. Among
these Walter Trymnell (probate 1511) died possessed
of a 'warping bar' and two looms, (fn. 50) John Baker
(fl. 1551) was mayor, (fn. 51) and Henry Blackborrow
(fl. c. 1595) was lessee of no little land. (fn. 52) Of five
persons labelled 'draper' or 'woollen–draper' John
Willos (or Willis), the elder, was taxed at £2 in
1545 (fn. 53) and Thomas Tymmer owned houses in the
town. (fn. 54) Both were mayors. (fn. 55)
The 'weavers' were presumably of less account,
but Edward Haynes (fl. 1555, 1576) became mayor (fn. 56)
and the clothier Richard Batt had been a weaver
first. (fn. 57) About mid century a 'weaver' called
Catherine Brede made white and coloured cloths on
contract, marked with her own mark, for sale in
Gloucestershire through a Gloucestershire agent. (fn. 58)
A cardmaker first appears at the beginning of the
century (fn. 59) and another occurs in 1582 (fn. 60) and was
perhaps still living in 1618. (fn. 61) No fullers are then
known. Although little cloth was dyed in Wiltshire, (fn. 62)
a dye-house existed in the town by 1549. (fn. 63)
All this suggests that Leland was not wrong in
declaring that the town was in his time 'most
occupied by clothiers'. (fn. 64) Nevertheless the leather
trades continued. A glover and gauntlet-maker died
in 1582 (fn. 65) and there is record of four tanners. Of these
James Webb died c. 1559 possessed of a tan-house,
tanner's tools, and a dwelling in the Brittox, (fn. 66) and
Jeremy Webb inherited a tan-house in Bishop's
Cannings from George Reynolds in 1577. (fn. 67) By 1559
there was a craft guild or 'company' jointly comprised of cardmakers, smiths, wiredrawers, saddlers,
and cutlers, (fn. 68) an unexpected combination but one
which shows the persistence of the metal trades
which provided locally the wire for cards. While no
founder is expressly named, the bells of St. Peter
and St. Paul, Marlborough, were recast in Devizes
in 1579. (fn. 69)
There had already been a tailor before 1443. (fn. 70)
Other tradesmen directly serving the sophisticated
consumer now appear: a capper in 1555; (fn. 71) three
haberdashers between 1560 and 1569; (fn. 72) a joiner in
1564; (fn. 73) a barber in 1576; (fn. 74) a painter in 1582; (fn. 75) and a
jerkin-maker in 1583. (fn. 76)
The 'company' referred to above is the first
evidence of the way in which the craft guilds, perhaps existing somewhat
earlier, (fn. 77) were organized.
At the herald's visitation
of 1565 such a company
is mentioned again. It
was officially called 'the
fellowship and corporation of the burgesses and
merchant adventurers',
was presided over by the
mayor, its 'head and
governor', and divided
into three sections, each
under two wardens.
Those Sections were the
clothiers and weavers,
the drapers and tailors,
and the mercers, 'etc.'. (fn. 78)
A grant of arms was
registered. (fn. 79) The relationship of the three sections
of 1565 to the 'company'
of 1559, which consisted
only of practitioners of
the leather and metal
trades, is obscure, unless,
which is unlikely, it is to be identified with the
mercers' guild. But it has been concluded that its
creation about this time arose from the wish to
restrict competition in an age of declining prosperity
for the Wiltshire cloth towns, which set in about
the middle of the century. (fn. 80)

The Devizes Guilds.
Barry wavy of six azure and
argent a pegasus salient or
and in chief palewise
(i) argent a roundel azure
charged with a paschal lamb
argent holding a staff or,
(ii) gules a demi-virgin couped
below the shoulders issuing
from clouds, all proper
crowned with an Eastern
crown or, (iii) argent a
fountain on a bend gules a
lion passant guardant or
In 1523 as many as eight townsmen were assessed
at £40 in anticipation of the subsidy. (fn. 81) In the
assessments of both 1545 and 1576 Salisbury stood
out far above all other towns, followed in that order
by Marlborough and Devizes. Trowbridge and
Warminster were not far behind. (fn. 82) The demographical evidence, such as it is, seems to point towards
the same ranking. (fn. 83)
By the earlier 17th century wages in the cloth
trade had fallen and there was distress among the
weavers, some of whom were sent to the house of
correction. (fn. 84) Shortly before 1630 the Devizes poorrate rose. (fn. 85) This was but a local reflection of the
prevailing widespread destitution in the trade. (fn. 86)
Between 1611 and 1618 no fewer than eleven
Devizes men were prosecuted in the Exchequer for
engrossing. (fn. 87) Moreover since country clothiers
competed with town clothiers some attempt was
made by the latter to enforce apprenticeship. A reorganization of the merchants' 'fellowship' which
took place in 1614, (fn. 88) with a constitution which
insisted on apprenticeship, perhaps had such an
aim. By the middle of the century Devizes weavers
were finding it hard to retain their apprentices, (fn. 89)
and a list of a dozen apprentices and their masters,
drawn up apparently ten years before, contains the
name of only one master-weaver. (fn. 90) None the less
the old 'clothier' or woollen-draper families such
as the Batts, (fn. 91) the Morrises, (fn. 92) and the Flowers (fn. 93)
continued to govern the town and fill the mayoralty.
New ones who now arose did the same: Pierces, (fn. 94)
Erwoods, (fn. 95) Webbs, (fn. 96) and Paradises. (fn. 97) William
Erwood and Richard and Robert Flower were all
mayors and so were Edward Northey and John
Stephens, also clothiers. (fn. 98) That some at least of
these manufacturers possessed gentle status and
were prosperous is in various ways attested.
Northey (fn. 99) and John Pierce (d. c. 1642) (fn. 100) sent their
sons to Oxford, and Richard Batt bequeathed £130
in cash. (fn. 101)
The effect of the changes in the guild structure of
1614 seems to have been to turn the three sections
of 1565 into three separate companies. The new
constitution was agreed upon in the common council
of the borough, and the mayor remained the 'chief
head and governor'. (fn. 102) The parent company or
merchant guild was now implicitly abolished. The
three companies were the drapers, the mercers, and
the leather-sellers, each under a master and two
wardens, called in the case of the drapers masterwardens. The first included clothiers, weavers,
woollen-drapers, tailors, hosiers, fullers, shearmen,
and spinners, i.e. the textile manufacturers and
leading textile retailers, and it extended also to
coopers, carpenters, masons, tilers, joiners, cutlers,
smiths, and ironmen, in fact the constructional
workers and most metal-workers. The second
company included mercers, grocers, linen-drapers,
haberdashers of both small wares and headgear,
vintners, innholders, brewers, bakers, apothecaries,
barbers, surgeons, chandlers, painters, braziers, and
glasiers, i.e. the catering trades and leading retail
tradesmen. It has been concluded that the leathersellers comprised dealers in hides, patten-, boot-,
bellows, and harness-makers, saddlers, and girdlers. (fn. 103)
The regulations promulgated required the registration of those free of the companies, the admission
and regulation of apprentices and journeymen, the
correction of trade abuses, and the restriction on
outsiders seeking to trade in the borough. Small
changes in the mercers' constitution were made in
1620 and 1623, and in 1651 the whole of the
drapers' constitution was ratified, which suggests
that the company was still of some account. In
general it may be doubted whether the companies
were ever of much economic, as distinct from
social, importance. Nevertheless the charter of 1685
sought to restrict trade within the borough to those
free of one of the companies, unless they were
locally apprenticed. (fn. 104)
While white broadcloth no doubt continued to be
the staple product, felt and serge now began to be
manufactured. There were felt-makers in 1633 and
1637, (fn. 105) a serge-weaver in 1637, (fn. 106) and a serge-comber
in 1631. (fn. 107) There was a hosier in 1615 (fn. 108) and, somewhat unexpectedly, a silk-weaver two years later. (fn. 109)
Hosiers had market standings by 1630. (fn. 110) Besides
combers practitioners of processes subsidiary to
weaving began to show themselves. Thomas
Blackborrow, doubtless a kinsman of the 16thcentury clothier already mentioned, is labelled both
'fuller' (fn. 111) and 'shearman', (fn. 112) and two other fullers
existed in 1620. (fn. 113) William Watton (1620) (fn. 114) and
Robert Showring (1631, 1652) were cardmakers. (fn. 115)
The leather trades continued conspicuous, as the
creation of the leather-sellers' company implies.
Between 1605 and 1640 Edmund and Edward
Potter, (fn. 116) Philip Godfather, (fn. 117) James Fidsell, (fn. 118)
Richard Godbye, and Richard Palmer (fn. 119) are named
as glovers, Richard Attwood (fn. 120) and John Miles (fn. 121) as
curriers, John Thorer as a saddler, (fn. 122) a Paradise (fn. 123)
and Thomas Merryweather (fn. 124) as tanners. Cordwainers or shoemakers are numerous enough to
suggest the presence of an industry catering for far
more than a local market.
By the turn of the century Devizes had not
significantly changed its relationship to other
Wiltshire towns. With Salisbury and Marlborough
it was the only Wiltshire town to whom the Crown
appealed in 1614 for money and plate. (fn. 125) In 1622 it
was the only town, apart from Marlborough, which
was asked for a benevolence. (fn. 126) In 1635 and 1638 it
contributed somewhat less to ship-money than
Marlborough, but more than Chippenham and
much more than Wilton. (fn. 127) In the middle of the
century, however, it outstripped Marlborough and in
1662 Fuller called it 'the best and biggest town for
trading (Salisbury being a city) in the county'. (fn. 128)
There is no evidence that Devizes engaged in the
making of medley clothes which elsewhere in
the county was undertaken with success around the
middle of the 17th century. Consequently the town
lost ground and the centre of Wiltshire textiles
shifted westward. (fn. 129) If petitions of 1696, (fn. 130) 1719, (fn. 131)
and 1731 (fn. 132) are to be trusted, the Devizes manufacturers suffered considerable losses. Yet clothmaking did not leave the town; it changed its form.
In the later 17th century the town became a chief
centre of serge manufacture, (fn. 133) producing a strong
variety of 'German' serge much used by country
people. (fn. 134) Edward Bowman was a serge-weaver in
1657 (fn. 135) and between that year and 1753 23 other
people are described as serge-clothiers, serge-makers,
or serge-weavers. (fn. 136) The last of these was George
Pead, serge-weaver of St. James's chapelry, (fn. 137) but
serge was still being made in 1779. (fn. 138)
A slightly later Devizes product, noted by Defoe
as a speciality of the town, was drugget, popular for
its lightness. (fn. 139) Four members of the Phillips family
engaged in its manufacture between 1716 and 1734, (fn. 140)
and ten other drugget-makers or drugget-clothiers
can be found. (fn. 141) They include Morgan Price who
was so described in 1734 (fn. 142) and who was a sergeclothier in 1748. (fn. 143) Devizes druggets were being
exported to Russia up to 1753. (fn. 144) Felt-making
continued. A felt-maker is mentioned c. 1669 (fn. 145) and
there are four new ones in the 18th century, the last
in 1750. (fn. 146)
Another industrial event of the 18th century was
the inception of 'cassimere'-making. 'Cassimeres',
closely-woven fancy fabrics sometimes shot with
silk, cotton, or mohair, were the speciality of John
Anstie, (fn. 147) who was trading from at least 1779 (fn. 148) and
who c. 1785 built a factory in New Park Street at the
corner of Snuff Street on a site acquired about ten
years earlier. (fn. 149) Anstie was said in 1788 to have kept
300 looms at work. (fn. 150) His cloths were exported to the
Continent and he himself was a leader among West
of England clothiers. He went bankrupt, however, in
1793, partly perhaps through over-diversification, (fn. 151)
and partly because the French War made the
discharge of debts impossible. (fn. 152)
Between the Restoration and the Reform Bill
fresh families of Devizes clothiers and drapers arose,
notably the Suttons, who succeeded by marriage to
New Park, (fn. 153) the drugget-making Phillipses (fn. 154) and
others of that name, i.e. Edward (1733–67) (fn. 155) and
Edward White Phillips (d. by 1767), (fn. 156) and John
Waylen (1687–1727) who married a Paradise (fn. 157) and
founded a dynasty. Of these the elder James Sutton
was a white clothier in 1715, (fn. 158) his son, also James, was
admitted to the drapers' 'fellowship' in 1719, (fn. 159) and
a John Sutton, not in the direct line, was a clothier
in 1767. (fn. 160) Stephen Hillman, trading in 1791, (fn. 161) was
worth £800 yearly in 1797. (fn. 162) Such were some of the
new-comers. Some of the older families, however,
continued, such as the Paradises (fn. 163) and the Webbs. (fn. 164)
There were still six clothiers in 1783–4 (fn. 165) and
three in 1791. (fn. 166) By c. 1828 all had departed. (fn. 167) The
last of any account was Robert Waylen (d. 1841),
who in his hey-day employed a thousand (fn. 168) and used
the best steam engine in the district. (fn. 169) His factory,
afterwards a brewery (fn. 170) stands behind the houses on
the west side of Northgate Street. (fn. 171) It ceased to make
broad cloth in 1824 but was still making fancy
waist-coatings in 1826, which continued to be made
for a few more years by one Holloway, Waylen's
foreman. (fn. 172) Though the firm of J. J. Fox & Co. was
still listed in 1839 as making linsey-woolsey (fn. 173) and as
woollen cloth manufacturers and wool-staplers in
1865, (fn. 174) they seem to have been primarily retail
drapers. (fn. 175)
The industries ancillary to cloth manufacture were
more sparsely represented after the Rebellion than
they had been in early times. Between 1654 and
1679 five card-makers (fn. 176) and four worsted-combers (fn. 177)
are named. Wool-combers are not conspicuous in
the next century. They seem, however, to have
been grouped into an informal company, for in 1739
they collectively attended a public ceremony. (fn. 178)
A comber was still living in 1776. (fn. 179) In 1756 there
was a dyer, (fn. 180) and in 1743 Richard Brooks, clothier,
patented a machine for drying yarn. (fn. 181) There was a
fuller in 1734 and shearmen in 1723 and 1759. (fn. 182)
Among the ancillaries silk-throwing must be
included. As has been shown, silk might be needed
in weaving 'cassimeres' and Robert Waylen spun
his own. (fn. 183) A distinct trade is said to have arisen
about 1815 and by 1855 was employing some 100
men. (fn. 184) Belvedere, once Snakesmead mill, in
Roundway parish, can be traced from 1823, when
Peter Walker owned it. In that year Walker joined
Robert Waylen to work another factory. (fn. 185) This was
in Anstie's former building. (fn. 186) What came of this
enterprise is not known but Belvedere mill, then
owned by Frederick Walker, lasted until 1859. (fn. 187)
Wool brought wealth to Devizes not only through
those who wove from it but also through those who
dealt in (or jobbed) it. By c. 1637 there was already a
market spinner. (fn. 188) William Ludlow and his ancestors
seem to have been wool-broggers throughout the
later 16th and earlier 17th centuries (fn. 189) and there
are four known wool-staplers within the period
1672–86. (fn. 190) During the first sixty years of the 18th
century the staplers continue numerous. Thirtythree of them, including one cloth factor, are then
known by name. (fn. 191) Moreover they lasted on for
another century. Four are known between 1783 and
1839, (fn. 192) the last being William Cunnington (d. 1846),
the nephew of Colt Hoare's collaborator.
Cunnington established his wool business at
Southgate House in 1827 and in 1836 began
additionally to deal in wine and spirits. His sons
William (d. 1906), Henry (d. 1887), and Edward
carried on after their father's death, though it is
not clear for how long they acted as wool-staplers,
certainly not after 1887. (fn. 193)
After the Rebellion there were no more tanners.
Glovers, however, continued. Four are known in
the middle years of the 18th century (fn. 194) and one
Baster, fell-monger, glove-, breeches-, and gaitermaker, enjoyed a reputation well beyond the borough
bounds. (fn. 195) A few such men were still similarly
employed in 1861 (fn. 196) and the firm of V. C. Boulton of
Westbury maintained a workshop in 1956. (fn. 197) In the
earlier 18th century three curriers, (fn. 198) four saddlers, (fn. 199)
and eight cordwainers (fn. 200) are known. The last are
perhaps still too numerous for an exclusively local
trade. Curriers were in business in 1783–6 (fn. 201) and
1791 (fn. 202) in Bridewell Street, hence the Curriers Arms. (fn. 203)
Reference to curriers and 'leather-cutters' continue
far on into the 19th century. The Reynolds family
practised their craft in Maryport and Monday
Market Streets until at least 1885 (fn. 204) and in that year
there was a tannery in the latter. (fn. 205) Throughout the
19th century there were never fewer than two firms
in the town. (fn. 206)
The braziers of earlier times remain in evidence.
Among them James Bartlett (fn. 207) and James Burrough
were also bell-founders. The latter, who is thought
to have kept his foundry at the Ark, (fn. 208) was active
locally between 1738 and 1755 but with two
exceptions never plied his trade outside the county. (fn. 209)
William Box, an iron-founder, cast one Wiltshire
bell. (fn. 210) Braziers continue into the 19th century.
Two are named in 1822–3 and also an iron-and
brass-founder. (fn. 211) Around 1825 much good ironwork seems to have been executed by Devizes men,
especially H. and J. Burt, and a Mr. Hope who
succeeded Burrough in his business. (fn. 212) There were
four braziers and tinmen in 1830 (fn. 213) and five in 1851, (fn. 214)
but they and their successors were probably in
general only retailers.
A spoon-maker (Henry Showring) appears in
1631 (fn. 215) and in the mid 18th century there are two
whitesmiths. (fn. 216) There was still a wiredrawer in
1694 (fn. 217) and perhaps also in 1740. (fn. 218) There was a cutler
in 1620 (fn. 219) and two in the 18th century. (fn. 220) The names
of just over 30 clock-makers have been recorded,
active, judging by their dated products, between
1660 and 1819. (fn. 221) They were probably of little more
than local consequence, (fn. 222) although a list compiled in
1911 shows that there were far more clock-makers
in Devizes than in any other Wiltshire town.
Tobacco and snuff were cured and ground in
Devizes from the early 18th century. (fn. 223) The firm,
later known as E. & W. Anstie Ltd., traces its origin
to Richard Anstie, a grocer, who in 1698 occupied a
shop at the junction of Snuff Street with the
Market Place. John Anstie, Richard's son, was for a
short time in partnership with William Leach
(d. 1780), a former wire-maker, (fn. 224) who ground his
snuff in the two windmills on the castle motte.
These mills existed in 1716, when a half share of
them was conveyed to William Maple, (fn. 225) and
originally expressed rape oil. (fn. 226) They were used by
William Ludlow, who was still in trade in 1784. (fn. 227)
The Anstie-Leach partnership was dissolved before
1740 but in 1769 Leach was still trading alone. (fn. 228)
Ansties tenanted land on both sides of Snuff
Street from 1731 (fn. 229) and presumably at some time
later in the century used it for their tobacco trade.
The firm was mechanized in the 1830s and the
works completely rebuilt in 1831. (fn. 230) In 1894 offices,
designed by J. A. Randell, (fn. 231) were put up on the site
of the shop of 1698. (fn. 232) By 1917 the former factory of
John Anstie the clothier, at the junction of Snuff
and New Park Streets, had been taken over. (fn. 233) In
1925 the tobacco-making business of I. Rutter & Co.,
of Mitcham (Surr.), was absorbed. In 1944 the firm
was sold to the Imperial Tobacco Co. and thus the
six-generation link with the Anstie family was
severed. Snuff ceased to be made in 1957 (fn. 234) and
tobacco to be cured in 1961. (fn. 235) In the second year the
factory and office buildings were sold to C. H.
Woodward, Ltd., printers. (fn. 236)
From the mid 16th century brewing and malting
have been carried on (fn. 237) and in the 1670s malt was
reckoned one of the town's more important articles
of merchandise. (fn. 238) Between 1620 and the mid 18th
century ten maltsters (fn. 239) and three brewers are
known. (fn. 240) A malt-house in St. John's parish, once
Thomas Lewen's is mentioned from 1618 (fn. 241) to
1626 (fn. 242) and a 'millhouse' was conveyed to John
Hollis, maltster, in 1707. (fn. 243) In 1645 a malt-mill
'opposite' the castle was destroyed, (fn. 244) before 1752 a
brewhouse and millhouse seems to have stood on the
site of the Ark, (fn. 245) and from 1726 until at least 1842 a
malt-house and subsequently a brewery stood next
to the Bridewell. (fn. 246) By 1819 the Bridewell Street
brewery had come into the hands of James and
Joseph Dredge, represented in 1844 by Joseph
Dredge & Co. (fn. 247) In 1797 Samuel Adlam, a clothier
in 1783–4, (fn. 248) was a prosperous maltster. (fn. 249) Charles
Rose and John Tylee, his nephew, were inn-holders
in 1766 and in partnership as brewers by 1768. (fn. 250)
By 1783, Rose being dead, the firm had been
transformed into Tylee and Gent, (fn. 251) which under
the subsequent names of Gent and Tylee, J. & T.
Tylee, and Tylee & Co. is traceable to 1844. (fn. 252)
By 1822–3 the brewery was at the maltings,
Northgate Street, (fn. 253) on a site now forming a branch
of Wadworth's. By 1841 it had become a foundry. (fn. 254)
The firm of Figgins and Gent coexisted from 1783
to 1791. (fn. 255) James Gent, whose income in 1797 might
be reckoned a large one, (fn. 256) remained a partner until
his death in 1829. (fn. 257)
The two connected trades continued to flourish
throughout the 19th century, often as adjuncts to
liquor retailing. Seven firms are found in 1839,
three of them 'large', (fn. 258) and six in 1898–9. (fn. 259) In
test years they average four. (fn. 260) Few survived for
long. One of the brewers of 1839 was James Oram
of Northgate Street, (fn. 261) successor to the younger
Robert Waylen and J. O. Anstie. (fn. 262) In 1864 Oram
sold out to Sainsbury Brothers, (fn. 263) who established
the Northgate Brewery (fn. 264) in the elder Robert
Waylen's cloth factory, (fn. 265) which by 1970 had become Messrs. May's premises. They then sold in
1875 to H. A. Wadworth, a farmer, who founded
the present firm of Wadworth & Co. Ltd. The
brewery and maltings at the corner of Northgate and
New Park Streets were designed by. J. A. Randell (fn. 266)
and built by direct labour in 1885. (fn. 267) Four years
later Wadworths became a limited company and
absorbed J. F. Humby's business, otherwise the
Southbroom Brewery in the present Southbroom
Road traceable from 1854. (fn. 268) Later they acquired
other enterprises: in Devizes the Estcourt Brewery,
traceable from 1889, (fn. 269) and Chandler & Co's
maltings, once Tylee's, in Northgate Street, in 1904.
The last two of Wadworth's Devizes competitors are
recorded until 1911 and 1933 respectively. They
were the Hare and Hounds Brewery, (fn. 270) which had
been in existence, if intermittently, since 1839, (fn. 271)
and the Three Crowns brewery. (fn. 272) Between 1904 and
1968 Wadworths bought various public houses
and liquor stores. In 1964 they ceased to malt
and converted the Northgate Street maltings into
a warehouse called Kennet House.
The development of brewing in the 18th century
led to the building-up of a cooperage industry.
Three Paradises were then coopers (fn. 273) and four others
are known. (fn. 274)
In the 17th century Devizes was well known for
the manufacture of metheglin, in which Thomas
Pierce, of the Swan, did a large trade. (fn. 275) One or two
Devizes tobacco-pipe-makers of the late 17th or
early 18th century have been identified. (fn. 276)
Until the 17th century (fn. 277) there is no mention of
wind- or water-mills. The castle occupied the only
suitable site for the former and the flow of water in
the parkland streams was too feeble to sustain the
latter. A horse-mill, however, occurs in 1363 and
1451. (fn. 278)
In the course of the 19th century some completely
new industries arose. Two firms of agricultural
engineers played a large part in the town's prosperity.
The first of these was Brown and May, established
in 1854 and liquidated in 1913. (fn. 279) Its works, the
North Wilts. Foundry, which in 1885 lay north of
Estcourt Street close to the then workhouse, (fn. 280) were
badly burnt in 1873. (fn. 281) The firm made agricultural
steam engines and ultimately oil engines, which
seem to have led to their undoing. A limited
company from 1895, (fn. 282) the firm employed 350
workmen in 1901. The other firm was T. H. White,
Ltd., originating in an ironmongers' firm (1830) of
that name in the Brittox and another (Thomas
Carter) in Sidmouth Street. It was founded about
1855 by George White, whose grandson (d. 1899)
bore the same initials as the ironmonger of 70 years
before. It became a limited company in 1914 and
absorbed other Wiltshire firms, including those of
Richard and William Box, active in and around
Devizes in the 1840s. (fn. 283) The firm built the Phoenix
factory (burnt 1864) (fn. 284) in the angle formed by
Sidmouth Street and Gains Lane. In 1973 the works
were moved to Nursteed Road. (fn. 285)
The firm of W. E. Chivers & Sons Ltd., building
contractors, dates from 1884, when the first Chivers
set up a small business close to the Rising Sun in
Southbroom Road. It moved in the late 1890s to a
joinery at the corner of Hare and Hounds and
Sidmouth Streets and in 1912 took over Brown and
May's foundry, which is still occupies. It came to
prosperity in the First World War when it was
employed by the government partly in building
construction and partly in furnishing steam lorries
to transport troops and munitions. The transport
business was given up in the early 1930s but the
construction side has continued on a large scale.
Since the Second World War Chiverses have built
the Atomic Energy establishments at Harwell
(Berks.) from 1946, and at Aldermaston (Berks.)
from 1955. In 1970 about 1,500 were employed of
whom 300–400 were based on Devizes. Branches
have been opened in several parts of southern
Britain. The main offices in Estcourt Street were
rebuilt c. 1965. (fn. 286)
The North Wilts. Dairy Co., formed in 1889 by
(Sir) Reginald Butler, had its depot in Estcourt
Street (fn. 287) and later a factory in Pans Lane. (fn. 288) By fusion
with a similar company in Melksham this became
the Wilts. United Dairies, Ltd., in 1897 and took
over other dairying concerns. (fn. 289) Headquarters
remained in Devizes until 1913. The Pans Lane
factory then became the chief centre for the firms'
soft cheeses until its closure in 1941. In 1915 the
company was merged in United Dairies, Ltd. (fn. 290)
The Central Wiltshire Bacon Company, Bath
Road, was formed in 1899. Shut down during the
Second World War, it revived its prosperity shortly
after, (fn. 291) but was closed finally in 1960, (fn. 292) when its
buildings were taken over by Cross Manufacturing
Co. (1938), Ltd., light engineers. Two small
electrical manufacturing firms operate: Savage
Transformers, Ltd., with a factory in Nursteed
Road, started in 1926, and the Hinchley Engineering
Co., started in 1949 in the former cheese factory in
Pans Lane. (fn. 293)
Several neighbouring brick and tile factories
provided outlets for the local labour force, especially
the works on Caen Hill, established by 1855. (fn. 294)
Apart, however, from the works which existed
1831–9 at the foot of Dunkirk and in the latter years
belonged to G. T. Sainsbury, (fn. 295) none of these has
ever been within the borough bounds.
By the early 19th century Devizes had been
transformed from a mainly manufacturing into a
mainly commercial town. In the preceding century
economic life had been growing more sophisticated
and so the way for this evolution had been smoothed.
In 1740 attempts were still being made to restrict
retail trading to the members of the three
companies. (fn. 296) Thirty years later the companies were
dissolved. (fn. 297) Luxury trades were set up. Thus there
was a bookseller before 1719, (fn. 298) a goldsmith by 1712. (fn. 299)
Mantua-makers abounded. (fn. 300) Henry Axford (fl.
1720), (fn. 301) John Locke, (fn. 302) his son Wadham Locke (fl.
1744, 1755), (fn. 303) Solomon Hughes (fl. 1751), (fn. 304) and
William, his son, (fn. 305) were attorneys. By 1783 there
were six firms of attorneys in practice, (fn. 306) by 1797
seven. (fn. 307) A physician existed in 1711 (fn. 308) and two
surgeons by the middle of the century. (fn. 309) By 1791
there were two physicians and four surgeons. (fn. 310)
In 1775 the first bank was opened. It was owned
by James Sutton, William Leach, John Beaven, and
Richard Read. (fn. 311) Sutton was probably the former
clothier of that name, (fn. 312) Leach perhaps the tobaccomanufacturer. (fn. 313) By 1783 the house was known as
Sutton, Read & Tylee. (fn. 314) Tylee was John Tylee,
the brewer, (fn. 315) by 1797 the richest man in town. (fn. 316)
Under a variety of names this bank existed for two
generations. It had disappeared by 1851. (fn. 317) Its offices
were in the Market Place in the 1820s, (fn. 318) and in
Northgate Street in 1839. (fn. 319) The firm of Locke,
Hughes & Co., presumably composed of members of
the local lawyers' firms, may be traced from 1822–3
under a succession of different names. (fn. 320) It was then
in the Brittox (fn. 321) and moved to purpose-built offices
at no. 41 St. John's Street, on the site of the old
gabled home of the Mayos, in 1826, (fn. 322) where it
remained until 1851. (fn. 323) The bank was fused with the
Capital and Counties in 1883. (fn. 324)
Inns.
Nine Devizes innkeepers were licensed in
1600. (fn. 325) In 1620 15 innholders or innkeepers, 13
alehouse keepers, and a taverner, all of Devizes or
Southbroom, bound themselves in Lenten recognizances. (fn. 326) If the earlier figure is complete, even
for the hosts of the larger establishments, there must
have been an enormous increase in taverns over a
short period. A reduction in the number by 12 in
1623 causes no surprise. (fn. 327) In 1686 the inns of the
town contained 97 beds, many fewer than Salisbury,
Chippenham, or Marlborough could provide; even
Warminster and Bradford could do better. (fn. 328) On the
other hand stabling was ampler in 1686 than that of
any other Wiltshire town apart from Salisbury. (fn. 329)
In 1766 licensed premises in the borough and on the
Green numbered 41, (fn. 330) in 1818–19 30 within the
borough, (fn. 331) in 1844 28 within the extended borough, (fn. 332)
in 1903 30, (fn. 333) and in 1970 26. Several of the early
inns belonged to the corporation either absolutely or
in trust.
The first named inn, mentioned in 1514, was
called 'Dokemannys'. (fn. 334) It stood on the Green and
does not recur. Next comes the Crown, which occurs
in 1538–44. (fn. 335) It seems to have continuously occupied
the same site in St. John's Street (fn. 336) until its closure in
1966. (fn. 337) Its use in the 17th century by lodgers of
good social standing suggests that it was then one
of the best inns in the town. (fn. 338)
There is record of six other 16th-century inns,
four of which may be specially mentioned. The
Hart, represented by no. 12 St. John's Street, is
first mentioned in 1546, (fn. 339) and under the successive
names of the Boot, (fn. 340) and the Wheatsheaf, and
possibly the Rose (fn. 341) can be traced to 1836. (fn. 342)
A Swan is first mentioned in 1563 (fn. 343) and in 1580 (fn. 344)
stood in the New Port. In 1668 there was a Black
Swan, approachable from Short Street, near the
butchers' shambles. It was still an inn in 1673 (fn. 345) but
closed soon after. It is probably the Swan of 1580.
In 1693 no. 22 High Street, previously a private
house, had become the Black Swan and so remained
until 1732 (fn. 346) or later. Its yard may have lain across
the street, for in 1900 no. 6, on the east side, was
still called 'Old Swan Yard'. By 1750 the building
had become a private house, but by 1766 there was
once again a Black Swan. (fn. 347) This may have been the
present one, which is dated 1737, (fn. 348) was partly burnt
in 1798, (fn. 349) and has stood in the Market Place since at
least 1778. (fn. 350) A White Swan, now represented by
no. 39 Market Place, (fn. 351) existed in 1676–7, (fn. 352) and
perhaps changed prefixes with the Black Swan when
that inn set up in High Street. In 1758 it was made a
dining-place for militia officers. (fn. 353) It was still an inn
in 1775, was a private house in 1791, (fn. 354) and an inn
again from 1808 (fn. 355) to 1864, (fn. 356) when it became the
Wilts and Dorset Bank. (fn. 357) Thomas Pierce, the
metheglin-maker, (fn. 358) once occupied the Swan and
was presumably the descendant of John Pierce, its
licensee in 1600, (fn. 359) and Richard Pierce, the Royalist
mayor, its owner in 1649. (fn. 360) The inn was probably
the Black Swan in 1668. An Angel, in the New Port,
existed in 1596. (fn. 361) It is often referred to afterwards,
for out of it a rent was payable to the poor. (fn. 362) It has
been claimed that it stood in the Market Place on a
site later occupied by Ansties' offices, and at an
uncertain date to have been renamed the White
Lion. (fn. 363)
The Bear, now and for long the chief inn, is first
mentioned in 1600. (fn. 364) In 1678 it was called the
Black Bear (fn. 365) and in 1738 alternatively the Bear and
Castle. (fn. 366) It seems to have possessed ornamental
grounds by 1664 (fn. 367) and a bowling alley ten years
before. (fn. 368) As a staging point on the Bath road it became
well known to the fashionable world and under its
licensee George Whatley (d. 1767) was evidently well
conducted. A near successor to Whatley was Thomas
Lawrence, the painter's father, who became licensee
in 1772 and remained until at least 1779, (fn. 369) when he
was replaced by William Halcombe (d. 1801),
licensee of the King's Arms. (fn. 370) During Lawrence's
time Fanny Burney and David Garrick were
lodgers (fn. 371) and the young Thomas (1769–1830)
entertained such visitors by reciting poetry and
showing his precocious drawings. (fn. 372) Halcombe
maintained the standards, so that the inn could still
be described in 1788 as 'remarkable' for its
goodness. (fn. 373) In his time 30 coaches a day halted in
the yard. (fn. 374) He may have been responsible for
building new assembly rooms to the north of the inn
where the Corn Exchange now stands. The likeness of
a black bear, holding a bunch of grapes, reared upon
two columns in the Market Place, was moved to the
north entrance porch c. 1801, (fn. 375) after when the
prefix 'black' was dropped. (fn. 376) The Archduke of
Austria in 1786, George III and Queen Charlotte in
1789, and Queen Charlotte alone in 1817 all stopped
at the inn. (fn. 377) The Duchess of Kent and Princess
Victoria did the same in 1830, (fn. 378) and Edward VII,
when Prince of Wales, visited it in 1893. (fn. 379) The
construction of the Corn Exchange and Station
Road c. 1857 much reduced the size of the yard. (fn. 380)
In the 18th and 19th centuries, especially before
the Town Hall was remodelled and the Corn
Exchange erected, the inn was an administrative and
social centre; the first board of Improvement
Commissioners were required by statute to assemble
there, (fn. 381) and it was an appointed dining-place for
militia officers. (fn. 382) In 1828 a subscription readingroom was established in it. (fn. 383)
The northern half of the inn was originally
timber-framed and has an L-shaped plan, consisting of a front range and a long rear wing. The
front range may once have had an open passage
running through it. Its oldest visible features are two
Tudor-arched stone fireplaces of a type which
persisted from the late 16th to the mid 17th century.
The gabled rear wing is likely to be of the latter
period. The front range was remodelled and raised
in height in the 18th century; its three-storeyed
front is now stucco-faced and has sash windows and
a columned porch. Other 18th-century alterations,
perhaps Whatley's work, included a curved staircase with a Venetian window above it housed in a
bowed projection facing the yard. Three stone
Tuscan columns, each with a detached entablature,
rise through two storeys of the rear wing and
support the ceiling of what may originally have been
an open first-floor gallery. The monumental
character of the columns, incongruous in this
position, suggests that they may have come from
elsewhere; they appear to match those which
formerly supported the Bear sign in the Market
Place. Early in the 18th century the inn frontage was
extended by the erection of a new south block.
It originally had a flat two-storeyed front of five
bays with a central pediment. (fn. 384) Between c. 1804 and
1816 the front was faced with stone ashlar and given
two-storeyed bay windows, fluted pilasters, and
other embellishments; (fn. 385) the wrought-iron verandah
above the central doorway and double flight of steps
may be of later date. The former assembly room,
displaced by the Corn Exchange, appears to have
been reconstructed in much its original form at the
far end of the rear wing. The street front had a low
ground floor with, above it, three tall sash windows
set in arched recesses. (fn. 386) The present assembly room
has similar windows and an enriched plaster
ceiling in the 'Adam' style.
The Elm Tree may possibly be the corner
tenement, 'forynst an elme', mentioned in 1512. (fn. 387)
As the Salutation Inn it occurs from 1665–6 (fn. 388) to
1681. (fn. 389) It had acquired its present name by 1818. (fn. 390)
A tree which stood in front of it was removed in
1826. (fn. 391)
The Black Horse occurs from 1657 (fn. 392) to 1848. It
then changed its name to the Wiltshire House and
disappeared in the next year. (fn. 393) It stood on the site of
the Wiltshire Savings Bank, Long Street, (fn. 394) and in the
late 18th century was occasionally the meetingplace of the licensing justices. (fn. 395)
There was a Bull in 1663. (fn. 396) It may be identifiable
with the Bull's Head in the Little Brittox, recorded
from 1740 (fn. 397) to 1821 (fn. 398) or later, (fn. 399) whose sign is said
to have been painted by Sir Thomas Lawrence
in childhood. (fn. 400) The Castle, New Park Street, still
open, was built soon after 1768 and was inviting
custom in its 'genteely furnished' state in 1770. (fn. 401)
In the later 18th century it was the meeting-place
of the Improvement Commissioners and of local
insurance societies (fn. 402) and in 1836 it was a posting
house, (fn. 403) fair proof of its size and importance.
The Curriers' Arms formed part of the Bridewell
Street brewery. (fn. 404) It was the Chartists' headquarters
in 1839. (fn. 405) Between 1841 and 1845 it became the
Duke of Wellington and so survived until 1865. (fn. 406)
The Hare and Hounds in the street of that name, has
existed since 1766. (fn. 407) The King's Arms (Northgate
House in 1973), first mentioned in 1766, (fn. 408) the
approximate date of all but the western block, which
is a little later, became soon after a coaching house
with 40 beds, garden, and bowling green, the scene
of aristocratic balls. Halcombe was the landlord in
the early 1770s until he left it for the Bear. (fn. 409) The
inn had closed by 1823. (fn. 410) The Leg of Mutton,
Sidmouth Street, is named from 1739 (fn. 411) to 1830. (fn. 412)
It seems likely that it became the Odd Fellows or
Odd Fellows Arms in or before 1844. (fn. 413) That inn
changed its name to the Unicorn in 1866, (fn. 414) was
still open in 1966, (fn. 415) but had closed by 1970. Another
Unicorn existed in 1687. (fn. 416) A Pelican (not the present
one) was the headquarters of the royal troops during
Monmouth's rebellion. (fn. 417) This still existed in 1737–
8. (fn. 418) The Queen's Head has stood at the foot of
Dunkirk Hill since 1769. (fn. 419) The building of
chequered brickwork with stone dressings and a
pedimented Tuscan porch may be of that period;
a two-storeyed bay window was added later. The
Three Crowns, Maryport Street, probably a 17thcentury building, has existed since 1849. (fn. 420) When
it was put up for sale in 1933 by J. F. Phipp, whose
family had owned it since 1862, it was said to be the
only free house in town. (fn. 421) The White Bear, Monday
Market Street, a building of similar if not earlier
date, has existed since 1673. (fn. 422) The timber-framed
building on a corner site, which it still occupies,
probably dates from the earlier 17th century.
Agriculture.
Until the boundary extensions
began in 1831 the only significant amount of
agricultural land in the borough was the comparatively well-watered tract of the old park. In 1227 the
king had a meadow in it (fn. 423) and in 1225 its herbage
and pannage were let at a fixed rent. The herbage
and pannage of the other park was also let in 1255
and the whole of that park, by which may have been
meant the pasturage, was let as well. (fn. 424) In 1281–2 the
constable of the castle converted the meadow in the
old park into pasture. (fn. 425)
In 1408 a parker, then newly appointed, was
authorized to take a fee for every beast agisted. (fn. 426)
Such fees continued to be collected until at least
1447–8. (fn. 427) From 1465–6 (fn. 428) until the later 16th
century the agistment and also the pannage were
customarily let, often to the stewards. (fn. 429) The herbage
or hay crop was let from 1468 to 1478–9 to the
parker with or without a partner (fn. 430) and was let with
the agistment and pannage to Henry Herbert, earl of
Pembroke (d. 1601), the steward within the period
1574–82. (fn. 431) It seems probable that these leases
affected the old park alone. In 1570 Pembroke had
also secured for a term the agistment and pannage, (fn. 432)
which in 1581 were granted for life to his son
William (d. 1630), later earl of Pembroke, and in
1592 to feoffees, one of whom was steward to the
earl of Essex. (fn. 433)
Between 1446–7 (fn. 434) and c. 1543 (fn. 435) the summer and
winter pasture of the new park were leased to
parkers. (fn. 436) In 1570 Pembroke acquired the pannage
for a term (fn. 437) and in 1581 the lease was extended. (fn. 438)
In 1592 it was, like the pannage of the 'old' park,
settled upon feoffees. (fn. 439)
Encroachments on the new park, for the needs of
husbandry, had begun in 1275–6, (fn. 440) when a rent,
unchanged until at least 1505–6, (fn. 441) was collected for
the farm of the lands therein. In 1327–8 this
encroachment, later known as Parklands, (fn. 442) amounted
to 135 a., mostly arable, and was divided between
eight people. (fn. 443) By 1412 an area within it was both
arable and pasture (fn. 444) but by 1446–7 was referred to
only as pasture. (fn. 445)
Land 'under' the castle ditch, and therefore in the
old park, was let sporadically from 1443 to 1481 but
was waste in the years immediately following. (fn. 446)
A survey of c. 1565–6 shows 'gardens' near the
castle (fn. 447) and in 1611 there were meadow and
pasture, 'gardens', and orchards around the same
area. (fn. 448) The pattern was the same in 1651 (fn. 449) and
1654. (fn. 450) In particular there was a cherry orchard on
the south side of the castle mound. In 1654 the
whole of the old park was split up into small
'grounds'. The partition of 1664 (fn. 451) implies the
existence of arable, meadow, and pasture in all parts
of the park. (fn. 452) The land-use in the next century is
uncertain, but between 1710 and 1740 Wadham
Wyndham's portion (fn. 453) was split into 25–35
parcels. In 1720 these parcels included a withy
bed, which between 1729 and 1738 was converted
into a grove. (fn. 454) About 1551 rabbits abounded in
what was called the ditch about the castle without
the park. (fn. 455) References in 1715 to the Little Conyger (fn. 456)
and in 1828 to the Upper Conyger, the latter lying
south of the Congregational church, (fn. 457) attest the
presence of a rabbit warren.
In the 19th century the old park was split up
between Old Park and Lower Park, Gillett's, and
Sunnyside farms. (fn. 458) The last of these, occupied
in 1896 and later by a dairyman, (fn. 459) was watered by
the clarified effluent of the sewage works. (fn. 460) In 1920
it was said to consist of 'exceptionally rich pasture
land' (fn. 461) and in 1924 its pasturage potential was even
more enthusiastically praised. (fn. 462)
Cartographical evidence shows the whole town to
have been a mass of gardens and orchards in 1759.
In particular the map of that year marks a belt of
'nurseries and gardens' running outside the then
borough boundary from the site of the Assize
Courts to Gains Lane. (fn. 463) The area seems large but
may be no more than is to be expected on the
outskirts of a rather sophisticated town of this sort
and with a soil as fertile as that of the Upper
Greensand. Perhaps in one of these nurseries
worked the gardener Adam Taylor, author of a
treatise on pineapples published in Devizes in
1769. (fn. 464) Three later nurseries may need special
mention. An estate called Rotherstone was bought
by George Sloper in 1775 and converted into a
nursery garden in 1794. (fn. 465) It probably ceased by
1839 when the terrace of that name was built. (fn. 466) In
1841 there was a nursery, occupied by James
Durnford, at the corner of Pans Lane and
Southbroom Road (fn. 467) and in 1885 Northgate
Nursery ran from the malthouses in Northgate
Street southwards to the station. (fn. 468) The second was
still a nursery in 1971. (fn. 469)
An allotment garden, said to be the first of its kind
in England, was laid out by William Ewart, of
Broadleas, Potterne, in 1855, south of Hillworth
Park and west of Potterne Road. In 1956 it began to
be built over. (fn. 470)
By the time of statutory inclosure (1819) there was
already a number of old inclosures in the tithings
of Southbroom and Wick, (fn. 471) but little has been
gathered about their exploitation. An analysis
published in 1834 of the land-use of Southbroom
chapelry (fn. 472) is not illuminating because there is no
ready means of knowing how the classification
applies to the parts that lie within the present
borough bounds.
Markets And Fairs.
As might be expected
in a town on royal demesne, Devizes market, first
mentioned in 1228, (fn. 473) sprang up without express
grant. In 1275 the burgesses claimed that Edward I's
predecessors had forbidden the establishment of
any rival market within seven miles (leucas) (fn. 474) but
cited no precise authority. They claimed that the
recent establishment of a market at Market
Lavington (fn. 475) had infringed their monopoly and
reduced their tolls. (fn. 476) Their market, however, was
not permanently injured and has continued to the
present day. It is held on Thursdays as it has been
since 1609 at least. (fn. 477) In 1567 the Crown expressly
granted a second market to be held in St. Mary's
parish on Mondays. (fn. 478) It was still held in 1803 (fn. 479) but
had apparently ceased in 1814. (fn. 480)
Leland described the Thursday market as 'very
celebrate' (fn. 481) and so it has remained almost until now.
Corn, wool, and yarn seem to have formed the chief
merchandise in the 16th and earlier 17th centuries. (fn. 482)
In 1605 both townsmen and strangers might sell
corn, foodstuffs, cattle, wool, and woollen yarn, but
cloth, unless of the strangers' own making, and
other commodities were restricted to townsmen. (fn. 483)
Later in the 17th century cheese, bacon, and butter
became important. (fn. 484) Aubrey thought Devizes the
best fish market in the county. (fn. 485) A writer in 1673
described it as a mart for horses, cattle, and corn. (fn. 486)
Stukeley said in 1724 that the townsmen viewed it
as 'one of the best weekly markets in England'. (fn. 487)
In 1759 it was called one of the best markets in the
west for corn, wool, cheese, black cattle, and
sheep. (fn. 488) The cattle market seems to have lapsed
about this time but was revived in 1776. (fn. 489) By the
early 19th century there was a twice-weekly market
for butcher's meat. (fn. 490) Britton (1814) singled out
horses, cattle, corn, wool, and cheese. (fn. 491) In 1830 (fn. 492)
and 1842 corn seems to have been the staple
commodity and in the later year, when malt was also
sold, it was possible to describe the corn market as
one of the most important in England. (fn. 493) In that
generation the wool market lapsed and the cattle
market lapsed again, but both had been revived by
1837, though held but four times yearly. (fn. 494) In 1848
corn and cattle were looked upon as the chief
commodities. (fn. 495) The cheese market, having lapsed at
some uncertain time, was restored in 1862. (fn. 496) It had
ceased by 1903. (fn. 497) It was the local view in 1888 that
the market as a whole had recently lost ground to
Chippenham, but that the cattle market had
increased and the yield of the corn market doubled
since 1858. (fn. 498) In 1903 the market was said to be for
corn, poultry, butter, and vegetables, (fn. 499) in 1939 for
corn, cattle, pigs, and poultry, (fn. 500) though cattle and
corn were then of minor importance. (fn. 501) A Christmas
stock market in December was being held in 1903
and 1939, (fn. 502) but had ceased well before 1961.
It is clear from the plaint of 1275 that the borough
enjoyed at least a part of the profits of the market.
In practice, however, it possessed no monopoly, for
it was also complained that the constables of the
castle had damaged the market by erecting stalls
and letting them at a fixed rent, (fn. 503) and in 1275–6 the
constable received over £18 in tolls. (fn. 504) As is elsewhere shown, (fn. 505) the borough seems to have lost
some independence in the earlier 14th century and
perhaps during that period the burgesses forfeited
the tolls. At all events the profits were enjoyed by
the lord of the fee between 1446 and 1509. They
consisted of petty customs, which from 1501–2
included the 'yarn lane', (fn. 506) and the toll of the grain.
The former was always the richer source and
both sources declined fairly steadily in the halfcentury. (fn. 507)
In 1510 Catherine of Aragon leased the profits of
the fairs and markets to the burgesses (fn. 508) who so
enjoyed them until 1624 when they secured them in
fee farm. (fn. 509) From the late 16th century until the
early 19th the profits were normally let to contractors, together with the halls in which the market
activities were severally carried on. (fn. 510) The practice
seems to have been abandoned with unhappy
results between c. 1808 and c. 1822. (fn. 511) It was resumed
in 1837 (fn. 512) but discontinued, except for the corn tolls,
ten years later. (fn. 513) The tolls of all the markets,
except the general market, were still let by the
corporation in 1888, (fn. 514) but taken in hand again in
1889. (fn. 515)
In earlier times the chief market-place lay in
front of St. Mary's church, (fn. 516) where there is still an
irregular open space. The corn market was held
beside the White Bear, at the corner of Monday
Market Street, and the cattle market further to the
north-west, at the west end of St. Mary's church. (fn. 517)
There was once a cross here. It was marked by a tree
in 1759 (fn. 518) which had apparently disappeared by
1814. (fn. 519) In 1366 there was a special market, of
unknown location, where horses were sold. (fn. 520)
Gradually the market spread from the Old Port to
the New and invaded many quarters of the town.
As the castle lost its military significance, its
outer bail provided an admirable open space for
marketing, and here and in the streets around the
chief market was eventually concentrated. That
concentration had begun by 1378. Probably the old
market-place was never abandoned but continued
as the locale of the Monday market.
For many generations the market was really not a
single entity but a group of markets. There was a
fish market by 1378 (fn. 521) and a district ubi carnes
venduntur by 1454. (fn. 522) Both these were in the New
Port. By 1463 the latter district was being called
the flesh shambles (fn. 523) and in 1489 the butchers'
shambles. (fn. 524) Later evidence suggests that the place
of sale was at the corner of Wine Street and High
Street. In 1617 a town weighing beam was erected
over the site which by 1728 was covered by a
dwelling house. (fn. 525)
In 1568 new shambles were built, in Short
Street, (fn. 526) and rebuilt in 1600. (fn. 527) By 1737–8, however,
they were in the present Market Place, north-east of
the cross, and in 1759 were a set of uncovered
stalls surrounded by trees. (fn. 528) Between 1769 and 1771
the corporation, using the benefaction of their M.P.
George Willy, replaced these stalls by a permanent
building, once again in Short Street, (fn. 529) and in 1791
Addington gave £500 to enable this building to
be completed or rebuilt. (fn. 530) The accretions to the
building are mentioned below. (fn. 531) In 1803 the
building also became a mart for pig-meat. (fn. 532) The
butchers, however, boycotted it soon after. (fn. 533)
A corn market is mentioned in 1502 (fn. 534) and in
1534 was in the New Port. (fn. 535) It probably occupied
the present Market Place. In 1610 it was also called
the tanners' market-place. (fn. 536) A corn market in the
Old Port is still mentioned in 1569. (fn. 537) A corn hall
existed in 1560. (fn. 538) In 1615 a 'Measuring House' for
corn was set up. (fn. 539) Later this stood a little to the
north of the then recently erected shambles in the
present Market Place. (fn. 540) Perhaps it was planted there
at the outset and the corn market moved northwards.
In 1625–6 the Measuring House was being leased (fn. 541)
and in 1646–7 the beadle and ale-taster became
perpetual lessees. (fn. 542) It was somewhat expensively
repaired in 1674–5. (fn. 543) In 1678–9, when troops were
stationed in the town, it was used as a guard house. (fn. 544)
It appears to have been demolished between 1787
and 1791. (fn. 545) After that time, so far as is known,
corn was both sold and measured in the open
against the Market Cross railings, until it was
resolved in 1856 to build a Corn Exchange on part
of the Bear Hotel yard. (fn. 546) The building, designed by
William Hill of Leeds, was opened in 1857. C. Darby
Griffith, M.P., gave the clock and the statue of Ceres
that crowns the entablature. The cost was largely
met by public subscription. (fn. 547)
The market in early times centred upon the cross.
A 'corn cross', very near St. Thomas's chapel, (fn. 548) is
mentioned in 1527 (fn. 549) and a cross, perhaps the same,
was mended in 1645–6. (fn. 550) In 1673–4 it was furnished
with 'gernard', globe, and neckstone and the whole
construction gilded. (fn. 551) Presumably it was this cross,
standing west of the old shambles, (fn. 552) that remained
in use until 1814. It was then replaced by a new one,
the gift of Lord Sidmouth, somewhat further to the
east. (fn. 553) On one side is recorded the story of Ruth
Pierce, a market-woman of Potterne who fell dead
in the Market Place in 1753 after lying to her
neighbours. (fn. 554) This testimony to the consequences
of perfidy, placed in the Measuring House in 1760, (fn. 555)
was removed from the Market Place in 1788, and
fixed to the sign of the Bear. (fn. 556) The original is now
in the Devizes Museum. (fn. 557) The cross, designed by
Benjamin Wyatt and L. J. Abington, was first 'laid
open' when peace was proclaimed in 1814. (fn. 558) The
adornment of the Market Place was completed in
1879 when T. H. S. Sotheron Estcourt presented a
fountain, designed, it is said, by Henry Woodyer. (fn. 559)
A yarn cross existed in 1559. (fn. 560) It was no doubt the
mart for wool and textiles and perhaps stood in
the (unlocated) 'yarn lane', already leased to the
borough in 1516–17. (fn. 561) By 1575 the cross had been
replaced by a yarn hall. (fn. 562) This was rebuilt in the
early 17th century and its history is told elsewhere. (fn. 563)
A butter cross is mentioned in 1599, when it was
repaired, (fn. 564) and such repairs were periodically done
until 1650–1. (fn. 565) In 1661–2 the cross yielded a small
rent. (fn. 566) It is not heard of again and its site is not
known. In the later 18th century butter appears to
have been sold in the 'New' hall. (fn. 567) Since 1803 the
mart has been the Market House. (fn. 568)
'Chescrosway' is mentioned in 1553. (fn. 569) The cross
from which it took its name still existed in 1657, (fn. 570)
but in 1687–8 the stones of which it was made were
ordered to be removed and a wooden platform erected
in their place. (fn. 571) Next year there is a reference to the
cheese market, (fn. 572) in which no doubt the cross had
stood, but like the cross itself its location is unknown.
Cheese was later marketed successively in the 'Old'
hall, the 'New' hall, the Town Hall (as the 'Old'
hall had become), (fn. 573) and the new Market House. (fn. 574)
Among the places set apart for the sale of special
commodities 'millers' places' or 'standings' and the
'tanners' standings' are mentioned in 1599–1601.
The corporation could not then let them and
perhaps in consequence they disappeared. (fn. 575) In 1741
the tanners' market, in earlier times probably in the
present Market Place, lay or had recently lain at the
north end of the present Town Hall. (fn. 576) By regulations
of 1630 the hosiers were confirmed in their immemorial standing in High Street. Greengrocers
were to stand from the White Swan southwards.
smiths, fishmongers, and shoemakers in St. John's
Street. (fn. 577) In 1642 the shoemakers were to move to
their former standing at a vacant plot called 'the
Gun', presumably the site of an inn of that name, (fn. 578)
and the hosiers were anchored to their existing
pitch 'near' the corn market. (fn. 579) On the map of
1737–8 the word 'poultery' is written in the middle
of Wine Street. (fn. 580)
Addington's gift for the butchers' shambles in
1791 was matched in the same year by an equal
sum from his fellow M.P. Joshua Smith. This the
corporation used to improve the Market Place (fn. 581) by
building a covered market for merchandise other
than butchers' meat, corn, cheese, and live-stock to
the west of the butchers' shambles. The new Market
House seems to have been partly complete by 1793,
for it then had a bell. In the same year hides and
skins were ordered to be moved from the west end
of the butchers' shambles, (fn. 582) probably so that further
building might not be obstructed. By 1803 the
building was finished and orders were given that
it should become the only market-place for eggs,
poultry, fruit, and vegetables. (fn. 583) In 1822 it was also
the butter market. (fn. 584) The butchers' shambles was
roofed in 1838 and the two buildings fused for all
practical purposes. (fn. 585) One Pollard, of Frome (Som.),
is said to have designed these changes. (fn. 586) In 1869 the
Market House was described, perhaps inadequately,
as a cheese market. (fn. 587) In 1921, (fn. 588) as in 1970, a wide
variety of goods was exposed for sale upon its
benches.
Weighing beams, which by Statute of 1429 all
cities and boroughs were required to possess, (fn. 589) are
first mentioned at Devizes in 1592 when a capital
burgess surrendered his grant of them. (fn. 590) In 1617
new beams for weighing meat, butter, cheese,
grease, and other victuals were erected on the site
of the old butchers' shambles. (fn. 591) By 1614 there was a
beam for wool and yarn (fn. 592) and one for bacon in
1698. (fn. 593) From the late 16th century to the late 17th
the beams were usually let or put up for lease. (fn. 594)
The public had to be repeatedly enjoined to weigh
goods (or certain types of goods) elsewhere than at
the common scales. Such orders can be traced from
1614 to 1737 and a provision to the same effect was
included in the charter of 1685. (fn. 595) In 1793 there was a
weighing house in Short Street (fn. 596) and this was most
probably on the site of the pre-1617 shambles. (fn. 597)
It seems likely that ultimately only food, and
perhaps only butchers' meat, was weighed there.
At all events the terms of a lease of 1726 suggest
that wool, yarn, and cheese were all weighed in the
Wool Hall, where they were marketed. (fn. 598)
A 'rudder' market lay in the New Port in 1666,
probably in the present Market Place. There or near
by cattle were sold in 1888 (fn. 599) and have been since.
A sheep market was being constructed in 1673–4, (fn. 600)
and was promptly leased out. (fn. 601) It seems to have
contained the sheep 'cubs' (fn. 602) or cribs. (fn. 603) In 1737–8 the
cribs were in the Market Place adjacent to the
butchers' shambles, (fn. 604) and, like the shambles, were
often leased out. In 1791 there was a comprehensive
lease to a single individual of the sheep, pig, and
cattle markets and fairs and the stalls and standings
in them altogether with the corn tolls. (fn. 605) No other
reference has yet been found to cattle tolls, which
by 1888 the corporation had given up exacting. (fn. 606)
In 1819, apparently for the first time, horses were
ordered to be tolled, (fn. 607) but by 1888 the horse market
was not of much account. (fn. 608)
In 1208 a yearly fair on the eve and feast of
St. Denis (8 and 9 Oct.) was granted to the lepers of
Devizes. (fn. 609) In 1223 the bishop of Salisbury was at
variance with the constable of the castle over the
right to make attachments at it. How the bishop had
displaced the lepers, who from now disappear from
view, is not known, but the lepers' house, in
Southbroom, was in the bishop's fee and outside
the borough. Litigation ensued and in 1224, while
the outcome was pending, the constable and bishop
were charged to make attachments jointly (communiter). (fn. 610) After an inquiry the fair was granted in
1227 to the bishop to be held on the days already
appointed and the two following. (fn. 611) The constable,
however, continued his claim for a while, for in
1229 it was necessary to order him expressly to let
the bishop have his fair. (fn. 612) The grant of 1227 was
confirmed in 1393. (fn. 613)
In 1223 a fair was established on 23–25 June to
endure until Henry III's majority in 1227. (fn. 614) If it
continued after 1227, it is not heard of for many
centuries. An early summer fair, perhaps this one,
was, however, being held on Ascension day 1557–
27 May in that year. (fn. 615) In 1576 one was held on
Corpus Christi day (Trinity Thursday)—27 June in
that year. (fn. 616)
In 1567 the corporation was granted two fairs of
its own, one on Candlemas eve and the two days
following (1–3 Feb.) and another on the eve of the
Decollation of St. John the Baptist and five days
following (28 Aug.–1 Sept.). (fn. 617) Finally in 1685 the
Crown granted it a new fair on 10 April and the two
following days for wool and woollen cloth, cattle, and
merchandise, to be held somewhere in St. John's
parish. (fn. 618) This was called by contemporaries 'the
wholesale fair'. Woollen goods brought for sale
were to be exposed in and about the Wool Hall. (fn. 619)
Aubrey said that in his time the October fair lasted
about a week. (fn. 620)
In 1759 fairs were held on 13 February, Holy
Thursday, Trinity Thursday, 5 July, 9 September,
2 October, and 20 October. (fn. 621) The first, fourth,
fifth, and seventh respectively represent the
Candlemas, Midsummer, Decollation of the Baptist,
and St. Denis fairs of the past, thrust forward by
the Calendar Act. The sixth, later called the nine
days before Michaelmas or Lamb Fair and held
on 1 October, (fn. 622) was new. In 1792 the fairs were
the same as those of 1759 except that 20 April and
13 June have replaced Trinity Thursday and 9
September as fair days. (fn. 623) The April fair is perhaps
the same as that granted by the 1685 charter, (fn. 624)
which in that respect the corporation found to be
not 'obnoxious' but benign. The June fair had lapsed
by 1830. (fn. 625) The Holy Thursday fair is still referred to
in 1836 (fn. 626) but seems to have ceased by 1839, possibly
because of a temporary revival of the Ascension
day fair. The Candlemas fair was then held on
14 February. (fn. 627) By 1848 the fairs had been reduced
to three, namely, 14 February, 20 and 21 April, and
20 and 21 October. (fn. 628) By 1907 the July fair had been
revived, though it was then held on the second
Tuesday in that month. (fn. 629) By 1939 the fairs on
21 April and 21 October had been discontinued. (fn. 630)
The July fair ceased in 1939 and the February fair
in 1942. (fn. 631)
St. Denis's fair was being held on the Green by
1560 and that is probably its original, as it is its
present, site. The April fair was held in the same
place from at least 1789. (fn. 632) The Candlemas fair was
held in Monday Market Street in 1790 and there
remained throughout its life. (fn. 633) In 1888 it swamped
over into New Park Street. (fn. 634) In 1839 the July fair
was held in the Market Place, (fn. 635) in 1907 in the Corn
Exchange and the shambles. (fn. 636)
About 1224 St. Denis's fair was described as a
wake (vigilia). (fn. 637) In 1790 the Candlemas fair was for
horses; the 20 April fair, a very large one, the Holy
Thursday fair, a 'considerable' one, and the 5 July
fair, a 'very considerable' one, were all for cattle.
The early October fair, which was small, was for
cattle and pleasure, and the later one, for cattle, hops,
and cloth. (fn. 638) The later October fair was also a
pleasure fair, wild beasts assembling there from all
over England. (fn. 639)
As elsewhere in England the fairs fell off in
importance in the next half-century. The October
fair of 1838 was described as 'the smallest ever
recollected at this season'. About 20,000 sheep
changed hands, but little trade was done in horned
cattle or horses. The display at the pleasure fair was
'meagre'. (fn. 640) In 1839 the February, Ascension day,
and early October fairs were said to be for sheep and
cattle and the April and October fairs, described as
'large', for cheese, hops, and cattle. (fn. 641) In 1848 the
April and October fairs were said to be for cattle,
toys, and pedlary. (fn. 642) They were more authoritatively
defined in 1888 as for cattle, sheep, and horses on
the first days and for pleasure on the second. (fn. 643)
Definitions of 1903 and 1939 do not mention
horses, (fn. 644) and the last horse was sold on the Green in
April 1956. (fn. 645) From 1839 the July fair was for wool. (fn. 646)
In 1873 it was described as the largest in the west of
England. Fleeces then sold numbered 100,000. (fn. 647)
As has been said, the borough has enjoyed the
profits of fairs continuously since 1624. (fn. 648) The
grant was limited to the fairs within the borough.
The Green, to which the fairs later mainly gravitated, lay outside until 1835 and was not borough
property, and, even when it came within the bounds,
the corporation, on grounds of private ownership,
felt itself debarred from collecting tolls. Private
rights were, however, extinguished in 1899 when
the corporation bought the Green. (fn. 649) The town clerk
said in 1888 that tolls were not collected at the
Candlemas fair, as the expense of doing so would
have exceeded the receipts. (fn. 650)
Borough Government.
A charter, acquitting them of toll, passage, and lastage throughout the realm and its ports and promising them royal
protection, was granted to the burgesses by Maud
the empress in 1141. It was confirmed by Henry II (fn. 651)
and again in 1200 (fn. 652) and 1229. (fn. 653) In 1218 the privileges of Marlborough, granted to that borough in
1204, (fn. 654) were bestowed upon the burgesses. Those
privileges consisted of a long string of exemptions,
such as Winchester and Oxford enjoyed, from
burdens both financial and judicial, from suit of
shires and hundreds and, in the main, from attendance at forest courts; the right to hold their
dwellings (mansiones) in chief; a guild merchant;
the trial of pleas by the law of Winchester and not by
combat; the cessation of customs unjustly raised
(levata) in the recent war; the recovery of debts by
bailiffs of their own; except for debtors and their
pledges, immunity from distraint; exemption from
external pleading in pleas of land, but the trial of
those pleas by the law of Winchester. (fn. 655)
The burgesses through the town bailiffs appear
to have been farming the borough in 1239 and
1240, (fn. 656) and by 1245, (fn. 657) if not by 1244, (fn. 658) Pewsham
forest as well. They were separately represented at
the eyres of 1194, 1249, 1268, 1281, and 1289, (fn. 659) at
the fiscal eyre of 1255, (fn. 660) and at the investigations
of 1275. (fn. 661) In 1249 the borough was called a free
manor. (fn. 662) In 1255 it was headed by its bailiff,
William the parker, who is the first town officer to
be named. (fn. 663) It claimed return of writs, made
declarations about castle-guard, and returned its own
value at £39 2s. 4d. This value was made up of rents
of assize, the herbage and pannage of the two parks
with two 'gardens', the rent of the new park, market
profits, and court perquisites. (fn. 664) The next declaration
of its constitutional condition was made in 1275.
The burgesses claimed that they could plead pleas
of vee de naam, and, foolishly, that the castle and
the borough were ancient demesne. They extended
the rents of assize at £9 11s. and the perquisites of
court at £5. Writs, however, were now said to be
returned by the constable of the castle and the
profits of the assize of bread and ale were said to
belong to the Crown and therefore by implication
were not accounted for by the burgesses. There is a
reference to two beadles. (fn. 665)
So far as the scanty evidence permits a judgement,
the borough was ascending in the scale of autonomy
until the earlier years of Edward I. Then, at the time
when the castle began to lose its military importance (fn. 666) and the burgesses the prosperity they had
won through the proximity of a garrison, a decline
set in; once even, in 1315, the town was taxed at a
fifteenth. (fn. 667) The presumption of decline is supported
by a Parliamentary petition of 1330 in which the
townsmen pray to have the town by the 'old'
extent. They were impoverished, they said, by
farmers and strangers who made execution by
unknown bailiffs; they claimed the right to elect
their own bailiffs and to have the return of writs,
which the farmers withheld. The Crown was willing
to restore past usages, if investigation confirmed
their genuineness, (fn. 668) but it was not until 1371 that
there was any express renewal of privileges. In that
year the charters of Maud, Henry II, John, and
Henry III were confirmed, with the addition of the
clause licet, and the privileges of Marlborough,
conceded in general terms in 1218, were defined. (fn. 669)
By another charter (fn. 670) with the same clause, granted
in 1381, the old charters were again confirmed and
the burgesses were granted return of writs, exemption from the authority of the county keepers of the
peace and coroners, and the right to elect a coroner
of their own. This charter also stipulated that the
principal men of the town should be arrayed before
the keeper of the castle or his lieutenant and none
other, and should be required to furnish themselves with arms. The charter was confirmed
without alteration in 1404, 1414, 1423, 1462, (fn. 671) and
1559. (fn. 672)
Until 1555, when its own records begin, there is
little to show what were the organs of borough
government. It has been seen that in the 13th
century the borough was managed by one or two
bailiffs and that in 1275 it possessed beadles. It was
to the bailiffs that the Crown addressed an order in
1355 to provide a guard of burgesses for Charles of
Blois and his children, (fn. 673) but by the end of the 14th
century the authority of the bailiffs, whatever it may
have been, had begun to be encroached upon by the
mayor. A mayor is named in 1306 (fn. 674) and thereafter
mayors are repeatedly encountered. While the
charter of 1381 was addressed to the burgesses alone,
that of 1391 was addressed to mayor and burgesses
together. Nevertheless the bailiffs do not disappear.
By twos they are known by name for various years
between 1398 (fn. 675) and 1481. (fn. 676) They appear to have
been the officers jointly or severally responsible with
the parker, the collector of castle-guard rents, and
others for paying to the Crown the profits of the
borough. They were acting in this way in 1461–4, (fn. 677)
and were still town rent collectors in 1499–1500 and
1533–4. (fn. 678) In 1539 they witnessed a deed together (fn. 679)
and in 1561 were present at a livery of seisin. (fn. 680)
In the attestation clauses of deeds dated between
1398 and 1539 (fn. 681) two constables appear, ranking
before the bailiffs. Their then function is obscure as
is that of a prepositus, who witnessed a charter of
1379. (fn. 682)
As shown above, the borough had power to
determine civil pleas by 1371 and perhaps certain
Crown pleas by 1381. A mayor's court is known to
have sat from 1446–7. Between that year and 1504–
5, when the details cease to be recorded, the number
of sessions was variable: 19 in 1480–1, 6 in 1503–4
and 1504–5. The average was between ten and
eleven. (fn. 683) Until 1510 the profits went to the Crown
and fluctuated greatly. The respective functions of
the mayor's court and the two courts held by the
steward (fn. 684) are not known, but in the earlier 16th
century a dispute between a townsman and the
mayor was referred to the steward for settlement. (fn. 685)
Civic autonomy was significantly advanced in
1510 when Catherine of Aragon let the borough to
the burgesses to farm, to hold during pleasure at
£5 yearly. The grant included all courts, leets, and
profits of fairs and markets within a 40s. limit. (fn. 686)
This ran by prescription until renewed by the
Crown c. 1540–1. (fn. 687) It was renewed again in 1563 (fn. 688)
and 1585 (fn. 689) for 21-year terms and made perpetual
in 1624. (fn. 690)
Shortly after the first lease, in an arbitration
award upon a disputed mayoral election, the nature
of the constitution becomes more evident. The
award states that some held that the 'yeldens',
which must mean either the men of the guild
merchant or the craft guildsmen of whose prior
existence there is no evidence, should choose the
mayor and present the name of the chosen candidate to 'the twelve' who are 'chosen to the rule of the
town'. Others, however, held that the 'yeldens' and
'the twelve' should join together in the election. (fn. 691)
Though the members of the guild merchant may
have been the burgesses, as in some other 16thcentury towns, (fn. 692) this is the only evidence that the
guild played a part in government. The arbitrators'
decision is not extant but whatever it may have been
the 'yeldens' were ultimately excluded. After this
time the senior men of the borough or even the
whole mass of 'burgesses' begin to play their part in
local affairs. Conveyances of borough lands, once
made by the mayor alone, are now often made in the
name of the mayor and his brethren or of the mayor,
the brethren, and the commons or burgesses. (fn. 693)
The mayor's 'brethren' were almost certainly in
part ex-mayors. They are known as majores sive
prefecti in 1580, (fn. 694) and are the same as the body called
'capital burgesses' in 1592 (fn. 695) and 'burgesses being
councillors' at the 'end' of Elizabeth I's reign. (fn. 696)
Below them were 'the twelve', not meant to correspond mathematically with that number, (fn. 697) who are
first mentioned in 1561. (fn. 698) They are called in 1592
'common councillors' and usually thereafter 'capital
burgesses of the common council'. Below them
stood the freemen or 'burgesses'. In 1574, 1580,
1592, and at the 'end' of the reign the number of
these three classes, when tested, were respectively:
9, 17, (fn. 699) 10, and 9; 13, 14, 10, and 22; and 26, 21, 35,
and 30. The figures for the first two years and the
fourth are drawn from tables purporting to be
complete, though subsequent amendments sometimes create uncertainty; those for the third are
taken from a court attendance list.
It is clear that already the inhabitants and the
burgesses did not coincide. The court admitted or
created burgesses in 1556 (fn. 700) and 1560 (fn. 701) and in 1560–1
disburgessed them. Where cause is assigned,
disburgessing for misbehaviour towards the mayor,
the mayor and brethren, or another burgess. (fn. 702)
Once a vote was taken on a man's fate, (fn. 703) and once it
was said that thenceforth the disburgessed person
'standeth as a commoner and not otherwise'. (fn. 704)
In the 16th century the governing body seems to
have gathered in only one assembly, the court, or
'court of assembly' as it is called in 1592. (fn. 705) The
headings in a court book running from 1574 imply
that the court was also one of pie powder and vee de
naam but pie powder proceedings seem lacking. (fn. 706)
The court sat frequently and its business was
varied. There were 13 sessions between 21 April and
23 October 1556, 16 in 1574–5, and 12 in 1575–6.
Here the mayor and other officers were elected,
burgesses admitted and removed, tradesmen
licensed, prices fixed, and vagrants, night-walkers,
slanderers, minor thieves, and those who played
unlawful games, evaded price-fixing, and trespassed
against the assizes of bread and ale were punished. (fn. 707)
The court also entertained private suits. Actions of
debt are numerous and there are also actions of
detinue (1557), (fn. 708) trespass on the case (1582), (fn. 709) and
breach of promise of marriage (1560). (fn. 710) Leases were
sometimes ratified or at least recorded in court. (fn. 711)
Little is known of procedure but a suitor once
(1556) (fn. 712) waged his law and inquest juries might be
summoned to present customs or nuisances. (fn. 713)
The court amerced delinquents and often committed them to 'ward', usually no doubt the town
prison (fn. 714) but once in 1583 to the county bridewell. (fn. 715)
The governing body, who in 1567 had acquired a
market and two fairs in indisputable ownership (fn. 716)
and in 1586 a lien upon landed property which was
or was thought of as once chantry land, (fn. 717) obtained
their first charter of incorporation in 1605. (fn. 718) By this
instrument, which was addressed to the mayor and
burgesses, the mayor, town clerk, and 36 capital
burgesses were declared to be the common council
and were empowered to choose the mayor each year
from the twelve capital burgesses councillors and to
appoint other officials. A mortmain licence was
granted. Courts of record and of quarter sessions
were established and certain steps were at the same
time taken to protect retail trade in textiles. (fn. 719) The
corporation was to control internal trade and to
promulgate by-laws. In pursuance of the charter a
commission of the peace was formed the same year,
consisting of the mayor, town clerk, and the common
council or its greater part. (fn. 720) When recorded in 1614
the new corporation was made up of the mayor, 15
magistri or capitales burgenses et consiliarii (who
included the town clerk), 26 capitales burgenses de
communi consilio, and 33 free burgesses. (fn. 721) The titles
for all practical purposes were the same in 1630 but
the numbers were then respectively 21 (including
the mayor), 30, and 47. (fn. 722) On the first occasion the
number of capital burgesses, however reckoned,
exceeded the charter limits, on the second it was
within them. In general the structure does not
differ much from that of pre-charter times. After
1614 'and' drops out of the title used for the senior
body, (fn. 723) the word consilarius being in apposition to
capitalis burgensis. The alias magister is still found in
1730. (fn. 724) The phrases used for the three classes in
1834 were 'capital burgesses councillors', 'capital
burgesses of the common in the preceeding
burgesses' (fn. 725) and were common in the preceding
two centuries apart from the period 1685–8.
The corporation received two other charters
shortly after 1605. In 1610 the chantry lands which
in 1586 had been secured to trustees to the corporation's use passed to them as an outright gift. (fn. 726)
Secondly in 1609 the corporation purchased from
the Crown, after the determination of a lease to an
Exchequer official, the reversion of the bailiwick of
the borough and the profits of markets, fairs, courts,
and other customs under 40s. in value, which that
official had himself secured in reversion after the
termination of the corporation's own lease. (fn. 727)
In 1624 they obtained this in absolute possession,
subject to a fee farm rent of £5, (fn. 728) and they paid for
the purchase by granting long leases of their own
and their trust lands. (fn. 729) Such benefits as these were
an outcome of the civic maturity which the charter
of 1605 bespoke.
In 1636 the rents and profits reserved in 1624 and
the rents reserved in 1610 were conveyed at the
request of a Crown creditor (Sir John Heydon) to
two nominees. (fn. 730) He and they in the same year sold
them to ten persons, doubtless members of the
governing body, in trust for the corporation. By this
means the borough liquidated any abatement of the
interest that they had acquired in 1624, subject only
to the payment to the Crown of a chief rent of £10
and a fee farm rent of £5. It is not clear why this
circuitous course was adopted. In 1658 the trust was
renewed. The corporation bought the rent or rents
in 1650 (fn. 731) but surrendered them at the Restoration.
It was they and not the trustees who paid them in
1660–1. (fn. 732) In 1701 the Crown sold the rents to
Francis Bourman (fn. 733) and from him they descended to
others. (fn. 734) The last parcel was redeemed by the
corporation in 1971. (fn. 735)
In 1639 a new charter was secured under which
the borough was governed, with but a brief intermission, until 1835. It did not, like its predecessor,
require that the mayor should be chosen from among
the capital burgesses councillors; it declared the
corporation's right, partly exercised already, to hold
pleas of account and mixed actions not extending to
debt or damages above £40; it limited the mortmain
licence to lands of the net yearly value of £100; it
replaced the 'common clerk', as it called him, by a
recorder who was to be a barrister; it limited the
commission of the peace to the mayor, recorder, and
a single common councillor chosen by the council. (fn. 736)
These last two provisions tended to make the
borough courts more professional. Otherwise the
new instrument wrought little change.
In the earlier 17th century the corporation began
to admit the county notables to its fellowship, a
practice of course paralleled elsewhere. (fn. 737) Such
persons sometimes also represented the borough in
Parliament, as Sir Edward Baynton and Sir Henry
Lee, capital burgesses councillors in 1623, did or
had done. (fn. 738) The earl of Marlborough was a capital
burgess councillor in 1630. (fn. 739) In 1654 when 46
'burgesses and inhabitants' participated in the
election of a member of Parliament, nine were
labelled 'gentlemen'. (fn. 740) Such persons, and indeed
lesser men, were no doubt elected by the capital
burgesses councillors including the mayor and
town clerk or recorder. (fn. 741) The governing body
continued also to eject the unworthy and unfit.
Richard Maundrell, once mayor, was disburgessed
in 1607 for contempts; (fn. 742) a man who had lived
outside the borough for a year and a day in 1617; (fn. 743)
burgesses who declined to pay forfeitures for
straying beasts or fees to the bellman in 1623. (fn. 744)
Sir Edward Baynton, the 'justice', who refused to
sit, lost his office in 1656, probably for political
reasons. (fn. 745)
By the time the 1639 charter was granted the
appointed town officers had become numerous.
A town clerk existed in 1556. (fn. 746) In 1565 he was stated,
perhaps wrongly, to be also recorder. (fn. 747) He was
receiving a salary in 1592 and 1596. (fn. 748) By the charter
of 1605 he became a member of the governing body
but at least until 1612 retained a salary. (fn. 749) John
Kent (d. 1630), town clerk in 1628, compiled an
illuminated register of the charters and constitutions,
based upon a text of 1592, (fn. 750) whence comes much of
our knowledge about the officers. Kent was also
county clerk of the peace from c. 1601 until 1626 (fn. 751)
and had been a borough M.P. and mayor in 1602.
It was perhaps his personal prestige that secured so
eminent a position for the town clerkship in James's
charter. The substitution of a recorder in the
succeeding charter may betoken a local suspicion
of over-mighty town clerks. No more such officers
are heard of until 1662. (fn. 752) The first recorder was
Robert Nicholas, who surrendered his office on
becoming a justice of the Upper Bench in 1649. (fn. 753)
A steward and clerk of the courts, with the power
of deputation, existed in 1614, (fn. 754) but the office
probably dates from the establishment or
reconstruction of those courts in 1605. Two
chamberlains emerge in 1592. (fn. 755) and are afterwards
continuously traceable. They kept the borough
property, collected the revenue, and accounted
annually. In 1614 one was chosen from the capital
burgesses councillors and the other from the
'twelve'. (fn. 756) They were salaried in 1630 and 1636. (fn. 757)
The coroner, annually chosen up to 1605, (fn. 758) was
dropped from the charter of that year.
The two constables, of 15th-century origin at
least, (fn. 759) were the most senior of the 'inferior
ministers', as Kent called them. With bailiffs and
sub-bailiffs they are found taking offenders to court
(1575) (fn. 760) or summoning townsmen to join in
suppressing a riot (1631). (fn. 761) The two bailiffs, if
indeed they may claim any descent at all from their
medieval predecessors, have lost some status, for
they act like the constables or in their support by
bringing captives into court (1557) (fn. 762) or distraining. (fn. 763)
In 1614 they were also assigning stalls in fairs and
markets. (fn. 764) Two serjeants or serjeants-at-mace,
traceable from 1556, (fn. 765) and two sub-bailiffs,
traceable from 1574, (fn. 766) were similarly minor
policemen. By 1614 (fn. 767) the sub-bailiffs were equated
with the strangely-named 'aldermen' of 1556 (fn. 768) and
'under-aldermen' of 1565. (fn. 769) In 1599 it was decreed
that the sub-bailiffs should thenceforth be paid. (fn. 770)
The by-laws of 1614 refer also to surveyors of
ways and streets, scavengers, carners of the market,
searchers of leather, and an aletaster. There was
already one 'wayman' in 1556 (fn. 771) and two in 1561
and 1574. (fn. 772) In the last two years they seem to have
been subordinate to two surveyors. (fn. 773) There was
a scavenger, a carner, and a leather-searcher in
1556 (fn. 774) and two of each by 1574, (fn. 775) 1574, (fn. 776) and
1625 (fn. 777) respectively. The aletaster's office first
appears in 1574, when it was linked with the
beadle's. (fn. 778) An apparitor occurs from 1556 (fn. 779) to
1614 at least. (fn. 780) In 1574 there was a crier (preco) and
aletaster. (fn. 781) In 1614 when the two offices seem to
have been separated the aletaster both examined
the quality of liquor and presented the drunken; the
beadle and crier collected tolls, cleaned the corn
market, impounded strays, and arrested vagabonds. (fn. 782)
He has enjoyed subsequently a prominence out of
keeping with his low estate. (fn. 783) In 1646–7 the offices
were fused again. (fn. 784) A 'wayer' is found in 1556. (fn. 785)
He was a rather senior officer and was presumably
one of the weighers of wool and yarn or of the common beam whose duties were defined in 1614. (fn. 786)
Nearly all the 'inferior ministers', who seem
almost ludicrously abundant for so small a place,
were elected yearly in the borough court. But there
were some others who figure neither in these annual
lists nor in the by-laws. A town chandler was
appointed for a short period in 1556 and between
1559 and 1586 such a person seems to have been
regularly in office. A by-law, recorded by 1614,
gave him monopoly of the purchase of tallow
brought into the town by outside butchers retailing
at a controlled price candles so produced. (fn. 787) In 1585
a keeper of the toll booth took charge of strays. (fn. 788)
In 1623 a bellman was appointed to patrol the
streets in winter, and give warning of the danger of
theft and fires. (fn. 789) The office seems to have lapsed but
to have been revived in 1646–7. (fn. 790)
The court of record, established eo nomine in
1605, was in 1614 an all-purpose assembly meeting
weekly. (fn. 791) In 1615 it was still possible to fill vacant
offices at its meetings. (fn. 792) Presumably, however, it
confined itself increasingly to litigation, and the
court of common council, so styled in 1657, (fn. 793) with
administrative decisions. An 'attorney in the
borough court' is first named in 1621. (fn. 794)
When the corporation reassembled at the
Restoration it consisted of the mayor, 14 capital
burgesses councillors, 32 capital burgesses, and 53
free burgesses, (fn. 795) a larger total, 100, than is recorded
before. In 1662 it was 'regulated' by the Corporation
Act commissioners and six capital burgesses
councillors, 10 common councillors, the town clerk,
and seven free burgesses were removed, (fn. 796) whether
on political or religious grounds cannot be said.
Not all were replaced and the corporation was
reconstituted to consist of the mayor, recorder,
11 capital burgesses councillors, 24 common
councillors, and 31 'freemen, and burgesses', (fn. 797) a total
of 69.
Despite a futile effort in 1671 to secure some
changes, (fn. 798) the borough constitution was not disturbed until 1684 when under threat of quo warranto
the corporation surrendered their governing charter. (fn. 799) The 'obnoxious' charter, granted in 1685, (fn. 800)
provided for a corporation of 60: a mayor, recorder,
deputy recorder, 11 aldermen, 15 capital burgesses,
and 31 free burgesses. The deputy recorder was to
be appointed by his principal; the limit of actions in
the court of record was raised to £50; the Parliamentary franchise was restricted to the members of
the corporation; and the free burgesses, not being
aldermen or capital burgesses, were limited to 35.
There were also three non-constitutional provisions.
A new fair was granted; (fn. 801) the common beams were
confirmed as the only places for weighing wool and
yarn; (fn. 802) and trading by interlopers was restricted. (fn. 803)
In personal terms the effect of the charter was that a
new recorder, Sir John Talbot, was appointed by
name to replace Charles Danvers, who, likewise
named, was demoted deputy. Talbot was promptly
elected M.P. The mayor was continued and eight
members of the old common council were dropped
and replaced by seven, but three of these later
refused to serve. One free burgess also refused the
oath. (fn. 804)
On three occasions in 1688 James II, taking
advantage of the clause customary in 'obnoxious'
charters, regulated the corporation by Orders in
Council. In January the mayor, 5 aldermen, 8
capital burgesses, and 7 free burgesses were removed
and replaced by new ones, one extra free burgess
being added. (fn. 805) In February 5 aldermen, 7 capital
burgesses, and 10 free burgesses were replaced. (fn. 806)
In March there was a third regulation of which we
have no details. (fn. 807) The effect was to erode the 1685
corporation by stages and replace it by new men.
The new mayor was an Independent in religion (fn. 808)
and at least two other dissenters were intruded.
In suffering these changes Devizes was of course in
no way singular.
The common council, constituted according to
the 1685 charter, met finally on 12 October 1688,
when the mayor, 9 other aldermen, and 16
capital burgesses attended. (fn. 809) By 18 October the
proclamation in effect restoring all pre-1679
borough charters was issued and on 22 October a
new mayor was elected. (fn. 810) He was the elder Francis
Paradise who had been ejected in the preceding
January.
Since there were no striking constitutional
changes between 1688 and 1835 the state of local
government institutions can be reviewed for the
period as a whole. The corporation continued to
consist of the mayor, recorder, capital burgesses,
and free burgesses, the first three elements forming
the common council. By 1705 it had been reduced to
27, probably for political reasons, but seems to have
risen in the next year to 54 by new elections. (fn. 811) By
1690 capital burgesses councillors had come to be
fixed at 12 in number. (fn. 812)
The mayor presided over the common council,
quarter sessions, and court of record. (fn. 813) By order
made in 1657, (fn. 814) rescinded in 1661, (fn. 815) but at an
unknown date revived he remained a justice for the
year following his mayoralty. (fn. 816) This arrangement
naturally ended with the Justices of the Peace Act,
1968. (fn. 817) The mayor was chosen out of the capital
burgesses councillors by a majority of the common
council. Towards the end of the old corporation's
life, in 1827, it was ruled that a simple majority of
common councillors was enough to validate an
election and that there need not be separate majorities of capital burgesses councillors and capital
burgesses of the common council.
In 1615 it was decided that at each election two
candidates should be proposed, by later custom by
the mayor, and that the council should vote on
these. In 1683 Pierce, a capital burgess councillor,
proposed a third candidate which had the effect of
eliminating the mayor's second candidate from the
contest. Pierce's candidate won but for an unknown
reason did not take up office. (fn. 818) The story of how in
1706 there were rival claimants to the mayoralty is so
plainly a part of parliamentary history that it must be
sought elsewhere. (fn. 819)
From at least 1614 the mayor was elected on
Friday in Whitsun week and took up office, in
accordance with the 1605 charter, on the following
Michaelmas day. Persons refusing office were, by
the same charter, liable to fines and this was also
true of admission to other borough offices and to
membership of the common council and to the free
burgess-ship. (fn. 820) In 1673 a capital burgess renounced
election to a capital burgess councillorship. He paid
a voluntary fine and so retained his membership of
the common council. (fn. 821) In 1741 the mayor's fine was
fixed at £30 and in 1809 five capital burgesses of the
common council paid the same fine in order not to
proceed to the higher rank.
The mayor was receiving a salary before 1595,
when it was raised substantially, (fn. 822) and there are
constant references to such payments later on.
In 1612 the allowance was as high as £30 because
of the difficulty of getting mayors, (fn. 823) and in 1614
was higher still. (fn. 824) Thereafter there are repeated
prohibitions (fn. 825) and restorations (fn. 826) of the allowance,
which was reduced to £80 just before the Municipal
Corporation commissioners arrived. (fn. 827) From at least
1653, the money, when paid, was often spent on
feasting (fn. 828) but by the early 19th century was so
insufficient for the purpose that capital burgesses,
as explained above, preferred to be fined rather than
qualify for the mayoralty and so assume its burdens.
In 1971 the mayoral allowance was £300. (fn. 829)
The recorder was elected for life or during
pleasure by the common council and was normally
made a free burgess and councillor on the eve of his
appointment. He did not in practice attend council
meetings unless by-laws needed drafting. (fn. 830) He
officiated at quarter sessions and was a judge in the
court of record. In 1660 he received a salary (fn. 831) but by
1835 its payment had long ceased. By 1688 he was
appointing a deputy (fn. 832) who commonly thereafter sat
in council. None was appointed after 1826. The
recorder was not required to reside and he often held
his office concurrently with that of one of the
borough M.P.s, the first office being a kind of
stepping-stone to the second. Nearly all the known
recorders up to 1844 at some time sat for Devizes. (fn. 833)
The capital burgesses councillors were elected by
the common council out of the burgesses of the
common council. The difficulty of finding candidates in the early years of the 19th century has been
mentioned. It lessened after 1810. In the century
after the Restoration importance was attached to
both residence and good attendance, the second
presumably being partially ensured by the first. (fn. 834)
A laxer view was taken in 1784 (fn. 835) and after.
The by-laws of 1614 enjoined attendance on the
days on which the mayor was pre-elected and sworn
and also on the two days of assembly, namely the
Fridays after St. Andrew and Easter. (fn. 836) In 1631,
however, the 'customary' election days were
Michaelmas and the Fridays before and after. (fn. 837)
In 1790 the 'Charter' days were these three,
together with the mayor's election day, which was
the Friday in Whitsun week. (fn. 838) Normally, of course,
the council did not limit its meetings to these high
days. It has been concluded that in 1688–1749
meetings were separated by a few days only and that
the average frequency was monthly. (fn. 839) But the spirit
of the old by-laws, which aimed at compelling
attendance, lived on despite the multiplication of
meetings, (fn. 840) and could sometimes be effective. (fn. 841)
After 1790, however, despite fines, (fn. 842) there were
some poor attendances. (fn. 843)
The capital burgesses of the common council were
elected by the common council from among the free
burgesses. From 1731 (fn. 844) efforts were made to keep
all the vacancies filled, but latterly residence was
laxly enforced. The number of free burgesses, by
charter unlimited, steadily declined. In 1682, when
Henry Baynton was admitted, (fn. 845) the practice still
prevailed of introducing the local gentry. In 1688
the number was 34. In 1697 it was decided to limit
the free burgesses to twenty (fn. 846) and thus to admit new
ones only when vacancies on the common council had
to be filled or compliments bestowed. In the end
men were commonly admitted to the burgess-ship
and the common council simultaneously. Addington
was treated thus in 1784 and Thomas Tylee in
1805. (fn. 847) The honorary burgesses were either
'inferior' borough officers or M.P.s. Sir Paul
Methuen, for example, M.P. 1708–10, was a free
burgess by 1733. (fn. 848) The number stood at ten in 1728
and in 1738–1828 averaged a little over two. In 1835
there were four, none resident. At that time nomination had long rested with the mayor who was thus
able to pack not only the corporation but until 1832
the constituency.
A few further remarks are needed about the
'lesser' borough officers. Of the three justices of the
peace, one, called preeminently 'the justice', was
chosen for life by the common council. He was
unpaid and never in practice became mayor. He
might, however, be also M.P., as T. G. B. Estcourt
was in 1820–6, and this, especially when the
recorder was also absent, was inconvenient. In 1835
there was a fortnightly petty sessional court, which,
no doubt, the 'justice' effectively ran. He was not as
such a judge of the court of record but probably
he presided there as well. The steward and clerk of
the courts was also town clerk and clerk of the peace
and attended in practice the meetings of common
council, of which he was at times a member. In 1707
he had power to depute. (fn. 849) He received a salary and
court fees and was the corporation's solicitor. Over
three generations from the mid 18th century the
office was held by the Salmon family. The founder's
son William amassed great wealth as an attorney and
banker, and as manager of the corporation earned
the name 'King Salmon'. (fn. 850) He it was who controlled
the borough in 1816. (fn. 851)
The appointment of surveyors is not systematically recorded after Elizabeth I's reign but the
office evidently continued (fn. 852) until abolished in
1780. (fn. 853) The chamberlains continued. They lost
their salaries, like other officers in 1687, (fn. 854) but
regained them later although they did not always
collect them. In 1833 only one was effective at a
time and they had then recently begun to serve two
years or more. For some time before 1833 they
habitually accounted only at the end of their terms
but in 1832 an annual audit was established. The
constables were already literate in 1662 when they
were corresponding direct about enforcing tax
payments by armed force. (fn. 855) In 1835 they were taken
from the 'respectable' inhabitants and were regarded
as the head of the police. The serjeants-at-mace,
bailiffs, and sub-bailiffs continued up to 1833. The
first two executed court judgements and were then
paid, though the bailiffs' wages were cut off in
1682 (fn. 856) and the sub-bailiffs' in 1687. (fn. 857) In 1833 the
serjeants-at-mace had custody of those arrested or
taken in execution by process in the court of record.
One sub-bailiff was also beadle and the other hallkeeper. Searchers of leather and searchers or
surveyors of fish and flesh also continued, though
without duties in 1833. In 1688 the beadle was also
aletaster. (fn. 858) The bellman still existed in 1674–5. (fn. 859)
In 1736 a paid inspector of weights and measures
was appointed. (fn. 860)
After the Restoration the common council was
beginning to manage its affairs through committees.
Two were set up in 1662 (fn. 861) and again in 1685. (fn. 862)
In 1666 something in the nature of a standing
general purposes committee was created to meet at
least quarterly. Not unexpectedly such committees
are less frequent in the next century, though two
were convened in 1732. (fn. 863) In 1809, during a period
of stringency, there was a committee on market and
fair tolls. (fn. 864) It seems to have stood until 1821, (fn. 865)
although in 1812 a similar committee concerned
with all aspects of the borough revenue was
intercalated. (fn. 866)
The court of record, composed of the recorder
(or his deputy) and three other common councillors,
was required to sit weekly. Pleading was the same as
in superior courts except in ejectment proceedings.
The surviving records begin in 1653. (fn. 867) Owing to the
low scale of fees and low level at which costs were
taxed the court began to lose business by c. 1776
and there was hardly any after 1813. In 1810,
however, it still possessed enough life to formulate
practice rules and revise its table of fees. (fn. 868) In 1754–
66 the assize of bread, which with the assize of ale
and beer the mayor had been required to keep since
1614 at least, (fn. 869) was promulgated in the court. (fn. 870)
The court of quarter sessions, with a quorum of
two justices, could try misdemeanours and minor
felonies. Its records begin in 1657. (fn. 871) Then and
until c. 1815 presentment juries, each of twelve,
were summoned from the Old and New Ports. (fn. 872)
After that time only trial juries were summoned.
By 1833 there were few trials. In practice the
county justices were excluded but they possessed in
theory a concurrent jurisdiction.
It has been shown that the corporation had long
owned much landed property and held much charity
land in trust. It had also effectively enjoyed the profits
of markets, fairs, and justice since 1510, and it raised
money by penal fines from its members. As is to be
expected, it had no rate income. When analysed in
1833 revenue arising from land made up about 70
per cent of the total, the rest coming from tolls
which since c. 1826 had been farmed as they often
were in the past. (fn. 873) Of the land revenue about twothirds was yielded by renewals of leases and the rest
from chief and quit rents. The rents whether upon
freeholds or leaseholds were numerous and low, and
the property was widely scattered. By long-standing
custom most leases were for 99 years though a by-law
of 1722 made provision for a shorter term, in
practice 60 years, or for lives. Leases were commonly
renewed when half their terms had run. It had been
the recent practice to sell the reversion where
corporation property was mixed with another
owner's.
The chief sub-heads of expenditure were salaries
(c. 36 per cent), mainly to the mayor, and the service
of debt (c. 25 per cent). In the mid 18th century
much of the latter arose from borrowings from
charity funds especially from the alms-houses.
In the late 18th and early 19th centuries the borough
M.P.s presented the corporation with substantial
sums for the liquidation of the debt, (fn. 874) some of which
gifts were spent on public buildings. (fn. 875)
As one of its first tasks the reformed corporation
inquired into its financial legacy. The chamberlains,
whose report was presented in 1836, (fn. 876) examined
their predecessors' accounts from 1785. They
discovered a debt of over £4,500, only partly secured,
and excessive expenditure on mayors' feasts, loyal
addresses, law expenses, and the decoration of the
Town Hall. There was also no proper record of
debts and contracts. On the revenue side insufficient
income had been drawn from market tolls, owing in
part to the cessation of the butchers' market to
which the commissioners of 1833 had drawn
attention. (fn. 877) While there is no doubt that by the
standards of 1835 there had been much irregularity,
it may be noted that one of the chamberlains was a
Baptist, (fn. 878) to whom some of the expenditure could
have seemed morally objectionable. The chamberlains also seem to have ignored the fact that
before they reported the old corporation had resumed
the farming of the tolls which they told the commissioners of 1833 was a better method of raising
the revenue than the use of direct labour. (fn. 879) The
corporation solved their problems by selling
reversions and increasing rents. They also resolved
to eliminate renewal fines. (fn. 880)
In 1781 a body of improvement commissioners to
clean, light, and watch the town and repair the
streets was appointed under an Act of 1780. (fn. 881)
The Act provided for a board, made up of the
corporation and 97 substantial townsmen, with a
quorum of five. Seventeen persons attended the
first meeting. The then mayor presided and William
Salmon, to whom no doubt the innovations were due,
became clerk and treasurer. (fn. 882) During the period for
which minutes survive (1781–95) there is little to
suggest that the board were very effective. From 1782
adjournments were frequent (fn. 883) and in 1790 it was
necessary to find 22 new trustees to replace those
who had died since 1780. (fn. 884) The board set rates, as
statute allowed, both to defray capital expenses
such as lamp standards and toll-houses and also to
carry out its day-to-day routine. They were also
empowered to levy a double Sunday rate on those
passing through the turnpikes on that day and this
power they exercised. (fn. 885) Most notable, perhaps, is the
success with which they extracted gifts from James
Sutton for the furtherance of their work and loans
from him on the credit of the tolls. (fn. 886)
The first Act, having been officially pronounced
insufficient, a new one was passed in 1825 in which
paving was given first place and cleansing last. It
appointed the corporation and III substantial
inhabitants commissioners and repealed all the
provisions of its predecessor except the power to
impose Sunday tolls, which was retained for fourteen years. The quorum was nine. The Act was
stronger and more professional than its predecessor.
It required the audit of accounts, the separation of
the offices of clerk and treasurer, and the maintenance of proper records. It prohibited fees and
enjoined salaries. More important, however, were
the clauses which vested the streets in the board
and gave them power over the ensuing five years to
acquire by what amounted to compulsory purchase
specified properties and to compel builders to make
up the service roads. None of the rating powers
bestowed by the last Act was surrendered. (fn. 887)
William Salmon (II) was concerned with the
successful promotion of the Act as were the borough
M.P.s. (fn. 888) The latter also contributed to the improvements and in 1826 the public was incited to do the
same. (fn. 889) The board certainly did not ignore its
paving responsibilities, even making a proper road
through the Market Place (fn. 890) which was vested in the
corporation. (fn. 891) As Parliament had allowed, they also
started a gas works in 1825, revised the watching
arrangements in 1826, overhauled fire precautions
in 1825 and 1827, condemned thatched roofs in
1826–7, and made minor improvements in the
urban plan. All these achievements are elsewhere
rehearsed. (fn. 892) The board also investigated and corrected
nuisances in 1831. (fn. 893) In 1833 they sought to enlarge
their powers by a new Act, (fn. 894) but the appointment of
the Municipal Corporation Commissioners in that
year no doubt discouraged them. Their minute
books ceased in 1843, (fn. 895) and in 1867 their powers,
which perhaps had been for some time dormant, were
transferred to the corporation acting as the local
board of health. (fn. 896)
By the Municipal Corporations Act, 1835, (fn. 897) the
borough was reincorporated under the title, traditional since 1605, (fn. 898) of the 'Mayor and Burgesses of
the Borough of Devizes', with 6 aldermen and 18
councillors. North and South wards were created,
whose boundaries as delimited in 1835 (fn. 899) were slightly
varied shortly after. (fn. 900) An East ward was added in
1960 without altering the number of councillors. (fn. 901)
A court of quarter sessions, of seven persons with
the mayor, was set up on petition in 1836 (fn. 902) and
survived the Justices of the Peace Act, 1949.
Devizes was the smallest town in 1949 to possess
such a court. (fn. 903) A court of record was preserved in
1835 (fn. 904) but had not met by 1840 (fn. 905) and perhaps never
did. It can have been little use after the creation
of county courts. (fn. 906) Besides the statutory watch
committee the council set up a finance committee,
and appointed a treasurer, a town clerk (who was
also registrar of the court of record), and a clerk of
the peace. They retained the two chamberlains, who
remained as unpaid custodians of borough property,
the (chief) constables, and the liveried beadle, who
was also hall-keeper and a policeman, and they
abolished the serjeants-at-mace, and the steward
and clerk of the courts. (fn. 907) The recordership was also
preserved and the coronership restored. (fn. 908) No coroner, however, has been appointed since 1939 when
the last one retired and all county coroners'
districts were abolished. (fn. 909) Mock antiquarianism
had by 1864 reunited the office of beadle with that
of aletaster, (fn. 910) and by 1915 had fused aletaster and
town crier. (fn. 911)
Fines for not attending council meetings and for
declining office were preserved. New by-laws were
presented. (fn. 912) Somewhat unexpectedly select newspaper reporters were from 1836 admitted to council
meetings. (fn. 913)
Pursuant to the advice given in 1835 the borough
treasurer had by 1837–8 sold off a number of
reversions and rents, thus converting the properties
into freeholds, and had leased many of the tolls.
He had liquidated his debt to various charities.
He had, however, inevitably ordered a borough rate
since, despite savings, the borough had to bear new
burdens formerly shouldered by the county or the
parishes. (fn. 914)
Immediately after the Municipal Corporations
Act the corporation fell into the hands of Whigs.
This situation lasted only until 1841. (fn. 915) Though
there was a mayoral contest in 1845, (fn. 916) the corporation's conservative complexion remained unchanged until at least 1889. (fn. 917) Two Liberals, however,
were elected in 1857 and Liberal mayors assumed
office after 1889. (fn. 918) The first Labour councillor,
R. P. Sheppard, was returned in 1929. (fn. 919)
In 1867 a local board of health was set up,
coincident in membership with the borough
council and in practice meeting on the same day. (fn. 920)
At the same time much of the Improvement Act
of 1825 was repealed and the commissioners
abolished. (fn. 921) A paid clerk (who was the town clerk),
surveyor, inspector of nuisances and collector, clerk
of the gas works, and an unpaid treasurer were
appointed. (fn. 922) In the natural course of events the
local board became an urban sanitary authority in
1872 and was fused with the borough in 1889. The
borough, however, for reasons which are not
apparent, continued additionally to style itself an
urban district up to 1933. (fn. 923)
During the later 19th century the borough officers
remained substantially the same with the important
exception that a medical officer of health was
appointed in 1873. (fn. 924) In 1892 the clerk of the peace
lost his fees and began to receive a salary. (fn. 925) The parttime offices of borough treasurer and town clerk were
converted into full-time ones in 1948 and 1965
respectively. (fn. 926)
Municipal Buildings.
An 'old' town hall
(pretorium vetus) stood in the New Port in 1451. (fn. 927)
Beneath its successor, first mentioned in 1541, (fn. 928) a
shop, called the Tolsey House, stood in 1563, (fn. 929) and
six stalls in 1586. (fn. 930) In the later 16th century the
council house, with a shop below it, adjoined the
guildhall. (fn. 931) In 1648–50 a turret was added to the
building, into which the market-bell and a new clock
were then inserted; at the same time the building was
gilded and ceiled. (fn. 932) In 1669–71 turret, 'town hall',
and council house were repaired together. (fn. 933) From the
earlier 16th to the later 17th century the guildhall
was used for administrative assemblies and sessions
of the borough courts; (fn. 934) the town armour was housed
in the hall in 1625–6 (fn. 935) and documents in the
council house in 1635. (fn. 936)
In 1615–16 the yarn hall of earlier date (fn. 937) was
rebuilt as the market-house for wool and yarn to
the designs of one Andrews and other masons. (fn. 938)
It was intended additionally as a meeting-place for
county quarter sessions. (fn. 939) The corporation began to
let it in 1625–6 (fn. 940) and after 1641 did so commonly.
The hall was repaired in 1627–8 (fn. 941) and extensively
in 1631–4. (fn. 942) In 1663–4 it needed 'propping up'. (fn. 943)
From the late 17th century until its reconstruction
in the early 19th century, it is nearly always called
the Wool Hall, or else, to distinguish it from the
hall built c. 1752, the Old Hall. (fn. 944) The cheese
markets and fairs were moved into it in 1689 (fn. 945) and
by 1726 were located in what was called the 'lower
Wool Hall'. (fn. 946)
In 1733 it was decided to build 'a new guild hall'
'behind' the Wool Hall (fn. 947) and next year to spend
£300, offered by Sir Joseph Eyles, on 'rebuilding
and repairing' the hall. (fn. 948) The designs of a Mr.
Lawrence were approved soon after. (fn. 949) It seems that
the construction of a completely new hall was
discarded in favour of altering the existing Wool
Hall by adding to it a council chamber in which
the common council sat from 1735. (fn. 950)
The 'old' hall, as depicted in 1759, (fn. 951) was a twostoreyed brick building with a hipped slate roof. The
lower storey formed an open courtyard, presumably
for the display of merchandise. The principal front
was of five bays, having a Tuscan colonnade below,
supplied in 1629, (fn. 952) and sash windows above. The
central entrance was flanked by Corinthian columns
which rose through both storeys and supported a
pediment; above was the clock turret surmounted
by a bell cupola. By 1792 the lower storey seems to
have been enclosed by walls in which windows were
inserted. (fn. 953)
In 1750 it was decided to pull the guildhall down
and in its place to erect a 'public hall' to be set upon
piazzas. (fn. 954) The site chosen was on the south side of
Wine Street. A decision reached in 1751 to build the
new hall around a courtyard, which might be used
as a poultry market, (fn. 955) cannot have been effective,
for the building of 1973 is a solid block. The hall
seems to have been nearly finished by 1752 (fn. 956) and
completely so by 1759. (fn. 957) Unexpectedly the corporation used it mainly as a market-house, banishing the markets from the Wool Hall, and using
the latter for its current business. Of this there are
two signs. When in 1791 the corporation gave a
lease of the Wool Hall, they reserved to themselves
not only the 'upper' hall but their right to use the
whole building on certain 'public occasions'. (fn. 958)
Secondly, when the hall was condemned to reconstruction (see below), directions were given to
fit up the 'new' one for public business. (fn. 959) If the 'new'
hall had become the corporation meeting-place,
such directions would have been meaningless.
In 1785–7 the hall was being used as a militia
arsenal. (fn. 960) On completion of the covered Market
House in 1803 many marketing activities were transferred to it. (fn. 961)
In 1803 James Wyatt condemned the 'old' hall as
beyond repair (fn. 962) and with further benefactions, each
of £1,000, from Smith and T. G. B. Estcourt, M.P.,
(Addington's successor) it was substantially rebuilt between 1806 (fn. 963) and 1808 (fn. 964) to the designs of
Thomas Baldwin of Bath. (fn. 965) The front was pulled
down and replaced by a new sessions court on the
ground floor and a spacious assembly room with
fine plasterwork above. The walls forming the rear
of the old building were retained (fn. 966) but the interior
was altered to provide a council chamber, with
attached muniment room, on the first floor. Below it
was an enclosed open space into which the cheese
market was moved from the 'New' hall in 1810. (fn. 967)
This area was still called the cheese hall in 1972.
The sessions court had been converted into offices
by 1961. Between 1825 and 1830 iron palisades
were placed at the north end of the building. (fn. 968)
In 1809 it was resolved to lease out the 'New' hall.
With an unexpected regard for amenities the
corporation resolved to preserve its external
appearance. (fn. 969) In 1825 the hall was sold (fn. 970) and has
since been put to literary and commercial uses. (fn. 971)
William Cunnington (II) bought it in 1836 to house
his wine and spirit business (fn. 972) and in 1871 his son
William (III) erected a clock on the facade. (fn. 973)
A weavers' hall is first mentioned in 1586, when it
was described as very ruinous. (fn. 974) The corporation,
then its de facto owners, mended it in 1595–7. (fn. 975)
Fruitless attempts to let it were made in 1599–1601. (fn. 976)
In 1607 it was a seat for county quarter sessions. (fn. 977)
In 1614 it was assigned to the three craft guilds and
remained to their use until upon their dissolution in
1770 they surrendered it. (fn. 978) In 1707 a common
council was held in it. (fn. 979) It possessed a chapel (1586) (fn. 980)
with a little room in it (1595), (fn. 981) stairs (1595), (fn. 982)
and a buttery (c. 1617). (fn. 983) It seems to have stood on
the north side of Wine Street. (fn. 984) The map of 1737–8,
however, shows the guildhall in this position (fn. 985) and
marks a 'Drapers' Hall' on the other side of the
street exactly where the 'New' hall now stands.
That hall appears to have covered the guildhall site
after that building had been demolished. 'Drapers'
Hall' could be another name for the weavers' hall
assigned to the craft guilds, which included drapers.
The map, however, must not be trusted too far
since it assigns at least one improbable street name. (fn. 986)
A town prison is first mentioned in 1556 (fn. 987) and is
doubtless 'the ward' to which from 1559 delinquents
were committed by the borough court. (fn. 988) By 1581
both bailiffs' and serjeants' wards existed. (fn. 989) The first
of these can be traced from 1560, (fn. 990) and in 1643. (fn. 991) was
distinguishable from the 'blind house', mentioned
from 1584 (fn. 992) until 1737–8. (fn. 993) About 1655 a new prison
was built 'at the end' of the market-house or Wool
Hall, (fn. 994) but, somewhat unexpectedly, this was 'pulled
down' in 1660–1 and the 'old prison' repaired. (fn. 995)
In 1737–8 (fn. 996) what is called the 'Mayor's new prison',
probably replacing the 'blind house', seems to have
stood near the south end of the Wool Hall. It may
have been out of use in 1774, for Howard found town
prisoners in the bridewell. (fn. 997) When the Town Hall
was rebuilt in 1806–8 a cell, which still survived in
1973, was fitted into its southern end.
A gallows was mended in 1596 and 1623 (fn. 998) and
new made in 1642. (fn. 999) Its name was long preserved in
Gallows Ditch, (fn. 1000) which in 1787–8 was a suicides'
graveyard. (fn. 1001)
Apart from such shelter as the Town Hall could
provide the corporation had no central offices until
1959 when they moved to Northgate House. (fn. 1002)
The town clerk, being until then a part-time officer,
worked from his own premises. (fn. 1003)
Seals, Insignia, Records, and Chief Officers.
The first common seal, of which the
latten matrix broken in four and soldered together
survives, is round, 23/8 in., and depicts the borough
arms. (fn. 1004) Legend, black letter: SIGILLUM COMMUNE
BURGENSIUM DOMINI REGIS DIVISAR'. Impressions
of the seal have not been traced. The matrix has been
conjecturally assigned to the 14th or 15th century. (fn. 1005)
The second common seal, of which the bronze
matrix survives, is round, 2½ in., and also depicts
the borough arms. (fn. 1006) In base '1608', the year of
execution. (fn. 1007) Legend, humanistic: SIGILLUM COMUNE
MAIORIS ET BURGENSIUM BURGI DOMINI REGIS DE
DEVIZES IN COMITATU WILT'. Impressions survive
appended to documents of 1748 (fn. 1008) and 1792. (fn. 1009)
The mayor's seal, of which the silver matrix
survived until about 1951 but has not since been
traced, was round, 15/16 in., and also depicts the
borough arms. (fn. 1010) Legend, humanistic: SIGILLUM
OFFICII MAIORIS BURGI DOMINE [sic] REGI [sic]
DIVISAR'. Round the edges were the words 'Mr.
Mathew Allar maior anno do' 1681'. (fn. 1011) Impressions
have not been traced. The dating is a puzzle. Kite
thought the matrix was struck early in Elizabeth I's
reign, (fn. 1012) which the use of 'domine' would support.
If he is right, then 1681 must be the year of recasting. A mayor's seal was, however, struck in
1665–6 by James Hughes. (fn. 1013) This was either lost or
abandoned in the more
distant past or the matrix
described above is much
later than has been supposed.

Borough of Devizes.
Parted
palewise gules and azure, a
gold six-sided castle in perspective, the port flanked by
two domed towers, each dome
surmounted by a star sable,
and another tower rising
above the gate [Recorded
1565]
A silver seal was in the
list of property to be surrendered by the old to
the new mayor in 1660. (fn. 1014)
If this was the common
seal, the 1608 seal, which
is of bronze, must be its
replica in base metal.
In 1893 an impress
stamp die was substituted
for the seals. (fn. 1015) It was still
used in 1971.
A mayor's mace existed
in 1560 (fn. 1016) and by 1608
there were two, weighing
10 oz. each. (fn. 1017) They were
then replaced by two new ones, each weighing
nearly 30 oz. (fn. 1018) All or some of the maces were altered
in 1625 (fn. 1019) and 1650, (fn. 1020) to adapt them to new regimes.
In 1660–1 the present two mayor's maces were
made. (fn. 1021) They are silver-gilt, 2 ft. 10½ in. long,
chased with roses, thistles, and other floral devices,
and divided into lengths by ornate bosses. (fn. 1022)
In 1609 maces were provided for the serjeants. (fn. 1023)
These were no doubt the precursors of the two
brass-headed constables' staves, which had existed
shortly before 1895 and borne a portrait of Queen
Anne and the royal arms, the date 1709, and an
inscription testifying that they had been presented
by John Smith, citizen of London and brazier to
William III. (fn. 1024)
A mayoress's mace, originally belonging to the
rector, was discovered in St. John's church between
1838 and 1853 and was used by the mayoress, wife
of Henry Butcher, its owner, when the foundations
of the Corn Exchange were laid in 1857. In 1900 his
relict presented it to the corporation. (fn. 1025) It is not hallmarked.
The mayor's gold badge and chain, made by
Messrs. T. and J. Bragg, were presented in 1879 by
Sir Thomas Bateson, Bt., M.P., and the recorder,
rector, town clerk, clerk of the peace, and coroner. (fn. 1026)
A replica for the mayoress, on a smaller scale, was
acquired in 1952. (fn. 1027)
A silver-gilt loving-cup, 15¼ in. high, hallmarked 1606–7, with 'AB' as the maker's name, was
presented in 1620 by the mayor and twelve 'brethren'. (fn. 1028) Known in 1940 and long before as a 'hanap
cup', it is customarily carried before the mayor
when he goes to church in state. (fn. 1029) A silver punch
bowl, hall-marked ?1734–5, and silver ladle, hallmarked 1740–1, both belonging to an obscure body
called. 'The Brittox Club', are also among the
insignia. (fn. 1030)
Apart from the charters, nearly all the records up
to 1900 were transferred to the county record office,
Trowbridge, in 1966. (fn. 1031) A list of those dated before
1836 has been published. (fn. 1032) A list of mayors,
1302–1858, was published in 1859, (fn. 1033) and for
1302–1906 in 1908. (fn. 1034) A list from 1302 also hangs in
the Town Hall, together with photographs of many
ex-mayors since 1850. A list for 1554–1791 was
issued in revised form in 1925. (fn. 1035) Numerous
additions, especially for the 14th and 15th centuries,
can now be made. The names of a few recorders
were published in 1859. (fn. 1036)
Parish Government.
In a town which
borough government was fairly active the function
of the parish officers was pro tanto lessened.
Moreover the records, although for St. Mary's
parish they are numerous and begin unusually
early, are marred by chasms and do not tell a
continuous story. (fn. 1037) The two churches always
possessed separate sets of parish officers and
separate vestries. The churchwardens of St. John's
have, so far as is known, always numbered two.
By 1762 the practice of accepting the rector's nominee for one of the two offices was prevailing, a
custom breached in 1805 but then resumed. It seems
that from c. 1814 until 1830 the 'senior' churchwarden was reappointed from year to year.
There were three overseers for St. John's in 1762,
one of whom was perhaps paid. In 1814 an 'extra'
paid overseer was appointed, whose creation was
held soon afterwards to have brought savings to the
parish and comfort to the poor. In 1833 there were
both a deputy and assistant overseers, the first of
whom was paid. The vestry met with fair regularity
from 1762. In April of that year the parish officers
and eight others attended. In 1830 it was resolved
to meet monthly to investigate minutely appeals for
aid. This was at a time when the expenses of the
poor were high. (fn. 1038)
Between 1798 and 1812 rates were set by twelfths,
one or two of such fractions being granted for the
year. In 1812 it was said that the then poor-rate,
which had stood at 19s. 6d. in the £ in 1803, (fn. 1039) was
'unequal and defective' and a new one was ordered
to be devised. After that time fractional calculations
cease, and until 1832 rates, when set, are at 6d., 9d.,
and 1s. in the £, sums which occur with almost equal
frequency. In 1822 agricultural land was derated by
12½ per cent and in 1831 by a further 15 per cent,
except for the Old Park estate (Alfred Smith),
which secured an abatement of 20 per cent.
Two churchwardens or proctors of St. Mary's
may be traced from 1340–1. (fn. 1040) In 1398 they are
called keepers of church goods. (fn. 1041) Since the church
possessed landed property from the 14th century (fn. 1042)
the keepers needed a seal (fn. 1043) of which there are a few
16th-century impressions. Between 1573 and 1576
they were chosen by the mayor 'and his brethren'. (fn. 1044)
From the mid-17th century it was the practice for
each churchwarden to serve two years (fn. 1045) and in 1655
it was settled in vestry that every rector should be
empowered to choose one of the old churchwardens
as his own warden. (fn. 1046) This practice may not have
lasted long. From 1772 the church property was
managed by a body of feoffees. (fn. 1047) In 1615 and 1618
there were four overseers, from 1619 only two. (fn. 1048)
A vestry existed from 1655 (fn. 1049) and perhaps from
1637. (fn. 1050) Long before this, however, the parishioners
participated in parochial decisions, for in 1378 and
in 1421 conveyances were made by the proctors,
with the consent of the parish. (fn. 1051) In 1655 the vestry
ruled that the churchwardens might not spend
more than £2 annually, except on the poor, without
the consent of the parish. (fn. 1052)
The story of the Devizes poorhouses, with which
the parish officers were naturally concerned, is
obscure and patchy. In 1726 St. John's parish was
trying to lease a site for a workhouse outside its own
boundaries, at Gallows Ditch. (fn. 1053) It is not known
whether the attempt succeeded. In 1783 the 'Ark'
was being used for this purpose. (fn. 1054) Before 1776 there
had also been a workhouse in New Park Street
presumably belonging to St. Mary's parish. (fn. 1055)
In 1796 the two parishes were united for poor-law
purposes under Gilbert's Act (fn. 1056) and decided to buy
a workhouse jointly. (fn. 1057) By 1799 Anstie's former
factory in New Park Street had been acquired as
a 'house of industry' (fn. 1058) but then, (fn. 1059) as in 1802,
St. Mary's parish was trying to withdraw from the
agreement. (fn. 1060) By 1809 the building had been abandoned (fn. 1061) and in 1817 was sold. (fn. 1062) The two parishes
seem then to have parted company. St. John's
moved its paupers to Short Street apparently
to the alms-house which Sir John Eyles had given to
the poor of the parish by 1668. (fn. 1063) By 1826 that was
thought to be unsafe. (fn. 1064) Accordingly in 1828 a plot
at the junction of Hare and Hounds Street and
Southbroom Road was acquired by exchange and a
combined alms- and poorhouse erected in 1829,
known in 1885 as St. John's Buildings. (fn. 1065) About
1834 there were 24 rooms of which 18 were
occupied by paupers. (fn. 1066) The building was not
abandoned upon the building of the Union workhouse, (fn. 1067) but was still used in 1901 when it comprised 16 rooms occupied by members of the Old
and Eyles almshouse charities, who received no
allowance but were relieved. (fn. 1068)
In 1810 the parish officers of St. Mary's sold some
timber standing on their lands and therewith bought
the site for a poorhouse, which they built. (fn. 1069) It is not
known for certain where this stood, but possibly
near their Eyles houses in Short Street. In 1828 a
combined alms- and poorhouse of 32 rooms was built
at New Town in Commercial Road on the south
of St. Mary's church, the Eyles's almspeople of
St. Mary's being moved there too. (fn. 1070) The parish
paupers occupied 24 of the rooms but Eyles's
benefaction was commemorated by a tablet on the
new building which c. 1834 was said to be occupied
as a 'parish poorhouse'. (fn. 1071) After the Union workhouse was built the story of the New Town premises
is part of that of the Eyles and St. Mary's almshouses and is traced elsewhere. (fn. 1072)
A Devizes Poor Law Union was formed in 1835 (fn. 1073)
and a workhouse built in 1836 (fn. 1074) in Sedgefield
Gardens. In 1947 it was renamed St. James's Home
(Hospital from 1949) and became an old people's
home. (fn. 1075)
Churchwardens' accounts for St. John's exist for
1758–1806 after which year until 1853 they are
combined with vestry minutes, which continue,
perhaps only quoad sacra, until 1945. (fn. 1076) There are
overseers' accounts from 1613 until 1848 with some
gaps. (fn. 1077) Churchwardens' accounts for St. Mary's
(1499–1734), (fn. 1078) overseers' accounts (1614–1736), (fn. 1079)
and vestry minutes (1808, 1833–1928) (fn. 1080) survive.
The most significant Nachlass, however, is the parish
deeds which are fairly abundant from the 13th
century. (fn. 1081)
Public Services.
The streams that flow
through the old park can have been of little use as a
town water supply. A spring once gushed from the
slope which descends from Northgate Street to
Station Road. It was called the King's Well from
1595, (fn. 1082) and may originally have helped to feed the
castle, though there was a well within the castle
walls. (fn. 1083) As late as the 1830s it flowed from a grotto
into a walled pond from which water was supplied
to Waylen's factory in Northgate Street. When the
railway and access road were built, the spring was
sealed and now lies below the bed of both. (fn. 1084) It is
uncertain whether the watercourse at the north gate,
mentioned in 1451, (fn. 1085) is that same spring.
The town has had many wells, often sunk to a
depth of more than 90 ft. to penetrate below the
Greensand. (fn. 1086) In 1905 a few were still in use, notably
one under Wadworth's which survived in 1971. (fn. 1087)
In 1702 the well water was held to be bad and
attempts were made to pipe a better supply from
a spring under Roundway, presumably Mother
Anthony's Well. (fn. 1088) Nothing was then done and 27
years later Stukeley commented on the continuing
shortage, (fn. 1089) which may thenceforward if not earlier
have limited the town's growth.
In 1792 James Sutton offered to build a reservoir
near the shambles. The offer was accepted (fn. 1090) and by
1837 such a tank lay below that building. (fn. 1091) Between
1807 (fn. 1092) and 1838 (fn. 1093) vain efforts were made to induce
the Canal Company to provide lock water for fire
extinguishment and street-watering. By 1839,
however, a tank for the latter purpose had been
built and another was then under construction. (fn. 1094)
One of these was in Couch Lane. (fn. 1095) In 1843, however,
supplies were still considered inadequate for fire
extinguishment. (fn. 1096) Efforts to improve the supply
were made between 1866 and 1868 but were fruitless,
the view prevailing that wells were enough. (fn. 1097) By
1877, however, it had become clear that this was
wrong and a water-works was begun at Shepherd's
Shore in Bishop's Cannings parish. Its history
belongs elsewhere. (fn. 1098)
In early days street maintenance, when not
provided charitably, (fn. 1099) was a corporation responsibility. 'Waymen' and surveyors existed by the
later 16th century. (fn. 1100) In 1614 the waymen were
levying a highway rate, managing lands allotted to
the highways, and presenting defaulters. (fn. 1101) Digging
pits in the streets had been prohibited by 1614 (fn. 1102) and
in 1632 frontagers were directed to repair the streets
in which they lived; (fn. 1103) the order was repeated with
variations in 1641–2. (fn. 1104) Surveyors were still being
appointed in 1770. (fn. 1105) It was stated in 1724 that the
surface of two main roads through the town was so
bad that carriages were often broken when they had
crossed the borough boundary. (fn. 1106) The Improvement
Commissioners appointed in 1781 included paving
among their functions. They were somewhat
inactive on this front, but did promise in 1783 that
those who paved their frontages should receive
allowances. (fn. 1107) In 1784 and 1787 they sought contractors to pave the turnpike roads from Rowde
Ford to Shepherd's Shore and from the east end
of the town to Redhorn Hill (in Urchfont) in
their passage through Devizes. (fn. 1108) The succeeding
Improvement Act of 1825 vested the streets in the
board and empowered them to pave. (fn. 1109) Their most
conspicuous work, however, was in effecting minor
alterations in the plan. (fn. 1110)
By 1614 frontagers had become obliged to clean
the areas before their doors once a week and after
fairs and remove the muck, and the town scavengers (fn. 1111)
were to see that this was done and to ensure the
cleansing of gutters and ditches. Swine were not to
wander. (fn. 1112) The corporation expressed itself in favour
of clean streets in 1732, (fn. 1113) but systematic scavenging
can be said to date only from 1781, when the
Improvement Commissioners, charged to supervise
this service, appointed the first paid scavenger. (fn. 1114)
For many years the work was carried out by
contractors, changing periodically. (fn. 1115) In 1825 the
second board seems to have appointed a permanent
cleansing inspector. (fn. 1116) In 1791 the town was
divided into three scavenging districts (fn. 1117) and in 1794
separate scavengers for the two parishes were
chosen. (fn. 1118) In 1785 the public were charged to
cleanse the footways beside their houses, (fn. 1119) a requirement that became statutory in 1825. (fn. 1120)
By 1833 the corporation had long maintained a
main sewer, (fn. 1121) and the Improvement Commissioners
of 1825 were empowered to explore for contaminated water. (fn. 1122) The lack of water, however,
already mentioned, impeded the development of
good sewerage, since water closets could not be
built in any number. (fn. 1123) Although attention was
drawn to the situation in 1848, (fn. 1124) it was not until
1869 that a drainage system for the whole town was
decreed. (fn. 1125) Deep drainage below the Market Place
had been sanctioned four years earlier. (fn. 1126) At first the
crude sewage seems to have been discharged into
the two streams that traverse the old park. While
the northern stream carried it away well enough, the
southern one became clogged where it passed under
Marsh Lane and aroused protests from the Rural
Sanitary authority. (fn. 1127) This led to the construction
of a proper sewage works, modelled on that at
Oswestry (Salop.), on the north side of the former
parkland. It was completed by 1886 (fn. 1128) and extended
in 1892 (fn. 1129) and 1895. (fn. 1130) The septic system of disposal
was in full operation by 1905. (fn. 1131)
A cemetery at Belvedere was opened in 1879 (fn. 1132) and
extended eastwards in 1958. (fn. 1133) A bathing place in pound
no. 24 on the canal, behind the secondary school,
was constructed in 1878 (fn. 1134) and opened to women in
1890. (fn. 1135) In 1936 it was replaced by a public swimming
bath in Colston Road. (fn. 1136)
Devizes was visited by the plague in 1604, 1607,
and 1644 (fn. 1137) and by the last year contained a pest
house. (fn. 1138) There were small-pox visitations in 1767,
1769, 1785, 1794, 1806, and 1810. Inoculation was
being practised by the first year and there were
general inoculations in 1785, 1806, and 1820. (fn. 1139)
A pest-house stood, c. 1831, on the east side of
Pans Lane, (fn. 1140) and is perhaps the same as that
mentioned in 1644 and between 1787 and 1791. (fn. 1141)
A cholera hospital was provided in 1832 by the local
Board of Health which had been set up in the preceding year to contend with the threat from that
disease. The board was dissolved in 1833. (fn. 1142)
Attempts in 1866 to provide such a hospital anew
were defeated, (fn. 1143) but in 1873 an infectious-diseases
hospital was built beside the canal just north of the
present course of Victoria Road. (fn. 1144) It was transferred
from the cottage hospital managers in 1875. (fn. 1145) and
enlarged in 1883 (fn. 1146) and 1893. (fn. 1147) Between 1903 and
1911 it moved to a new site in Pans Lane close to
what is now Roundway Hospital, (fn. 1148) but by 1956 the
building which housed it had become a maternity
hospital. (fn. 1149)
In 1832 a dispensary was established in Snuff
Street with one resident and a rota of visiting
physicians. (fn. 1150) Between 1859 and 1871, when it was
called the North Wilts. Dispensary, it had moved to
Northgate Street (fn. 1151) and by the next year to Monday
Market Street. (fn. 1152) It seems to have maintained a
kind of independence in 1879, (fn. 1153) although by 1873 it
was in some form combined with the hospital, and
served as an out-patients' department. (fn. 1154) It was
closed in 1888. (fn. 1155) A cottage hospital in New Park
Road was opened in 1872, (fn. 1156) earlier efforts made in
1824 and 1832 to establish a local hospital having
failed. (fn. 1157) It was enlarged in 1887, (fn. 1158) c. 1897, (fn. 1159) as
jubilee memorials, in 1911, with a benefaction from
Alexander Grant Meek, (fn. 1160) in 1921 as a memorial to
Edward VII, (fn. 1161) and in 1936, when private wards
were provided. (fn. 1162)
In 1815 Richard Trueman was licensed to
receive into the Knoll, his home on Dunkirk Hill, a
maximum of ten lunatics. (fn. 1163) His daughter married
Thomas Phillips, who took over the business and
moved his patients before 1839 to a building
behind the Old Crown, New Park Street. (fn. 1164) By 1841
the establishment had moved again to Bellevue (fn. 1165)
and there it remained until at least 1862, although
its licence for pauper patients was withdrawn in
1854, two years after the county lunatic asylum
(now Roundway Hospital) had been opened. (fn. 1166)
It held 100 patients in 1841 and 156 in 1844, most of
whom were paupers. (fn. 1167)
Lighting was one of the responsibilities of the
first board of Improvement Commissioners and in
the year of their appointment lamp posts were
erected throughout the town. (fn. 1168) By 1824 the corporation discussed a plan to light the town by gas,
and, favouring it, concluded that a new Improvement
Act would be required, with enlarged powers. (fn. 1169)
The Act was passed in the next year and the new
Commissioners promptly set about promoting a
gas supply not only for street-lighting but for
private consumption. A site for a gas works beside
the canal convenient for unloading fuel, was secured
from the wharf company. (fn. 1170) The works was opened
in 1827 and by 1858 had been enlarged several
times. (fn. 1171) The gas company was taken over on
nationalization and about 1955 the gas works was
closed. (fn. 1172) Since then gas has been piped into the town
from Bath. The gas-works chimney was felled in
1961. (fn. 1173)
The firm of Brown and May began to supply
electric light in 1897. (fn. 1174) By an Act of 1904, confirming Board of Trade orders, the corporation were
constituted undertakers and mains were laid. (fn. 1175)
Punishments for creating fire hazards were laid
down in 1614. (fn. 1176) The borough ordered its first known
fire engine in 1641. (fn. 1177) In 1731 it purchased one of
Richard Newsham's. (fn. 1178) In 1825 the second body of
Improvement Commissioners tried to secure a
proper supply of water for fire-fighting; they drew
up regulations for stowing and mending the engine
and provided fire-fighting appliances to be kept in
the shambles. Master bricklayers and carpenters
were to attend fires with axes and act as special
constables. (fn. 1179) There were still complaints about a
lack of water in 1843 (fn. 1180) when a new fire engine was
supplied. (fn. 1181) A fire brigade was established in 1868 (fn. 1182)
and reorganized in 1886. (fn. 1183) From 1885 (fn. 1184) until
c. 1962 the engine house stood at the west end of
Short Street, but by 1927 the engine had been
moved to Estcourt Street. (fn. 1185) In 1967 a new station
was built by the county council, in opposition to
local opinion, on the south side of Heathcote
House. (fn. 1186)
From the 16th century there was a formidable
array of peace officers. Headed by the constables, they
included bailiffs, serjeants-at-mace, and 'aldermen',
all of whom were in some way involved under the
by-laws of 1614. Arresting and imprisoning vagabonds and others, presenting offenders, especially
the drunken and unlawful gamesters, and attendance upon the courts were among their functions.
In addition all inhabitants were to store in their
shops and other places such arms as might be needed
to keep the peace and in theory they were, under
the constables' superintendence, to keep watch. (fn. 1187) A
regulation of 1642 demanded that for a limited
period all who paid the poor rate should act as or
find wardsmen and watchmen, four of the former to
be on duty by day and eight by night. (fn. 1188) The duty of
watch and ward was abolished in 1781. (fn. 1189) The first
Improvement Commissioners were among other
matters to superintend the watching of the borough
and were given power to correct a long list of
nuisances. (fn. 1190) They at once appointed four paid night
watchmen to that end. (fn. 1191) The men were illdisciplined. (fn. 1192) A superintendent was appointed in
1787 no doubt to check their behaviour, (fn. 1193) but
misconduct was still reported in 1795. (fn. 1194) The
ineffectiveness of the watchmen led to the formation of the Association for preventing Felony and
other Offences. This was in existence by 1787 and
remained so until at least 1793. It was succeeded in
1797 by the Devizes Prosecution Society which held
meetings until 1867. It maintained a membership
for some (probably a social) purpose until 1887 and a
nominal existence until 1920. A competing body, the
Devizes Mutual Protection Society, was formed in
1836. All three societies extended their membership to surrounding villages. (fn. 1195)
The second body of Improvement Commissioners,
1825, were required to watch the town as their predecessors had been. (fn. 1196) They were at once impressed
by the insufficiency of the police. This is not
surprising since the regular appointment of watchmen had evidently lapsed. Four men were appointed
in 1826 to work under the constable, and dissolute
wanderers were placed under stricter control. (fn. 1197)
As before, however, there were cases of indiscipline, (fn. 1198)
and a new regulation of 1829 required the night
constable, as he was now called, to patrol the town
four times each night and report daily to the high
constables. (fn. 1199)
As soon as the Municipal Corporations Act, 1835,
had transferred policing to the reformed corporation, the new watch committee informed the
Home Office on the state of the police. Under the
high (here called chief) constables there were four
policemen, a night constable, and four constables
acting as watchmen. By 1839 these last four seem
not to have existed, but there were 30 special
constables. (fn. 1200) In 1835 the only station house was the
night constable's house in the Brittox. The policemen were normally only on duty on market and fair
days and on Sunday afternoons, but the night
watchmen patrolled regularly. Shortly afterwards a
single policeman was put in uniform and expected to
be on duty six days a week. (fn. 1201) The watchmen continued until the whole Devizes force was amalgamated with the county constabulary in 1847. (fn. 1202)
The police station was in the old bridewell from
c. 1836 (fn. 1203) until it was moved between 1855 and 1859
to the Town Hall. (fn. 1204) It was in the Assize Courts from
1937 (fn. 1205) and in Barford House, St. John's Street, the
former post office, from 1969. (fn. 1206)
A postal service in Devizes is first recorded in
1674 and a postmaster in 1675. (fn. 1207) In 1847 the post
office stood at no. 44 Market Place where it remained
until 1880. It was then successively at no. 39
(1881–7) and no. 24 (1888–1921). (fn. 1208) In 1921 it was
moved to Barford House, (fn. 1209) St. John's Street, and
thence in 1968 (fn. 1210) to the junction of Sheep and Maryport Streets, where it forms part of a block of offices
consisting additionally of the local branches of the
Departments of Health and Social Security and
Employment and the County Court offices.
The Constituency.
The borough of Devizes
was first summoned to Parliament in 1295. (fn. 1211)
Out of the next 37 Parliaments to which boroughs
were summoned and for which returns survive it
was summoned to twelve. From 1331–2 until 1362,
a period of decline, (fn. 1212) it was not summoned at all.
Of the 57 Parliaments, similarly defined, between
1363 and 1449 it was summoned to all but five.
It was not summoned in 1459 or 1460. Afterwards,
except in 1553, it was never omitted. In the first
Protectorate Parliament of 1654 it was summoned
with Salisbury and Marlborough alone, (fn. 1213) a reflection
of the true significance of Wiltshire towns at this
time. Except in the first Parliament of 1384 (fn. 1214) and in
1654, (fn. 1215) it was represented by two members until
1867. It then returned one until in 1885 it was
merged with the Devizes division of Wiltshire. (fn. 1216)
The return was made by the constable of the
castle in 1322. (fn. 1217) It has been said that in 1510–11
representatives were chosen in the county court. (fn. 1218)
In 1593, (fn. 1219) and so far as is known at all other times,
returns were made by the mayor and burgesses.
The uncertain element in the constitution was the
body of burgesses, who were by charter unlimited in
number. What looks like an attempt by the 'popular'
element to contest the mayor's return in 1660 does
not seem to have pursued. (fn. 1220) That element, however,
apparently swayed the election of 1679. (fn. 1221) On
petition the governing body's influence was reestablished at the election to the Convention in
1688–9 (fn. 1222) and in 1697 the number of free burgesses
was cut down. (fn. 1223)
Over the years 1705–14 further election disputes
troubled the peace of the town. On the death of a
Whig member in 1706 the Tory recorder tried to
secure the return of a Tory by alleging that the
election precept had been addressed to a false mayor
and by inciting to riot. The rioters were prosecuted,
with Government support, and a Whig returned.
In 1708 Tories again alleged that returns had been
made by a false mayor. The House of Commons
compromised by declaring both a Whig and a Tory
elected. At the elections of 1710 and 1714 Tories
secured both seats but on the second occasion
attempts were made to unseat them. The disputes
were characterized by each party trying to elect its
own supporters as capital burgesses, forcing or
persuading opponents to absent themselves from the
council, and obstructing efforts to fill its vacancies. (fn. 1224)
As shown elsewhere, (fn. 1225) the corporation and
therefore the electorate steadily declined in numbers
from the end of the 17th century so that for the
period 1715–54 the electorate could not unjustly
be called 'a narrow self-co-opting oligarchy'. (fn. 1226)
As Oldfield cynically remarked in 1816, 'care is
taken not to let the number of burgesses exceed that
of the corporation who creates them'. (fn. 1227) The
estimates, however, of the size of the constituency,
both at that time (32) and in the ensuing 35 years
(c. 30), seem too low. (fn. 1228) The statement made in 1816
that the voters numbered about 50 (fn. 1229) is, on the other
hand, probably too high.
Although men who were not townsmen were
beginning to sit in the 15th century, (fn. 1230) the
constituency was never in 'carpet-baggers" hands.
No doubt the gentry were increasingly returned,
but at least one member in each Parliament,
through residence just outside or near the borough,
maintained the local connexion. (fn. 1231) In the 18th
century large-scale clothiers dominated the constituency, but the local connexion continued to be
preserved by the same means. (fn. 1232) Only John Pearse
(M.P. 1818–32), for long a director of the Bank of
England and prosperous in the insurance world,
was an interloper. Though the owner of an estate at
Chilton Foliat, (fn. 1233) he was a stranger to the town and
twice had to fight election contests. T. H. S. Sotheron
Estcourt, of New Park, who sat 1835–44, perpetuated the older tradition that at least one seat
should be filled by a local gentleman.
During the 18th century the members were
supporters of government. (fn. 1234) In 1831 the representatives in Parliament, like the corporation,
were opposed to Parliamentary reform and both
members voted against this Bill. (fn. 1235) After 1832 both
parties were represented for a while, (fn. 1236) but by 1841
the constituency had gone Tory and so remained for
the rest of its existence. (fn. 1237)