CHARITIES FOR THE POOR
By the 19th century Lichfield was plentifully
endowed with charities. They were in general
carefully preserved, and those that had been
endowed with land had extended their activities
as their incomes grew. Trustees' motives in adding to the number of beneficiaries were not
always altruistic. Charity money bought parliamentary votes in the 18th century, (fn. 1) and in the
early 1840s the Tory trustees of Lowe's Charity
and the Radical trustees of the Lichfield Municipal Charities apparently used the distribution of
charities for party purposes. (fn. 2) Nevertheless, the
Charity Commissioners who visited Lichfield in
1821 found little to criticize, and in 1828 the
city's record was compared favourably with that
of other places where augmented charity revenues had led to corruption and embezzlement. (fn. 3)
By the 1860s, however, there were complaints
that there were too many charities and that the
traditional distributions of food, cash, and clothing were having a degrading effect on the poor.
In 1865 T. H. Green found Lichfield 'the great
seat of superfluous charities' in Staffordshire;
the £600 a year said to be handed out in doles
and gratuities encouraged idleness in 'an ill-conditioned surplus population'. (fn. 4) An inspector
at an inquiry into the city's charities in 1868 was
shocked to hear that in St. Mary's parish, containing 1,200 householders, 600 or 700 women
applied each year to a clothing charity. (fn. 5) In 1885
the mayor claimed that a scheme to relieve
distress by offering work on the roads at 2s. 6d. a
day, more than was paid in other Midland
towns, had been met with curses by the unemployed, who expected to be given charity. A
Charity Commission inquiry into the Municipal
Charities in 1888 heard calls for fewer doles, a
greater emphasis on medical and educational
provision, and popular representation on the
trust. A Scheme of 1891 followed those lines. (fn. 6)
Further modifications have since been made.
The local agitation of the 1880s also led to the
formation in 1889 of a Lichfield branch of the
Charity Organization Society. It opened an
office in Dam Street, where it remained in the
1940s. In 1940 it established there a citizens'
advice bureau for the Lichfield area. (fn. 7)
ALMSHOUSES AND ALMSHOUSE CHARITIES.
St. John's Hospital.
The men's
almshouse in St. John Street known until 1989 as
St. John's hospital was founded as a hospital,
probably in the earlier 12th century. By the later
15th century it was an almshouse, and it was reestablished and re-endowed as such in 1495 and
1496. Its institutional and architectural history to
1970 are treated in another volume; (fn. 8) the history
of its chapel as a place of public worship is treated
above. (fn. 9) In 1981 its trustees opened an almshouse
in the Close on the site of the former theological
college. The building included five flats for married couples and seven for single men, a common
room, and a guest room. The new almshouse was
called the hospital of St. John the Baptist within
the Close, and the master of St. John's hospital
was given the pastoral care of the almsfolk. (fn. 10) In
1989 the trustees decided that the word 'hospital'
might cause confusion, and that in future the St.
John Street building would be known as St.
John's without the Bars. The building of 1981
was already known simply as St. John's within
the Close. (fn. 11)
Dr. Milley's Hospital.
The women's almshouse in Beacon Street, known until the 19th
century as the women's hospital and since then
as Dr. Milley's hospital, was established probably in 1424 or shortly afterwards; it was reendowed, and probably rebuilt, in 1502–4 by
Thomas Milley, a canon of the cathedral. Its
institutional and architectural history to 1970
are treated in another volume. (fn. 12) In 1985–7 the
building was restored, modernized, and extended; the number of flats was increased from 8
to 10, and a common room was added. (fn. 13)
William Lunn's Homes, formerly Lunn's
Almshouses. In 1654 William Lunn gave two
houses in Stowe Street as almshouses for six
poor widows, with 2 a. in Long Furlong as
endowment. (fn. 14) The charity may not have become
effective until 1667, when Edward Lunn conveyed the property in trust. (fn. 15) By 1762 the trustees were under the supervision of the city
bailiffs. The almshouses then comprised six
two-roomed cottages with gardens. In 1868 the
almswomen were given clothes by the trustees
and most of them received from the parish each
week 1s. or 1s. 6d. and a loaf. (fn. 16) The charity was
administered with the Municipal Charities from
1899 and was merged with them in 1908. In
1959 the almshouses were replaced on the same
site by a terrace of six old people's bungalows
known as William Lunn's Homes. Three more
bungalows were opened on the site in 1982, and
another four in 1985. (fn. 17)
Newton's College, the charitable foundation of
Andrew Newton in the Close, is treated above. (fn. 18)
Buckeridge's Almshouses.
The Revd. George
Buckeridge (d. 1863), master of St. John's hospital, gave T. A. Bangham, incumbent of Christ
Church, two adjacent cottages in Lower Sandford Street to be used as parish almshouses. The
transaction was informal, and although Buckeridge's heirs did not contest the gift, they did not
formally renounce their rights in the property.
Bangham collected money to establish an endowment fund for the almshouses, which he
intended should be named after Richard Hinckley, his church's principal benefactor, but he
died in 1876 with the project unrealized. He and
his successors chose as tenants aged parishioners
charged nominal rents in accordance with Buckeridge's wishes. By 1908 the cottages had become uninhabitable, and the vicar sold them.
The money received was invested, and the income from what was known as the Buckeridge
Bequest was used for charitable purposes among
Anglicans in the parish. (fn. 19)
Other Almshouses.
There was an almshouse in
Stowe Lane in 1343–4. (fn. 20) At some time in the
later Middle Ages there was a 'domus emosinalis' in Wade Street, presumably an almshouse. (fn. 21)
Fecknam's Charity.
John Fecknam or Feckenham (d. 1585), innkeeper and twice senior
bailiff, gave by will the reversion of 21 a. in
Lichfield to augment the income of St. John's
and Dr. Milley's. Each received £14 in 1786,
£37 16s. a year from 1827 to 1835, and £99.22 in
1988. (fn. 22)
Saturford's (later Wightwick's) Charity.
By
will dated 1586 George Saturford bequeathed
his leases and the income from them to St.
John's and Dr. Milley's, with Dr. Milley's to be
given preference. His executor, Matthew
Wightwick, later stated that the leases had been
valued at £50 and instructed his own executor,
Alexander Wightwick, to give that sum to the
almsfolk. Instead Alexander and his descendants kept the money and paid £1 16s. a year to
Dr. Milley's and £1 4s. a year to St. John's. In
1815 John Wightwick gave the £50 and a £10
donation to the feoffees of Dr. Milley's, who
used the £60 as capital and paid £1 4s. a year to
St. John's as Wightwick's Charity. The payment was redeemed in 1983. (fn. 23)
Charities of Walton, Salt, Allen, and Cressett.
The corporation was apparently obliged to pay
the interest on Jane Walton's £20 loan charity
(1572) to the almswomen of Dr. Milley's and the
interest on Walter Salt's £30 loan charity (1599)
to the inmates of Dr. Milley's and St. John's. By
the late 1650s it paid 30s. a year to Dr. Milley's
as Walton's Charity and 24s. to each almshouse
as Salt's Charity. (fn. 24) By deed or will of 1604 Anne
Allen gave the corporation £15 to provide annual payments of 9s. to Dr. Milley's and 9s. to
other poor widows. In the late 1650s the corporation instead paid 5s. to Dr. Milley's, 4s. to St.
John's, and 9s. to other poor. (fn. 25) In 1692 it paid
£5 to Dr. Milley's as the interest on Mr. Cressett's £100, an otherwise unknown benefaction.
By the early 19th century it was making annual
payments of £9 4s. to Dr. Milley's and £1 8s. to
St. John's, evidently including the four charities. (fn. 26)
St. John's hospital also benefited under
Phoebe Simpson's Charity. (fn. 27)
BENEFACTIONS ASSOCIATED WITH CATHEDRAL CHANTRIES AND OBITS.
The ordination of some chantries and obits in
the cathedral provided for annual distributions
of money or food to the poor, evidently of
Lichfield: (fn. 28)
Bishop Muschamp (d. 1208), 6s. 8d.,
later history unknown; (fn. 29)
Dean Mancetter (d.
1254), 20s. in bread, still distributed in 1535 but
in memory of Master Peter of Radnor; (fn. 30)
Dean
Mancetter, a further 20s. in bread or other food,
still distributed in 1548; (fn. 31)
William de Burton
(will dated 1268), prebendary of Gaia Major, 6s.
to the most needy, paid until the late 1320s,
revived in 1338, later history unknown; (fn. 32)
Canon
Nicholas de Lega (d. 1268), acknowledged in mid
14th century to include provision for annual
distribution to poor, details and later history
unknown; (fn. 33)
Master Ralph de Chaddesden, cathedral treasurer, established in 1276, 20s., still
paid in 1347; (fn. 34)
Master Peter of Radnor, cathedral
chancellor, established in 1277, 12s. in bread,
still distributed in 1548; (fn. 35) chantry at St.
Nicholas's altar established by Bishop Langton
in 1319, details unknown, 3d. distributed in
1548; (fn. 36)
Master William de Bosco, cathedral
chancellor, established in 1325, 7s. in bread,
peas, or beans, still distributed in 1535; (fn. 37)
Master
John de Kynardessey (d. 1332 or 1333), prebendary of Eccleshall, details unknown, 1s. 4d.
given to almsfolk in 1548; (fn. 38)
Roger le Mareschall,
prebendary of Dernford, established in 1335,
10s., later history unknown; (fn. 39)
John Colman and
Margery his wife, details unknown, probably
mid 15th century, 3s. 4d. distributed annually
1538–48; (fn. 40) chantry of Jesus and St. Anne established by Dean Heywood in 1468, dole to 12
men, probably still distributed in 1548; (fn. 41)
John
Meneley, prebendary of Offley 1452–80, details
unknown, 5s. 10d. to almswomen in 1504, 4s. to
the poor and the Lichfield Franciscans in
1535. (fn. 42)
Dean Yotton (d. 1512) stipulated that the
priest of his chantry should be a graduate in civil
law or divinity; if the former he was to give free
legal aid to poor people brought before the
bishop's consistory court, if the latter he was to
preach four times a year without charge in
nearby churches. The only recorded priest had
degrees in both subjects. (fn. 43)
Only one obit charity survived the Reformation, that of Bishop Meuland. In 1265 he arranged that when he died one third (£6 13s. 4d.)
of a pension which he had acquired for the
cathedral from the church of Wigan (Lancs.)
should be used each year to endow his obit. Of
that £6 13s. 4d. the sacrist was to distribute £3
6s. 8d. in bread to the poor after the service.
Meuland died in 1295, and the bread dole
existed c. 1300. By 1535 the sacrist was distributing it on St. Thomas's day (21 December). (fn. 44)
In the early 18th century the dole was apparently still worth £3 6s. 8d. By 1878, however,
only £1 was being spent on bread, which was
distributed annually among all householders in
the Close on St. Thomas's day as St. Thomas's
Dole. (fn. 45) The pension was commuted in 1958. (fn. 46)
By then the origins of the dole had been forgotten. The distribution continued: the head verger
bought bread rolls on St. Thomas's day and
delivered them to all the houses in the Close. In
the early 1970s the tradition was brought to an
end. The charity was revived in 1988: after a
service in the cathedral on 21 December the
congregation was given bread rolls in the Close
refectory. (fn. 47)
CITY CHARITIES.
Loan Chests. (fn. 48)
Under the
will of John Harewood (d. 1389), prebendary of
Gaia Minor, (fn. 49) his executors established a £20
fund for the poor of Lichfield. By the 1450s the
money was kept in St. Mary's church. In 1457,
under the will of Master George Radcliffe, treasurer of the cathedral 1435–49 and archdeacon
of Chester 1449–54, (fn. 50) his executors added £20
to the fund. Harewood's money was kept in a
chest known variously as Our Lady's alms chest
and Harewood's coffer. Radcliffe's bequest was
put into another chest in St. Mary's known as
Radcliffe's coffer. The rules for Harewood's
coffer have not survived. Radcliffe's beneficiaries, who were to be poor men living in the city
and its suburbs, were to receive interest-free
loans of up to 20s. for up to six months and had
to leave in the chest pledges made of metal and
worth at least 3s. 4d. more than the sum borrowed. A pledge not redeemed within six
months was to be sold and the amount of the
loan was to be returned to the coffer. If the sale
realized more than the amount of the loan half
the surplus was to go to the defaulting borrower
and half to augment the capital of the charity.
The master of the guild of St. Mary and St.
John the Baptist, the cathedral sacrist, the
chapelwarden of St. Mary's, and a priest chosen
by the guild each had a key to one of the coffer's
four locks. The rules were similar to those for
loan chests at Oxford and Cambridge; the coffer
was one of the few medieval loan chests in
England outside the two universities. (fn. 51) In 1485
Dean Heywood found that only £13 remained
in the two Lichfield chests. He recovered £20,
gave £7 himself, had the entire £40 placed in
Radcliffe's coffer, and in 1486 stipulated a strict
observance of Harewood's and Radcliffe's rules
and careful supervision by the guild. The later
history of the charity is unknown.
Corporation Loan Charities.
In the later 16th
and earlier 17th century the corporation administered various charities designed or adapted to
provide interest-free or low-interest loans, any
interest being distributed among the poor. Most
loan charities seem to have been lost or absorbed
into general corporation funds in the mid 17th
century. Unless otherwise stated, all that is
known is the name of the benefactor and the
amount of the gift. (fn. 52)
Richard Skeffington, probably Sir Richard (d.
1647), second son of Sir William Skeffington,
Bt., of Fisherwick, gave £80, all or some of
which remained in 1658. (fn. 53)
Richard Caldwell (d. 1584), a London physician and a native of Staffordshire, gave £40 in
1582, to be lent interest-free for five-year
periods to eight residents of Lichfield. Nothing
is known of the charity after c. 1620, and it had
been lost by 1690. Caldwell's similar charity for
Burton upon Trent, supervised by the Lichfield
bailiffs, was extant in the 1660s. (fn. 54)
Jane Walton gave £20 in 1572, the interest to
be paid to the almswomen of Dr. Milley's
hospital. By the late 1650s the capital apparently
formed part of the corporation's general funds,
and loans had ceased. (fn. 55)
Walter Salt left £30 in reversion to be lent for
three-year periods to three inhabitants of
Lichfield. The bailiffs were to pay 54s. a year
interest to the almsfolk of Dr. Milley's and St.
John's from the time of Salt's death. By the late
1650s the capital apparently formed part of the
corporation's general funds, and loans had
ceased. (fn. 56)
John Burnes, probably the upholsterer who
was three times senior bailiff and died in 1600,
gave £10, to be lent for three-year periods to
poor tradesmen. It had been lost by 1690. (fn. 57)
At unknown dates Richard Blount gave £3 or
£10, all or some of which remained in 1658; (fn. 58) a
person called Needeman gave £6 13d. 4d.; a
Mr. (fn. 59) or Mrs. Howard gave £30; Robert Ball
gave £12, of which £4 was distributed to the
poor; the corporation gave £33 4s.
The Virginia Lottery Money, evidently a
prize won in one of the lotteries run by the
Virginia Company between 1612 and 1621, provided £25. (fn. 60)
John Utting, probably the John Utting who
gave property to St. Mary's church in 1615, (fn. 61)
gave £26 13s. 4d.
Walter Wrottesley, who gave £150 and later
added £50 more, was presumably Walter Wrottesley (d. 1630), squire of Wrottesley, in Tettenhall, whose first wife inherited lands in and
around Lichfield. (fn. 62) In 1630 the corporation lent
the £200 for six months to Sir Walter Heveningham (d. 1636) of Pipe Hall, in Burntwood. It
had been lost by 1690. (fn. 63)
William Sale, residentiary canon of the cathedral and former master of St. John's hospital, by
will proved 1588 bequeathed £20 to provide £5
loans for four-year periods to four poor artificers, interest-free. (fn. 64)
At an unknown date a Mr. Cowper gave £10.
William Hawkes, by will dated 1631, endowed three charities. One bequest, of £40 to
the poor, was evidently used for loans. It had
been lost by 1690. (fn. 65)
Sir John King, who died in the Close in 1637,
bequeathed £20 to the corporation for the
poor. (fn. 66) The money was evidently used for loans.
The Charities of the Biddulph Family.
By deed
of 1579 confirmed by will proved 1580 Simon
Biddulph of Lichfield settled £40 in trust to
provide £6 13s. 4d. loans to six Lichfield tradesmen. His trustees were still granting loans in
1631. (fn. 67) No more is known of the charity.
His son Simon (d. 1632), of Lichfield, bequeathed £5 a year to the city's poor, to be
distributed on Good Friday and Christmas Eve.
He was perhaps confirming, and augmenting to
£5, a dole established by the earlier Simon. Two
of his own sons later charged land at Hammerwich with the £5. The charity, sometimes
wrongly attributed to Sir Theophilus Biddulph,
Bt. (d. 1683), of Elmhurst, was 20 years in arrear
in 1728 when, following a Chancery decree, the
Biddulphs paid the corporation £100. The
money was distributed among c. 600 poor in
doles of 1s.–10s. In the early 1820s the owner of
the land at Hammerwich distributed £5 in 1s.
doles on Good Friday and the Friday before
Christmas to Lichfield poor, chiefly widows. In
1908 the charity, then known as the Biddulphs'
Charity, was merged with the Municipal Charities.
By deed of 1731 or 1737 Sir Theophilus
Biddulph, Bt. (d. 1743), of Elmhurst, settled the
rents of three houses in Greenhill in trust for the
poor. The income in 1786 was £1 5s. The
charity was apparently unknown c. 1820. New
trustees were appointed in 1845, and in 1868 the
survivor distributed the rents, £10 1s. 6d.,
among 60 Greenhill poor, mainly women, in 2s.
6d. doles. The charity lapsed in 1879 but was
revived shortly before 1888. It was administered
with the Municipal Charities from 1899 and was
merged with them in 1908. (fn. 68)
Maddocke's Charity.
By deed of 1586 Humphrey Maddocke, a Lichfield mercer, charged
4 a. at Curborough with 13s. 4d. a year for 119
years; the land was then to be rack rented. The
13s. 4d. and the subsequent rack rent were to be
distributed on Good Friday among the poorest
householders in the city. About 1820 the net
annual income, £6 13s. 8d., was distributed on
Good Friday in 1s. or 2s. doles. The charity was
merged with the Municipal Charities in 1858. (fn. 69)
Michael Lowe's Charity.
By will proved 1594
Michael Lowe of Timmor, in Fisherwick,
confirmed an earlier grant of houses and 45 a.
land in Lichfield to provide 12 respectable poor
men each year with a coat, a cap, a waggon load
of coal (or other fuel of equal value), and 12s. (fn. 70)
By the later 17th century the income was sufficient to permit an increase in the number of
beneficiaries. In the late 1680s 16 men received
the charity each year; in the 18th century there
were generally over 20 a year, and sometimes
over 30. (fn. 71) Occasionally the trustees tried to
ensure that recipients attended church on formal
occasions wearing their caps and coats and did
not sell or alter their coats. From 1751 hats were
given instead of caps. (fn. 72) The estate amounted to
57 a. in 1820. Rack renting was gradually introduced from 1808; the rent increased from £21 in
1796 to £66 in 1820 and £200 in 1868, when 71
men each received a coat, a hat, coal, and 7s. (fn. 73) A
Scheme of 1877, modified in 1906, diverted £30
a year to educational purposes; one of 1886
limited the number of poor men receiving coat,
hat, coal, and 7s. to 50, but allowed the trustees
also to give pensions of 3s.–6s. a week to up to 10
men and to support provident clubs, societies,
and institutions. (fn. 74) In 1978–9 the charity had an
income of over £30,000. It was amalgamated
with nine other Lichfield charities in 1980 to
form Michael Lowe's and Associated Charities. (fn. 75)
Smith's Charity.
From the charity which
Henry Smith, a London merchant, eventually
established by declaration of trust dated 1627
Lichfield was assigned £18 a year for its poor. It
received its first payment in 1632. In 1641
Smith's trustees charged the £18 on Fradswell
manor, in Colwich; by 1673 it was being levied
instead on Drayton Bassett manor. The charity
was distributed at Lichfield by the parish officers of St. Mary's, though not restricted to that
parish. In early years gifts were of clothes, cash,
and bread, and until 1671 there were also payments for apprenticing. Thereafter the money
was spent solely on clothes, and from the 18th
century the only clothes distributed were flannel
petticoats or lengths of flannel, given to poor
women at the beginning of winter. There were
94 beneficiaries in 1820, 139 in 1851, 105 in
1897, and 61 in 1967. (fn. 76) In 1980 the charity
became part of Michael Lowe's and Associated
Charities.
Budd's Charity.
By will, probably dated 1627,
Margaret Budd left a 24s. rent charge on a house
in Sandford Street to the bailiffs and churchwardens, to be distributed to 12 poor widows on
Good Friday and St. Thomas's day (21
December). About 1820 the owner of the house
distributed the dole himself on Good Friday and
Christmas Eve, as had previous owners. (fn. 77) No
more is known of the charity.
Hawkes's Bread Charity.
By will of 1631
William Hawkes, senior bailiff in 1626–7, left
the corporation two 13s. 4d. rent charges, one
for sermons at St. Mary's on Care (or Carl)
Sunday (the Sunday before Palm Sunday) and
on Palm Sunday, the other for bread for poor
who attended them. In 1650 his trustees gave
the corporation 1½ a. in Lichfield in lieu of the
charges. The bread dole was still worth 13s. 4d.
in the early 18th century, but by 1786, when the
income from the land was £2 10s., all save the
13s. 4d. for sermons was distributed in bread.
There was no distribution from 1806 until 1820,
when £50 of accumulated arrears was given to
the poor in blankets and other necessaries. (fn. 78)
From 1835 the charity was one of the Municipal
Charities.
Collins's Charity.
By will dated 1637 George
Collins, presumably the man who was twice
senior bailiff, left a rent charge on land at Pipe in
Burntwood to provide four poor Lichfield
women with gowns together costing at least £3
on All Saints' day (1 November). After the two
trustees named by Collins had died the city
bailiffs were to choose the beneficiaries. By the
early 18th century £3 had become the amount of
the rent charge. In the early 19th century the
funds of the charity were allowed to accumulate,
and distributions of gowns were infrequent. (fn. 79)
From 1835 the charity was one of the Municipal
Charities.
Nevill's Charity.
By will proved 1639 John
Nevill, citizen and grocer of London and a
native of Lichfield, left the corporation a £6 rent
charge on houses in London for bread, to be
distributed every Sunday after morning service.
Half was to go to the poor of Stowe Street, half
to other poor in the city. In the late 18th century
the corporation paid the money to a baker who
sent weekly supplies of bread to St. Mary's and
St. Chad's. The parish clerk of St. Chad's was
sent each week 12 penny loaves which he distributed in Stowe Street; c. 1800, however, the
overseers of St. Mary's ended his supply. About
1820 the sexton of St. Mary's gave penny loaves
every Friday to the poor of his parish, save for
four Fridays a year when he gave them to the
almswomen of Dr. Milley's hospital. (fn. 80) From
1835 the charity was one of the Municipal
Charities.
Perkins's Charity.
Mary Perkins (d. 1643) of
Lichfield gave by will a rent charge of £4 for
charitable uses. Her son John Perkins and
granddaughter Ruth Bayley by wills proved
1685 and 1713 provided for its payment. (fn. 81) No
more is known of it.
Matthew's Charity.
For many years before
1645 Ann, wife of Humphrey Matthew, a Lichfield tanner, gave six poor widows a cloth
waistcoat each year. By deed of 1645, at her
request, her husband settled 6 a. in Lichfield to
endow her charity. The corporation was to have
the land after the Matthews had died; it was to
spend 20s. of the income on sermons at St.
Mary's and St. Chad's, 2s. on managing the
charity, and the rest on waistcoats for poor
widows on St. Thomas's day (21 December). By
the late 1650s the corporation was paying for the
sermons and was distributing six waistcoats
marked with red letters each year as Mrs. Ann
Matthew's Gift. The charity continued in that
form until the early 18th century, when its
income began to increase. In 1705 two gowns
were given besides the waistcoats, and by 1745,
when the charity was being attributed to Humphrey Matthew, it was distributed in gowns,
coats, and money. About 1820 between 30 and
50 poor widows a year were each given a gown
and 2s. 6d. (fn. 82) From 1835 it was one of the
Municipal Charities.
Ruins of the Minster Charity.
In 1651 parliament ordered that £1,200 raised by the sale of
materials from the derelict cathedral should be
used for poor relief. Of that sum the corporation
was given £40 in 1657 and a further £20 in
1659; the money was put out on loan and the
interest paid to the overseers. In 1690 it was
claimed, probably incorrectly, that £100 in all
had been received. (fn. 83) In the early 18th century the
bailiffs distributed £5 a year in coal to the poor,
but after complaints of irregularities it was
decided in 1717 that the charity should be
distributed instead by the churchwardens and
overseers. The money was divided evenly between the three parishes until 1743, when, following an alleged increase in the number of poor
in St. Mary's parish, its share was raised to £2
and the shares of St. Michael's and St. Chad's
reduced to 30s. each. (fn. 84) In the late 18th and early
19th century the charity was distributed in
bread on St. Thomas's day (21 Dec.) by the
overseers. (fn. 85) From 1835 it was one of the Municipal Charities.
Dilkes's Charity.
By will proved before 1673
Mary Dilkes, apparently of Lichfield, left two
rent charges on a house in Conduit Street, 10s.
for distribution among 30 poor widows on Lady
day, and 5s. for repairs to St. Mary's. The 5s.
was regularly paid, and until 1817 the owners of
the house distributed 10s. to widows, latterly in
1s. doles. The marquess of Stafford, who bought
the house in 1819, was said in 1820 to be willing
to revive the charity. (fn. 86) He apparently did not do
so.
Minors's Charity.
By will dated 1677 Thomas
Minors, founder of Minors's school, bequeathed
a 10s. rent charge for an annual sermon in St.
Mary's. If the authorities forbade the preacher
to speak, the 10s. was to be distributed among 10
poor Lichfield widows. In 1786 it was stated
that the money was given to 10 widows, and had
been for many years. The charity had been lost
by 1821. (fn. 87)
Marshall's Charity.
By will proved 1681
Thomas Marshall of Lichfield devised in trust
1½ a. in Lichfield, the rent to be distributed at
Christmas among the city's poor. In 1737 there
was a dispute between the trustees, and part of
the rent, then 22s. 6d., was withheld. The charity had been lost by 1786. (fn. 88)
Finney's Charity.
By will proved 1689 William Finney, citizen and tallow chandler of
London, devised land in Lichfield and Mavesyn
Ridware worth £31 6s. 8d. a year to Lichfield
corporation and provided for the purchase of
further land to raise the total rental to £37; land
at Yoxall was bought. Every year 22 poor men
and 10 poor widows were each to be given a
wainload of coals, 1s., and a cloth gown with W.
F. on the sleeve; the men were to be given caps,
the women cash to buy themselves headcloths.
Recipients were to be Anglicans, with preference for Finney's kin. The first distribution took
place in 1690. In 1738 the estate was 63 a. and
the income £37 16s. 8d. By c. 1820 the rent
income was £219 and the corporation had increased the number of beneficiaries. Between
1815 and 1820 from 79 to 263 men and women a
year received 6s. for coal and 1s. cash, the
balance between the sexes reflecting that laid
down by Finney. The men were also given a hat
and a coat with W. F. on the sleeve, and the
women, all aged widows, a gown, a cap, and a
handkerchief. Recipients did not normally
benefit more than once every two years. The
corporation diverted surplus funds to good
causes; in 1819, for example, it spent £50 of the
charity's money on blankets for the poor. (fn. 89) From
1835 the charity was one of the Municipal
Charities.
Hinton's Charity.
By will dated 1685 Roger
Hinton of Castle Church charged his estate
there with annuities for the poor of various
places in Staffordshire; the poor of Lichfield
were to receive £12 a year. The charity was
established in 1692, after Chancery proceedings. (fn. 90) Lichfield was receiving its £12 by 1703.
Initially the money was distributed in doles of
up to 10s.; later, smaller gifts were made to
larger numbers. From 1703 to 1724 the beneficiaries included the almswomen of Dr. Milley's
hospital. (fn. 91) It had been directed in 1692 that the
entire income of the estate was to be divided
among the places concerned, but it was not until
the early 19th century that the charity received
the full economic rent. Between 1805 and 1820
Lichfield received £336 12s. 6d. in irregular
instalments. There were routine distributions to
the poor in 1807–12 and 1814, and in 1821 the
vicar and churchwardens of St. Mary's distributed an accumulated £140 throughout the city
in 10s. and £1 doles. By 1889, when Lichfield
received £31, the mayor received the money and
handed it over to the ministers of all denominations in the city for distribution. (fn. 92) In 1955
Lichfield's share of the charity was made part of
the Municipal Charities, which in 1988 received
£58.93 from Hinton's Charity. (fn. 93)
Ashmole's Charity.
By 1757 the corporation
was distributing £2 2s. a year among the poor as
the interest on £60 given for charitable uses by
Elias Ashmole (d. 1692). The charity was not
established by will, and no deed has been found.
In 1678 Ashmole wrote that for over 20 years he
had given £5 a year to the poor of the city; the
corporation perhaps accumulated the £60 from
those gifts. In 1765 it reduced its payments to
£2 a year. Until 1805 the charity was distributed
in 2s. doles to poor women. Nothing was paid in
1806. There was a distribution to both men and
women in 1807; thereafter no payments were
made to the poor for at least 13 years. (fn. 94) From
1835 the charity was one of the Municipal
Charities.
Charities of Francis and John Deakin.
By will
of unknown date Francis Deakin the younger, a
Lichfield fellmonger, left a £1 rent charge to
buy 6d. loaves for poor householders of the city
on the Wednesday after Ash Wednesday. The
Revd. John Deakin of Rugeley bequeathed the
city £20; of the interest 10s. was to be used to
augment Francis's bread dole and 10s. for a
sermon at St. Mary's on the same day. (fn. 95) A Revd.
John Deakin, master of Rugeley grammar
school, died in 1727; his will made no bequest of
£20 to the city, but it asked his father and
brother Francis, both of Lichfield, to use his
books and other goods, valued after his death at
£20, to establish a free library at Lichfield, and
they presumably preferred instead to extend an
existing family charity. (fn. 96) The corporation used
the £20 to buy another £1 rent charge. About
1820 the vicar of St. Mary's was distributing
30s. in 6d. loaves after the sermon to poor
householders chosen for life from the three city
parishes, preference being given to widows. (fn. 97)
No more is known of the charities.
Mousley's Charity.
Samuel Mousley (d. 1733),
twice senior bailiff, left houses, barns, land in
Lichfield, Curborough and Elmhurst, £100
cash, and the residue of his personal property,
which probably amounted to another £100, to
the corporation, the income to be distributed
among the poor. About 1820 the gross annual
income was £225, although the net income was
sometimes much less. It was distributed in cash
payments of 10s., and occasionally of £1 or £2,
and £5 a year was subscribed to the Lichfield
dispensary. (fn. 98) From 1835 the charity was one of
the Municipal Charities.
Wakefield's Charity.
By will proved 1733
Richard Wakefield, town clerk of Lichfield
1688–1721, left the reversion of his Lichfield
property, the income to be distributed annually
by the constables, churchwardens, and overseers
among the Lichfield poor not in receipt of parish
relief. The life tenant died in 1754, and in 1755
the estate was conveyed to trustees who were to
distribute the income themselves to the poor at
Michaelmas. Recipients were not to have received parish relief for six months. In 1820 the
net income of the estate, then 48 a., was £185,
and 472 beneficiaries received between £1 and
5s. (fn. 99) Management of the charity was transferred
in 1914 to the Municipal Charities, with which
in 1955 the charity was merged. (fn. 100)
Taylor's Charity.
By will Cary Butt (d. 1781)
of Pipe Grange in Pipehill devised in trust for
sale 3 a. in Lichfield which he had acquired from
Catherine Taylor. Part was already charged with
a payment of up to 10s. for the Lichfield poor. In
1783, when Butt's trustees sold the land, the
rent charge was said to be 15s., payable to the
poor at Christmas. The origins of the charge are
unknown. Taylor's conveyance to Butt did not
mention it, but she was later alleged to have
been anxious to secure its payment. About 1820
the solicitor to Butt's trustees was distributing
the 15s. income of what had become known as
Mrs. Taylor's Charity among deserving poor,
giving preference to Mrs. Taylor's kin. (fn. 101) No
more is known of the charity.
Bolton's Charity.
By deed or will before 1799
a Mrs. Bolton gave £50, the interest to be given
to 20 poor widows of the city at Christmas. The
charity may still have existed in 1806, but no
more is known of it. (fn. 102)
Slaney's Charity.
By deed of 1827 Richard
Slaney of Uttoxeter, an ex-convict who had
been transported and had returned to England, (fn. 103)
gave £700 to St. Mary's, St. Michael's, and St.
Chad's, the income to be equally divided among
the parishes for clothes 'with an appropriate
badge' for up to 12 aged and indigent men. (fn. 104)
The badging requirement seems to have been
ignored. In the 1840s and 1850s St. Mary's
spent the money on shoes, in 1868 all parishes
distributed boots, and in the early 20th century
St. Chad's gave clothes and shoes. (fn. 105) In 1922 the
charity was converted into three separate parochial endowments. (fn. 106) In 1980 the charity, reunited, became part of Michael Lowe's and Associated Charities.
Lichfield Municipal Charities.
The Municipal
Corporations Act of 1835 transferred the management of charities which had been administered by the unreformed corporations to bodies
of municipal charity trustees. Lichfield Municipal Charities, comprising the charities of John
Allington, Elias Ashmole, Walter Chetwynd and
Richard Plumer, George Collins, William Finney, Humphrey Matthew, Samuel Mousley,
and John Nevill, William Hawkes's bread charity, and the Ruins of the Minster Charity, were
further regulated by an Order of 1843. The
existing forms of benefaction were in general
preserved. Except for Mousley's Charity (for
the city alone) and Chetwynd and Plumer's
Charity (for the parishes of St. Michael and St.
Chad) the beneficial area of the Municipal Charities became the city, its suburbs, and the Close.
In 1858 the Municipal Charities trustees took
over the management of Maddocke's Charity.
In 1888 an inquiry revealed that for many years
the Order of 1843 had not been observed. The
town clerk, Charles Simpson, steward and treasurer of the Municipal Charities since 1848, had
ignored it and had not told trustees of it. It had
escaped notice in 1868 during an earlier inquiry
into Lichfield charities. The trustees had made
grants to schools and to deserving institutions,
had reserved a certain amount of money each
year for cases of sickness, and had then allotted
fixed sums to the four districts into which they
divided the city, for distribution among the
poor. A Scheme of 1891 provided that of the 15
trustees 5 were to be directly elected by ratepayers, 3 were to be appointed by the city council,
and 7 were to be co-opted. The first elections of
trustees were held in 1891 and produced much
working-class excitement. In 1908 direct election was abolished and the number of trustees
was reduced to 13: the mayor, 2 co-opted trustees, 6 appointed by the city council, 2 appointed by the board of guardians, and 1 each
from the Lichfield branch of the Charity Organization Society and the Lichfield nursing home.
The charities of the Biddulphs and Sir Theophilus Biddulph, and Lunn's almshouses were
merged with the Municipal Charities. From
1908 to 1955 the trustees were empowered to
use the income of Chetwynd and Plumer's
Charity and Mousley's Charity for educating
poor children. In 1955 the charities of Rowland
Muckleston, Luke Robinson, and Richard
Wakefield, and the Lichfield share of Roger
Hinton's Charity were merged with the Municipal Charities. The main object of the 13 trustees
(the mayor, 6 appointed by the city council, and
6 co-opted) was to be support for Lunn's almshouses and the almspeople. Under the Scheme
the trustees replaced the almshouses in 1959
with William Lunn's Homes, which they later
extended. A Scheme of 1982 increased the number of trustees to 14 (the mayor, 3 appointed by
the city council, 2 appointed by the district
council, and 8 co-opted) and confirmed that the
city on the eve of the 1974 reorganization of
local government was the beneficial area of
the Municipal Charities. In 1988 the income
of the charities was £91,259, the expenditure
£23,559. (fn. 107)
Passam's Charity.
By will proved 1860 Elizabeth Passam of Lichfield bequeathed £1,000, to
be invested in stock. The income was to be
distributed among poor widows and families
living in Lichfield in sums not exceeding 10s. on
24 January, the anniversary of the death of her
brother Thomas Passam, by whose wish the
bequest was made. (fn. 108) In 1980 the charity became
part of Michael Lowe's and Associated Charities.
John Foster Haworth and Blanche Susan
Haworth Charity Fund.
By will proved 1867
Margaret Haworth, formerly of the Close, left
the reversion of £2,000 to the dean of Lichfield
for a fund for the very poor of the city, preference being given to consumptives and chimneysweeping boys. The life interest expired in 1888,
and the first grants were made in 1889. In the
mid 1980s the income of £150 was used for
grants to Dr. Milley's hospital and for small
payments to its almswomen and other elderly
women. In 1989 the charity became part of
Michael Lowe's and Associated Charities. (fn. 109)
Michael Lowe's and Associated Charities.
In
1980 the charities of Michael Lowe, Jesson
Mason, Elizabeth Passam, Elizabeth Preest, Alice Simpson, Phoebe Simpson, and Richard
Slaney, Turnpenny's Charity, the charity
known as Mrs. Richard Hinckley's Memorial,
and the Lichfield portion of Henry Smith's
Charity were amalgamated to produce a fund for
the general or individual relief of residents of the
city. In the year 1988–9 the combined charity
had an income of £69, 621, of which £15,424
was distributed in fuel grants, £294 in pensions,
and £14,275 in other grants. Haworth's Charity
was amalgamated with the charity in 1989. (fn. 110)
PAROCHIAL CHARITIES.
St. Mary's.
Hawkes's Gallery Charity.
When William
Hawkes paid for a gallery in St. Mary's church
in 1630 he stipulated that those who took sittings in it should pay a 1s. entry fee, to be given
to poor communicants on Palm Sunday and
Low Sunday. Four shillings was distributed in
bread in 1634 and 6s. in 1635. (fn. 111) The charity
presumably ended when the church was demolished and rebuilt in the early 18th century.
Thropp's Charity.
By deed or will of 1631
William Thropp, presumably the mercer of that
name who died in 1632, gave a £1 rent charge to
pay 6s. 8d. for a sermon at St. Mary's on MidLent Sunday and the distribution then of 13s. to
13 poor widows. The distributor was paid 4d.
The charity apparently still existed in the 1680s
but had been lost by 1786. (fn. 112)
Allington's Charity.
John Allington (d. 1642),
thrice bailiff, bequeathed rent charges in trust to
the two senior freemen of the Lichfield mercers'
company for a weekly bread dole for the poor of
St. Mary's. According to a 17th-century inscription formerly in St. Mary's church the rent
charges amounted to £5 6s. In the 17th and early
18th century 2s. a week was distributed in bread.
In 1786 the total rent charge was said to be only
£4. (fn. 113) Bread continued to be distributed at the
church every Sunday until c. 1797, when the
mercers' company became extinct and the charity lapsed. In 1818 Chancery transferred the
management to the corporation and ordered the
revival of the dole. Accumulated funds went in
the costs of obtaining the decree. In 1821 the
Charity Commissioners, accepting that the rent
charges totalled £4, noted that the corporation
had received no money since 1818 and had not
revived the dole. It was later revived as one of
the Municipal Charities, and in 1843 its beneficial area was extended to cover the city, its
suburbs, and the Close. (fn. 114)
Edward Finney's Charity.
By 1651 Edward
Finney the elder, probably the senior bailiff of
1636–7, had established a bread dole at St.
Mary's endowed with 1s. a month. Apparently it
still existed c. 1715. (fn. 115) No more is known of it.
John Matthews's Charity.
By deed or will
John Matthews (d. in or before 1669), perhaps
the junior bailiff of 1650–1, gave the minister
and churchwardens of St. Mary's a 10s. rent
charge on property at Little Wyrley, in Norton
Canes, for distribution among 10 poor widows.
In 1671 and 1672 the property was conveyed to
John Darlaston the younger and his wife. Darlaston and his father covenanted to pay the
corporation 10s. a year, which would be given to
St. Mary's for distribution. (fn. 116) The charity survived in the 1690s and early 1700s, latterly as
Mr. Darlison's Gift. (fn. 117) No more is known of it.
Robinson's Charity.
By will proved 1767 Luke
Robinson of Lichfield left £300, the interest to
be distributed among the poor of St. Mary's at
Christmas. About 1820 the charity's £18 income
from stock was distributed annually among poor
chosen for life. From 1858 to 1897 the charity
was given in 10s. doles, no longer to recipients
chosen for life; later it was distributed in cash or
coal. In 1908 its management was transferred to
the Municipal Charities. The beneficial area
remained St. Mary's parish until 1955, when the
charity was merged with the Municipal Charities. (fn. 118)
Edge's Charity.
By will proved 1777 Richard
Edge, a Lichfield mercer, left his friend and
former apprentice James Wickins £30, the interest to be used to buy 2d. white loaves for
distribution by the churchwardens of St. Mary's
on 23 or 24 December among the poor of the
parish. The bread was to be bought from bakers
in Conduit Street or Dam Street. Wickins kept
the money and used the interest (24s. in 1786) to
buy 1d. loaves which he distributed at his house
on Christmas morning among aged persons
from the three city parishes, giving priority to
parishioners of St. Mary's. About 1817 he gave
the £30 to the vicar of St. Mary's, who c. 1820
was paying 30s. interest to the churchwardens
for distribution among poor parishioners on
Christmas morning. (fn. 119) No more is known of the
charity.
Hector's Charity.
In 1778 Mary Hector (d.
1783) of Lichfield gave £50 to endow an annual
Lady day distribution by the St. Mary's churchwardens to 20 poor widows of the parish. The
charity was not established until 1834; previously the interest on the capital was paid into
St. Mary's general church account. In 1856 the
bank in which the £50 had been deposited
failed, and the charity came to an end. (fn. 120)
St. Michael's, city portion.
Bailey's Charity.
By will dated 1735 Elizabeth Bailey of Lichfield
devised land in Abbots Bromley, the income to
be divided equally between St. Michael's parish
and the township of Newton, in Blithfield, for
distribution among their poor at Easter. St.
Michael's annual share c. 1820 was £2 10s.,
which the churchwardens distributed after consulting the vicar. (fn. 121) The land was sold in 1947 or
1948 and the money was invested. In 1978 St.
Michael's received £3.25 for its poor. (fn. 122)
Gregory's Charity.
Greenwood Gregory, the
son of a Lichfield dyer and alive in 1721, (fn. 123) left
the churchwardens a £1 rent charge on a house
in Lombard Street for a Christmas distribution
to the poor of Greenhill. The charity existed by
1786. In the early 1820s the churchwardens
distributed the money, a few shillings at a time,
to poor parishioners. (fn. 124) The £1 was still being
received in 1884, but by 1989 the charity was
extinct. (fn. 125)
Mason's Charity.
By will proved 1823 Jesson
Mason of Lichfield left £800, the interest to be
used to provide coats, hats, gowns, and caps at
Christmas for the poor of Greenhill and St.
John Street. Clothing was distributed until the
beginning of the Second World War and clothing vouchers were then given until the 1960s.
Thereafter small cash grants were made. In the
1970s there was an income of £80–£100 from
stock. (fn. 126) In 1980 the charity became part of
Michael Lowe's and Associated Charities.
St. Chad's, city portion.
Turnpenny's Charity.
A person called Turnpenny bequeathed a 6s. 8d.
rent charge to provide a bread dole for the poor
of Beacon Street. (fn. 127) The benefactor was probably
Zachary Turnpenny (d. 1672), subchanter of the
cathedral, who lived in Beacon Street. (fn. 128) By 1786
the dole was being distributed on Ascension
Day, probably, as c. 1820, in 1d. loaves handed
out by the churchwardens. (fn. 129) The otherwise unknown 6s. 8d. paid in the late 18th century by
the heirs of John Fletcher to provide a bread
dole for the poor of St. Chad's parish was
probably Turnpenny's Charity. (fn. 130) In the 1930s
bread rolls were distributed to poor parishioners
on Ascension Day. (fn. 131) In 1980 the charity became
part of Michael Lowe's and Associated Charities.
Charity of Alice Simpson or Thomas Green.
By
will proved 1674 Alice Simpson devised her
house in Stowe Street to her cousin William
Holmes subject to a 10s. rent charge, to be
distributed on St. Thomas's day (21 Dec.)
among five poor widows of Stowe Street and five
of Beacon Street. (fn. 132) Holmes and his heirs concealed the charity, and it did not become effective until either 1696 or 1736, when Thomas
Green, who had bought the house, agreed to
honour Simpson's wishes. The 10s. was to be
distributed by the incumbent and parish officers; if insufficient widows applied, the number
was to be made up by poor householders. About
1820 the money was handed out at Christmas in
1s. doles. (fn. 133) By 1918 poor widows living near the
two streets were also eligible for the doles. (fn. 134) In
1980 the charity became part of Michael Lowe's
and Associated Charities.
Christopher Lowe's Charity.
By will proved
1705 Christopher Lowe, a Lichfield innkeeper,
left £5 to provide a 5s. distribution at Christmas
among five of the poorest householders in
Beacon Street not in receipt of parish relief. The
charity had been lost by 1786. (fn. 135)
Preest's Charity.
By will proved 1838 Elizabeth Preest of the Close, a servant of the Revd.
T. H. White, left £100 in reversion to St.
Chad's to provide Christmas gifts of a woollen
cloak and 1s. 6d. to poor women who attended
the church most regularly. (fn. 136) The money was
lent to a maltster who went bankrupt, but £76
was recovered from his estate and in 1849 was
invested in stock. In the later 19th century
cloaks and shawls were given. (fn. 137) In 1980 the
charity became part of Michael Lowe's and
Associated Charities.
Christ Church.
Mrs. Richard Hinckley's
Memorial.
By deed of 1881 the trustees under
the will of T. A. Bangham (d. 1876), incumbent
of Christ Church, gave £225 stock, the income
to be divided annually between two poor parishioners, who were not to benefit in consecutive
years. (fn. 138) In 1980 the charity became part of
Michael Lowe's and Associated Charities.
Martin Heath Memorial Fund.
By will proved
1952 Edith Mary Heath (née Martin) left the
residue of her estate to the vicar and churchwardens of Christ Church. Part was to be used to
endow an annual New Year's gift of £1 each to
12 poor parishioners, six men and six women,
aged 60 or more. (fn. 139) The gifts were being distributed in the 1980s.
The Close.
Muckleston's Charity.
By will
proved 1897 Rowland Muckleston, rector of
Dinedor (Herefs.), who had been born in the
Close, established a charity for its poor. Its
endowment in 1902 was £2,850 stock, and £65
of its £71 income was then being distributed in
pensions for five people. In 1919 its management was transferred to Lichfield Municipal
Charities. The beneficial area remained unchanged until 1955, when the charity was
merged with the Municipal Charities. (fn. 140)
Other Parochial Charities.
Chetwynd and
Plumer's Charity.
In 1726 or 1727 (fn. 141) Walter
Chetwynd and Richard Plumer, the city's
M.P.s, gave the corporation £400 for the poor,
to be divided equally between the city portions
of St. Michael's and St. Chad's. Over £300 was
used in 1730 to buy 32 a. in Mayfield. The
remaining money was left at interest, yielding
£1 12s. a year until 1753 and £1 8s. a year
thereafter. In the 19th century the Mayfield
rental was £30–£40 a year. The corporation
paid money on request to the churchwardens of
the two parishes, who generally used it to apprentice poor boys. From 1835 the charity was
one of the Municipal Charities. The Order of
1843 regulating the Municipal Charities widened the potential range of benefactions while
retaining the original beneficial area, and was
confirmed in 1891. The beneficial area was
extended to the city in 1908. (fn. 142)
Phoebe Simpson's Charity.
By deed of 1807
Phoebe Simpson of Stowe Hill gave £400 stock,
the income to be divided equally between St.
John's hospital and the three city parishes. The
hospital's share was to be divided equally among
the almsmen, and the money for the city parishes was to be given to their poor. About 1820
the charity's income, £20, was paid to the vicar
of St. Mary's, who gave the overseers of the
other two parishes their shares. (fn. 143) The charity
lapsed in 1855 but was revived in 1869 and the
arrears were recovered. By the 1940s the income
was distributed in small Christmas gifts to the
poor and the almsmen. (fn. 144) In 1980 the charity
became part of Michael Lowe's and Associated
Charities.