CHARITIES FOR THE POOR.
In the 18th century income from charities was not always used as
the donors intended. In 1710 the lord of the manor,
Sir William Langhorne, complained that the rents
of the Wells charity estate were being used by the
parish officers to ease the poor rate. (fn. 58) For many years
all the income from the other charities was put in one
general account by the churchwardens to defray
their expenses, about £16 a year, and, up to 1802, to
pay for the sacramental bread and wine. After 1806
the accounts were not properly kept, and money was
lost when a churchwarden for 1808 died insolvent.
The clerk, beadle, sexton, bellringer, and pew
openers were among the weekly recipients of bread,
although only the clerk (under Cleave's gift) was entitled to a loaf. The local Act of 1800 enabled the
guardians to distribute the charities' income, but
that was done only from c. 1821, when they also
appointed a committee to look into the churchwardens' accounts regarding charities and provided
for stricter accounting. (fn. 59)
Campden charity. Elizabeth Hicks, Lady Campden, by will dated 1643, bequeathed £200 to buy
freehold land worth £10 a year, half of which was to
relieve the most needy of Hampstead and half to
apprentice boys. In 1644 the parish bought 14 a. in
Hendon for £250, the rest of the purchase price
coming from £40 bequeathed by a maid to provide
every inhabitant of Hampstead, rich or poor, with a
½d. loaf on Good Friday, and £10 given by John
Rixton during his lifetime. In 1824 the whole income went into the general charity account and no
boy had been apprenticed for 50 years. The charity
commissioners declared that 3/5 of the income, £47
14s., should be used for bread, and 2/5, £31 16s., for
apprenticing. The proceeds from a small sale of land
were invested. New trustees were appointed in 1855,
when 3/5 of the income was distributed as cash to poor
residents of 3 years' standing not receiving relief. In
1877 the trustees were authorized to sell the land;
when the charity was amalgamated with the Wells
charity under a Scheme of 1880, it had £7,708 in
stock. (fn. 60)
Wells charity. (fn. 61)
In 1698 Susannah Noel, on behalf
of her son Baptist, earl of Gainsborough, lord of the
manor and a minor, granted 6 a. of Hampstead
Heath, including the well of mineral water, to 14
trustees, who were admitted as copyholders at a rent
of 5s. a year to use the income for the poor of Hampstead. The trustees leased all the property except the
pond or springhead north-west of the mineral spring
to John Duffield in 1701 for 21 years at £50 a year,
on condition he spent £300 over 3 years improving
it, and agreed for a second term for improvements
worth £200. In 1710 they agreed on a third term of
21 years for further improvements. The excluded
pond or spring was let separately to John Vincent,
who undertook to run water into the town, spending
£200 on it; in return he was to hold the supply for
21 years at a rent of £15, although no lease was
drawn up. In 1707 the trustees had to defend a suit
brought by an entrepreneur who claimed that his
own water supply to the City from the heath was
affected by Vincent's enterprise. (fn. 62) In 1710 the new
lord challenged the copyhold grant as illegal and
claimed that the trustees were misusing the income, (fn. 63) while the churchwardens accused them of
neglecting the pond and well. (fn. 64) In 1729 a Chancery
decree established the charity: the estate was to be
held of the lord for 5s. a year and a reasonable fine;
the lord was to appoint 13 resident copyholders as
trustees and to nominate others when the number
fell to 5. The lord and trustees presented a Scheme
in 1731 to use the arrears of rent and future income:
James, son of John Duffield, owed arrears of £575
from 1718; John Vincent, son of the original tenant,
owed £322 10s. After costs and fines £412 remained,
of which £150 repaid the parish for fitting up the
workhouse and charity school; the residue and future
income was for apprenticing to trades or domestic
service, and other uses for the poor.
John Duffield sold his interest in 1730 to John
Mitchell, who was granted leases for the remaining
42 years. In 1734, when the buildings were decayed,
Mitchell received a further term of 31 years to run
from 1764, in return for spending £200 on repairs
and a further 21 years for spending £500 on replacements and building on vacant ground. In 1795 a new
lease of the property, which in addition to the medicinal spring and 6 a. with its buildings included three
small plots granted by the lord in 1789, was made to
Anne Frewen and Joseph Baldwin, executors of
Charles Frewen, for 21 years at £70, with an agreement for a further 40 years. The additional lease was
granted in 1810 to Anne, as Anne Buckner, and included a plot near the garden of Lady Watson; in all
the additional plots totalled c. 1¼ a. By 1824 the
estate was built up, mostly in Well Walk, and at
£800 a year its value was considerably more than the
income which the charity was to receive until the
lease expired in 1850.
The springhead excluded from the lease of 1701
was auctioned under the Chancery decree of 1729.
John Vincent alone made an offer and was granted a
lease in 1733 for 33 years from 1731 at £15, to include the banks and pipes which conveyed the water
to the lower part of Hampstead town. Additional
terms were granted in 1764 and 1785 at the same
rent. In 1806 Elizabeth Vincent was granted a 21year lease for £25 a year, which by 1824 was vested
in her executors. The springhead, used only to supply the Vincents' brewery in High Street and a few
adjoining houses, was of little value to anyone other
than the brewer.
By 1824 the charity also possessed £1,100 stock,
bought with rent arrears in 1783-4 and a legacy of
£100 from John Peter Blaquiere in 1801; the annual
income was £95 in rents and £33 in dividends. The
income was spent on apprenticing between 8 and 10
children each year, with premiums of £3 to £7, on
clothing children going into service, and on sums of
5s. to £1 for paupers who were old, infirm, or had
large families, and did not receive parish relief. The
money gifts were made at the workhouse, usually in
December, at a meeting advertised by the secretary,
who received a salary of £4 4s., beside £1 1s. for each
apprenticeship indenture.
In 1850 the property consisted of Foley House,
the chapel, the Wells hotel (formerly the Green
Man), 11 houses in Well Walk, Willow House, 4 cottages, the springhead, and £1,100 stock. Gross income after the lease expired was £976 in rents and
dividends. Sales in 1851 and 1853, to pay for repairs
and expenses, and a further purchase in 1855 left a
balance of £577 stock. In 1857 a new Scheme provided for managers, who would include the minister
of Hampstead, the district incumbents, and three
members appointed by the board of guardians. They
were to invest £50 a year as a repair fund and £250
as a fund for the copyhold admission fines, and
spend up to £250 on apprenticing. Out of the first
money received, £250 was to be paid towards the
new infants' school and £250 for building Christ
Church National schools, so long as both should be
open to all poor children without religious restriction. Surplus money was to be invested. In 1857 a
small piece of copyhold was bought with the £577
stock and income, and between 1859 and 1873 £907
stock was bought for the repair fund. In 1873-4 the
various copyhold parcels were enfranchised, using
c. £7,000 stock.
A Scheme in 1875 established 20 trustees, who
could spend up to £150 a year on the further education of a boy or girl from a Hampstead elementary
school and £150 p.a. on apprenticeships or putting
out to service. Accumulated and future income was
to be used to improve the dwellings of the poor in
Hampstead, or to help the poor in other ways. In
1876 the trustees acquired Crockett's Court, where
they built artisans' dwellings. In 1880 the charity
was amalgamated with the Campden charity and a
new Scheme drawn up.
The Wells and Campden charity.
Under the
Scheme of 1880, amended in 1885, 1893, and 1897,
for the consolidated charity, the 20 trustees were to
spend £150 a year, raised to £300 in 1899, on needy
pensioners resident in Hampstead for six years and
not receiving poor relief; until 1899 preference was
to be given to those reduced from better circumstances but thereafter to length of residence. Annual
sums of £50, later £200, were to be spent on any
dispensary, hospital, or convalescent home, £150 on
advancing children in life, and £230 on education
above elementary level, including exhibitions of up
to £40 a year. The residue was to improve the dwellings of the poor, for which purpose the trustees
could buy or fit up houses; they could also provide
facilities such as lecture rooms, day nurseries, laundries, and night schools. From 1893 £100 a year
could assist any institution giving scientific instruction in technical or industrial work, and from 1897
grants could be made for public open spaces, and
£50 a year used to assist emigration to British
colonies or moves within the British Isles.
Changes to the property of the amalgamated
charities included, in 1881, sales of stock to pay off
the loan for Crockett's Court and of the rest of the
land in Hendon that was part of Campden's charity,
from which £6,500 was invested and £1,200 used to
buy 1 r. 6 p. adjoining the Wells estate in 1882. From
1882 the trustees might raise money to put in sewers
before making building leases. They bought and
enfranchised Mount Cottage in Flask Walk in 1885
and property in Palmerston Road, part of West End
Park estate, in 1886, for baths and washhouses on
both sites, and in 1886 they bought land in Holly
Bush Vale from the M.B.W. for artisans' dwellings.
They also contributed £500 towards the purchase
of the 265-a. extension to Hampstead Heath.
In 1898 the charity estate consisted of many buildings (fn. 65) and c. £2,600 stock. The site of the old well
had been lost, as the water flow had been affected by
drainage works, and £20 could be spent seeking it.
So wide were the charity's functions that committees
were formed for apprenticeships, artisans' dwellings,
baths and wash-houses, finance, gardens, letting and
repair, and pensions. The income was spent on pensions, hospitals and dispensaries, apprenticing and
outfitting, and education. Five male and 17 female
pensioners received 5s. a week in 1898. During the
previous five years £200 a year had been paid to six
medical charities serving Hampstead, c. £130 a year
for apprenticing and outfits, and c. £107 a year for
exhibitions; there were usually two annual exhibitions to children aged 12 to 14, chosen by examination and mainly from board schools, in particular
Fleet Road. A subscription of £50 a year to the
Hampstead School for Cookery brought the right to
nominate to free places there. The artisans' dwellings
were all in the eastern part of the parish; no block
was planned for Kilburn because of difficulties in
finding a site.
The educational element of the charity was separated under Schemes of 1899, 1905, and 1924, as the
Wells and Campden educational foundation. Its income derived from £2,323 stock and sums of £230
and £100 a year from the main charity; £230 provided children resident in the borough for at least 2
years with exhibitions at institutions higher than
elementary, and £100 paid for instruction in technical and industrial work. In 1971 the foundation was
amalgamated with the Stock foundation (below).
Hampstead Wells and Campden trust. (fn. 66)
In 1971 the
Hampstead Wells and Campden trust was established by a Scheme which included more recent
charities with similar objectives. The charities were
brought together into two funds. The first, the
Hampstead Relief in Sickness fund, comprised the
Hampstead Aid in Sickness fund, Hampstead Aid
for Sick Mothers and Children, the charity of James
Stewart Henderson for a convalescent home, and the
Thomas Hancock Nunn Memorial fund. It was to
supply medical items or services which were not
readily available from other sources. Any income not
so used could be added to the Relief in Need fund
(below). In 1985 the fund's assets were worth c.
£140,000, yielding c. £12,000 net, of which £1,600
was applied to the charity in 1985.
The second, the Hampstead Relief in Need fund,
comprised the charities of Henry Joseph Ogden and
Theresa Thurlow, and the Hampstead Wells and
Campden charity. Its objective was to relieve needy
residents, generally or individually, through grants
of money or by providing items or services. In 1985
the fund held the freehold Well Walk estate (not
valued), other properties worth c. £1.3 million, and
investments and other assets of c. £1 million. The
net income was c. £165,000 in 1985, when c.
£186,000 was applied to the charity, including part
of £376,000 brought forward from previous years.
The trustees also administered the Wells and
Campden and Stock education foundation, (fn. 67) the
Wharrie Cabman's Shelter fund from 1971, and the
Hampstead Relief in Sickness charity (which was
distinct from the Hampstead Relief in Sickness fund)
from 1977. The Wharrie Cabman's Shelter fund was
founded by Mrs. Wharrie in 1935 and registered as
a charity in 1964. It provided a shelter at Hampstead
Green, the residue to be used for other charitable
purposes. In 1985 the fund owned the freehold
shelter, valued at £2,000, and investments and other
assets worth £4,400, with a net income of £656 of
which £200 was applied to the charity.
The Hampstead Relief in Sickness charity was the
successor to Kilburn and West Hampstead District
Nursing Association, which had been founded in
1901 to nurse the sick at home. In 1961 the association had 20 nurses at its nurses' home, nos. 18 and 20
Dennington Park Road, and its income of £16,300
was almost all derived from an L.C.C. grant. In 1967
the home was sold and the proceeds invested. In
1985 the stock was worth c. £12,000 and the net income c. £2,600, to be applied in grants or pensions
to nurses formerly employed by the association or
for the same purposes as the Hampstead Relief in
Sickness fund.
Stock's charity. (fn. 68)
John Stock, by will dated 1780,
left £1,000, the interest to educate and clothe 10
fatherless children, 6 boys aged 8 to 15 and 4 girls
aged 8 to 13, and afterwards put them out as apprentices or covenanted servants, paying £5 with
each boy and £2 with each girl. Annual sets of clothing were to include a chocolate coloured coat for
boys and a similar gown for girls. The charity was to
be administered by a committee of at least five
parishioners. By 1784 the fund had increased to
£2,000 through the investment of dividends and a
donation of £60 from the Wells charity. In 1801 a
legacy of £100 stock from J. P. Blaquiere was added,
and a committee appointed by the vestry to manage
the charity. (fn. 69) With savings the fund reached £2,300
in 1819, producing £69 a year for clothing and educating as many children as possible, with occasional
apprenticeship fees; 10 boys and 6 girls had received
clothing in 1818. The children attended the National
school, the boys free of charge, the girls for £1 a
year. In 1823 Sir Francis Willes left a rent charge of
£13 6s. 8d. to augment the charity, but the bequest
was made valid by his legal heir the Revd. Edward
Willes only in 1842. The stock stood at £2,600 in
1860 and the income was £71 10s. from dividends
and £13 6s. 8d. from the rent charge in 1898, when
it was spent on clothing c. 30 children every year,
two thirds of them boys, from all the parish's elementary schools; the distinctive colours had recently
been discontinued. A Ministry of Education Scheme
of 1957 applied the income, £65 beside the fee farm
rent of £2 14s. 11d., to maintenance or clothing
grants for pupils at any level, assistance for schoolleavers, and apprenticeships. (fn. 70)
In 1971 the charity was amalgamated with the
educational part of the Wells and Campden charity
as the Wells and Campden and Stock educational
foundation, and was administered by the trustees of
the Hampstead Wells and Campden trust. The net
income of the foundation, £400 in 1985, was to
benefit children resident in Hampstead for at least
two years, by means of exhibitions at any secondary
or higher educational institution, or financial assistance to enter a profession or trade.
Distributive charities. (fn. 71)
Thomas Charles (d. 1622)
of Holborn, clothworker, by will dated 1617, left his
four houses in Fetter Lane and all his goods to meet
legacies which included 24s. a year to the churchwardens of Hampstead for bread. (fn. 72) The money remained unpaid until 1688, when the owners of the
houses were ordered to pay the arrears of c. £72 and
future sums. (fn. 73) In 1824 the sum was subject to 3s. land
tax. In 1898 the 21s. a year was applied in bread with
Rixton's charity (below).
Thomas Cleave, by deed dated 1635, paid £50 for
a rent charge of 56s. a year on 2 a. near Battle Bridge,
St. Pancras, later Cromer Street, Gray's Inn Road,
with which the vicar of Hampstead was to buy 13
wheaten penny loaves each week and distribute them
to 12 poor people and the parish clerk, any surplus to
be used for the poor or repair of the church. Income
in 1824 was 56s. In 1898 the rent charge was applied
with Rixton's charity.
John Rixton, by will dated 1657, charged his four
copyhold houses in Hampstead town with the following annual payments: £3 to the churchwardens
for 12 penny loaves each Sunday for the poor, especially frequent churchgoers, with the remaining 8s.
to the parish clerk to clean Rixton's grave; £1 to the
minister for a sermon on 9 April; £1 towards repairing part of the church. In 1759 the houses were
chargeable with £7 10s. a year, perhaps in compensation for arrears. Sums for the sermon and the grave
were being paid, but not for repair of the church,
and £3 18s. was due for bread. In 1898 the property,
in High Street, belonged to Henry Wakeford: £5 2s.
a year, together with Charles's, Cleave's, and Mallory's charities, was distributed weekly in bread to
respectable elderly parishioners, usually 12 women,
of whom one third lived in the Kilburn part of the
parish.
Henry Waite, by will dated 1720, gave £100 for
annual payments to the most needy on the date of
his burial. The legacy was reduced to £50 because
his assets were too small, and was lent at interest to
the trustees of Hampstead church until it was repaid
in 1813, when it was invested. The annual income
was £2 10s. 11d. in 1824. It was £2 6s. 8d. in 1898,
when it was distributed with Marshall's charity.
John Robinson, bishop of London (d. 1723), left
£100 to the poor of the parish in which he should
die, which was Hampstead. The sum, like Waite's,
was lent to the trustees of the church and in 1813
invested. The income was £5 1s. 11d. in 1824. It was
£4 13s. 4d. in 1898, when it was distributed with
Marshall's charity.
Mary Arnold, by will of 1767, left £100 stock for
payments each Christmas day to poor householders.
In 1824 the dividends were part of the general distribution on St. Thomas's day. In 1898 the income
was £2 15s., distributed with Marshall's charity.
Francis Marshall, by will dated 1772, left £100
stock for payments at Easter to poor householders
not receiving alms. In augmentation his widow
Rosamond, by will dated 1785, left £100 stock. In
1824 £6 formed part of the general distribution on
St. Thomas's day. In 1898 the income of £5 10s. was
added to Waite's, Robinson's, and Arnold's charities
to produce £15 5s., for 'the annual gifts'. One third
was distributed by the churchwarden chosen by the
parishioners in Kilburn, in varying amounts, and the
rest by the vicar, generally in sums of £1.
Anne Mallory, by will dated 1789, left £100 for
2d. loaves for the poor every Sunday. The income
was £3 10s. 2d. in 1824. It was £3 4s. 4d. in 1898,
when it was distributed with Rixton's charity.
Elizabeth Shooter, by will dated 1727, left the
reversion of a copyhold in Langley (Bucks.), which
was valued at c. £5 10s. in 1824, in trust to maintain
two widows of Hampstead for life. The land produced a rent of £20 in 1811 and the fund was
managed by the vicar of Hampstead. After 1816
small sums were occasionally given to other widows
with the agreement of the principal recipients. In
1851 the trustees of the poor of Hampstead were
admitted to the property, which in 1898 formed part
of a market garden, and £30 less 7s. 7d. quit rent
was divided between three widows.
Thomas Rumsey, by will dated 1798, left £1,000
stock in reversion after the deaths of his three
daughters to four inhabitants of Hampstead chosen
by the vestry, for coals at Christmas for families
attending the Anglican church and not receiving
parish alms. The stock, £889 after duty, was received by the parish in 1835. Tickets for 2 cwt. of
coal were distributed in 1898.
Eliza Anne Hume, by will proved 1856, left £100
stock to repair her tomb and vault every 3 years, the
surplus to go to the poor. After duty £90 was
received, yielding £2 9s. 4d. in 1898. At the distribution in 1892 £10 10s. was paid to the Hampstead
Benevolent Society for work in the eastern part of
the parish and £10 10s. was distributed amongst the
poor of Kilburn; no part was used for her tomb.
John Clarke, by will proved 1861, left £100 to be
distributed with charities at St. Paul's chapel, Kilburn (Willesden). In 1897 the surviving trustees
applied for a Scheme, which in 1898 assigned the
income to the minister and churchwardens in aid of
charities of the district, which included part of
Hampstead. The charity then consisted of £192 in
stock, and £127 in cash which was to be used towards a parish room. After the demolition of St.
Paul's, a Scheme of 1936 assigned the income from
the £88 stock to the charities of St. Mary's, Kilburn,
in Hampstead. The income in 1964 was £2 12s. 8d. (fn. 74)
Isabel Constable, by will dated 1888, left £50 for
the repair of her family vault in the churchyard, the
surplus to go to the poor. In 1898 the dividends of
£1 7s. 8d. were used for annual gifts, similar to
Marshall's charity, and no part was spent on the
vault.
James Stewart Henderson, by will proved 1933,
left £4,000 for payments to the poor of St. Stephen's,
Rosslyn Hill. The income in 1961 was £140 and was
used for grants, supporting boys at camps and holiday homes, and Christmas gifts to pensioners. (fn. 75)
Hampstead Parochial charities.
A Scheme of 1983
administered the small charities of Arnold, Charles,
Cleave, Constable, Hume, Mallory, Marshall (Francis and Rosamond), Rixton, Robinson, Shooter, and
Waite, besides the charity of Elizabeth Blondell for
which no details were given. Their assets consisted
entirely of stock in 1983, except those of Shooter's
charity, which still derived an annual rent of £175.
All except Blondell's £56 stock and 26 shares out of
64 making up Rixton's charity were administered
together as the Hampstead Parochial charities. The
26 shares were managed separately as John Rixton's
Church charity. Half of the income of the Church
charity and all the income of Blondell's charity were
to be paid to the vicar of St. John's for a sermon on
or near Good Friday; the remaining half of the
Church charity was to help maintain the parish
church. Income from the parochial charities was to
relieve the poor in the former metropolitan borough
of Hampstead through grants, goods, or services, or
grants and subscriptions to organizations.