LANCASTER
Loncastre, Chercaloncastre, Dom. Bk.; Lancastre,
1161; Lancaster, 1202; Launcastre, 1292.
The position and development of the town of
Lancaster have already been described to some
extent. The urban area, originally a small portion of
the northern edge of the township bordering on the
Lune, has extended itself to east and west, filling the
gentle hollow between the Castle Hill on the west and
the higher land on the east, which was formerly the
moor; it has also stretched southward over the border
into Scotforth, and to some degree across the river
into Skerton. There are still fields and open lands
to the south-west, while on the east side the park and
the asylum grounds check the growth of streets. The
area of the township proper is 1,491 acres, but by
various extensions south, east and north it has been
increased to 3,506 acres, including 62 of inland
water. (fn. 1) In 1901 the population of the old township numbered 36,060, having more than doubled
itself in thirty years; that of the enlarged township
was 40,329 in 1901 and 41,414 in 1911.
The main streets of old time continue to be the
leading thoroughfares, but have been widened and
otherwise improved as opportunity has allowed. The
entrance to the town from the south, after descending
from 'Pointer' on the Scotforth Road and crossing
the canal, is by Penny Street, which leads down to
the river-side; from it King Street turns off to the
left to go directly to the Castle, which may be seen
rising up in front. 'Pointer' marks the old boundary
of the town. From it a road turns east to Bowerham,
which contains barracks erected in 1876–80, the
depôt of No. 4 Regimental District and head quarters
of the 3rd (Reserve) Battalion of the King's Own
Royal Lancaster Regiment. On the right side of the
main road, just before the canal is reached, may be
seen the remains of the old militia barracks.
Opposite to them stands the Royal Lancaster
Infirmary, (fn. 2) at the corner of Ashton Road. It was
opened in 1896, having sprung from a dispensary
established on Castle Hill in 1781, to which a house
of recovery for fever patients, founded in 1815, was
afterwards united. This infirmary and dispensary
was accommodated in Thurnham Street, close to the
new town hall, from 1833 to 1896. Ashton Road,
which goes south-west, has other notable buildings.
At its other corner is the old railway station;
further on, at the right side, is Springfield, (fn. 3) and then
comes the large and well-endowed Ripley Hospital.
There are 300 orphan boys and girls in it, drawn
from the neighbourhood of Lancaster or of Liverpool,
who are to be educated 'in useful and practical
school learning, and in religion according to the
doctrines and principles of the Church of England.'
The institution, which was founded in 1853 by
Julia widow of Thomas Ripley, (fn. 4) a native of Lancaster,
who made a large fortune in Liverpool and died in
1852, was opened in 1864; the grounds are over
50 acres in extent, and the endowments consist of
about £220,000 in stocks and some small landed
estates. Further along Ashton Road are Nazareth
House, built in 1902, the residential district round
Haverbreaks, and the Royal Albert Institution, which
is within Scotforth.
Penny Street, (fn. 5) after passing the end of Market
Street, is continued as Cheapside; crossing Church
Street it goes on as North Road, so reaching Skerton
Bridge over the Lune. The centre of the Penny
Street and Market Street crossing is marked by a
horse-shoe, fixed in the pavement and renewed from
time to time. (fn. 6) As to its origin one story says that
when John of Gaunt visited the town his horse
dropped a shoe there, and the townsmen fixed it on
the spot to commemorate the visit. Another story
connects it with the Young Pretender. A third
account supposes it to have been connected with the
horse fair. The opening of the thoroughfare from
Cheapside to North Road was made in 1842; North
Road itself was formed to lead to the bridge in 1788.
It skirts Green Ayre, (fn. 7) originally an open pasture
ground between the mill stream (fn. 8) and the Lune;
before being built upon the land was used as a recreation ground or promenade. (fn. 9) The Midland railway
station there takes its name from it. From the centre
of Skerton Bridge a good view of church and castle is
obtained. From the Lancaster end of the bridge a
short avenue called the Ladies' Walk (fn. 10) extends
north-east and is continued along the river-side as a
footpath to Caton.
King Street, leading from the entrance to the town
directly to the castle, passes Queen's Square, Penny's
Hospital and the Assembly Rooms. (fn. 11) Market Street
leads up from the Horse Shoe Corner past the old
town hall, two banks, (fn. 12) King Street, (fn. 13) the Storey
Institute, the Friends' School, to the London and
North-Western Company's Castle station (fn. 14) ; it
continues, rising and falling, till it becomes a footpath
called Freeman's Wood, which marks the boundary
between this township and Aldcliffe, and ends at the
river-side. By the Storey Institute a side street leads
up to the castle and parish church. Two of the
Sebastopol guns are fixed on the castle plateau.
Below it, on the low ground to the west, is Giant Axe
Field, used for football, shows and sports. From the
church tower a footpath leads down to the river-side.
Church Street, parallel to Market Street, leads
from Cheapside up to the parish church. In it are
the Lancaster Bank, (fn. 15) the Co-operative Stores, the
County and Conservative Clubs, the Inland Revenue
Office and the Judges' Lodgings, in front of which
stands the Covell Cross, (fn. 16) re-erected in 1902. Leading across to Market Street are New Street, (fn. 17) in
which is the Post Office, and China Street, in which
are the Young Men's Christian Association (1908)
and the Marton Tower. Church Street contains
houses dated 1683 and 1684 as well as some of the
mansions of the 18th-century merchants—e.g. the
clubs named; the gardens used to extend down to
Dam Side. The County Club is conspicuous by a
semicircular doorway with a fine mahogany door.
The Judges' Lodgings were formerly the residence
of the Coles of Beaumont Cote, purchased by the
corporation and adapted for their present purpose
in 1825. (fn. 18)
The lower end of Church Street ends at Stonewell,
to which also leads St. Nicholas' Street, the continuation of Market Street down from the 'Horse Shoe.'
Though the well has been covered up, Stonewell
remains an open space. It is the terminus of the
Morecambe Tramway. The streets named are continued as St. Leonardgate and Moor Lane respectively, while cross streets lead to Dalton Square and
to North Road. The theatre, first built in 1781,
is in St. Leonardgate; it was formerly called the
Athenæum, but now the Grand.
Dalton Square, just named, lies on the east side of
Penny Street. It was formed about 1784, and has
been used for fairs, shows, reviews and other purposes. The upper side is filled by the front of the
new town hall; other sides contain the Guardians'
offices and the Hippodrome. In the centre is the
statue of Queen Victoria, presented to the town by
Lord Ashton. From the Square a street
leads eastward up the hill to Williamson
Park, passing the grammar school (rebuilt
here in 1851) and the workhouse. The
park covers the highest land in the township, and has been formed with great skill
and taste out of the old quarries on the
moor. Part of the land was laid out in
1862–3 to relieve the distress caused by
the Cotton Famine. (fn. 19) In 1878 the late
James Williamson undertook to lay it out
as a park and present it to the town; he
died the following year, but the work was
completed by his son, now Lord Ashton,
who provided a maintenance fund also. (fn. 20)
A small observatory was opened in 1892;
the instruments, &c., were given by
Mr. Albert Greg. Recently (1907–9) a
very graceful dome has been built by Lord
Ashton as a family memorial. It stands on
the highest point in the park, about 350 ft.
above sea level, and rises 150 ft. to the
summit, so that extensive views in all
directions can be obtained from its upper
galleries. It was opened in 1909. A
palm-house adjoins it.
The county asylum on the slope to
the east of the park was opened in 1816,
and has been several times enlarged; a
large supplementary building or annexe
was in 1882 erected to the north-east of
it on part of the former race-course.
Adjoining it a fragment of the old moor
remains untouched. Nearer the town is
the cemetery, opened in 1855. A lane
by the asylum, connecting Wyresdale and
Quernmore Roads, is called Fenham Carr Lane, preserving an old name; it is the boundary of the
township there.
Along the river-side is a broad street, St. George's
Quay, at which small vessels can discharge. The
Fishery Board offices are there. One part of the
quay is lined with ancient warehouses, among which
stands the former custom-house, now a factory. The
appearance of decay at this point affords a curious
contrast to the animation of the town in general.
From the quay a narrow winding lane, exhibiting
the type of old Lancaster streets, leads up to Church
Street; there are a number of old houses in it. The
quay and North Road are connected by Cable Street,
in which are the Probate Court and the County
Court.
The oilcloth industry has been mentioned above;
the principal works stand on the marsh to the northwest of the town and along the canal. The chief
furniture factory is near Green Ayre station. In
addition the town possesses stained-glass works, pictureprint works, corn-mills, brewery and other industries.
The modern Volunteer movement quickly influenced Lancaster, a rifle corps being sanctioned in
May 1859. There are now a battalion of the
King's Own Royal Lancaster Regiment and a
battery of the 2nd West Lancashire R.F.A. Brigade.
There are political, social and sporting clubs, as
well as literary, musical and scientific societies. An
Oddfellows' Hall was built in 1844; though it has
long been used for other purposes, there are still
many lodges of Oddfellows and other friendly
societies.

The Ashton Memorial
Two newspapers are issued every Friday: the
Guardian, which was founded in 1837, (fn. 21) and the
Observer, (fn. 22) the first penny paper, 1860. Others
have been started at different times, but have
ceased to appear. (fn. 23)
Manors
It is recorded in Domesday Book that
in 1066 there were two manors, LANCASTER and KIRK-LANCASTER,
members of Earl Tostig's fee or lordship of Halton.
They were assessed as six and two plough-lands
respectively. (fn. 24) They were granted to Count Roger
of Poitou, who made them the head of his possessions
in the neighbourhood, so forming an honour which
derived its name from Lancaster. As the assessment
of all or most of the manors hereabouts was reduced
by half within a century from the Conquest, it is
probable that the 'one plough-land' held of the lord
of the honour by the burgesses was the Kirk-Lancaster
of 1066. Its history is traced below.
The larger manor, Lancaster proper, seems to be
the Old Lancaster of later documents, and was much
subdivided. Part was probably added to Hotun to
form Quernmore Forest, part was granted in alms, (fn. 25)
but much was held in serjeanty by those responsible
for the maintenance of the castle and other works. (fn. 26)
Some of these estates perhaps escheated to the lord,
as did some of the burgages, (fn. 27) or became subdivided
or on the other hand merged in other holdings; but
two of them can be traced down to the 17th century,
viz. Highfield and Bolron or Bowerham.
HIGHFIELD was in 1212 held by Roger son of
John, whose duty or office it was to sharpen the
plough-shares for two of the lord's manors each year. (fn. 28)
This service was afterwards commuted to a rent of 5s.
About 1222 the land was held by Walter son of
Walter the Smith and William son of William the
Smith. (fn. 29) William son of William son of Juliana was
the tenant in 1297, paying 5s. rent, (fn. 30) and was still
living in 1314, when as Master William son of
William son of Juliana he granted a burgage to Adam
le Purser and Joan his wife at 12d. rent. (fn. 31)
Soon afterwards the estate passed to William de
Slene in right of Alice his wife, he being tenant in
1323 by rendering 5s. a year in lieu of the ancient
service of sharpening the lord's plough-shares. (fn. 32) He
died the following year, leaving a son and heir named
William, only seven years old. (fn. 33) Alice as widow put
forward a claim for dower in 1325. (fn. 34) She demised
a burgage in 1329, the services required from the
occupier being a rent of 9s. and the finding of two
labourers to reap for one day. (fn. 35) For her second
husband she married John de Lancaster, husband
and wife and William her son being concerned in
a lease of land in 1338. (fn. 36)
William the son was still tenant in 1346, (fn. 37) but
was dead in 1358, when Thomas de Goosnargh
claimed a rent of 6s. 8d. in Lancaster from John
Grelley, Isabel his wife—who, as will be seen, was
the widow of William—and William son of William
de Slene. (fn. 38) William de Slene died in 1401 holding
burgages in Lancaster by a rent of 10s.; nothing is
said of Highfield. A son Robert, who is mentioned,
must have died before him, for no heir was known. (fn. 39)
There appear to have been two co-heirs, Isabel and
Alice, but their kinship is not recorded. Isabel was
the wife of Robert Brockholes in 1427 (fn. 40) and of John
Gardiner, possibly the benefactor, in 1440 (fn. 41) ; she
does not seem to have left issue. Alice was wife of
Oliver Southworth in 1448. (fn. 42) The descent is not
clear, but in the same year various burgages formerly
belonging to Oliver and Alice Southworth were
transferred to Margaret wife of Matthew Southworth,
with remainders to Robert, Thomas, Richard and
John, brothers of Matthew, and then to the right
heirs of Alice. (fn. 43) Matthew Southworth, Margaret
his wife and Robert his son and heir in 1472 gave
a lease of a burgage, &c., in Marketgate to Thomas
Estaryk for twenty years. (fn. 44)
The Southworths are later found to have held
Highfield, but the tenure became confused with that
of the other property they had in the town. Robert
Southworth, who in 1494 sold
the marriage of his son Robert
to Thomas Lawrence, (fn. 45) died
in or before 1516, when the
younger Robert, the heir, was
thirty years old; the estate
in Lancaster, Bolton, Oxcliffe
and Ellel was held by a rent
of 12s. 10d. in all. (fn. 46) Robert
Southworth of Highfield was
defendant in 1525–6. (fn. 47)
George Southworth next
occurs; he sold various lands
between 1552 and 1576, (fn. 48)
and died in 1586 holding
Highfield and seven burgages in Lancaster of
the queen in burgage. (fn. 49) In 1580 George Southworth, then aged sixty-eight, deposed that he had
removed the mill which stood on his land to a
spot on the common adjoining his house, 'because
it was a fitter place for the wind,' paying 2d. a year
to the mayor and bailiffs of Lancaster, because the
common was part of the fee farm of the town of
Lancaster. The mill was afterwards blown down
and broken to pieces. (fn. 50)

Southworth. Argent a cheveron between three crosslets sable.
Thomas Southworth, the son and heir, who was
twenty-four years of age, succeeded, but only for a
few years; he died in 1595, his son George being
but six years old. (fn. 51) George Southworth of Highfield and Mary his wife were on the recusant rolls in
1622. (fn. 52) When he died in 1636 the tenure of
Highfield and other property in Lancaster was
described as in free burgage by 8s. rent. (fn. 53) His son
and heir Thomas was fourteen years of age, and as
'Mr. Thomas Southworth of the Highfield' was
buried on 4 April 1673. (fn. 54) The family gradually
decayed in fortune, but retained Highfield for half
a century more. William Stout thus relates the
end:—
In this year (1728) Thomas Southworth of the Highfield in
Lancaster died, being the last of an ancient and wealthy family
of that name there, but reduced to a small estate. He left a
widow but no child; was a man of weak capacity and made no
will, and his widow expected the estate, seeing there was none
to claim as heir. I had long ago known an uncle of his in
London called Robert Southworth, who was poor; upon which
I writ to my friends in London to inquire for him but found
he was dead. But upon further inquiry found that there was
one Francis Southworth, another uncle, at London, who was
also dead but had left a son called Francis, whom my friends
found out, who came here to claim the estate. Whom the
widow made some scruple to admit at first, but was obliged to
admit upon a composition; and he returned to London and
gave me a power to sell the estate, which I did to Robert
Gibson, esq., for above £300. (fn. 55)
The house and land around it are now held in trust
for a local charity. (fn. 56)
BOLRON, assessed as one plough-land, was held
by masonry—that is, the holder was to find a mason
to work at the castle when required, receiving 1d. a
day as wages. Vivian de Bolron is the earliest of
the tenants on record; he was a benefactor of
Cockersand Abbey, giving the canons an acre of land
and whatever pertained to the 5 oxgangs of Halewadris. (fn. 57) His son Ralph in 1212 held Bolron by
the service described, (fn. 58) and still retained possession in
1224. (fn. 59) He gave land in Old Lancaster to the
priory, (fn. 60) and like his father was a benefactor to
Cockersand. (fn. 61) Maud the daughter and heir of Ralph
paid 1 mark on succession in 1241, (fn. 62) and her son
Ralph followed her by 1245, (fn. 63) when he paid ½ mark
as relief. It was probably about this time that the old
service was commuted to an annual payment of 5s. (fn. 64)
There is then a defect in the evidence. Thomas
de Bolron was plaintiff in 1292, (fn. 65) and paid 5s. rent,
doing suit for 4 oxgangs of land and paying 3s. 8d.
for another oxgang. (fn. 66) Hawise de Bolron, widow of
Thomas, was tenant in 1323, (fn. 67) and in 1346 William
de Bolron was recorded as holding a messuage and
60 acres in Bolron by the ancient serjeanty. (fn. 68)
Robert de Bolron was from 1338 onwards Mayor of
Lancaster, the first probably to hold that office, and
scattered notices of the family occur, insufficient for
tracing the descent with precision. (fn. 69) Thomas Bolron
in 1496 made a feoffment of six messuages in Lancaster,
Aldcliffe and Scotforth, (fn. 70) and probably died soon
afterwards, leaving as heir a daughter Margaret, wife
of Henry Duckett. She died in 1501 and her
husband in 1506, and livery of the tenement in
Bolron, held by masonry, was granted to their grandson Richard Duckett (son of Richard) in 1519. (fn. 71)
Richard died in 1525, leaving a son and heir William,
eight years old. (fn. 72) The estate at that time was called
a manor. (fn. 73) The next steps are not clear; Bolron
was probably acquired by Thomas Covell, and was
in 1630 in the hands of John Brockholes. (fn. 74) It
appears to have been forfeited and sold during the
Civil War time with the lands of Thomas Brockholes
of Heaton. (fn. 75)
Three oxgangs of land in Bolron had before 1200
been given to Cockersand Abbey by Benedict Gernet,
who had acquired it from Vivian father of Ralph de
Bolron. (fn. 76) Benedict also gave 3 acres in the same
vill, for which the brethren were to pay the chief
rent of 1s. (fn. 77) They should have paid 6s. 8d. a year
to the Earl of Lancaster for the 3 oxgangs, but
obtained an acquittance. (fn. 78) After the Suppression
the Cockersand estate was held by the Crown for a
time, but was in 1609–10 sold to George Salter and
others. (fn. 79) Some other early alienations were made in
Bolron, and rents were fixed in 1247–51, including
the following: To the brethren of St. Leonard of
York, 4 acres at 12d.; to the Prior of Lancaster,
1 acre at 4d.; and to William the Gardener the
same. (fn. 80) In later times Penny's almshouse had the
farm called Bowrams, (fn. 81) but this was sold to the War
Office about 1875 for barracks. The Coulston
trustees also own part of Bowerham.
William son of Matthew in 1212 held a messuage
and land by gardenry (fn. 82) ; he is afterwards called
William the Gardener, (fn. 83) and may have been an
ancestor of John Gardiner the benefactor, but the
surname is common in the district. The service was
afterwards commuted to 5s. a year, by which the
estate was held in 1297 by the heir of William the
Gardener. (fn. 84) William de Slene held it in 1346, (fn. 85)
and thus it may have become merged in Highfield.
Also in 1212 Roger the White (or Blundell) held
8 acres by being carpenter in the castle, (fn. 86) and Ralph
de Torrisholme by grant of William de Lancaster I
held half a plough-land, for which he rendered 4s.
yearly. (fn. 87) Philip le Blund was carpenter in fee in
1297, (fn. 88) and still held in 1323, (fn. 89) while William son
of Philip the Carpenter was a plaintiff in 1292. (fn. 90)
In 1346 William Philip, possibly the same, held a
messuage and 5 acres in Arnway Close by carpentry. (fn. 91)
The Torrisholme estate is probably that afterwards
held by Parles and Gentyl, (fn. 92) and then by Mercer. (fn. 93)
In 1346 Amery de Hest held a burgage, &c., with
land in Swanholmefield, and rents of 4s. and 1s. 6d.
from two burgages by charter of the lord (unnamed),
being bound to acquit the lord against Sir Nicholas
de Stapleton as to 4s. and against the Prior of
Lancaster as to 2s. due from the tenement, and to
do suit to the court of Lancaster in the manner of
burgesses. (fn. 94)
The Millfield rendered 5s. a year to the king in
1226, (fn. 95) and was held in 1323 by many free tenants,
who in all paid 5s. a year to the earl. (fn. 96)
The great Lancaster family, lords of Wyresdale
and Kendal, do not appear to have held anything in
the town from which they derived a surname beyond the half plough-land already mentioned. The local
surname was used by other families in the place, (fn. 97)
while Caton, (fn. 98) Aldcliffe, (fn. 99) Skerton, (fn. 100) Wyresdale (fn. 101)
and other places (fn. 102) around also afforded surnames to
residents in the town. Others again used the name
of their business or occupation, as Cook or Keu, (fn. 103)
Purser, (fn. 104) Chanter, (fn. 105) and so on. (fn. 106) In some cases
an ancestor's Christian name was adopted for a
surname, as Lawrence (fn. 107) or Lambert. (fn. 108)
Thomas Singleton, bailiff of the escheatery of the
town of Lancaster, rendered account in 1441 of
£8 4s. 7d. due from ancient rents and from various
burgages and plats of land which had escheated to
the king as duke from various causes. Among other
matters it shows that in Arnway Close was the
messuage held by carpentry formerly belonging to
William Philip, as above, and then to Robert Bolron.
One of the escheated plats was the site for a grange
in a lane called 'Between the Barns'; another was
a grange left unoccupied through the burning of the
town. Various allowances reduced the net receipt
to £7 4s. 3d. (fn. 109)
In Tudor times the families of Starkie (fn. 110) and
Stodagh (fn. 111) seem to have been of importance; the
estates of the former were acquired by Shireburne of
Stonyhurst (fn. 112) and those of the latter by Southworth
of Highfield. (fn. 113) The estates of Holland (fn. 114) and
Balderston, (fn. 115) here as elsewhere, came to the Earl of
Derby and a number of heirs. (fn. 116) Many of the
greater families of the county occur. (fn. 117) The inquisitions of the 16th and 17th centuries afford further
information as to the holders of burgages and lands
in the town; in them the tenure is usually stated
to be 'in burgage' or 'in socage.' (fn. 118)
The family of Toulson or Townson was once of
note. George Townson died in 1638 holding a
messuage in Highfield of the king by knight's service;
his heir was a daughter Isabel, aged fourteen. (fn. 119) He
was perhaps the George Tomson of Lancaster who
paid £10 in 1631 on declining knighthood. (fn. 120)
Another of the family acquired the advowson of the
vicarage and was probably founder of almshouses
formerly standing at the south entrance of Penny
Street. (fn. 121) Henry Porter, a justice of the peace,
recorded a pedigree in 1665. (fn. 122) He was a member
of the Presbyterian Classis in the Commonwealth
time, and was grandson of the Henry Porter who
was vicar from 1582 to 1609. In more recent
times the names of Fenton, (fn. 123) Higgin, (fn. 124) Sherson (fn. 124a)
and Whalley (fn. 125) may be recorded as those of prominent families.
In addition to the local priory, (fn. 126) friary (fn. 127) and
hospital, (fn. 128) the abbeys of Furness (fn. 129) and Cockersand (fn. 130)
and the priories of Cartmel (fn. 131) and Conishead (fn. 132) held
burgages and land in the town; so also did the
Knights of St. John of Jerusalem. (fn. 133)
Lancaster Marsh, beside the Lune, was vested in
the corporation from ancient
times and the freemen had
right of pasturage there. It
became the custom to divide
the area and assign portions
to the senior freemen living
in the town. By an Act of
1795 for embanking and
draining the marsh (fn. 134) the
pasture rights were extinguished, but the profits of
the inclosure were to be
divided among the eighty
oldest freemen or their
widows. By an Act of 1864 part was sold, and by
a further Act of 1900 the eighty beneficiaries are to
receive £13 a year each. (fn. 135)

Porter. Sable three bells argent a canton or.
Borough
The creation of the borough of
LANCASTER may have been due
to Count Roger of Poitou, who would
thus have his castle, monastery and borough in the
place he chose to make the
head of his lordship, but no
charter is known earlier than
that of John Count of Mortain
in 1193. This charter with
many others is still in the
possession of the corporation;
but as early as 1496–7 the
mayor and burgesses, in petitioning for a confirmation of
their liberties, alleged that
their ancient charters had
been lost or destroyed. (fn. 136)

Borough of Lancaster. Per fesse azure and gules, in chief a fleur de lis and in base a lion passant gardant or.
Count John gave 'his burgesses of Lancaster'—already
there were burgesses and
therefore a borough—all the customs he had granted
to Bristol, including freedom from suit of mill, from
ploughing, reaping and other servile customs. He also
gave pasture right in the forest and liberty to take wood
for burning and building by view of the foresters. (fn. 137)
This charter was confirmed by John in 1199, just
after he became king, but the liberties of Northampton were substituted for those of Bristol. (fn. 138) These
charters do not mention or impose any fee-farm
rent, but from the Pipe Roll of 1204–5 it is known
that this rent was 20 marks. (fn. 139) No market or fair
was appointed. In 1212 it was recorded that the
burgesses held one plough-land in Lancaster of the
king in free burgage, rendering 20 marks yearly.
One Nicholas had granted two burgages in alms, and
the burgesses held seven burgages for which they
rendered no service to the king. (fn. 140) Henry III in
1227 confirmed the 1199 charter. (fn. 141) A reeve was
acting in 1246 (fn. 142) ; later one or more bailiffs are
found at the head of the burgesses. (fn. 143) A grant of
land was attested by 'all the court of Lancaster,' (fn. 144)
and in another charter the 'burmansmote' is named. (fn. 145)
A common seal was used. (fn. 146)
Edmund the king's brother in 1278 granted the
burgesses a much greater liberty of common in
Quernmore in return for their allowing him to
make a park there. (fn. 147)
The privileges enjoyed by prescription or by
charter in 1292 are made clear by the proceedings
under a writ of quo warranto in that year. The
bailiff and commonalty claimed to be free from toll,
stallage and other dues in all markets, also from
suit of county and wapentake; they had a free
borough, assize of bread and beer, pillory, cuckingstool, infangenthef and gallows, a weekly market on
Saturday and a yearly fair at Michaelmas—viz.
28 September—12 October. The first decision was
adverse to the borough, but on a further argument
the claim for market and fair was allowed. (fn. 148) In
1297 the burgesses were recorded as holding the
borough in fee, paying the earl 20 marks yearly. (fn. 149)
An advance was made by the borough in 1337
when Edward III, after confirming the charters of
1193, 1199 and 1227, allowed an additional market
every Wednesday and a second fair at Midsummer,
and permitted the burgesses to have a gild merchant
with all appurtenances. (fn. 150) This charter has been
lost. From that time the town has had a mayor,
Robert de Bolron acting in 1338 and many later
years. (fn. 151) The mayor and two bailiffs governed the
community, but in course of time twelve burgesses
known as the head or capital burgesses (fn. 152) acted with
them. The new market and fair roused in 1345 a
complaint from Robert de Nevill of Hornby that
they were to the injury of his ancient market and
fair at Arkholme (fn. 153) ; but in 1348 he withdrew all
actions and undertook not to disturb the mayor and
commonalty of Lancaster in future. (fn. 154) A Preston
man in 1346 complained that the bailiffs of Lancaster
had in May 1343 seized two of his cloaks at the
Marketstead there. The defendants said they took
the goods because plaintiff would not pay the toll of
½d. the load. The reeve and burgesses had held the
town in fee-farm of the king for 20 marks a year,
with right of fair, market and 'through toll' on
goods in transit any day; more recently there had
been a mayor and bailiffs. Judgement was given for
the defendants. (fn. 155) The liberties of the town appear
to have extended over Quernmore and Bulk. (fn. 156)
The next privilege obtained for the town was the
monopoly of sessions of the justices and assizes, which
was granted in 1362 by the king at the request of
his son John of Gaunt, recently created Duke of
Lancaster. (fn. 157) This privilege did not affect the
government of the borough, but was of much
advantage to the townsmen, who jealously guarded it
down to last century. About the same time a
borough code is said to have been drawn up, (fn. 158) but
no copy is known. The charters were confirmed
by Richard II in 1383 (fn. 159) and 1389, (fn. 160) by Henry IV
in 1400, (fn. 161) Henry V in 1413 and Henry VI in
1430. (fn. 162) To the charter of 1389 is appended a
note stating that the fine was fixed at 40s., because
the town had often been burned by mischance. No
new privileges were secured, but in 1410 Henry IV
ordered that the men of Lancaster were to be tollfree in Ireland if those of London, Bristol and
Northampton were, (fn. 163) and this seems from later
history to have been admitted. In 1416 a general
pardon was granted for breaches of the statute of
liveries, (fn. 164) and in consequence it was obtained by
the mayor (Richard Elslack), bailiffs and community
of Lancaster. (fn. 165) At the same time the town recovered possession of Deep Carrs. (fn. 166)
At the request of the burgesses (fn. 167) the king in
1432 allowed the mayor and the clerk under him
authority to record recognizances of debts, or
'statute merchant,' for the convenience of traders
frequenting the town. (fn. 168) The ancient mayor's seal,
still used occasionally, probably belongs to this time. (fn. 169)
The request may be an indication that the prosperity
of the town was on the wane, (fn. 170) and little is known
of it for the rest of the century, apart from Gardiner's
foundations of 1472–85. In 1498 the burgesses
were called upon to establish their liberties by a writ
of quo warranto. (fn. 171) About 1500 Henry VII warned
the townsmen against adopting the liveries of noblemen or gentlemen of the district, a practice which
led to many disorders. (fn. 172) Henry VIII in 1511
confirmed the ancient charters, (fn. 173) as did Elizabeth
in 1563, while Philip and Mary in 1557 once
more restricted the holding of sessions and assizes to
the county town, the privilege having been broken
through by Henry VIII and Edward VI. (fn. 174) A
code of the borough customs was drawn up in 1572;
it contains 142 articles. (fn. 175) The town possesses sets
of standard weights and measures dated 1588 and
1601.
The by-laws of 1572 begin with the mode of
choosing the mayor, bailiffs and twelve men (fn. 176) at
the head court held on the Thursday after St. Luke's
Day, and describe the duties of these officials,
among which was the proving of bread and ale. A
second head court was held on the Thursday after
Low Sunday. All the burgesses were bound to
attend the head courts. A court was held every
Thursday at the Tollbooth.
The choice of mayor by 'the Forty' was a somewhat complicated business. No stranger was to be
present during the process. The twelve burgesses
were from their own number to nominate—each by
himself—a suitable man for mayor, one who had
already served as mayor or bailiff. The unnominated
residue of the twelve were then to choose other burgesses
till the number of forty was reached, and these forty
elected the new mayor. Then twelve of the forty
chose one bailiff and the rest of the forty chose the
other. At the next ordinary court—i.e. a week
later—the twelve capital burgesses were appointed;
the new mayor nominated three or four of the old
twelve, and these filled up their number from the
general body of burgesses.
The mayor and his brethren were to have suitable
gowns, and the bailiffs were to keep their banquets at
Shrovetide and Easter. The mayor was not to sell
victuals during his year of office. The duties of the
minor officers were prescribed: the bellman seems to
have been keeper of the pound, and was forbidden to
'take away the three gates belonging to the town ' at
the end of his year of office; the swineherd was to
keep the swine of the town upon Quernmore both
summer and winter. (fn. 177) There were four keys to the
town chest: the mayor had one, the bailiffs another,
a burgess chosen by the commonalty a third and the
twelve kept the fourth. The mayor and bailiffs were
not to pay any bearwardens or minstrels out of the
town funds without the consent of four of the head
burgesses.
New burgesses were to be admitted only at a head
court, and had to pay an entrance fine of 20s.
to 40s. (fn. 178) They were to be 'of some science or craft,'
and sworn to exercise it. Freedom might be lost by
various offences. Stallengers were admitted to trade.
'Inmates,' vagabonds, unruly or vicious persons were
to be expelled from the town. 'If any troublesome
persons come to the town against the peace to vex
anybody of the town the common bell shall be rung
a good while or space'; hearing which the inhabitants
were to assemble 'arrayed in the best manner they
may for defence of their own bodies to arrest the disturbers.' In general every inhabitant was bound to
keep 'watch and ward,' and to pay 'scot and lot' as
he should be assessed. Innkeepers were not to refuse
to sell or to lodge ' any stranger that seemeth to be
honest and able to pay his expenses.' Ovens had to
be licensed.
The penalties for various offences were defined.
Freemen only were to be imprisoned in the tollbooth; disorderly persons in general must be placed
in the stock-house. Breach of by-laws was punished
by fine. For slander or brawling a man was to be
placed in the gibbet or pillory and a woman in the
cuckstool. The author of a 'brawl or hubleshowe'
was to be fined not less than 3s. 4d., the general fine
for breach of the peace; but an offence in the market
or in the mayor's presence cost double, and if blood
was shed the fine was 10s. for every wound. Unlawful
games were to be put away, and young men were
ordered to 'buy bows and arrows.'
Other rules dealt with the good order of the
streets, (fn. 179) offensive occupations, (fn. 180) the use of the bridge,
quarry and moor—the moor was to be driven once a
year—and the times when sheep, swine, &c., must be
kept out of the fields were defined. Offences against
fair trading were condemned, (fn. 181) but in the case of
dealings in malt buyers were quaintly bidden to 'let
their eye be their chapman.' A freeman had in some
cases a right of pre-emption.
James I in 1604 granted an entirely new charter. (fn. 182)
While confirming the ancient liberties, fairs, &c., in
general terms, he incorporated the town as a free
borough by the title of the mayor, bailiffs and commonalty, and declared them capable of holding land,
&c.; they were to have a common seal. The mayor
was to be elected according to ancient custom; he was
to act as justice of the peace and coroner. Thomas
Braithwaite was to be clerk for statute merchants;
after his death the common clerk was to act. A
recorder was appointed; Sir Thomas Hesketh was
the first, and the mayor and twenty-four burgesses
were to choose his successors. The same king in 1608
and 1621 confirmed the freedom from toll in other
markets. (fn. 183) The method of choosing the mayor by
the Forty had become difficult, and about the time
of the new charter an agreement was come to that
the mayor should be chosen in rotation from seven
burgesses who were the most capable to serve. (fn. 184)
Thenceforward the governing body consisted of the
mayor, eighteen head or capital burgesses (including
the six in turn for the mayoralty) and twelve burgesses
for the commonalty. By degrees the seven became
known as benchers or aldermen, but they were not
formally authorized before the charter of 1684. The
provision was, however, recorded in the by-laws of
1652. (fn. 185)
In 1650 the mayor and community redeemed the
ancient fee-farm rent of 20 marks by purchase from
the Commonwealth authorities, (fn. 186) and thus became
absolute lords of the manor. At the Restoration,
however, they deemed it wise, as an evidence of
loyalty, to surrender their purchase, and again paid
the 20 marks a year. (fn. 187) To this sum was added
£2 10s. for certain pasture land in Quernmore. (fn. 188)
The whole rent was in 1675 sold by trustees for the
Crown to Sir William Ellis, and he soon afterwards
sold to Ashhurst of Ashhurst. In 1691 the Hon.
Robert Boyle bequeathed the residue of his estate for
charitable uses, and Sir Henry Ashhurst, one of his
executors, out of this residue purchased the Lancaster
rent from Thomas Ashhurst in 1697. A charity for
poor freemen of the City of Oxford and for the
widows of freemen and others was founded, (fn. 189) and
the Corporation of Lancaster has since continued to
pay the two rents, less a deduction for land tax and
charges, to the Ashhursts of Waterstock and to the
Corporation of Oxford for the Boyle charity. (fn. 190) The
net sum of £12 16s. 10d. is now paid yearly. (fn. 191)
Charles II in 1663 granted a charter which was in
the main the same as that of 1604, but had some
verbal changes and new clauses. (fn. 192) The existence of
aldermen was incidentally recognized by a proviso that
the alderman who had last been mayor should be a
justice of the peace. The same king in 1684 gave
the borough a new charter, under which it was
governed for more than a century. It nominated a
complete corporation—mayor, recorder, seven aldermen, twelve capital burgesses and twelve burgesses for
the commonalty. Elections were to be made according to the custom of the preceding seven years. A
town clerk, a mace-bearer and two serjeants at mace
were also appointed. (fn. 193) In accordance with the desire
of James II a Presbyterian was elected mayor in April
1688 and two Roman Catholics were placed among
the aldermen. Later in the year the king, in view of
the storm of the Revolution, restored the charter and
liberty of election, and a fresh choice was made. (fn. 194)
A new charter was obtained in 1819. (fn. 195) A local
board of health, apparently a voluntary association,
had been formed in 1815 for watching the health of
the town. (fn. 196) The old corporation came to an end
through the Municipal Corporations Act of 1835, and
the present representative one succeeded. There are
continuous records from 1664.
A long series of records of the perambulations of
boundaries shows that down to 1809 it was the custom
to go round Quernmore and part of Caton and Bulk,
as well as Lancaster proper, on account of the ancient
common rights the burgesses had in the forest. (fn. 197) An
old plan shows Quernmore Common to the south of
the Park, extending as far east as Pott Yeats in Caton.
Friar Moss was at the southern point of the Park and
Lancaster Copyholds adjoined the eastern side of
Scotforth.
Under the Municipal Corporations Act of 1835
the town was divided into three wards, named Castle,
Queen's and St. Anne's, each with two aldermen and
six councillors. The first election of the councillors took
place on 26 December 1835, and the mayor was
elected at the first meeting, on New Year's Day 1836.
There were various difficulties to be overcome, some
relating to the officials of the old corporation and
others to the charitable funds in its control. The
arrangement of wards continued undisturbed for fifty
years, but in 1888 parts of Scotforth and Skerton were
added to the borough by an Act obtained in that year,
and the extended area was divided into six wards,
named Castle, Queen's, St. Anne's, Park, John o' Gaunt
and Skerton (fn. 198) ; each had an alderman and three
councillors, so that there was no increase in membership. The boundaries were again extended in 1900,
and two additional wards were formed, called Scotforth and Bulk, some of the old ward boundaries being
varied. Thus the council now consists of a mayor,
eight aldermen and twenty-four councillors. The
ancient tollbooth in the market-place was replaced
by a 'town hall' in 1668, and this in turn by what
is now the Old Town Hall in 1781–3 (fn. 198a) ; police
and fire brigade stations were afterwards added. The
present town hall, the gift of Lord Ashton to his
native town, stands in Dalton Square, and was opened
on 22 December 1909. It is a stately edifice, with
portico of six columns supporting a richly carved
pediment, and having a lofty central clock tower.
The interior is beautifully adorned and contains
accommodation for all the municipal officers. There
is also a large hall for public meetings. The architect
was the late Edward William Mountford, who died
in February 1908, soon after building commenced.
The arms used by the borough have varied from
time to time (fn. 199) ; those in use since about 1700 were
in 1907 formally authorized by the College of Arms.
The great mace was presented in 1702; there are
also a mayor's staff, presented by Thomas Fanshaw in
1613, a chain and badge given in 1878 (fn. 200) and various
articles of plate acquired at different dates from
1615 onwards. (fn. 201) Two ancient brass halberds are
in use.
The old borough court of pleas, though not abolished,
has been replaced in practice by the county court. (fn. 202)
The town had a recorder down to the establishment
of the new corporation in 1835. It now has a bench
of magistrates and a police force. The corporation is
the port sanitary authority, and as the burial board
controls the cemeteries. It began the waterworks at
Grizedale in Over Wyresdale in 1852 and in 1879
purchased the gasworks, which had been established
as a private venture in 1825 (fn. 203) ; an electric light
supply was also provided in 1892, and in 1903–4 an
electric tramway service, extending from Castle station
to Scotforth and to the Park.
The Storey Institute, built in 1887 by the late Sir
Thomas Storey, was presented to the town in 1893.
It was erected on the final site (1856) of the old
Mechanics' Institute, founded in 1825, and continues
its work. The School of Art, established in 1856, is
also accommodated in the building. The Municipal
Technical School is held there, and the free library
and reading rooms occupy part of the building. A
school board was formed in 1893.
The market, formerly held in the square to which
it gave a name, was removed to an open space behind
Market Street in 1846; this was enlarged and covered
over in 1880. An open vegetable market is still held
in Church Street on Saturdays. The cattle market
is in Thurnham Street. The tolls formerly charged
on goods entering the town were abolished in 1887,
Lord Ashton compensating the town for the loss of
revenue. The butter and grain markets were at one
time held under the town hall. The cheese fair was
in 1812 removed from the market-place to Dalton
Square, and in 1887 from the square to the new
market. This fair is still proclaimed annually with
some ceremony.
The park has been described above. Baths in
private ownership were built in 1803 on the north
side of Moor Lane. In 1852 the public baths were
in Thurnham Street. The present baths in Cable
Street were presented to the town in 1863 by Samuel
Gregson, at that time a member for the borough;
he died in 1865. The baths were enlarged in 1894.
An infectious diseases hospital was built on the Marsh
in 1880, and removed in 1891 to a site still further
down the river bank.
The town is the head of a rural district council
and poor law union. The workhouse, built in 1787
and altered and enlarged in 1890 and 1909, stands
on part of the old moor adjoining Williamson Park.
There was an older workhouse near the White Cross.
As has been stated already, the town sent two
burgesses to represent it in Parliaments from the reign
of Edward I to early in that of Edward III, and
again from 1529 to 1865. Under the Reform Act
of 1832 the boundary of the Parliamentary borough
was extended to include about half of Bulk and a
third of Skerton. The last election took place in
July 1865; but extensive corruption was proved, the
members returned were unseated, and in 1867 the
borough was disfranchised. By the Redistribution
Act of 1885 Lancaster became the head of a county
division returning one member. This division includes the greater portion of Lonsdale South of the
Sands and the north end of Amounderness.
Churches
The parish church (fn. 204) has already
been described at length. It has two
mission churches, St. George's on the
Marsh and another in Bulk, both of recent origin.
St. John's Church, the second connected with the
Church of England, was erected in 1754 on a piece
of land at the edge of the Green Ayre granted by
the corporation for the purpose in 1749–51; the
tower and spire were added in 1784. It was consecrated in 1755 and continued to be a chapel of
ease to the parish church until 1842, when a parish
was assigned to it. (fn. 205) The incumbents, styled vicars,
are nominated by the vicar of Lancaster. At one
time this was the corporation church. (fn. 206) St. Anne's,
Moor Lane, was built in 1796 by the Rev. Robert
Housman of Skerton as a church for the old
Evangelical party. To it also a parish was assigned
in 1842, (fn. 207) and the vicars are nominated by the vicar of
Lancaster. St. Thomas's, Penny Street, was founded
through some dispute about the services at the
parish church; it was built by subscription in 1841
and consecrated in 1845, a district having been
assigned to it in 1844. The patronage is now vested
in the Church Pastoral Aid Society. The Rev. John
Bone, incumbent from 1873 till his death in 1906,
did something to promote scientific studies in the
town. Christ Church, on the Moor, was built in
1855–7 by the above-named Samuel Gregson, whose
residence was close by. It was intended in part for
the people of the adjacent workhouse, but an ecclesiastical district was assigned to it in 1874. (fn. 208) In
connexion with it is the mission church of the Holy
Spirit. The patronage is vested in five trustees.
There are private chapels attached to Penny's Hospital, the County Asylum, Ripley's Hospital and the
Castle.
Methodism appeared in the town about the end of
the 18th century, and Lancaster was made the head
quarters of a circuit in 1794. Two cottages in
Damside Street, now a tobacco warehouse, were converted into a meeting-place, but in 1805 a better site
was obtained in Sulyard Street, and a chapel built
thereon was opened in 1806. The present large
church succeeded it in 1874; a mission room in
Lune Road is attached to it. The Independent
Methodists built their chapel in 1829; it still
remains in use. The Primitive Methodists appeared
in the town early in the century, and had in 1823 a
meeting-place in Under the Gardens, Damside. (fn. 209)
A chapel was built there in 1836, having also an
approach from Bridge Lane; but about 1862 it was
quitted for a new one in Moor Lane called Ebenezer,
rebuilt in 1895. The United Methodist Free Church
in Brock Street was built in 1869.
The first Baptists known here were the Sandemanians, who had a meeting-room in Friar Street in
1810 (fn. 210) ; they died out about 1840. Other Baptists
attended the Congregational Church till 1862, when
they began separate services in the Assembly Rooms.
Their first church was built in White Cross Street in
1872, (fn. 211) but was replaced by the present one in
Nelson Street in 1896.
Modern Congregationalism here, as in many other
places in the county, began with the turning of the
old Presbyterians from Trinitarian to Unitarian doctrine in the course of the 18th century. A congregation was formed about 1766, and a chapel site
in High Street was purchased in 1772; the most
conspicuous promoter was John Dawson of Aldcliffe. (fn. 212)
In 1872 several of the more active workers determined to open a mission at the east side of the town,
thus marking the completion of the century. After
a short time a house in St. Leonardgate was altered
into a chapel, but on its becoming too small in
1877 the Palatine Hall was used until the present
Centenary Church in Stonewell was opened in
1879. (fn. 213) It has a branch chapel in Bowerham
opened in 1905. (fn. 214)
A Church of Christ meets in Balmoral Road; the
cause was founded in 1889 and the building opened
in 1897. The Presbyterian Church of England,
founded in 1899, has a temporary place of worship.
The Jubilee Town Mission, established in 1887, has
several mission rooms. The Catholic Apostolic
Church, or Irvingites, began services about 1875 and
still continue them.
The Society of Friends originated in the middle of
the 17th century through the efforts of George Fox
himself, as his Journal shows. A meeting-house on
the present site was built in 1677. Its use was
interfered with in 1680, when the mayor 'ordered
the meeting-house door to be locked and set a guard
upon it on the First-day weekly, to prevent a meeting; yet the Friends met in the lane before it at the
usual time, without disturbance for some time.' (fn. 215)
In 1689 a house was licensed for the Quakers' meeting-place. (fn. 216) In 1708 the present building on the
old site succeeded. (fn. 217) The Friends have an ancient
burial-ground at Golgotha, where John Lawson, the
friend of Fox, was buried in 1689. They have also
a school and a hall for meetings, &c.
In a Puritan town there must in 1660–2 have
been many sympathizers with the disestablished
Presbyterianism. It is known that they had a meetingplace even during the time of repression, (fn. 218) and during
the brief interval of religious liberty under James II
the mayor went publicly to the Presbyterian chapel. (fn. 219)
This was probably the 'upper chamber over a warehouse in Moor Lane' which was in 1689 certified
as the meeting-place of the Presbyterians by Augustine
Greenwood, Thomas Hodgson and William Townson. (fn. 220) The minister at that time (1689–1701) was
John Carrington, concerned in the Surey Demoniac
exorcisms. (fn. 221) Later perhaps came a chapel or meeting-place at the upper corner of Bridge Lane and
Church Street, as is indicated in Binns' plan of 1821,
but nothing further is known of this. In the 18th
century there was certainly a chapel in St. Nicholas'
Street, (fn. 222) and this was rebuilt in 1786. The congregation became Arian about 1760, and then Unitarian,
and still remains so. (fn. 223) In the chapel are monuments
to the Gaskells of Clifton and Wakefield.
During the long period of proscription adherents
to Roman Catholicism were frequently able to hear
mass in secret and find a priest to minister to them
at such residences as Aldcliffe and Dolphinlee, possibly
in the houses of the county gentry in the town itself.
A few convicted recusants lived there in the time of
Charles II. (fn. 224) In 1687, when one of the judges of
assize was a Roman Catholic, mass was said in the
schoolhouse, and he was present at it (fn. 225) ; and on
Binns' plan the house at the lower corner of Bridge
Lane and Church Street is marked as the site of a
former chapel, but nothing is known to confirm
this. A priest ventured to settle in the town about
1730, and a 'barn' at the rear of his house in
St. Leonardgate, at the head of what is now Mason
Street, was used as a chapel. Nicholas Skelton, the
earliest priest there whose name is certainly known,
was imprisoned in 1745 on the suppression of the
Jacobites. He died in 1766, and the following year
the number of 'Papists' was returned to the Bishop
of Chester as 650, with James Tyrer as priest. (fn. 226)
Registers have been kept from 1784. Dr. John
Rigby (fn. 227) built a more fitting chapel in Dalton Square
in 1797–9. (fn. 228) In 1859 the present church of
St. Peter was built on the hill-side, some little distance
below the old place of execution, where, as already
told, fifteen priests and laymen suffered death for
their religion between 1584 and 1646. The church
has a beautiful spire, rising to a height of 240 ft.,
and has been much enlarged and adorned since its
erection. St. Walburga's Convent adjoins it; the
inmates, Sisters of Mercy from Mount Vernon, Liverpool, teach in the schools. The sisters of St. Catherine
nurse the sick and instruct the ignorant. The sisters
of Nazareth have a house for poor children and others
on the southern border of the town. (fn. 229)
The Plymouth Brethren have had meeting-places.