SOCIAL HISTORY
Colchester's social life was influenced in the period by improved communications, by the consequences of agricultural change in the surrounding rural area and
of rapid industrialization in other parts of the country, and by the indirect effects
of wars, including the temporary establishment of a garrison during the Napoleonic
Wars. Improved roads and methods of road transport enabled a faster interchange
of commodities, and also of ideas and fashions, between the town and other parts
of the country, especially London. Coaching inns were particularly important
before the railway reached the town in 1843. Colchester's position on the route
from London to Harwich and the Continent provided in addition an important
cultural link beyond England. Newspapers, easily accessible in the town, brought
news of current national and international affairs like parliamentary debates and
the progress of the French Revolution. The Evangelical revival in the Anglican
church, which emphasized individual faith and the spiritual worth and capacity
for improvement of every person, led, particularly from the 1780s, to the
establishment of Sunday schools, day schools, and hospitals, to other philanthropic
work, and not least to some refinement in public behaviour. Nonconformity, strong
locally, encouraged similar efforts. By the end of the period the range of social
activities had widened. An increasing proportion of the town's population might
be categorized as middle-ranking, but great discrepancies remained between those
who could lead a reasonably comfortable and secure life and those on the borders
of poverty who sometimes resorted to lawbreaking when food was in short supply
or their livelihoods seemed at risk.
The remaining sections of the London-Harwich road were turnpiked under the
1725 Act, and by 1748 there was a coach to London and back, daily except Sundays,
so that it was possible to make brief business and social visits to London and keep
abreast of the latest developments. (fn. 48) There were 80 inns in 1762; (fn. 49) many were
staging posts for travellers. Dr. Samuel Johnson and James Boswell stayed at the
White Hart in 1763, as did John Wilkes in 1783. Lord Nelson visited the Three
Cups in 1801, as did the Prince Regent in 1813, and the Duke of Wellington in
1823. (fn. 50) Inns were also convenient meeting places with refreshments for people
such as farmers visiting the town on market days. (fn. 51) Members of political and social
clubs met at certain inns: the King's Head club was started by a group promoting
the return of the borough charter but continued as a Tory dining club whose
members included leading Anglican clergymen and gentry; Whigs and Radicals
met at the Hand in Hand club at the Red Lion. (fn. 52) Some local administration was
conducted at inns: in 1783 the borough accounts committee met every Monday
evening at the Waggon and Horses; (fn. 53) from the 1740s to the 1760s magistrates
adjourned to the Three Cups, the White Hart, or the King's Head after quarter
sessions. (fn. 54) The White Hart, which also had a coffee room, became one of the
leading inns in the later 18th century, accommodating administrative and legal
meetings as well as monthly assemblies and balls; it ceased trading in 1816 after
its position was usurped by the Three Cups, where a new assembly room had been
built in 1807. (fn. 55) New buildings and street improvements, including the provision
of street lighting in the town centre from 1783 (by gas from 1819), and a wider
variety of goods for sale in the shops increased the attraction of the town as a social
centre. (fn. 56)
Intellectual stimulation was provided by the books and newspapers available in
libraries and reading rooms, and by societies and lectures. Charles Gray set up a
library in the castle in 1749, and the following year formed the Castle library book
club, one of several lending libraries, which acquired a wide range of books,
including works by leading contemporary philosophers and political economists. (fn. 57)
In 1794, when the club's membership of 30 included 10 clergy, 4 bankers, at least
1 grocer, 1 apothecary, 1 clockmaker, and 1 captain, the writings of the Evangelical
William Cowper were popular, and Byron's works were also held. (fn. 58) Thomas Paine's
The Rights of Man was considered subversive however, and Richard Patmore, a
baymaker, was indicted in 1793 for distributing part of it. (fn. 59) Colchester Medical
Society, England's oldest provincial medical society, was founded in 1774 by
Robert Richardson Newell. Members presented difficult or interesting cases for
diagnosis and discussion, established a medical lending library, and regulated their
own professional conduct. (fn. 60) In 1820 the Philosophical Society was formed, whose
members, mainly professionals and traders but also one working man, each gave
one of the monthly lectures at Queen Street, the subjects of which included Heat,
Taste, Wit, and Electricity. The society kept a museum of antiquities which it
presented to the corporation when it was dissolved in 1843. (fn. 61) Interest was
developing in science as well as the arts. George Wegg of East Hill House had
amassed a collection of books, manuscripts, globes, telescopes, quadrants, magnets,
and other mathematical and philosophical instruments by the time he died in 1777.
After a successful series of lectures on astronomy at the moot hall in 1798 by a
visiting lecturer, Isaac Taylor, an Independent minister in the town 1796-1810,
lectured monthly in his parlour to 60-70 young people and their friends on
geometry, astronomy, geography, mechanics, history, and anatomy. (fn. 62)
Local discussions were sharpened by contact with scholars and writers from
further afield. Balliol College, Oxford, was patron of several town livings, and
Nathaniel Forster at All Saints' was one of their presentees who was also resident;
a Utilitarian writer on political economy and education, he was a friend of Jeremy
Bentham. The quarrelsome Dr. Samuel Parr, an eminent classical scholar and a
Whig writer, served as Forster's curate while master of the grammar school 1777-9,
for which post Dr. Samuel Johnson wrote him a letter of recommendation. (fn. 63) The
family of the minister Isaac Taylor was part of the small circle of intellectuals in
the town. His daughters, Ann and Jane, were writers of children's stories, hymns,
and poems, including 'Twinkle, twinkle little star'. The family visited friends and
relations in London, Essex, and Suffolk, who included publishers, writers, medical
families, clerics, and the artist, John Constable's, family at East Bergholt (Suff.).
One of their Colchester friends was Benjamin Strutt, antiquary, vegetarian,
amateur artist, musician, and agnostic. (fn. 64)
For much of the 18th century the established church seems to have had a limited
impact on local affairs. Many of the Anglican parishes were poor livings with
dilapidated church buildings, badly served by incumbents who were often pluralists
and non-resident for part or all of the year. No services were held at St. Runwald's
between 1723 and 1748, parishioners attending St. Peter's, and parishioners of St.
Botolph's attended All Saints' until their new church was built in 1837. St. Mary'sat-the-Walls parish, however, had some wealthy inhabitants and a good rectory
house to attract able clerics: Philip Morant, rector 1737-70, was author of a
scholarly history of Colchester and also of Essex; Thomas Twining, son of the
tea-dealer and well known as a translator of Aristotle, was resident rector
1790-1804. (fn. 65) He was acquainted with the diarist and novelist Fanny Burney. (fn. 66) All
Saints' was another relatively desirable living where some of the parishioners, such
as Charles Gray at Hollytrees and Thomas Boggis at the Minories, could be
counted among the most influential people in the town. (fn. 67) St. Peter's church was
used by the corporation for civic services. (fn. 68)
Despite various schisms old Dissent in general continued to be numerically
strong, although Quakerism declined. Some dissenters were prepared to conform
occasionally to qualify for civic office, and two Independents, Arthur Winsley and
Jeremiah Daniell, were mayors. Others, like members of the Tabor family at Lion
Walk chapel, took no interest in the corporation but were members of the
navigation and improvement commission. (fn. 69) New Dissent in the form of Methodism
had some early success, but declined in the 1780s, though it revived by 1800. A
minister's daughter considered local dissenters c. 1795 to be 'men of habit more
than men of piety', only a few of whom 'knew or thought why they dissented', but
that condition did not continue. (fn. 70) The number of protestant dissenters was often
overestimated: in 1829 out of a population of c. 16,000 there were 4,330 (27 per
cent) of whom 2,200 were Independents, 1,100 Baptists, 930 Wesleyan Methodists,
and only 100 Quakers. (fn. 71) Roman Catholicism was insignificant in the town in the
period. (fn. 72) Roman Catholics were feared: the corporation repeatedly petitioned
parliament against them, for example, in 1812 about the dangers of their holding
office in a protestant government, and in 1828 against granting them further
concessions. (fn. 73)
The Evangelical movement revived Anglican church life from the 1780s in some
parishes. By 1835 the income of many livings had also been augmented, and some
of the church fabric had been improved. Robert Storry, vicar of St. Peter's
1781-1814, an early Evangelical, was succeeded by another, the enthusiastic and
popular William Marsh, who stayed until 1829. Marsh instituted more Sunday
services, started prayer and bible-reading meetings in the week, renovated the
church, and provided more seating; he supported philanthropic activity in the
parish and beyond, including missionary work and anti-slavery societies. (fn. 74) The
Colchester and East Essex Church Missionary Association was established in
1816. (fn. 75) Public sermons to benefit missionary societies and on behalf of the National
schools were regularly preached at St. Peter's in the early 19th century. (fn. 76) The
Religious Tracts Society for Colchester and its Vicinity was formed in 1825. (fn. 77)
The influence of Evangelicalism extended beyond organized religion into the
whole of private and public life, influencing personal morality and stimulating
much educational and philanthropic work. The town assembly petitioned parliament against the slave trade in 1788, and Colchester Anti-Slavery Society was
established in 1824. (fn. 78) Fourteen Sunday schools were opened in 1786 when
Nathaniel Forster preached sermons expounding his Utilitarian view of education
as a prevention rather than a cure of vice in the poor. (fn. 79) By 1833 many day-school
places had been provided. (fn. 80) Some new charities were established for bread and for
money for the poor. (fn. 81) The Benevolent Medical Society for Essex and Herts. was
founded in 1786 for the relief of distressed medical men, their widows and children,
and in 1789 Colchester Benevolent Society was established for the sick poor. (fn. 82)
There were some short-lived attempts at medical provision in the late 18th and
early 19th century, and in 1820 the Essex and Colchester hospital opened as a
general infirmary for the poor on the initiative of Joseph Jefferson, archdeacon of
Colchester, and seven other men. (fn. 83) Women of middling status, excluded from
much of public life, were active in philanthropic work, such as running Colchester's
Lying-In charity, set up in 1796. The Female Friendly Society, established in 1808
with a committee of 12 ladies and 114 subscribers, helped women and girls, mainly
with gifts of clothing. (fn. 84)
Colchester's leaders, socially as in political and economic life, were the town
gentry together with members of the commercial and professional elites. (fn. 85) Among
the leading families, Charles Gray, lawyer, of Hollytrees was linked by marriage
with the Creffields and the Rounds, though the Rounds were not an important
social influence in the town until the 19th century. Gray's stepdaughter, Sarah
Creffield, married his friend, the lawyer George Wegg of East Hill House. (fn. 86) The
Smythies, an Anglican Tory family whose members included Francis and his son
Francis, both active in town politics, and also clergymen for several Colchester
churches, were linked with the Twinings, the tea merchants. (fn. 87) The Smyths at
Berechurch provided M.P.s for the town. (fn. 88) The increase in small workshops and
the growth of retailing resulted in a significant expansion, below the gentry and
above the lower levels of petty traders, artisans and labourers, of the middleranking groups who probably constituted about 20 per cent of the population at
the end of the 18th century. (fn. 89) They usually kept female servants, and wealthier
households also kept male servants. In 1780 Isaac Martin Rebow, M.P. for
Colchester, had 7 male servants at Wivenhoe Park and Charles Gray 4 at Hollytrees,
but only 7 Colchester houses kept as many as 2, and 50 houses had 1 each. (fn. 90) Poorer
people experienced much deprivation caused by the Napoleonic Wars and the
decline in the bay trade, and poor relief expenditure per head increased greatly in
the late 18th century and early 19th. (fn. 91)
Different social networks, such as those of family, religion, profession, trade, or
freemasonry were often intertwined. The Anglican physician, Richard Mackintosh,
was part of the local Evangelical network; he was treasurer of the Castle library,
vice-president of the Philosophical Society, a manager of the savings bank, active
member of the Botanical and Horticultural Society and of the Colchester and East
Essex Bible Society, and a founder member and voluntary physician of the Essex
and Colchester hospital, all of which ensured that he was never short of patients. (fn. 92)
A denominational bias was marked in social relationships, but nonconformists
gradually became more integrated into social life. (fn. 93) There is some evidence to
support the view that later in the period, especially in the 19th century, the spheres
of middle-class women and men were becoming increasingly separated, with men's
activities located predominantly in the public world and women's in the home.
Maria Marsh, for example, took her role as a clergyman's wife seriously, running
the home, looking after the material and moral welfare of the children and servants,
undertaking some charitable work, and generally supporting her husband, whose
activities were mainly outside the home; she corresponded with the Evangelical
writer, Hannah More, who extolled the virtues of domesticity and the importance
of women's moral influence in the home. (fn. 94)
In the 18th century men working in the cloth industry had their own supportive
networks. Woolcombers held an annual procession until at least 1782 in honour
of their patron saint, St. Blaize, and met at Bishop Blaize inn, Angel Lane. Other
inns, like the Weavers' Arms, were frequented by other craftsmen in the industry. (fn. 95)
Workers had to take care not to be seen to be breaking the Combination laws,
consolidated in legislation of 1799 and 1800, and their fraternization was often
disguised in the activities of friendly societies or benefit clubs. In 1793 there were
18 friendly societies in the town each with 20-40 members paying 1s. monthly;
sick members received 8s. to 10s. a week and aged ones 6s. (fn. 96) By 1828 benefit and
friendly societies included those for the parishes of St. Leonard's, St. Botolph's,
St. Nicholas's, and Lexden, the Samaritans Club at St. Peter's, and the Union
Benefit Society. (fn. 97)
Freemasonry gave its members useful social and business contacts and by the
end of the period a number of lodges existed in the town. Thomas Boggis,
baymaker, was master of the Angel lodge in 1770, deputy provincial grand master
of Essex in 1777, and master of the new Lodge of Unity in 1779. (fn. 98) At a masonic
anniversary meeting in 1777, after the public breakfast that ladies were allowed to
attend, the brethren processed to St. Peter's church where, together with the
provincial grandmaster, they heard a sermon. (fn. 99) In 1799 many of the members of
the Angel lodge and most of those of the North Devon lodge were soldiers. In
1834 the Angel lodge's 47 members were mainly occupied in trade and commerce,
though there were a few professionals, farmers, and gentlemen. (fn. 1)
The range of social activities increased, especially for those with sufficient free
time and the financial means to enjoy it. In 1790 a party of corporation gentlemen,
which included two customs officers, went by sea on a two-day pleasure trip to
Dunkirk; on their return they were astonished to be apprehended by another
customs officer for illicit trading. (fn. 2) Colchester functioned to a certain extent like a
county town in so far as people from the surrounding rural area visited the town
for agricultural, judicial, and political business. Social functions were put on to
coincide with particular events. (fn. 3) Monthly assemblies were held c. 1773 at the
King's Head from November to January and at the White Hart from March to
October. When fairs, like St. Dennis's, were on, special public breakfasts, dinners,
suppers, balls, and theatrical performances attracted 'the most respectable
families'. (fn. 4) The items included in musical concerts and at the theatre showed that
Colchester was no cultural backwater. Handel's Messiah was performed in 1759,
and there was a Handel festival at St. Peter's church in 1763 followed by a ball at
the King's Head, though no musical oratorio was played again until 1790. Music
by Dr. Thomas Arne accompanied a performance of Tom Jones at the theatre in
1769. (fn. 5) Entertainments staged at the theatre ranged from plays by Shakespeare and
Sheridan to the performance in 1786 by acrobats from Sadlers Wells and the Royal
Circus, which ended with a new pantomime. (fn. 6) During the Napoleonic Wars some
plays were chosen by the officers of various regiments. (fn. 7) Soldiers from the garrison
also brought extra custom to the town's inns, and were potential dancing and
marriage partners.
Some men took part in sports. Cricket matches were sometimes played for prizes:
in 1770 cricketers dined at the Cock and Pye, North Hill, before playing a match
for half-guinea hats. (fn. 8) There was a race-course on Mile End heath in the 1750s,
although it had gone by 1821, and a horse-race with betting was held after a cricket
match on Lexden heath in 1785. (fn. 9) A new riding school was set up at the bottom of
Angel Lane in 1792. (fn. 10) The town owned a subscription pack of hounds in 1754,
and in 1798 the East Essex Foxhounds was established, which met quarterly for
dinner at the White Hart. (fn. 11) Some early attempts at ballooning were made, and in
1829 George Green ascended from the town, reaching an altitude of nearly 3
miles. (fn. 12) Humbler folk had less leisure and little money to spend on it; some went
to cockfights, forbidden by the borough court again in 1764, or indulged in
poaching. (fn. 13) Both rich and poor may have enjoyed watching prizefights or visiting
spectacles like the 'surprising dancing bears' on show at the market cross in 1753
or the two lions and a tiger on view at the Golden Lion in 1766. (fn. 14)
Manners, both at public events and in private visiting, at least of the social elite
and of the middle-ranking groups, became more refined over the period. 'Genteel'
pastimes included visiting friends and going for short walks. 'Handsome gravel
walks' were laid round St. Mary's church in 1714, with lime trees planted beside
them. (fn. 15) Gardens, and the growing of plants and trees, became a fashionable
interest. (fn. 16) Annual spring flower shows and feasts were held in Colchester as in
many English towns, and auriculas were a speciality claimed to be finer than the
tulips and hyacinths of Dutch rivals. (fn. 17) Nevertheless by the early 19th century many
leisure activities were considered harmful by a minority like the Evangelical
William Marsh, who campaigned against the theatre. (fn. 18)
Colchester seemed a reasonably orderly town, by contemporary standards. (fn. 19)
There were food riots, apparently not serious, in 1740, 1766, 1772, and 1789, when
there were similar disturbances in other parts of the country. (fn. 20) Electioneering never
seemed to run out of control, even though numbers of London and country voters
were brought in and entertained by the rival candidates, and in 1832 part of the
hustings was destroyed by the crowd. (fn. 21) Industrial action was probably most
threatening early in the period when workers in the cloth industry still had some
economic power: in 1715 an armed mob tried to enforce redress of weavers'
grievances, and in 1724 weavers rioted for higher wages. The Luddite protests in
1811-16 against the introduction of new machinery in the stocking-making, cotton,
and woollen districts in the midlands and north inspired nothing comparable in
Colchester, where there was no equivalent large-scale industry. (fn. 22) The minor
outbreaks of incendiarism and the breaking of threshing machines in 1815 and
1830 at Mile End were linked with a wave of agricultural unrest unconnected with
the town. (fn. 23) In 1821 Queen Caroline's funeral procession, which a mob had tried
to divert in London with some loss of life, stopped in the town overnight en route
for the Continent; local people flocked to show their respect, but there was no
threat to law and order. (fn. 24)