31. THE HOSPITAL OF ST. JOHN BAPTIST, NOTTINGHAM
The hospital of St. John Baptist, commonly
known as St. John's, was an early foundation,
outside the walls on the north side of the town.
Until recently local historians, following the
lead given by the usually accurate Thoroton,
connected the house with the Knights Hospitallers, with which order this hospital had no connexion of any kind. (fn. 98)
From the beginning of the 13th century onwards this hospital is known by its dedicatory
name. It stood close by the side of the important road to the north which traversed the
town; and to the brethren was committed, in
the first half of this century, the important duty
of keeping the Trent Bridge in repair and collecting alms for that purpose.
The earliest reference to the brethren of this
hospital cited by Tanner is of the year 1202,
when they were entrusted with keeping in repair
the great bridge. (fn. 99) In 1221 Henry III took
under his express protection the brethren of
St. John, to whom was committed the custody
and repair of the bridge; strenuously enjoining
that they were not to be in any way molested,
vexed, or impeded, and that a generous response
was to be made to their gatherings for the repair
fund. (fn. 100) In 1229 the brothers of this hospital,
who are again stated to have undertaken the
making and repairing of Nottingham Bridge,
were once more taken under the protection of
Henry III. (fn. 101)
Pope Honorius III in 1220 wrote to the
Archbishop of York to the effect that the master
and brethren of St. John's had petitioned for a
chaplain and a cemetery, and commanded the
latter as diocesan to grant their request without
prejudice to anyone's rights. It is probable that
this was speedily done, though there is no formal
record of it extant earlier than 1234. (fn. 102)
About 1225 Hugh de Nevill, justice of the
forest, granted the hospital the important privilege of gathering two cart-loads of firewood
weekly in the wood of Arnold, for the use of
the poor occupants. When Henry III was at
Nottingham in November 1251 he granted a
formal ratification of this gift. (fn. 103)
At this period (not later than 1235) occurs
what has been mistakenly termed the foundation
charter, by which one Robert son of Ralph son
of Fulk of Nottingham gave the brethren of
St. John's 8 oxgangs of land at Stanton on
the Wolds, a windmill and 20 acres of land
in the field of Nottingham, and all the houses
erected within the convent yard of the hospital.
Durand, brother of this Robert, was at that time
prior. (fn. 104)
Of approximately the same date is a charter
of Robert de Salcey, granting 2 oxgangs of
his demesne land at Stanton, a cultivated plot of
land called 'Rihelands,' together with pasturage
for 200 sheep, eight oxen, six cows, two horses,
and ten swine. (fn. 105)
In 1235 Pope Gregory IX took the almshouse
of Nottingham under his special protection. (fn. 106)
Archbishop Gray in 1232 confirmed to the
brethren of the hospital of the Blessed John at
Nottingham all their possessions and goods conferred on them by the pious devotion of the
faithful. He placed the hospital and brethren
under the protection of the Blessed Peter and
Paul, solemnly warning anyone against invading
their possessions or in any way presuming to
rashly disturb them. (fn. 107)
On the feast of St. Andrew 1234 the archbishop promulgated an ordinance for this hospital
whereby it was determined that, with the consent of the rector and patrons of St. Mary's, the
brethren should have a chapel and a chaplain for
divine worship for themselves and their guests;
that the chaplain was to solemnly swear not in
any way whatsoever to defraud the Prior and
Convent of Lenton of any kind of due or offering; that the rector or master of the hospital
should take a like oath; that the hospital should
have a cemetery for the brethren or for any who
died there; that no other parishioners were to
confess, to receive the Eucharist, or to be buried
within the hospital; that the brethren were to
have a bell on the roof to call them to mattins
and the hours, to mass, to vespers, and to compline; that on the day of St. John Baptist the
perpetual vicar of that church, or some one on
his part, should celebrate in the hospital and
receive all oblations and all other oblations that
had been made in the hospital during the previous
year; that on the festivals of the Blessed Virgin
there should be no celebration within the hospital
save with closed doors and in a low voice; that
the brethren, in recompense for the oblations
and obventions customarily made before this
present ordinance, should give a mark of silver
annually to the mother church; that the brethren
were not to have an outer door in the chapel
towards the town; and that if the chaplain,
master, or brethren are guilty of any excess, they
should be canonically punished by the Archdeacon of Nottingham, or in his absence by the
rural dean of the place.
To this instrument were affixed the seals of
the archbishop, of the Prior and Convent of
Lenton, and of the vicar of St. Mary's, (fn. 108) and in
making this ordination the archbishop had the
express authority, under seal, of the burgesses of
Nottingham. (fn. 109)
In 1241 Archbishop Gray sent to Robert
Alwin, the master, detailed rules to be observed
by the brethren and sisters (the latter being now
mentioned for the first time), of which the following is an abstract:—(1) Two chaplains to be
provided; (2) all the brethren to assemble for
mattins at daybreak from Michaelmas to Easter, after mass to betake themselves to their
respective duties, and to attend evensong and
compline if not hindered of necessity; (3) regularly to obey the warden or master; (4) the
warden, if he has anything of his own, to convert it to the benefit of the house; (5) all to
wear the like habit, and to take their meals together in silence, or speaking low if forced to
speak, and only to eat meat on Sundays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays, save by licence of the
warden; (6) to occupy one dormitory, clothed in
breeches and shirts, or in the garment used instead of a shirt, and to observe silence in the
dormitory until after the first Cantate; (7) to be
chaste and sober, not to drink in borough or
suburbs, and faithfully to employ the goods of the
house and alms given to the necessities of the
poor and infirm; (8) to wear a regular habit of
russet or black cloth, and to assemble in the
chapter-house at least once a week; (9) all excesses to be regulated by the warden; (10) no
brethren nor sisters admitted but such as are
necessary to serve the infirm and keep the goods
of the house; (11) no brother to go into the
town or elsewhere, save by leave of the warden;
(12) the sisters to observe the same things appointed for the brethren; (13) the lay brethren
and sisters at the beginning of mattins to say
the Creed and Our Father, so that twenty-five
Our Fathers be said, and seven at prime, terce,
sext and nones and compline, but fifteen at
evensong, and after the compline another Our
Father and Creed; (14) one hundred other Our
Fathers to be said every week, for the brethren
and sisters dead and living, and also for the benefactors of the house. (fn. 110)
A considerable variety of minor grants to the
hospital made about the middle of the 13th
century, chiefly in Nottingham or its immediate
vicinity, are cited in the Records, as well as two
more substantial grants of lands at Kirkby in
Ashfield. (fn. 111)
Archbishop Wickwane issued his mandate at
the close of 1279 to the Dean of Nottingham to
compel the vicar of St. Mary's to replace the
goods of this hospital, which he had, as it was
alleged, transferred from thence, and to make
restitution without any delay; provided that the
hospital is in as good or better state as it used to
be, and that it is capable of having custody of
them. (fn. 112)
In the following March the care and custody
of the hospital of St. John was committed by
the archbishop to Robert, vicar of Retford. (fn. 113)
In 1286 Edward I granted the wardenship of
this hospital for life to Alan de Salopia, king's
clerk, the king claiming the presentation on
account of the voidance of the see of York. (fn. 114)
On 29 September 1289 Archbishop Romayne
appointed Thomas de Cancia, his priest, master
of St. John's Hospital, Nottingham, with all its
burdens and rights both temporal and spiritual,
in full confidence that he would deal faithfully
with the poor and with the goods of the house.
He was to have power to dispose of goods
acquired within three years. But afterwards, if
it should happen that he resigned or left, he must
leave seed for the hospital lands and oxen for the
ploughs. (fn. 115)
A commission was issued by the archbishop in
January 1289-90 to the Dean of Nottingham
and to the diocesan sequestrator, on behalf of
Thomas de Cancia, master of St. John's Hospital, about goods taken from that house. John
le Palmer, executor of the will of Lord Hugh
de Stapleford, deceased, deposed that Hugh when
living had deprived the hospital of certain houses
and inflicted other damages; and Thomas de
Rempeston owned to having wronged the hospital of meadow hay during two years, and made
submission. Restitution was ordered to be
made. (fn. 116)
In 1304 Edward I granted the life wardenship of his hospital to Robert de Sutton, king's
clerk, owing to the voidance of the see of York. (fn. 117)
In 1310 Archbishop Greenfield wrote to
Robert de Elton, master of the hospital, to make
provision for Nicholas de Danelby, who enjoyed
a place in that hospital, having been commended
to Thomas de Cancia, the late master, by Archbishop Corbridge. (fn. 118)
There was a great decline in the life and work
of this hospital about the beginning of the 14th
century, a condition of things from which it
never recovered, chiefly owing to the laxity and
non-residence of the masters or wardens.
In 1325 Archbishop William de Melton
issued a severe mandate to Matthew de Halifax,
rebuking him for living alone in the hospital, and
ordering him to take one or two fit brethren, as
the means of the hospital permitted, to live with
him, all wearing a decent habit, such as used to
be worn in times past; rendering prayers to the
Highest daily and nightly, and devoting the
whole of their lives to the Saviour of all. A
commission of inquiry then instituted reported
that the master or warden was originally appointed
by the community, or burgesses, of Nottingham;
but that Archbishop Giffard happening to be at
the castle of Nottingham (fn. 118a) during a voidance,
when there was great dissension between the
townsmen as to the appointment, the archbishop
(whom they dared not at that time gainsay) intervened and instituted one Ralph Wilford as
warden; and that at the next voidance, the see
of York being vacant, the king intervened and
instituted Malcolm de Harley (fn. 118b) as warden; and
so up to that time the election and institution
had continued without any right or sanction of
the community of the town. The jury of this
commission further returned that the hospital
was originally so endowed in lands and chattels,
granted to a master, two chaplains, the brethren
and sisters and the poor of the house, that all
was to be held in common; that the charters
and writings were in possession of the master
and could not be inspected, so that they knew
not whether any had been abstracted or not;
that the goods were not then sufficient for alms,
as used to be the case, because Henry de Calverton, Robert Ker, and Thomas de Cancia, as
masters, had deteriorated and wasted the property, converting it to their own uses; that
there used to be two priests celebrating divine
service there, but that there was then no priest
save the master; that the rule ordained by Archbishop Gray and written on a missal had for
long time been missing, having been maliciously
cut out by a warden, but that the leaf had recently
by divine grace been found and could be produced
before the archbishop; that the hospital was so
completely destroyed and annihilated that without the divine grace and the counsel and assistance of the archbishop, they knew not how it
could be relieved; and finally that there used to
be a hospital seal. (fn. 119)
Matthew de Halifax died in 1329; but Archbishop Melton's choice of a successor brought
about no improvement.
In November 1332 Master John Lambok of
Nottingham, parson of the church of Elkesley,
master of the hospital of St. John Baptist, Nottingham, on going beyond the seas, had protection and also letters nominating Bartholomew
de Cotgrave and John de Shirewode his attorneys
in England for two years. (fn. 120)
The hospital probably saw little or nothing of
this pluralist. Whilst absent from England he
obtained a dispensation at the court of Rome to
cover all his pluralities.
In October 1333 Pope John XXII allowed
John Lambok, M.A., skilled in civil and canon
law, to hold the canonry of Wilton and prebend
of Chalk, notwithstanding that he was rector of
Elkesley in the diocese of York, and also
warden of the house of St. John Baptist,
Nottingham. (fn. 121)
Licence was granted to the master, brethren,
and chaplains in 1350 to acquire land and rent
in mortmain, not held in chief, to the value of
£10 yearly. (fn. 122) There is, however, no information as to any benefactors availing themselves of
this sanction.
Archdeacon John de Nottingham, who was
warden of this hospital at the opening of the
15th century, was an outrageous pluralist. In
1402 Pope Boniface IX collated him to the provision of canonries of York, Salisbury, Lincoln,
Beverley, Ripon, and Southwell, with reservation
of a prebend in each; and this notwithstanding that he already held the archdeaconry of Nottingham, canonries with prebends in Chichester
and Lichfield and in the chapel royal, Tettenhall,
as well as the parish church of Cottingham and
the wardenship of the hospitals of St. John's
Nottingham and of St. Mary Magdalen
Ripon. (fn. 123)
Grant for life of the wardenship was made by
Henry VII in 1424, with the advice and assent
of the council, to John Tamworth, clerk. (fn. 124)
In February 1431-2 an action was brought
by the warden, Roger Hunt, against Thomas
Taylor, clerk, of the school of Nottingham, for
rent of houses the property of the hospital. A
verdict was given for the plaintiff. (fn. 125)
For an aid granted to the king in January
1503-4, St. John's Hospital is assessed at the
small annual value of £5 6s. 8d. (fn. 126)
The Valor Ecclesiasticus of 1534 gives a like
assessment, but the clear annual value was only
£4 13s. 4d., as a pension of 13s. 4d. had to be
paid to the priory of Lenton. (fn. 127)
Leland, who visited Nottingham about 1540,
entered in his journal:—'S. John Hospitall
almoste downe, without the towne.' (fn. 128)
The commissioners appointed by Henry VIII
in 1545 to arrange for the transference to the
Crown of colleges, chantries, and hospitals,
apparently found no master, chaplain, or poor at
St. John's Nottingham. They reported that
one Roger Oker farmed it, who stated on oath
that he knew nothing as to the time or the
intent for which it was founded. On 12 October
1540 Oker had made an indenture by which he
was to pay yearly to the master the sum of
£6 9s. 4d. The commissioners add further
evidence as to the master's mean and pilfering
conduct:—
Abought iij or iiij yere paste, att the commaundemente of oon Henrye Whitinge then Mr. of the same
hospitall, the said Roger Oker did take of all the
leade of the said hospitall and made a newe Roffe for
the same and covered ytt with slatte, and that the
same leade dyd amounte to iij foders and some what
more. Whiche was sold by the Comaundement of the
said Henrye Whitinge to Olyver Dande of Mannys
feld for ixli. xvis. viijd. and over that he solde the
said tyme to dyverse men of Nottingham certyn other
webbes of leade the weights therof nor yet the monye
he remembrithe not. (fn. 129)
Under Edward VI came about the final wreck
of this once useful and devout establishment, after
so many years of shameless pillage by those who
ought to have been its genuine wardens. The
Certificates of Colleges, Hospitals, &c., doomed to
dissolution in 1548-9 stat::—
The Hospitall of Saint Johannes without the Wall
in the parishe of Saint Maries there founded by
whome they knowe not for the relief of the poore
and worthe in Lands Tenements and other possessions
lying and being in Diverse places within the said
Towne and Shere of Nottingham, As by the Survey
therof made remayning with the Surveyour of the saide
|
|
|
|
|
sheire particularly yt doth appere. |
£6 |
13s. |
4d. |
| Whereof in Rente resolute and so remayneth unto Thomas Webster, clarke, master of the saide hospitall, of what age or of what |
|
13s. |
4d. |
| lerninge it is unknowne |
£5 |
17s. |
0d. (fn. 130)
|
From this it is evident that the masters kept
up their evil character to the end, for Webster
clearly treated this preferment as a sinecure, and
was non-resident.
In February 1551 the property of the hospital,
with that of other small religious foundations of
the town, was diverted by Edward VI towards
the sustentation of Trent Bridge, and conveyed
for that purpose to the mayor and burgesses. An
inquisition in June of the following year found
that for a long time before 1540 the late master
and his brother chaplains wholly withdrew and
absented themselves from the hospital and had
never since returned, whereby divine services,
prayers, almsgiving and other works of piety had
remained totally unperformed. Meanwhile the
corporation were put to no small trouble by the
last master, Thomas Webster, who had been inducted in 1545 by the Archbishop of York. He
exhibited a bill in Chancery in 1553, complaining that he was seised of the mansion-house of
the hospital of St. John, of three other messuages, and of 400 acres of land, meadow, and pasture
in Nottingham and Stanton on the Wolds, and
that the corporation had made an untrue suggestion that the property had come into the king's
hands by reason of the Act 37 Henry VIII, cap.
4, for the suppression of certain chantries and
hospitals. The town replied, citing the king's
grant of 1551. Webster rejoined, citing his induction on 9 December 1545, and stating that
at that time, or shortly afterwards, two poor men
were brethren of the hospital, one named Bacon
and the other Fellowe.
Failing in Chancery, Webster in 1561 exhibited a bill of complaint against the mayor and
burgesses stating that through being spoilt of the
hospital he had suffered loss to the clear annual
value of £10. The mayor and burgesses were
cited to appear at York Minster on 30 September. The archbishop lectured them severely, and
threatened to impose a heavy fine, saying that
his court was as high as that of Chancery. The
town clerk appeared again at York on 3 December on behalf of the corporation, but Webster
did not appear to prosecute, and the opposition
to the king's grant of 1551 speedily evaporated.
In 1601 the old hospital buildings were turned
into a poor-house, and somewhat later into a
house of correction. (fn. 131)
Priors of St. John's (fn. 131a)
Durandus, c. 1230
Robert Alwin, occurs 1241
Ralph Wilford, c. 1270
Malcolm de Harley, 1279
Robert, vicar of Radford, 1280 (fn. 132)
Alan de Salopia, 1286 (fn. 133)
Thomas de Cancia, 1289 (fn. 134)
Henry de Calverton, Robert Ker (fn. 135)
Robert de Sutton, 1304 (fn. 136)
John Dant, 1307 (fn. 137)
Robert de Elton, occurs 1310 (fn. 138)
Roger son of Richard de Whatton, 1311 (fn. 139)
Matthew de Halifax, 1323 (fn. 140)
John Lambok, occurs 1332 (fn. 141)
John Brun, 1343
Ralph Yarwell, 1349
Robert de Yarwell, 1356
John de Houdon, 1363
William Askham, 1371
John de Nottingham, died 1418
Robert Clough, 1418
John Tamworth, 1424 (fn. 142)
John Mosley, 1427
William Woodgrave
Roger Hunt, occurs 1432 (fn. 143)
John Grenville, 1447
John Alestre, 1464
Edward Carter, occurs 1534 (fn. 144)
Henry Whiting, c. 1542 (fn. 145)
Thomas Webster, 1545 (fn. 145a)