HOUSES OF BENEDICTINE MONKS
THE PRIORY OF BIRKENHEAD
The priory of St. James the Great at Birkenhead stood
on a wooded headland on the north-eastern shore of
the Wirral peninsula near a river ferry across the
Mersey to Liverpool; the existence of a ferry may have
been the reason for the foundation of a monastery on
such an isolated site and for its dedication. (fn. 1) According
to John Leland the priory was founded for sixteen
monks (fn. 2) and was a cell of Chester abbey. (fn. 3) Although it
is possible that the original monks were supplied by
St. Werburgh's, there is no further evidence of dependency. The date of foundation and the identity of the
founder are as obscure as most other aspects of the
history of the priory. The traditional date is 1150 (fn. 4) but
there is no documentary evidence that the priory
existed before the second half of the reign of Henry II. (fn. 5)
The nature of the priory's endowment suggests that a
member of the Massey family of Dunham founded it,
probably the second Hamon de Massey who died in
1185. (fn. 6) A Hamon de Massey granted the monks the
right to elect their priors from among their own
number; the right is likely to have been the gift of the
founder and the Pope Alexander who confirmed the
grant was probably Alexander III (1159-81). (fn. 7)
Most of the lands and churches held by the priory at
its dissolution had been part of the Massey fee in the
11th century and probably formed the original 12thcentury endowment. Apart from the Birkenhead site
the house held lands in the neighbouring manors of
Claughton, Moreton, Tranmere, Higher Bebington,
and Saughall; the churches of Bidston and Backford
were probably also gifts from the founder. (fn. 8) The interest of the prior in the church of Bowdon, the income
from which amounted to nearly half of the revenues of
the house in 1535, (fn. 9) was more contentious. Half of the
manor was probably held by the house from its
foundation and in the early 1270s the prior claimed
that a predecessor at the beginning of the 13th century
had presented to the church. The legal dispute was
settled in favour of the Massey family but in 1278 the
fifth Hamon de Massey granted the advowson,
together with a small holding of land in Dunham, to
the priory; in return he and his ancestors and heirs
were admitted to all the benefits of the house. (fn. 10)
Evidence concerning other benefactors and endowments is extremely scanty. By an unusual arrangement
the house shared the tithes of Wallasey church with
Chester abbey; that must have been acquired early as
St. Werburgh's was granted its share by William de
Waley before 1182. The priory also held land in
Wallasey and maintained a chapel, 'Lees Kirk', there. (fn. 11)
Some of the priory's lands in Lancashire, which were
never very considerable, had been acquired before
1200. At the end of the 12th century the prior and
convent leased out part of their holding in Burnden in
the manor of Great Lever in Middleton and before
1212 Henry de Walton gave the priory 3 a. at Newsham in Walton. The priory also held land in Melling
(in Halsall) but the date of the gift and the donor's
identity are unknown. (fn. 12) A known benefactor was
Hugh Domville of Oxton and Brimstage who granted
the priory a house and land in Oxton early in the reign
of Henry III; his grant gave rise to litigation between
the priory and the Domville family in 1282 and later
the prior and Roger Domville settled the bounds
between Claughton and Oxton. (fn. 13) By the 1260s the
house had acquired a small rent charge on property in
Chester, and in 1271 Edmund earl of Lancaster gave it
15 a. more at Newsham. (fn. 14) The earls of Chester apparently showed no interest in the house apart from
exempting the priory from the obligation of housing
and feeding the serjeants of the peace and any forest
officials other than the itinerant serjeants of the master
forester of Wirral and freeing the prior from attendance at hundred courts. (fn. 15) Thus, apart from the initial
endowment by the Massey family, all the benefactions
and privileges for which evidence survives were insubstantial and the house was to remain small and poor
throughout its existence.
Writs of protection were obtained from the king in
1201 and 1202, in 1205 the prior acted as papal
delegate in arbitration over the church of Childwall in
Lancashire, and in 1225 he attended the General
Chapter of the Benedictine order in England. (fn. 16) By the
early 1280s the house was very distressed financially,
probably for four reasons: litigation with the Massey
family over the advowson of Bowdon and pasture
rights in Bidston and Claughton, (fn. 17) the expense of visits
to the priory by Edward I in 1275 and 1277, (fn. 18) the
strain produced by the increase of traffic across the
Mersey, and possibly the cost of rebuilding the
church. (fn. 19) In April 1283 the prior and Geoffrey of
Cheadle acknowledged that they owed 17 marks to
William Hamilton, canon of Wells and later royal
chancellor, but the debt must have been considerably
larger than that acknowledged as at the following
Michaelmas the prior and convent granted Hamilton
an annual pension of 70 marks for life in consideration
of his services to them. (fn. 20) This large pension must have
placed a considerable strain on the priory's revenues
and Hamilton renounced it in 1289 when the prior
acknowledged that 62 marks were owing. (fn. 21) The prior
was also in debt to Chief Justice Ralph Hengham: in
1287 the prior acknowledged a debt of 34 marks and
goods worth 13½ marks were seized by the justice of
Chester; part of the debt was still owing in 1309 when
it was reported that further goods worth £5 had been
seized but there was nothing more to distrain. (fn. 22) The
settlement of the dispute over the advowson of Bowdon by the grant of Hamon de Massey in 1278 (fn. 23) may
have been intended to alleviate the financial problems
of the priory and in 1284 the bishop of Coventry and
Lichfield allotted the income and expenses of the
parish between the priory and the vicar. (fn. 24) In the same
year, however, the prior admitted the right of Ralph
Vernon to the advowson of the church of Davenham
in return for a payment of 70 marks, doubtless in
order to pay an instalment of the pension due to
William Hamilton. (fn. 25) There is an indication, also in
1284, of the problems caused by the increased use of
the ferry. The prior complained to the king that the
public highway ran through the middle of the priory
court and was given leave to deal with the nuisance by
diverting the road and enclosing the priory with a wall
or hedge and ditch. When the prior was accused in
1340 of injuring travellers by the removal of the road
he cited the royal licence in his defence. (fn. 26) In 1291 the
priory's income from its temporalities in Claughton
and Moreton amounted to only £8 13s. (fn. 27) but attempts
to increase the revenues from its estates led to frequent
accusations of assarting and cutting down timber from
the officials of Wirral forest; (fn. 28) in two cases of alleged
assarting in Claughton the prior was able to produce
licences granted in 1259 and 1305 by the earls of
Chester. (fn. 29)
The finances of the priory underwent another crisis
in the 1310s, mainly because of expenses arising from
the ferry to Liverpool. In 1310 the prior and convent
complained to the royal council that there were no
inns nearer than Chester for travellers using the ferry
and neither the revenues of the house, barely 200
marks a year, nor its buildings sufficed for the burdens
of hospitality; they asked permission to build lodgings
at the ferry and sell food to the passengers. (fn. 30) In 1317
the Crown licensed them to build lodgings to house
travellers delayed by the weather and in the following
year those in charge of the lodgings were allowed to
buy and sell food. (fn. 31) The fees them charged by the
Liverpool ferrymen elicited complaints from the
inhabitants of Wirral and in 1330 Edward III, as a
mark of favour to the monks and to travellers, granted
the priory the right to ferry men, horses, and goods
across the Mersey and to charge reasonable tolls. (fn. 32) The
grant may simply have licensed charges for a service
which the monks had previously operated free as a
work of charity, as the prior implied when the Black
Prince forced him to defend his right to the ferry in
1353. (fn. 33) In 1357 the prior had once more to uphold the
right to the ferry when it was alleged in the forest court
that the building of lodgings damaged the game in the
forest and that the ferry tolls were excessive. (fn. 34) The
income from tolls and the provision of lodgings, which
in 1536 was valued at £4 6s. 8d. a year, must have
helped to alleviate the financial problems of the priory
and it is perhaps significant that it never took up a
licence, issued on the day before the grant of ferry
rights, enabling it to appropriate Chester abbey's half
of Wallasey church. (fn. 35) The priory itself used the ferry to
sell produce at Liverpool market; from the early 14th
century it held land and a granary in Liverpool and in
1350 the prior and a fellow monk were accused of
assault and theft during the market. (fn. 36)
One attempt by the Crown to help the priory after
its appeal for help in 1310 turned out to be ill-judged.
In 1316 the house was given custody of the hospital of
St. John the Baptist in Chester, whose wardens had
mismanaged its endowment. (fn. 37) The intention was both
to ensure the maintenance of the services of the
hospital and to augment the revenues of the priory, but
the prior, on taking up his duties, reported that much
of the property of the hospital had been alienated. (fn. 38)
The brief custody by the priory did little to remedy the
mismanagement of the hospital and only increased the
financial problems of the priory itself. The hospital
was removed from the priory's control in 1341 and in
1345 the prior and convent granted an annual pension
of 5 marks to the new warden of the hospital, Richard
of Wolveston, for life; at the same time the prior
acknowledged a debt of 200 marks to Wolveston, 100
marks of which was still owing in 1353. (fn. 39) In 1361
Roger Lestrange bought the advowson of the priory
from the heirs of Hamon de Massey through the good
offices of Henry, duke of Lancaster (fn. 40) and in 1397 John
Lestrange sold it to John Stanley of Lathom, the
ancestor of the earls of Derby. (fn. 41) The changes of patron
did not, however, affect the monks' practice of electing
their own priors and thereafter obtaining the bishop's
confirmation of their choice. Episcopal injunctions for
1348 afford some information on the internal state of
the house in the mid 14th century. (fn. 42) As might be
expected the visitor was mainly concerned about the
community's finances: since suspicion had arisen
about the administration of the goods of the house,
each obedientiary was to present annual accounts to
the whole chapter or to a committee composed of the
more prudent monks and, since there were few monks,
the visitor advised that only the cellarer or the sacrist
be deputed to assist the prior. The prior was enjoined
to treat his brethren with charity and seek the advice of
the whole house on difficult matters. He was also
ordered to repair the priory buildings, particularly the
roofs of the church and the cloisters. A lamp was to be
kept burning in the church day and night and a secular
priest was to be appointed within a month to serve in
the church, which suggests that none of the monks was
in priestly orders. (fn. 43) No further comments were made
on the behaviour of the prior, even though he was
claiming the right to keep greyhounds and other dogs
in the priory, (fn. 44) and in general discipline in the house
appears to have been well-maintained, except that
silence was often broken; in the previous year the
house had been selected as a suitable refuge for one of
the monks of St. Werburgh's who had criticised their
own abbot's behaviour. (fn. 45) The smallness of the community, which attracted comment from the visitor in
1348, persisted later in the century; there were only
five monks, including the prior, at Birkenhead in 1379
and 1381. (fn. 46)
Little is known of the size or state of the house until
the late 15th century. The monks or their tenants were
sometimes involved in lawsuits but there is no evidence
of serious disorder. (fn. 47) In 1436, however, the priory was
the scene of a notorious crime: Isabel, the widow of
Sir John Butler of Bewsey (Lancs.), was abducted by
William Poole, a member of the Wirral family which
supplied stewards for the priory in the 15th and 16th
centuries, forcibly married to him in Bidston church,
and imprisoned at Birkenhead where she was discovered by Sir Thomas Stanley. (fn. 48) Some fragmentary
personal details of the lives of the monks have also
survived: two priors were bastards, and one had been
a murderer and had undertaken a penitential pilgrimage to Rome before being professed as a monk at
Birkenhead. (fn. 49) In 1423 the prior, John Wood, failed to
attend the meeting of the General Chapter allegedly
because of madness. (fn. 50) Also in 1423 Robert Urmston
was acquitted on a charge of taking a worsted cape
and silver-gilt brooch from a fellow monk; since the
prior was mad and Urmston became prior himself in
1425, that may have been an over-enthusiastic attempt
to enforce simplicity of dress. (fn. 51) Urmston was succeeded in 1435 as prior by Hamon Bostock, the prior
of St. Werburgh's, perhaps because there was no
suitable candidate in the house. (fn. 52) In 1456 the bishop,
while approving the monks' choice of the subprior as
their next prior, condemned clandestine elections and
confirmations and ordered the public confirmation of
the election in St. John's church, Chester. (fn. 53) By the end
of the 15th century the house was no larger nor more
prosperous; in 1496 there were only five monks and it
was exempted from clerical taxation on the grounds of
poverty. (fn. 54)
The priory was visited three times by Bishop Blythe
or his commissioners between 1518 and 1524; on each
occasion there were seven members of the house,
including two novices in 1518 and one in 1521 and
1524. The offices of precentor or sacrist and kitchener
seem to have been rotated among the monks, although
in 1518 one monk was both kitchener and cellarer. On
each occasion the prior and his brethren reported that
discipline was good and nothing needed reformation:
services and silence were observed, the rule was read
daily, no monk was suspected of incontinence, no
suspect women had access to the house and no boys
slept in the dormitory; inventories had been prepared
and accounts rendered regularly; in 1521 and 1524 it
was reported that necessary repairs had been undertaken. The house was not, however, always free from
debt. In 1518 the prior reported that there was a debt
of £30 but a further £70 had been paid off since the
previous visitation; in 1521 the house was said to be
free from debt but by 1524 a further debt of 100
marks had been incurred because the lease of Bowdon
church, which had been granted before the time of the
prior to Sir William Booth, had been redeemed. (fn. 55)
There had been several disputes at the end of the 14th
century between the priory and the Massey family of
Hale which held the other half of the manor. (fn. 56) The
rectory was leased in 1487 to Hamon Massey of
Rixton for 40 years at a rent of £40 to the priory and
after Massey's death the lease was transferred in 1508
to Sir William Booth and his brother; the prior denied
the validity of the lease in 1510 but it seems to have
been redeemed at considerable expense by Prior
Sharpe between 1521 and 1524. (fn. 57) Sharpe was praised
as prior by his fellow monks and wills of the period
reveal that the local gentry held him in high regard. (fn. 58)
The royal visitors in 1536 found that one monk was
incontinent and estimated the income of the house at
£108 with an outstanding debt of £20. (fn. 59) The valuation
of 1535 shows that the gross annual income was £102
16s. 10d. (£90 13s. net.). Spiritual possessions produced £82 17s. 6½d. while temporal property produced
only £19 19s. 3½d. Regular payments included pensions to the rector of Trafford and the vicar of
Backford and fees to a steward, a receiver, and bailiffs
in Bowdon, Claughton and Moreton, Wallasey, and
Lancashire. (fn. 60) The priory property as listed in 1536
after it had passed to the Crown (fn. 61) consisted of lands
and rents in Birkenhead, Moreton, Claughton (with
the 'manor of Woolton'), Kirkby in Waley (in Wallasey), Tranmere, Higher Bebington, Backford,
Saughall, Bidston, Heswall, Upton (unidentified), and
Chester; in Lancashire, lands and rents in Seacombe,
Barnston, Leftwich, Liverpool, Warrington, Newsham, and Melling; the rectories of Backford, Bidston,
and Bowdon and half the rectory of Wallasey. The
gross annual value of the estates was then
£129 18s. 10d.
The priory was included in the list of monasteries
worth less than £200 a year and was liable for
dissolution under the terms of the Act of 1536. (fn. 62) It was
probably dissolved in May or June 1536 as the prior
was awarded an annual pension of £12 at the beginning of July; no deed of surrender or inventory has
survived. (fn. 63) In the following year the former prior and
four monks were dispensed to hold benefices with a
complete change of habit. (fn. 64) The site of the priory
was leased immediately to Ralph Worsley, a member
of the royal household, (fn. 65) and in 1545 Worsley purchased the site and most of the priory's lands in
Cheshire for £568 11s. 6d. The site included the
buildings within the precincts, a mill, a flax field,
fishyards and the ferry, ferryhouse and boat. (fn. 66) The
priory buildings were allowed to fall into ruin after the
dissolution, apart from the chapter house which was
retained in use, first as a domestic chapel and later as a
chapel for the extra-parochial district of Birkenhead
until the new church of St. Mary was built on the site
of the priory graveyard after 1819. (fn. 67) The ruins were
purchased by public appeal in 1896 and their care
entrusted to the corporation of Birkenhead; in 1913 a
faculty was obtained to renovate the chapter house
and it was dedicated for use as a chapel in 1919. (fn. 68)
The two-bayed chapter house is the only surviving
structure of the 12th century but the cloister preserves
the scale of the original layout and that suggests a
small and not very pretentious group of buildings. The
church lay to the south of the cloister and may or may
not have been cruciform before the rebuilding of the
nave with arcades in the early 13th century, when the
original room or slype against the south side of the
chapter house was demolished to make room for
the north transept. The conjunction of transept and
chapter house is reminiscent of St. Mary's Abbey at
Chester, and the dormitory perhaps also followed the
Chester plan and ran eastward from the cloister a
short distance north of the chapter house.
The west claustral range was rebuilt in the later 13th
century and modified, perhaps in two stages, in the
14th century. In its final form it provided a small
two-storeyed lodging, comprising on the first floor
chamber, parlour, and chapel, at the south end, with a
two-bayed hall to the north and a cross passage north
of that. The arrangement suggests that it was for the
accommodation of the prior whose hall was doubtless
used for the entertainment of more important guests.
The north claustral range was rebuilt in the later
14th century, perhaps a little to the north of its predecessor, and contained the refectory above a vaulted
undercroft. A northward extension at its east end may
have housed the misericord. A first floor was added
above the chapter house in the 14th century, perhaps
to provide direct access to the transept from the
dormitory.
A short distance to the west of the main buildings a
house which survived into the 19th century is said to
have been the building which was put up to provide
accommodation for guests awaiting the ferry.
Priors
Robert, occurs about 1190. (fn. 69)
Ralph, occurs about 1200. (fn. 70)
Robert, occurs about 1206. (fn. 71)
Oliver, occurs about 1216. (fn. 72)
William of Walley, occurs from about 1250 to
about 1283. (fn. 73)
Robert, occurs 1282, 1283. (fn. 74)
Robert of Bechington, occurs from 1320-2, died
1339. (fn. 75)
James of Neston, elected 1339, resigned immediately. (fn. 76)
Henry of Bechington, appointed 1339, occurs
until 1348. (fn. 77)
Thomas of Tyddesbury, occurs from 1350 to
1357. (fn. 78)
Roger of Tyddesbury, occurs from 1361 to
1400. (fn. 79)
Robert of Handbridge, occurs from 1401, died
1408. (fn. 80)
John Wood, elected 1408, occurs until 1425. (fn. 81)
Robert Urmston, occurs from 1425, died 1435. (fn. 82)
Hamon Bostock, elected 1435, occurs until
1439. (fn. 83)
Richard Norman, occurs from 1441, died 1456. (fn. 84)
Hugh Boner, elected 1456, died before 1462. (fn. 85)
Thomas Reynforth, elected 1462, died 1473. (fn. 86)
Hugh Gardener, resigned 1486. (fn. 87)
Thomas Chester, or Tassy, elected 1486, died
1499. (fn. 88)
Nicholas Stace, or Tassy, elected 1499, occurs
until 1508. (fn. 89)
Hugh Hyne, occurs from 1509, died 1514. (fn. 90)
John Sharpe, elected 1514, surrendered the priory
in 1536. (fn. 91)
A seal in use in 1390-1 (fn. 92) is a pointed oval and
depicts St. James on a diapered ground standing under
a canopy. He wears a pilgrim's hat and cloak and a
wallet on his left side; his right hand holds a staff and
his left a book; in the base is a kneeling figure under a
canopy. Legend, lombardic: SIGILLUM COMMUNE
PRIORATUS SANCTI IACOBI DE BIRKENEVED
IN COM. CESTRIE.