THE BOROUGH OF MARLBOROUGH
The borough, (fn. 1) first referred to in 1086 when
it paid a third of its revenues to the Crown, (fn. 2) was
founded on a royal estate which extended from
the Kennet north and south over downland. In
the 11th century both borough and estate were
called Marlborough ('barrow of Maerla'), perhaps from the prehistoric earthwork which
formed the motte of Marlborough Castle. (fn. 3) The
church recorded at Marlborough in 1086 may
have been Preshute church. Preshute parish
extended over the rest of the royal estate including Marlborough Castle, and largely (until the
16th century, entirely) enclosed the borough. (fn. 4)
Marlborough College was opened in 1843 in a
house, later an inn, built in Preshute on the castle
site from 1688. (fn. 5)
The borough lay on a south-west and northeast axis. (fn. 6) In the 19th century and earlier it was
bounded south-east by the Kennet, south-west
by Marlborough Castle, and north-west partly
by Back Lane, which followed the line of part of
the town ditch mentioned in the 16th century, (fn. 7)
and Cross, earlier Dark, Lane. On the northeast Marlborough was until the 16th century
separated from Preshute by a boundary perhaps
marked by Blowhorn Street and Stonebridge
Lane where, on the west side of the lane near the
junction with the road called St. Martin's, the
borough bank is visible. (fn. 8) East of that boundary
'new land' belonged to Marlborough before
1252. (fn. 9) It remained in Preshute parish as the
chapelry of St. Martin until c. 1548 (fn. 10) when its
transfer to Marlborough extended the borough
to the river Og. Marlborough Common, given by
King John to the borough for pasture, (fn. 11) and Port
field, acquired by the burgesses in the Middle
Ages as arable land, remained in Preshute (fn. 12)
until 1934, (fn. 13) but both are treated as part of
Marlborough in this article.
The borough comprised 198 a. (80 ha.),
divided on the line of Kingsbury Street between
St. Mary's parish, 117 a. (47 ha.), on the east and
St. Peter's, 81 a. (33 ha.), on the west. (fn. 14) Land
around Preshute church, other land south-west
and the St. Margaret's district south-east of
Marlborough, and the western edge of Marlborough Common, were added to the borough in
1901 as the civil parish of Preshute Within, 400 a.
(162 ha.). (fn. 15) In 1925 Preshute Within merged
with the civil parishes of St. Mary and St. Peter
to form the civil parish of Marlborough. The
addition of 46 a. (19 ha.) from Mildenhall, 32 a.
(13 ha.) from North Savernake (both pieces being
part of the areas transferred to those parishes
from Preshute in 1901), and a further 824 a.
(333 ha.) from Preshute in 1934 (fn. 16) gave Marlborough an area of 605 ha. (1,496 a.). (fn. 17)
Settlement in the borough has been on the
clay-with-flints deposits north of High Street
and St. Martin's, at c. 150 m., and, at c. 137 m., on
the gravel and alluvium of the Kennet and Og
south of those streets. The line marked by High
Street and St. Martin's is that of the only chalk
outcrop in the borough. (fn. 18)
A Romano-British burial and pottery near Tin
Pit and coins found elsewhere in Marlborough
attest Roman activity. (fn. 19) The Old Bowling Green
at the north-west end of Kingsbury Street is an
embanked rectangular enclosure of medieval or
later date. (fn. 20)
The London-Bath road ran through Marlborough but from c. 1706 until c. 1752 it was
diverted south of the borough, and re-entered it
across Castle Bridge, mentioned in the 16th
century and earlier. (fn. 21) In 1726 the section from
Speenhamland (Berks.) to Marlborough and in
1743 the section from Marlborough to Beckhampton in Avebury were turnpiked. (fn. 22) The road
began to decline as a coach route in 1840 when the
G.W.R. opened a railway line from London to
Swindon. (fn. 23) Although much traffic was diverted
to the London and south Wales motorway
opened 12 km. north of Marlborough in 1971, (fn. 24)
the road was still a main east-west route in 1982.
Castle Bridge, renamed Cow Bridge in the 19th
century, (fn. 25) but also called the Pewsey Road bridge
and Duck's Bridge in the 20th, (fn. 26) was rebuilt as a
concrete beam bridge to designs by F. S. Cutler
in 1925. (fn. 27) A road which ran north from Marlborough to join the Roman road from Mildenhall
to Cirencester possibly followed the line of Barn
Street, the Green, and Herd Street from London
Road. The Kennet was forded where it left
Marlborough: (fn. 28) a bridge, called Culbridge c.
1300 and Cow Bridge in the 16th century and
1752, had been built there by 1300. (fn. 29) In 1773 the
main road from Swindon ran by way of the Old
Eagle in Ogbourne St. Andrew and through the
borough as Kingsbury Street and the Parade to
join the Andover and Salisbury road at the south
end of Barn Street. (fn. 30) The road was turnpiked in
1762. (fn. 31) The Parade was replaced as the main
thoroughfare in 1800 by New Road, so called in
1838 and earlier. (fn. 32) Another road from Swindon
through Ogbourne St. George, which entered
Marlborough as Port Hill, was turnpiked in
1819 (fn. 33) and became the main road to Swindon.
Cow Bridge, the name of which was transferred
to Castle Bridge in the 19th century, (fn. 34) was resited
when the Salisbury road in Preshute was diverted
eastwards in 1821 (fn. 35) and was called London Road
bridge in 1982. A road from Hungerford (Berks.)
through the Kennet valley by Ramsbury and
Mildenhall entered Marlborough along St.
Martin's. In 1675 that road was used by some
travellers and coaches rather than the LondonBath road. (fn. 36) Among the smaller bridges which
linked Marlborough with Preshute was New
Bridge, so called in the 16th century and 1825 but
called Stonebridges in 1826, (fn. 37) at the south end of
Stonebridge (formerly Newbridge) Lane. (fn. 38) The
railways which served Marlborough from 1864
and 1881 to 1964 lay outside the borough. (fn. 39)

Marlborough boundary extensions
Marlborough was the fifth most highly taxed
borough in the county in 1334. (fn. 40) Its 462 poll-tax
payers constituted the fifth largest fiscal unit in
Wiltshire in 1377. (fn. 41) Surnames of the members of
small Irish and French communities at Marlborough in 1440 indicate their activity in the
tanning, gloving, and cloth industries. (fn. 42) In 1545
and 1576 there were 47 and 70 people assessed for
taxation. (fn. 43) From then until the end of the 17th
century, when it lost ground to Devizes, Marlborough may have maintained a position in the
county second only to Salisbury. (fn. 44) In 1801
Marlborough had 2,367 inhabitants, (fn. 45) and was
clearly more populous than Westbury, probably
Calne, and possibly Chippenham. (fn. 46) That number was nearly evenly apportioned between the
two Marlborough parishes. The population grew
until 1871 when of the 3,660 inhabitants 2,004
lived in St. Mary's and 1,656, including 229
Marlborough College pupils, in St. Peter's. (fn. 47)
Numbers declined to 3,046 in 1901. The addition
of Preshute Within to the borough increased
Marlborough's population, which had reached
4,401 by 1911: 1,289 lived in Preshute Within,
1,677 in St. Mary's parish, and 1,435 in St.
Peter's. The population declined from 1911 to
1931 when the particularly low total of 3,492 was
attributed to the temporary absence of Marlborough College pupils. (fn. 48) The addition of more
land from Preshute and Mildenhall in 1934
increased the population. In 1951 the enlarged
borough had 4,557 inhabitants, 6,108 in 1971. (fn. 49)
Numbers had declined to 5,771 by 1981 when
Marlborough was the eleventh largest town in
Wiltshire. (fn. 50)
General eyres were held at Marlborough in the
13th century, (fn. 51) and in 1280 the transfer of the
county court thither from Wilton was considered. (fn. 52) Forest eyres were often held at Marlborough in the 14th and 15th centuries. (fn. 53) County
quarter sessions were held there in 1383 or
earlier, in 1660 and later at Michaelmas, (fn. 54) until
abolished by Act of 1971. (fn. 55)
The town supported the parliamentary cause
during the Civil War. It was captured on 5
December 1642 by royalist forces from Oxford
and houses and property were destroyed. (fn. 56)
Charles I in 1644 quartered his troops on the
downs north of the town. (fn. 57) Marlborough was
reoccupied by parliamentary forces in 1645. (fn. 58)
Marlborough gave its name to a suffragan see
established in 1534. (fn. 59) A bishop suffragan of
Marlborough was appointed in 1537 to assist the
bishop of Salisbury, (fn. 60) but the title afterwards
lapsed. It was revived in 1888 when a bishop
suffragan of Marlborough was appointed to assist
the bishop of London but lapsed in 1919. (fn. 61)
Walter Map, who stayed at Marlborough
Castle with Henry II in 1182, commenting on
Marlborough's lack of sophistication, told a story
that whoever drank from a particular spring there
would thereafter speak bad, or 'Marlborough',
French. (fn. 62) The same rusticity perhaps produced
'Marlborough-handed' as a local adjective meaning left-handed or clumsy. (fn. 63)
Cardinal Wolsey was ordained priest in St.
Peter's church in 1498. (fn. 64) Henry Sacheverell was
born at Marlborough in 1674, (fn. 65) the son of Joshua
Sacheverell, rector of St. Peter's church. (fn. 66) The
writer and dramatist John Hughes (d. 1720) was
born in 1677 in Marlborough where his grandfather William Hughes, who had been ejected
from St. Mary's vicarage in 1662, remained as
a dissenting minister and schoolmaster. (fn. 67) Sir
Michael Foster (d. 1763), born in the town in
1689 and educated at the grammar school,
became a judge of King's Bench. (fn. 68) Walter Harte
(d. 1774), a writer on miscellaneous subjects,
may have been born in Marlborough and certainly attended the grammar school. Three of the
Merriman family, all born in Marlborough,
became medical men of note in London, Samuel
(1731–1818) and his nephews Samuel (1771–
1852) and John (1774–1839). (fn. 69) Thomas Hancock
(d. 1865), founder of the British indiarubber
industry, and his brother Walter (d. 1852),
pioneer of steam locomotives, were born in
Marlborough. (fn. 70)

Marlborough street plan, 1981
The town lies where two main routes cross, the
London-Bath road forming High Street and at
one time St. Martin's, and the SalisburySwindon road formerly taking two possible
routes, one along the Parade and Kingsbury
Street, the other along Barn Street and Herd
Street. The crossing of the Kennet by the
Salisbury-Swindon road was shared by an
alternative route from London which by the late
17th century had taken some, and by the 18th all,
of the traffic from St. Martin's. (fn. 71) It is unknown
whether the rectilinear settlement marked by
Kingsbury Street and Herd Street is earlier or
later than the linear settlement along High
Street. High Street, mentioned in 1289, (fn. 72) follows
the line of the chalk outcrop, has a breadth of
32 m., (fn. 73) and is flanked by characteristically long
and narrow burgage tenements, (fn. 74) features which
suggest that it represents the borough established
by 1086. (fn. 75) From the 15th century it contained
many inns. (fn. 76) It may once have run the full 900 m.
between the Green, where its line crosses that of
Herd Street and Barn Street, and the castle, but
within that length a church had been built by
1223 (fn. 77) at each end on the line of the middle of the
street; each church lies within a churchyard, and
St. Mary's churchyard, at the east end, is enclosed by houses. The Green was mentioned in
1289, when the 'new land' north-east of it had
been built on, formed a ward of the borough, and
was crossed by the highway later called St.
Martin's. (fn. 78) Land in Barn Street was leased for
building in the later 14th century, (fn. 79) and Herd
Street was mentioned in the earlier 15th. (fn. 80) North
of St. Mary's church Silverless Street, called
Silver Street in 1536 (fn. 81) and 1540, (fn. 82) Silverless
Street in 1582, (fn. 83) may have been inhabited by the
Jews who lived in Marlborough in the 13th
century. (fn. 84) North-east of the Green, Blowhorn (or
Pylat) Street, Coldharbour (or St. Martin's)
Lane, and Bay (or Tin) Pit, were mentioned in
the 16th century. Kingsbury Street north-west
of St. Mary's church was mentioned in the 15th
century. (fn. 85) Its south-eastern continuation was
called the Marsh in the 15th century, by which
time it may have been built on, (fn. 86) and c. 1900, (fn. 87)
the Parade in 1982. The lanes and passages
between the burgage plots on the south side of
High Street included Figgins Lane, called Dame
Isabel's Lane in 1320 (fn. 88) and Dame Isabel's or
Lovell's Lane in 1652. (fn. 89) To the north Hyde Lane
was named after the Hyde family who lived there
in the 18th century: (fn. 90) it was called Blind Lane in
the 15th (fn. 91) and 18th centuries, (fn. 92) Sun Lane briefly
from c. 1900. (fn. 93) Hermitage Lane was mentioned
in the 1560s. (fn. 94) The bridewell built on the east
side of it in 1709 gave its name to Bridewell
Street, (fn. 95) that part of the Bath road west of St.
Peter's church.
There were four or more town crosses in the
16th century and six in the 17th. The high or
market cross, which c. 1570 stood at the east end
of High Street, (fn. 96) was rebuilt or much repaired in
1572–3. (fn. 97) It contained the market house. (fn. 98) A new
town hall and market house were erected on its
site c. 1630 and rebuilt in the mid 17th century,
the late 18th, and early 20th. (fn. 99) The corn cross,
frequently repaired in the 16th century and earlier
17th, (fn. 100) was in High Street, (fn. 101) near the Castle and
Ball inn outside which the corn market may have
been held. (fn. 102) St. Martin's cross may have stood
c. 1565 at the junction of St. Martin's, Coldharbour Lane, and Stonebridge Lane. (fn. 103) St.
Helen's cross, mentioned in 1584 and 1616, (fn. 104) may
have stood at the entrance to St. Martin's north
of the Green. (fn. 105) More cross, mentioned in 1625,
may have stood east of Bridewell Street; (fn. 106) the site
of St. Denis's cross, named in 1617, (fn. 107) is unknown.
Surviving buildings suggest that in the 17th
century most of High Street, the south end of
Kingsbury Street, Silverless Street, and the
north and west sides of the Green were continuously built up with two-storeyed timberframed and plastered houses of which some had
attics. The area north of High Street called the
Hermitage (fn. 108) had on it successive houses of that
name. One of them, on the west side of Hyde
Lane, was built in 1628 by John Lawrence,
whose initials and the date appear on the north
gable. (fn. 109) John Hyde, who became owner in
1740, (fn. 110) may have extended the house westwards
and refitted it. Further alterations were made by
Thomas Brudenell-Bruce, earl of Ailesbury, who
bought it c. 1812. (fn. 111) It was a boarding house of
Marlborough College in 1982.
The destruction caused on 28 April 1653 by a
fire which began in a tannery at the western end
of the south side of High Street (fn. 112) has been
described as nearly total, (fn. 113) but may have been
much less. Jettied houses of the mid 16th century
in High Street and other jettied houses at nos. 9
and 43 Kingsbury Street, (fn. 114) nos. 6–7 and 13–15
Silverless Street, and nos. 2–3 the Green survived it, and more pre-1653 houses may have
been obscured by later alterations. On the north
side of High Street no. 136 (the White Horse
bookshop) has moulded ceiling beams of the later
16th or earlier 17th century, and in no. 138
(Cavendish House) similar beams and a principal
chimney stack and fireplace of c. 1600 survive.
Following the fire of 1653 a national collection
was taken to enable the inhabitants to rebuild, (fn. 115)
but claims to compensation from it were met only
after delay. (fn. 116) The fact that John Evelyn could
describe Marlborough as 'new built' in June
1654 (fn. 117) suggests that recovery was by repair rather
than by reconstruction. Samuel Pepys, who in
1668 stayed at the White Hart, considered Marlborough to be 'a pretty fair town for a street or
two' and remarked upon the walk afforded by the
penthouses in High Street. (fn. 118) Short stretches,
apparently of 19th-century construction, survived in 1982 at the east end of both sides. (fn. 119)
The continued use of timber and thatch caused
other, less severe, fires in 1679 and 1690. (fn. 120) The
ineffective bylaw of 1622 under which a penalty
of £5 might be imposed on those who built
thatched houses with inadequate foundations or
chimney stacks (fn. 121) was reinforced in 1690 by a
private Act which forbade the thatching of
roofs. (fn. 122)
From the mid 18th century much of High
Street was either rebuilt in brick or refronted
with patterned or mathematical tiles. Characteristic of the buildings of the period were the
initialled and dated lead rainwater heads, such as
that of 1748 at no. 98 High Street, and the use of
red brick with dark headers. The upper floors of
most houses at the eastern end of the north side
of High Street were given canted bays, often of
two storeys, in the earlier 19th century. (fn. 123)
In the late 18th century groups and terraces of
houses, usually of red brick with slated roofs,
were built along St. Martin's, Kingsbury Street,
Barn Street, and elsewhere, possibly on new
sites. (fn. 124) Of those houses, only Kingsbury Hill
House in Kingsbury Street is large: it is dated
1774. Yards surviving from earlier inns on either,
but mostly on the south, side of High Street,
from which they were entered by passages, were
closely built up with cottages in the later 18th
century. Those, and other poor houses in the
town, were removed between 1925 and 1933, (fn. 125)
and replaced by council houses in the Lainey's
Close and St. Margaret's areas. (fn. 126) Marlborough
College expanded west of High Street in the 19th
century and the 20th, and most building, both
council and private, has taken place in the roads
running north and south of St. Martin's and in
the St. Margaret's area transferred to the borough
in 1901. The only substantial buildings between
High Street and London Road bridge are in the
Parade. Katharine House, formerly a rope
factory, is of the 16th century, Wye House, built
c. 1800 at the south end of Barn Street, was the
home of the architect C. E. Ponting from 1905, (fn. 127)
and St. Peter's Junior School, formerly the
grammar school, is a red-brick building of 1905.
Social and Cultural Activities. Race meetings were held intermittently on Barton Down in
Preshute in the 18th century and in the 19th. The
18th-century meetings, which usually lasted
two days, were social events accompanied by
backsword-playing, balls, plays, public dinners,
and assemblies. Assemblies held at the town hall
in 1771 were attended by local nobility and
gentry. Race meetings ceased c. 1773, were
revived c. 1840, but had finally ceased by 1874.
The course ran parallel to the MarlboroughRockley road on Marlborough Common. A
grandstand was erected in 1846 and demolished
in 1876. (fn. 128)
Cricket was played at Marlborough in 1774
when Marlborough tradesmen played against
Devizes tradesmen on neutral ground. A game
between townsmen was played on Marlborough
Common in 1787. (fn. 129) A pitch was made there c.
1881. (fn. 130) In the late 19th century Wiltshire County
Cricket Club occasionally played matches at
Marlborough. (fn. 131) Marlborough Town Football
Club, formed in 1871, at first played on Marlborough Common (fn. 132) but by 1937 had acquired a
ground north of Elcot Lane which was still used
in 1982. Marlborough Golf Club, founded in
1888, had a course on the common west of Port
Hill. (fn. 133) Play ceased there during the Second
World War. The course was afterwards remade,
and until 1970, when it regained its independence,
the club was run by the borough council. (fn. 134)
Marlborough Bowling Club, founded c. 1930, (fn. 135)
had a green south of Orchard Road. A new green
at the recreation ground in Salisbury Road had
been laid out by 1970. (fn. 136) Other groups, such as
gymnastic and athletic clubs in the later 19th
century, (fn. 137) and hockey, rifle, tennis, and badminton clubs in the 20th, (fn. 138) have also existed.
The guild of Palmers at Ludlow (Salop.) had
members at Marlborough, one of whom devised
property in Kingsbury Street to it, in the later
15th century and earlier 16th. (fn. 139)
A masonic lodge which met in 1768 at the
Castle inn had been dissolved by 1777. A Wiltshire Militia lodge met from 1803 to 1805,
became permanent when the regimental headquarters of the Wiltshire Militia were established
at Marlborough in 1818, and took the name
Lodge of Loyalty. It was dissolved in 1834.
Marlborough Lodge of Unity, renamed Lodge of
Loyalty, was formed in 1875 and since 1911 or
earlier has met at the Masonic Hall, Oxford
Street. The Methuen Chapter of Royal Arch
Masons, formed in 1883, the St. Peter and St.
Paul Preceptory of Masonic Knights Templar,
formed in 1962, and the Lodge of Good Fellowship, formed in 1971, also met there in 1982. (fn. 140)
The Independent Order of Good Templars
had established the Hope of Marlborough Lodge
by 1879. In that year the Ancient Order of
Foresters met monthly, and the Independent
Order of Oddfellows fortnightly, at the Royal
Oak. (fn. 141) There were five friendly societies, including Foresters, Oddfellows, and Rechabites, in
Marlborough in 1937. (fn. 142) The Savernake Forest
and Sir William Dickson lodges of the Royal
Antediluvian Order of Buffaloes met at Marlborough in 1978. (fn. 143)
There was a coffee house in the town in 1771. (fn. 144)
The Marlborough Club, whose members were
Tory gentlemen from Marlborough and the
surrounding area, was established in 1774. It met
at the Castle inn until 1842 and at the Ailesbury
Arms until 1846 when it was wound up. (fn. 145) The
Marlborough Reading and Mutual Improvement Society was formed in 1844. (fn. 146) It had 90
'middle class' members and a library of 800
volumes in 1849. (fn. 147) The society opened a reading
room in High Street in 1854, (fn. 148) still flourished in
1903, (fn. 149) but had been wound up by 1907. (fn. 150)
A working men's hall was opened in High
Street in 1866 with a reading room, smoking
room, and classroom which was used each
evening. (fn. 151) The hall was still used in 1903. (fn. 152)
Marlborough and District Unionist Association
had been formed by 1907. (fn. 153) Since 1923 (fn. 154) Marlborough and District Conservative Club has had
premises in High Street.
Marlborough Choral Society, founded in
1877, had c. 80 members in 1879 (fn. 155) and still met in
1937 (fn. 156) and 1982. A silver band flourished in the
town in the late 19th century and earlier 20th. (fn. 157)
An amateur dramatic and operatic society was
founded in 1923. (fn. 158) The corn exchange was converted c. 1914 to a cinema, (fn. 159) which closed in
1970. (fn. 160)
Apart from Salisbury, Marlborough was the
only Wiltshire town in which a newspaper was
published in the later 18th century. The Marlborough Journal was printed weekly at no. 132
High Street, by J. Smith and E. Harold in 1771,
by Harold alone in 1773, but ceased publication
in 1774. (fn. 161) The Marlborough Times, the title
of which has been extended and changed frequently, was founded in 1859 by Charles Perkins.
It was printed weekly at Waterloo House in High
Street. (fn. 162) Its Tory attitudes reflected those of the
marquesses of Ailesbury, lords of the borough,
until 1885 when the newspaper became politically
neutral. (fn. 163) Publication was continued after
Perkins's death in 1899 by his son H. G. Perkins. (fn. 164) The newspaper was bought from E. H.
Perkins & Son Ltd. in 1962 by Woodrow Wyatt
Ltd. Its printing works and offices were
moved from Waterloo House, which had been
demolished by 1977, to Banbury (Oxon.). In
1966 the newspaper was bought by Cirencester
Newspaper Co. Ltd., publishers in 1982, and
printed at Dursley (Glos.). (fn. 165) The Marlborough
and Hungerford Express, begun by William Cane
in 1860, expressed Liberal views. It was printed
weekly at no. 100 High Street until 1863 when it
ceased publication. (fn. 166) From 1902 to 1928 Wiltshire Opinion, later Wiltshire Opinion Special, and
from 1910 to 1914 the Andover Times and Wilts.,
Berks., and Hants County Paper were published
at Marlborough. The Wiltshire Echo was published in Marlborough from 1964 to 1966, afterwards in Trowbridge and Swindon. (fn. 167)
Estates.
Marlborough was in the king's
hands in 1086. (fn. 168) Except during the period 1189–
93 when John, count of Mortain, held it with
Marlborough Castle, the BOROUGH belonged
to successive kings until 1273. Their authority
over it was delegated to the constables who were
appointed to keep the castle. (fn. 169) The borough
was assigned in 1273 for life to Queen Eleanor
(d. 1291), in 1299 to Queen Margaret, in 1318
to Queen Isabel, who was deprived of it in the
period 1324–7, and in 1330 to Queen Philippa, on
whose death in 1369 it reverted to the Crown. (fn. 170)
In 1403 the reversion of the lordship on the death
of Henry IV was granted to Humphrey, duke of
Gloucester; from 1415 or earlier until 1621 the
lordship descended with the site of Marlborough
Castle, from 1621 to 1779 with Barton manor in
Preshute, and from 1779 to 1929–30 with both. (fn. 171)
In 1929–30 George, marquess of Ailesbury, sold
the lordship of the borough to Marlborough
borough council. (fn. 172)
The site in the Marsh given by Levenoth son of
Levenoth for the hospital of St. John the
Baptist, and other land in Marlborough given by
John son of Elfric and by Walter Pinnock, were
confirmed to the hospital by King John in 1215. (fn. 173)
In 1550 the mayor and burgesses of Marlborough, who had presented masters of the
hospital from 1315 or earlier, received royal
permission to convert the house to a free
grammar school. The school was endowed with
the lands of the hospital and with those of the
Jesus services in the churches of St. Mary and St.
Peter. (fn. 174) Most of the hospital's lands may have
been alienated before 1637. Small properties
in the town were sold in 1799 and 1867. (fn. 175) In
1883 the endowments included 11 a. in Marlborough. (fn. 176) The largest remaining town properties, St. John's close south-west of Marlborough
Common and a close in St. Martin's, were sold in
1907 and in 1924 respectively. (fn. 177)
In 1316 William Ramshill and John Goodhind
received royal permission to convey land in
Marlborough to the Carmelites, who built a
priory on it. (fn. 178) Ramshill and Goodhind conveyed
more land in 1321 and in 1328 Adam Long gave a
messuage in Marlborough to the friars. (fn. 179) The
priory was dissolved in 1538. Its property, which
comprised church, cloister, chapter house,
dormitory, prior's lodging, kitchen, and land, (fn. 180)
was conveyed by the Crown to Robert Were or
Brown in 1543. (fn. 181) Robert, M.P. for Marlborough
in 1553 and many times mayor of the borough, (fn. 182)
died in 1570 and was succeeded by his wife
Agnes. On Agnes's death the property passed to
their son Richard Were or Brown (d. 1577), to
successive sons Thomas Were or Brown (d.
1599), Thomas Were or Brown (d. 1608), and
Thomas Brown (d. 1625), and then to the last
Thomas's brother Robert Brown. (fn. 183) By the early
17th century the estate had been augmented by
numerous town properties. (fn. 184) In 1652 a Robert
Brown, perhaps the Robert who succeeded in
1625, settled it on his son Robert who in 1658
sold it to Isaac Burgess. (fn. 185) In 1676 the estate
belonged to another Isaac Burgess and his wife
Cecily, (fn. 186) and in 1701 to Cecily and her second
husband William Master. Isaac's and Cecily's
heirs were their daughters Cecily, wife of James
Worthington, and Anne who married Thomas
Fletcher. (fn. 187) Cecily Worthington was dead by 1708
when the Fletchers owned the estate. (fn. 188)
Parts of that estate, including, after 1701, the
house called the Friars in 1596 and in the early
18th century the Priory, were sold and later
became part of the Savernake estate of the earls
and marquesses of Ailesbury. (fn. 189) What remained
Anne Fletcher's in 1751 included inns in High
Street then called the Swan, the Antelope (later
the Castle and Ball), the Bull, and the Half
Moon. (fn. 190) They were sold in 1773 by the executors
of her daughter Anne Fletcher to Thomas, Lord
Bruce, (fn. 191) and added to the Savernake estate. The
Savernake estate sold parts of what had once
belonged to the Fletchers, such as the Castle and
Ball in 1872, (fn. 192) but leased Priory House to the
governors of Marlborough College in 1850. (fn. 193) It
was a college boarding house from 1861 to
1967. (fn. 194) A housemaster, W. Mansell, bought it
from the Savernake estate in 1876 and sold it in
1899 to another, J. P. Cummins. T. C. G.
Sandford bought Priory House from Cummins
in 1917 and in 1923 sold it to Marlborough College, (fn. 195) from which it was bought in 1971 by the
borough council with help from Mrs. J. Clay. (fn. 196)
In 1981 the house contained a day centre and
flatlets for the elderly and the gardens were a
public park.
The remains of the priory buildings were
replaced in 1823 by Priory House built in Gothic
style of flint and sarsen. (fn. 197) A west block, which
matched the style of the house of 1823, was built
to designs by Ernest Newton in 1926. (fn. 198)
Arnold Fathers gave 1½ burgage to Bradenstoke priory c. 1245 and also in the 13th century
Eustace, parson of 'Wootton', gave to the priory
three shops and a store abutting the market
place beside St. Mary's churchyard. (fn. 199) In 1272
Thomas Green gave the priory 1¼ burgage and
a messuage. (fn. 200) The properties, which included
market stalls, were in High Street, the Green,
Barn Street, and the Marsh. (fn. 201) They passed to
the Crown at the Dissolution and were sold to
Geoffrey Daniell in 1544. (fn. 202)
Maiden Bradley priory acquired, all in Marlborough, a burgage from John Whatley c. 1260, a
tenement from John, canon of Wells (Som.), in
1274, 6d. rent from a tenement held by Maud
Ballemund in the later 13th century, and, at
an unknown date, a tenement from Thomas
Romsey. (fn. 203) The properties, one or more of which
was in High Street, passed to the Crown at the
Dissolution and were sold to Geoffrey Daniell in
1544. (fn. 204)
In the earlier 12th century the Empress Maud
gave to Reading abbey the property in Marlborough of Herbert son of Fulk, who had become
a monk there. The abbey leased the messuage in
1192 on condition that monks from Reading
might lodge there when visiting Marlborough. (fn. 205)
Stanley abbey was given a burgage in the town c.
1266 and, at an unknown date, a house. (fn. 206) Bicester
priory (Oxon.) had property in Marlborough in
1291. (fn. 207) None of the three houses accounted for
property in Marlborough in 1535. (fn. 208)
Agriculture.
A pasture held by the burgesses of Marlborough in 1194 or earlier for 10s.
paid yearly to the lord of the borough may have
been east of Marlborough Castle. (fn. 209) In King
John's reign the burgesses gave up that pasture in
exchange for one which may be identified with
Marlborough Common, sometimes called the
Thorns, c. 80 a., which apart from its south-west
corner was in Preshute. The burgesses paid 10s.
rent for it to the lord of the borough in 1275 and
in 1768. (fn. 210) Tenants of Barton farm in Preshute
also had pasture rights there in 1638. (fn. 211) A small
rabbit warren on the common was part of Barton
farm in the later 16th century and the earlier
17th. (fn. 212) Bylaws of 1577 regulated use of the
common. A burgess might keep not more than
two cows or bullocks on it and was to pay 8d.
yearly for each animal to the mayor, a day's board
to the herdsman who drove the animals to
pasture each morning and brought them back in
the evening, and 1d. yearly for destruction of
vermin. (fn. 213) A bull, provided until 1836 by the
mayor and afterwards by the borough fund,
could be hired for 8d. It ceased to be kept in
1904. (fn. 214) Wandering animals were taken by the
herdsman, or hayward as he was apparently
called in 1777, to the borough pound which was
moved in 1846 from Kingsbury Street to the
common. (fn. 215) Pasturage fees and the herdsman's
wages were increased in the later 19th century
and earlier 20th. (fn. 216) Rights of pasturage were
apparently extended to all inhabitants of Marlborough from 1836. (fn. 217) In 1908 and later the
inhabitants could pasture as many cows as they
wished for 1s. a week for each cow. Yearly income
from pasturage of cows declined in the earlier
20th century and in 1919 averaged only £30.
That decline led the corporation to allow sheep
fairs, agricultural shows, military manoeuvres,
and organized games to be held on the common
although no regular use, except for race meetings
in the 19th century and golf in the 20th, has been
allowed. (fn. 218) Furze planted on the common in the
later 17th century was grubbed up in 1831. (fn. 219)
Marlborough Common was levelled and reseeded
in 1958. (fn. 220) It was open in 1982 when it was used
chiefly for grazing and recreation.
Arable land in Preshute east of Marlborough
Common and called Port field, c. 80 a. or more,
was acquired between 1216 and 1272 by the
mayor and burgesses who paid £6 4s. rent yearly
for it to the lord of the borough. (fn. 221) It was
apportioned among the burgesses in plots of 1 a.
or 2 a. (fn. 222) Its use, like that of the common, was
regulated in 1577. The hedges and ditches adjoining the plots which the burgesses were enjoined
to maintain in that year may indicate inclosure.
For each acre held, the burgesses paid 1d. yearly
for the destruction of vermin. (fn. 223) All the inhabitants of Marlborough could pasture cattle on the
linchets of Port field after harvest, a right they
may still have enjoyed in the earlier 19th century. (fn. 224) The tenant of Barton farm in Preshute had
similar rights in 1574 (fn. 225) and 1638. (fn. 226) Inclosures
existed in 1627. In that year burgesses, who held
for life, were forbidden to hold more than 2 a.
each, for which they were to pay 1s. 4d. yearly and
do suit at the mayor's courts. (fn. 227) They paid small
entry fines, and in 1759 were allowed to hold a
maximum of 6 a. each. (fn. 228) Any land not held by
burgesses was sublet. In 1808 Port field comprised a south field, 36 a., and a north field, 54 a.,
containing 13 and 38 allotments respectively. By
subletting, however, three holdings in the south
and four in the north field had been created. (fn. 229)
Port field was inclosed c. 1823 (fn. 230) and in 1847 had
in it allotments of 21 a. and 8 a. and fifteen smaller
plots totalling 60 a. (fn. 231) In 1930 Marlborough
borough council bought the freehold of Port field
from George, marquess of Ailesbury. (fn. 232) Council
houses were built on part of it from the 1960s.
The remainder was let as allotments and pasture
land in 1982. (fn. 233)
Trade and Industry.
The position of
Marlborough on a favoured royal estate and a
main east-west route made the town a likely
commercial centre in the 12th century and earlier.
Although no burgess was mentioned in 1086,
Marlborough had a mint in the later 11th century
and was sufficiently developed commercially for
the burgesses to pay £5 to the king to have a
merchant guild in 1163. (fn. 234) That privilege was
confirmed to the burgesses in 1204 when others,
mostly modelled on those of Winchester and
including a general grant of freedom from toll,
were extended to them. (fn. 235) That the privileges
were limited to members of the merchant guild,
which comprised all the burgesses, is clear
because in 1239, under the grant of 1204, only
they were free of payment of tolls at Southampton. (fn. 236) In 1408 Henry IV granted to the burgesses
quittance of murage, quayage, coverage, and
chiminage on goods and merchandise. (fn. 237)
Henry III may have encouraged Jews to settle
in the town in 1234 or earlier, (fn. 238) and in 1241 five
Jewish families lived in Marlborough, possibly
under the protection and jurisdiction of the
constable of the castle. (fn. 239) A chirograph chest, in
which records of the Jews' financial dealings were
kept, was mentioned in 1268 and the chirographers who compiled the records in 1272. (fn. 240)
The community was ordered to move to Devizes
in 1275 (fn. 241) but there were still Jews at Marlborough
in 1277 and a chirograph chest in 1279. (fn. 242) They
had all apparently left when in 1281 their property was granted to Christians. (fn. 243)
A thriving merchant class, in which John
Goodhind, mentioned in the period 1311–43,
was apparently pre-eminent, was evident in
Marlborough c. 1300 or earlier. (fn. 244) It included
Irishmen and men from northern France in the
earlier 15th century. (fn. 245) Much of Marlborough's
trade was by way of Bristol and Southampton in
the Middle Ages when the town was a market
centre for the surrounding countryside. In 1365
wine, iron, and steel were carted to Marlborough
from Southampton. (fn. 246) In 1439–40 wine, garlic,
and grindstones were conveyed to Marlborough
and Marlborough merchants distributed woad
and fish from Southampton to Salisbury and
Broughton Gifford. (fn. 247) Seventeen journeys were
made from Southampton to cart wine and herrings to Marlborough in 1443–4. (fn. 248)
Burel, coarse woollen cloth, was made in
Marlborough in the 12th century or earlier. The
weavers and fullers who made it were allowed to
work only for the burgesses and could not
become freemen unless they gave up their crafts.
Fulling in nearby mills, including one at Elcot in
Preshute used for fulling in 1215 or earlier and
for the production of cloth until c. 1800, was
presumably connected with the industry in the
13th century and later. (fn. 249) It is likely that most of
the cloth was sold locally for the poor's use
although in 1391 Thomas Tanner, a Marlborough merchant, exported ten cloths to Ireland. (fn. 250) Clothmaking was apparently in decline in
1379, when there were only 2 shearmen, 1 tucker,
1 dyer, and 5 weavers in Marlborough, but had
recovered by the later 15th century when kerseys
may have been made there. (fn. 251) Finishing processes
may then have been more important than manufacture, although a 'woolman' was mentioned
c. 1500. (fn. 252) Some of the woad brought from
Southampton to Marlborough in the 15th
century may have been for use in Marlborough
and c. 1460 a dyer from Newbury (Berks.) took a
lease of a house in Marlborough which was
altered to incorporate a furnace and vats. (fn. 253) A
weaver, a woollen draper, and a mercer were
mentioned in 1674, and a clothier in 1679. (fn. 254) Then,
as in the Middle Ages, the workers were poor and
c. 1698 included those in the workhouse. (fn. 255) There
was a weaver of broad cloths in the town in 1711,
a drugget maker in 1717, and in 1797 a feltmonger, a clothier, and a worsted maker. (fn. 256) A
woolhouse mentioned in 1744 was possibly no
longer used as such in 1771. (fn. 257) In 1791 a shed to
contain looms was erected at St. Mary's workhouse and in the 1790s a new clothing mill,
intended to provide work for the industrious
poor, was built to adjoin Elcot mill. (fn. 258) The
venture may have had little success: in 1799 both
the clothing mill and the grist mill were leased to
a Marlborough baker. (fn. 259) Wool stapling was still
carried on at Marlborough in 1753 and 1865. (fn. 260)
Manufacture of fustians may have partly replaced that of woollens by 1800. The spinning of
cotton, supplied during the first few months by a
Mr. Crook and thereafter until 1773 or later by a
Mr. Sheppard, was begun in St. Peter's workhouse in 1751. From 1760 to 1767 John Crook of
Marlborough sent cotton to be spun in the Bristol
workhouse. (fn. 261) Hand spinning of cotton continued
at Marlborough until the mid 19th century. (fn. 262) An
attempt in the early 1790s to establish a silk
manufactory, to be financed by public subscription, was apparently unsuccessful. (fn. 263)
Sheepskins, wood from Savernake forest, and
water from the Kennet provided the means for
tanning which flourished in the town in the 14th
century. In 1379 there were ten tanners. They
included the mayor, who may have traded with
Northampton. (fn. 264) There were tanners in Marlborough in the earlier 17th century. (fn. 265) A decline
which the industry later suffered may have been a
result of the outbreak of the fire of 1653 in a
tannery. (fn. 266) The trades associated with tanning at
Marlborough since the Middle Ages continued.
Gloves were made there in the 17th century (fn. 267)
as they had been in the 15th. (fn. 268) In 1797 there were
a fellmonger, a currier, and a leather cutter in the
town: their trades were still carried on in the 19th
century. (fn. 269) The firm of George May & Sons, in
business at the Green as curriers and leather
cutters in 1830 or earlier, still traded there as
Charles B. May in 1907. (fn. 270) In 1830 or earlier there
was a tannery in Black Swan Yard, and in the
1850s there was one in Angel Yard. (fn. 271) In 1865
tanning was again one of the principal industries
in Marlborough. (fn. 272) Wingrove & Edge Ltd. established a sheepskin tannery in Angel Yard in 1937.
The production of hide leather there began in
1950. The firm merged in 1963 with Whitmore's
Ltd. of Edenbridge (Kent), afterwards the
Whitmore Bacon Organization, which supplied
wet chrome-tanned hides to Marlborough for the
production of leathers of different grains and
suede leathers. From 1967 no sheepskin was
treated and most leather produced, of which a
fifth was suede, was sold to shoe manufacturers
and makers of sports equipment. (fn. 273) Some fifty
people were employed in 1982. (fn. 274)
Rope making was carried on in Marlborough
in 1660 or earlier. (fn. 275) There was a hemp dresser in
the town in 1716, a sack maker in 1719, and a
rope maker in 1738. (fn. 276) Sail cloth was made there
in 1749. (fn. 277) Two Henry Shepherds manufactured
sacking in 1797, when there were also two ropers
in the town, and William Shepherd did so in 1830
in Kingsbury Street and in 1844 in High Street. (fn. 278)
In St. Mary's parish John Palmer had, in 1844 or
earlier, a factory in which in 1862 about twenty
people were employed to make rope. (fn. 279) In 1865
and until 1965 James Morrison & Co. of High
Street made hempen cloth, rope, and twine in a
factory, in the Parade, where eleven people were
employed in 1960. (fn. 280)
Pin making, sufficiently well established in
Marlborough for the pin makers to have their
own building in 1576, flourished in the 17th
century and in the early 18th, as did the associated trade of wire drawing. (fn. 281) Clay pipes were
made in the town in the earlier 17th century. The
manufacture was at its height c. 1700 but had
declined by c. 1750 when there was only one pipe
maker. (fn. 282) Bone lace was made in the 17th century. (fn. 283) There were then, and in the 18th century,
numerous clock makers, including George
Hewett who was at work in the period 1769–97.
In 1865 there was only one. (fn. 284)
Among the trades usual in a market town that
of cheese factor may have gained wider importance in the 17th century when the 'Marlborough' cheeses of the surrounding area, made
thin for quick drying, became popular in London, and London cheesemongers may have kept
their own factors in the town. Despite waning
demand in London c. 1680, Marlborough remained a centre for the sale of cheese and was still
such in 1907. (fn. 285) There were seven cheese factors
in the town in 1797 and in 1844. (fn. 286)
Marlborough's prosperity derived not only
from its industries and markets but also from the
many inns for travellers to and from the west of
England. (fn. 287) Chief among them from 1456 or
earlier to c. 1730 was the Hart, or Old Hart, on
the north side of High Street. (fn. 288) The coach trade
expanded in the early 18th century with the
development of Bath, and to a lesser extent of
Marlborough itself, as resorts. The principal inns
which catered for it were, on the south side of
High Street, the Angel, the Black Swan, and
the Duke's Arms, in 1843 or earlier called the
Ailesbury Arms, and, on the north side, the
Antelope, an inn in 1745 and called in 1764 and
1982 the Castle and Ball. An inn called the Castle
was opened in 1751 in Marlborough House in
Preshute. (fn. 289) In 1797 coaches ran daily from the
Duke's Arms and the Black Swan to London and
Bath, three each way from the Castle daily, and
one each way from the Castle and Ball on
Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. Nightly
mail coaches ran to London and daily ones to
Exeter. Daily post coaches ran to London and
Bristol. There was still a daily service in 1833
from the principal inns to London, Bath, Bristol,
Cheltenham, Frome (Som.), and Reading. The
G.W.R. line from London to Bristol was opened
in 1840–1, however, and in 1844 only three
coaches a day ran to London and one to Bath and
Bristol. Coaches occasionally ran to Southampton. Of the two coach makers in High Street in
1797 one, Thomas Forty, was still in business in
1830. There were then two other coach makers in
High Street, of whom one, Joseph Eden, still
traded as Eden & Son in 1865. (fn. 290)
The town's emergence as a resort, encouraged
by the lords of the borough resident nearby, with
race meetings during which various entertainments were held, (fn. 291) may have contributed indirectly to its commercial and industrial decline.
It was described in 1764 as having few manufactures and in 1831–2, some eight years before the
opening of the G.W.R. line, as 'a respectable
country place' with no trade. (fn. 292)
There was a private bank, Thomas Hancock &
Co., in business at Marlborough in 1797 or
earlier. (fn. 293) Other early bankers were King, Gosling,
& Tanner in High Street and Ward, Brown,
Merriman, & Halcomb in Silverless Street in
1830. (fn. 294) The Silverless Street bank, as Ward & Co.,
was still in business in 1865. (fn. 295) The North Wilts.
Banking Co. had a branch in High Street from
1844 or earlier to 1865 or later and the Wilts. and
Dorset Banking Co. Ltd. had a branch there from
1844 or earlier until between 1907 and 1923. The
branch of the Capital & Counties Bank in High
Street in 1907 had been acquired by Lloyds Bank
Ltd. by 1923. (fn. 296)
In 1833 Stephen Brown had a brewery in High
Street which by 1843 had passed to Dixon &
Co. (fn. 297) There were breweries in the Marsh and
Kingsbury Street in 1838. (fn. 298) Brewing was one of
the chief trades of Marlborough in 1865 when
S. B. & H. P. Dixon and Reed & Co. each had a
brewery in High Street. (fn. 299) In 1899 Reed & Co.'s
brewery was called the Anchor brewery and was
owned then and in 1903 by G. & T. Spencer's
Brewery Ltd. (fn. 300) Dixon's brewery at no. 109 High
Street had been leased to A. M. Adams by 1897
and in 1917, when it was called the Marlborough
brewery, belonged to Usher's Wiltshire Brewery
Ltd. (fn. 301) No brewing took place in the town in 1923. (fn. 302)
Agricultural machinery was made in High
Street in 1844. (fn. 303) In 1870 T. Pope started an
agricultural engineering business which in the
earlier 19th century was at Chantry Works, no.
99 High Street, and was continued by J. A. Pope.
In 1946 Thomas Pope sold the business, which
was then carried on in High Street and in works
at Granham Hill, to T. H. White Ltd. of Devizes.
Its name was changed from T. Pope Ltd. to T. H.
White, Marlborough, Ltd. The High Street
premises, then a retail shop, were closed in 1966
but engineering continued at Granham Hill. (fn. 304)
A. E. Farr Ltd., civil engineers, came to Marlborough in 1939 and occupied Wye House as an
office until 1941. (fn. 305)
Although some employment was provided by
Marlborough College, the local schools and hospitals, Wingrove & Edge Ltd., and a few small
engineering and light industrial factories in
London Road and Elcot Lane, (fn. 306) most people
worked outside the town in 1982.
Markets and Fairs.
In 1204 King John
granted Wednesday and Saturday markets to the
burgesses of Marlborough. (fn. 307) The prosperity of
the markets may have been increased in 1240
when, in an exchange with the king, the bishop of
Salisbury gave up his right to a weekly market at
Ramsbury. (fn. 308) By 1255, however, tenants of the
bishop, of the dean and chapter of Salisbury, and
of several other lords had ceased to pay tolls at
Marlborough markets, a loss reckoned at £10. A
weekly market which had been held at Swindon
from c. 1260 was considered in 1275 to have
damaged that at Marlborough by £2 a year. (fn. 309)
The burgesses exercised the same rights, including freedom from pavage, pontage, passage,
pedage, peage, pesage, stallage, and lastage, as
the burgesses of Oxford and Winchester enjoyed
in their markets. (fn. 310) When the borough was incorporated in 1576 those rights were confirmed,
the mayor became ex officio clerk of the market,
and the mayor and burgesses were empowered to
regulate the markets by passing bylaws, which
they did in 1577. (fn. 311) In 1625, in return for the lord
of the borough's confirmation of their right to
take the market tolls, the burgesses agreed to pay
pickage and stallage to him. (fn. 312) From 1626 the
lords of the borough leased the profits of pickage
and stallage to the burgesses. (fn. 313) The burgesses
leased the market tolls. (fn. 314) When Marlborough
corporation was dissolved in 1835 the right to
take the tolls seems to have passed from the
burgesses (fn. 315) to the lord of the borough, who
afterwards leased them. (fn. 316) The borough council
bought them from George, marquess of Ailesbury, in 1929–30. (fn. 317) In 1836 a committee to
regulate market affairs was appointed by the
borough council. (fn. 318)
The market place, in High Street in 1289 or
earlier, was at the east end of the street between
the high or market cross, called the cross house in
the later 16th century, and the corn cross near the
Castle and Ball inn. The high cross, which was
probably a timber building on piers set in a stone
base, contained the market house. (fn. 319) In the early
17th century the cheese and butter market was
held under it and later under the town hall which
occupied the site from c. 1630. (fn. 320) Fish and salt
beef were also sold there in the early 19th
century. (fn. 321) After the town hall replaced the high
cross the wool market was held in it. (fn. 322) The bakers
also had their stalls in it until 1634 when,
apparently because of lack of space, they were
expelled. (fn. 323) A Wednesday market place, where
there was another market house, was mentioned
in 1625 and may also have been in High Street. (fn. 324)
Always apparently less important, the Wednesday market occasionally lapsed. None was held in
the later 17th century, when the Saturday market
was an important cheese market attended by
factors of London cheesemongers, in 1797, or in
the later 19th century and earlier 20th. (fn. 325) Meat
was sold in shambles in High Street called
Butcher or Close Row in the later 16th century or
earlier and in the 17th. (fn. 326) In the early 19th century, however, white meat and bacon could also
be sold under the town hall. (fn. 327) The shambles,
rebuilt c. 1573 and c. 1654, were shaded by trees
in 1750 or earlier. They were demolished, and the
trees felled, in 1812. (fn. 328) From 1838 meat was sold
at the east end of the south side of High Street. (fn. 329)
In the earlier 19th century the market for eggs,
poultry, and fruit was at the east end of the
penthouse on the north side of High Street. It
was moved in 1838 to a building on the south side
which also housed the National schools. Toys,
confectionery, and fruit were sold in front of the
town hall c. 1800 and at the north-east corner of
High Street in 1838 and later. After 1838 farm
implements, cattle, and horses were sold at the
east end of High Street and pigs and sheep
outside the National schools. (fn. 330) The corn market
was held outside the Castle and Ball round the
corn rails, the site of the corn cross, until 1864
when George, marquess of Ailesbury, built a
corn exchange on the site of the National schools.
Business had ceased there before 1900. The corn
rails were removed in 1929. (fn. 331) In 1981 small
general markets were held at the east end of High
Street on Wednesdays and Saturdays.
A weighing beam, which by Act of 1429 the
borough had to maintain and which in 1576 was
housed in the high cross, and scales were held by
the bailiffs of Marlborough. (fn. 332) The beam like the
market house was leased. (fn. 333) The weighbridge and
the house containing it, which stood on the south
side of High Street opposite the Castle and Ball,
were rebuilt in 1853–4 and removed in 1925. (fn. 334)
In 1204 the king granted to the burgesses of
Marlborough an eight-day fair to begin on the
eve of the Assumption (14 August). (fn. 335) It was
presumably held in St. Mary's parish, possibly
on the Green. After 1752 the fair was held on 22
August and in 1929, when it was described as
agricultural, on 23 August. (fn. 336) In 1931 and until
the 1960s Marlborough fair, sheep fair, or great
sheep fair, was held on Marlborough Common
on 22 August. (fn. 337)
Henry III in 1229 granted that a four-day fair
to begin on the eve of St. Martin (10 November)
might be held on the 'new land' of Marlborough. (fn. 338) It was held on the Green in the later
18th century. (fn. 339) From 1752 the fair was held on 22
November and in 1888 and in 1929, when it was
held on Marlborough Common for agricultural
purposes, on 23 November. (fn. 340) It was still held in
1938, (fn. 341) but lapsed in the 1960s. (fn. 342)
In 1246 Henry III granted that a four-day fair,
to begin on the eve of St. Peter and St. Paul (28
June), might be held around St. Peter's churchyard. (fn. 343) In the same year the king suppressed a
wake held at the same time in Little Wittenham
(Berks., later Oxon.) because it detracted from
St. Peter's fair. (fn. 344) It was chiefly a horse fair in the
early 18th century. (fn. 345) From 1752 it was held on 10
July, (fn. 346) in 1809 and 1865 on 11 July. (fn. 347) It was held
in 1875 but had lapsed by 1879. (fn. 348)
Hiring or mop fairs were held in the early 19th
century. In 1888 and in 1982, when they were for
pleasure, Little Mop and Big Mop fairs were
held in High Street on the Saturday before and
the Saturday after old Michaelmas day (10
October). (fn. 349)
Local Government.
Borough Government. Before 1204 Marlborough was presumably governed by the king through the keeper of
the castle. A guild merchant received royal
approval in 1163 and confirmation in 1204. (fn. 350)
King John also in 1204 granted liberties to the
burgesses modelled on those of Winchester and,
to a lesser extent, on those of Oxford. The
privileges consisted of exemption from suit of
shire and hundred and from attendance at forest
courts except to answer for breaches of forest law,
of the right to hold their houses in chief, and of
soc and sac, toll and team, infangthief and
outfangthief, trial of pleas by the law of Winchester and not by combat, cessation of customs
unjustly levied in war, the recovery of debts by
their own bailiff, immunity from distraint except
for debtors and their pledges, freedom from
pleading in pleas of land outside the borough,
and, within it, trial of those pleas by the law of
Winchester. (fn. 351) The burgesses were not exempt
from Crown pleas, however, and attended eyres. (fn. 352)
The right to hold a borough court and view of
frankpledge was implicit in the grant. (fn. 353) From
1224 the burgesses farmed the borough for £50
yearly. (fn. 354)
The charter of 1204, frequently inspected and
confirmed, (fn. 355) formed the basis of borough government until 1576. In that year Marlborough was
incorporated by charter as the free borough of the
mayor and burgesses. The burgesses were confirmed in the privileges granted to them in 1204.
They were allowed to pass bylaws, a right which
they first exercised in 1577. They were allowed to
have a commission of the peace, comprising three
justices of the peace, and a gaol. The justices were
required, however, to send those indicted at
borough quarter sessions for treason, murder, or
felony to the county gaol. The power of the
mayor was greatly extended: thenceforth he was
ex officio escheator, coroner, clerk of the market,
and, with powers more limited than those of the
county justices, a justice of the peace empowered
to act with the two burgesses who had preceded
him as mayor and whom he nominated fellow
justices. (fn. 356) The charter of 1576, under which the
borough was governed until 1835, was twice
abrogated. In 1642 it was withdrawn by Marlborough's royalist captors. A new charter,
granted by Cromwell in 1657, increased the
corporation's officers to mayor, recorder, town
clerk, 8 aldermen, 5 justices of the peace, 7
'assistants', 2 high constables, 5 constables, 2
bailiffs, and 2 serjeants at mace, but was annulled
at the Restoration when the charter of 1576
was confirmed. (fn. 357) That charter was again withdrawn at the end of Charles II's reign and was
replaced in 1688 by another which allowed the
Crown to pack the corporation, consisting of a
mayor, 13 aldermen, 24 burgesses or common
councillors, and a common clerk, with royal
nominees. It was annulled shortly afterwards by
proclamation. (fn. 358)
Wards existed within the borough in 1268. (fn. 359)
New land ward, although it remained part of
Elcot tithing, was a ward in 1289 (fn. 360) but was later
merged with Green ward. In 1547, and until 1835
when they were abolished, there were five wards,
Bailey, High or High Street, Kingsbury, Green,
and Marsh. (fn. 361) The alderman, later constable, of
each ward had to summon its inhabitants to
borough courts, at which he presented nuisances
and breaches of the peace and of bylaws. He also
saw that watch was kept and precautions against
fire taken. (fn. 362) With his fellow constables he kept
the peace at fairs in the later 18th century and
earlier 19th. (fn. 363)
Few records survive to show how the borough
was governed in the Middle Ages. (fn. 364) The governing body was the guild merchant and comprised
all the burgesses, who had a common seal in the
13th century. The burgesses may have been
entrepreneurs rather than artificers and the guild
oligarchical. (fn. 365) By the 16th century new burgesses
were elected at the morrow, or morning, speech
courts held in early autumn and on admittance
made money payments to the mayor rather than
the supposedly traditional gifts, depicted on the
borough arms, of a bull, capon, and hounds. (fn. 366) By
1514 the guild had been replaced as the governing body by a small number of burgesses
chosen from it to form a common council.
Councillors were chosen by the mayor and existing council at the morrow speech courts at which
all borough officials were elected. (fn. 367) A bylaw of
1577 confirmed that method. From 1577 to 1835
the common council made bylaws with the
agreement of the other burgesses, approved
leases of borough lands, and each year nominated
three men from whom all the burgesses elected a
mayor. A bylaw of 1622 empowered the councillors to elect borough constables and chamberlains. In 1833, however, the mayor appointed the
constables. From 1633 until 1835 the mayor and
common council approved, and from 1652
nominated, new burgesses. (fn. 368) The number of
burgesses declined from 60–80, of whom a third
were common councillors, in the 16th century, (fn. 369)
to 32, of whom a quarter were councillors, in
1713. (fn. 370) Besides the mayor and justices, there
were 11 burgesses, 8 of whom were councillors
and 3 'undignified' in 1772, and in 1809 there
were 6 burgesses, all councillors. (fn. 371)
There seems to have been no serious conflict
over the exercise of the liberties granted in 1204
between the burgesses and the grantees of the
borough whose lordship was considered to
include return of writs, gallows, and other liberties in the 13th century and later. (fn. 372) In 1625
William, earl of Hertford, in return for their
acknowledging him as lord of the borough and
permitting him to nominate one of the borough
bailiffs from among the burgesses each year,
confirmed the burgesses' economic privileges
and right to exercise leet jurisdiction in the
borough. (fn. 373) In the period 1676–1734 the new
lords of Marlborough, the Bruces, displaced the
Whig interest of the old lords, the Seymours, in
parliamentary elections at Marlborough by
ensuring that burgesses, to whom voting was
restricted, returned Tory candidates. Success
was achieved by admitting to the corporation
only men acceptable to the Bruces and by
reducing it after 1734 to a small oligarchy. (fn. 374) In
that way the corporation became subservient to
the lord of the borough. By the later 18th century
most corporation members were common councillors, with whom, in the first instance, the
making of decisions rested. In the later 18th
century, early 19th, and still in 1833, the
Ailesburys' steward was the corporation's
leading member and ensured that only men
acceptable to Lord Ailesbury were nominated as
burgesses. (fn. 375)
Although the king's court, the later town court
or court of civil pleas, to which the 1204 charter
entitled the burgesses and which the new
borough council was allowed to retain in 1835, (fn. 376)
was mentioned in 1473, (fn. 377) no record of it survives
before 1641 or after 1847. It was a court of record
usually held weekly but sometimes less frequently:
in the 19th century it was held every three weeks
in the town hall on Wednesdays. There, before
the mayor as chairman, civil pleas such as those of
debt, and claims for damages, were heard and
determined. Pleas more properly the concern of
the borough quarter sessions, such as trespass on
the case, trespass and assault, assault and battery,
entry, and entry and assault were also dealt with,
presumably because they involved claims for
damages. The town clerk acted as registrar, and
the serjeants at mace as bailiffs of the court
serving process. (fn. 378) Although most of its functions
passed to the county court established by Act of
1846 the king's court was not formally abolished
until 1974. (fn. 379)
The right to be exempt from the sheriff's tourn
and to take other liberties was implied in the
charter of 1204. (fn. 380) The mayor's court, first
recorded in 1501, seems in the earlier 16th
century to have fulfilled some of the functions of
a court leet. It was attended by all the inhabitants
and held, usually every three weeks, on Fridays,
and at it the ward aldermen presented minor
breaches of the peace. The administrative
business of the borough was conducted from
1501 and earlier at courts of morrow speech
which were held, generally each quarter, on
Fridays. There bylaws were passed, leases of
borough property were enrolled, and transfers of
such property were proclaimed. At the autumn
court the mayor and borough officials were
elected and the common council chosen. (fn. 381) The
mayor's and the morrow speech courts were held
together once in 1537. (fn. 382) They were separate in
1553–4 (fn. 383) but had merged by 1614 under the title
of the court of morrow speech with the mayor's
court (fn. 384) and were held, under various similar
titles, every three weeks on a Friday until the
earlier 19th century. (fn. 385)
Pie powder courts, records of which are extant
only for the earlier 16th century, were held on
Wednesdays and Saturdays to deal with market
offences such as debts and infringements of the
assize of bread. (fn. 386) Biannual views of frankpledge,
of which no record survives before 1514 or after
1554, were also held. Presentments of matters
such as the fouling of gutters and thoroughfares,
buildings in need of repair, and malicious
wounding were made to a jury by the ward
aldermen. (fn. 387) The view was, perhaps exceptionally, held with a court of pie powder in 1514. (fn. 388)
Although the newly incorporated borough was
granted a commission of the peace in 1576, (fn. 389) no
record of a distinct borough court of quarter
sessions survives before the 18th century. In the
later 17th century and early 18th justice business,
such as larceny, the removal of paupers from the
town, trespass, assault, and ejectment, was dealt
with at the king's court and at the court of the
mayor with the morrow speech court. Quarter
sessions business was distinguished in the first
court in 1705 and in the second court in 1715, and
a separate borough court of quarter sessions may
date from that period. (fn. 390) In the 18th century, too,
the sessions held at Easter and Michaelmas drew
to themselves the leet business formerly done in
the mayor's court and later in the court of the
mayor with the court of morrow speech and
matters dealt with in the 16th-century views of
frankpledge and courts of pie powder. In 1772,
and probably earlier, the title of the Easter
and Michaelmas sessions was general quarter
sessions of the peace, leet, and law day. The two
strands of jurisdiction exercised at them are
illustrated by the attendance of and presentments
by the overseers of the two Marlborough
parishes, who were appointed by the justices on
the churchwardens' nominations, and the ward
constables or their deputies who were appointed
at the Michaelmas sessions. From the 18th
century cases including bastardy, grand and
petty larceny, and assault were presented to
the three borough justices by a grand jury. (fn. 391)
Felonies were tried, without authority, until
1824, (fn. 392) and in the later 16th century and earlier
17th the corporation had a gibbet west of Kingsbury Street on the site of Gallows Close. (fn. 393)
From 1576 the mayor was ex officio clerk of the
market. (fn. 394) No record of a market court survives
before 1785. In that year, and until 1836, minutes
of the mayor's court otherwise called the court of
the clerk of the market show the mayor, as clerk
of the market and a justice, sitting every six weeks
with another borough justice to regulate market
affairs, and to receive presentments by a jury
sworn each autumn of matters such as the sale of
butter in short measure and the use of short
weights. (fn. 395)
In the 16th century and later the income of the
borough derived from rents and entry fines of
Port field, payments for pasturage on Marlborough Common, rents from houses and inns in
Marlborough, some of them former chantry
property bought from the Crown in 1550, the
profits of a weighing engine, and tolls which were
leased in 1626 and later. The total income of
£633 in 1832 included £484 from the properties,
£99 from the land, £20 from the tolls, and £30
from the weighing engine. (fn. 396) Marlborough was
exempt from the county rate, (fn. 397) and from 1775
borough rates were imposed on the two Marlborough parishes at borough quarter sessions by
the borough justices. Although the jurisdiction of
the borough justices was assumed by the county
justices in 1835, the borough continued to be
exempt from the county rate but apparently
contributed from the borough fund to the costs of
committing prisoners from Marlborough to the
county gaols, and, on the orders of the county
justices and of the justices of assize, paid the
expenses of prosecutions of offences committed
in the borough. In 1848, however, the borough
was judged liable to contribute to the county
rate. (fn. 398)
Borough bailiffs were in office in 1223. (fn. 399) They
were in charge of the borough weights (fn. 400) and acted
as officers of the borough courts. A coroner, an
officer the burgesses claimed to have had from
1204, was in office in 1249 and there were two in
1289 and later. (fn. 401) There were ward aldermen in
1268, (fn. 402) a mayor in 1273, (fn. 403) and two underbailiffs
and a constable in 1462. (fn. 404) All the officers were
elected in early autumn at the morrow speech
court, later the courts of morrow speech with the
mayor's court, (fn. 405) but coroners, although the office
was elective, seem to have served for longer
periods. (fn. 406) Borough officials, except the ward
aldermen called constables from 1649, continued
to be elected at those courts in the earlier 19th
century. (fn. 407) In the later 18th century the ward
constables, who then appeared at borough
quarter sessions by deputy, were elected at the
Michaelmas sessions, leet, and law days. (fn. 408) Two
chamberlains in 1572 and one in 1593 and 1833,
apparently appointed by the corporation rather
than elected, were in charge of borough
finances. (fn. 409) A borough treasurer, perhaps the
chamberlain, was mentioned in 1824. (fn. 410) A town
clerk, who also acted as recorder and clerk of the
peace, was in office in 1579. (fn. 411) The two constables
mentioned in 1641 were called high constables in
the later 17th century to distinguish them from
the ward constables. The two serjeants at mace
mentioned from the 16th century may have
performed functions similar to those of the
medieval underbailiffs. (fn. 412) A beadle was mentioned
in 1833. (fn. 413)
A guildhall, which may have stood on the north
side of High Street at its east end, was mentioned
in 1270. (fn. 414) The building or its successor was
repaired in 1575 and 1583. (fn. 415) In the 17th century
and earlier 19th the borough courts and quarter
sessions were held there. (fn. 416) That building,
apparently inadequate for county quarter sessions
for which temporary buildings were provided,
was replaced c. 1630 by a new guildhall or town
hall, incorporating a market house, built at the
east end of High Street on the site of the market
or high cross. (fn. 417) That town hall, burned down in
1653, was rebuilt on the same site in 1654–5. (fn. 418) It
was rebuilt by John Hammond in 1792–3, altered
and repaired to provide better accommodation
for county sessions in 1867, and rebuilt again in
1901–2 to designs in a late 17th-century style by
C. E. Ponting. (fn. 419)
The right of the burgesses to have a prison was
implicit in the terms of the 1204 charter. One was
mentioned in 1281, in 1561 when the mayor
committed a felon to it, and in 1575 when it was
repaired. (fn. 420) A gaol was expressly granted to the
corporation in 1576. (fn. 421) It was beneath the guildhall in 1625. (fn. 422) Extra and temporary accommodation may have been provided for prisoners at
county sessions in the earlier 17th century. (fn. 423)
Prisons or blindhouses were incorporated in the
town halls of c. 1630, 1654–5, and 1792–3. (fn. 424) In
the late 19th century the prison accommodated
prisoners awaiting trial at county quarter sessions; the lower part had gone out of use by
1867, but the upper part was used until the new
town hall was built in 1901–2. (fn. 425) The doorway
of the 18th-century blindhouse was built into
the town hall of 1901–2, which incorporated
cells. (fn. 426)
In 1575 or earlier the borough maintained an
almshouse next to the grammar school. (fn. 427) A
workhouse, which possibly stood west of Marlborough, was built by the corporation c. 1631. (fn. 428)
That building was demolished c. 1709 and replaced by another on the west side of Hyde
Lane. (fn. 429) In 1725 the corporation conveyed the
almshouse to St. Mary's parish to house its
paupers and the workhouse to St. Peter's for the
same purpose. (fn. 430)
The borough contributed towards a bridewell
in Preshute in 1624. (fn. 431) Another, built partly at the
expense of the county and partly at that of the
borough in 1630–1, (fn. 432) stood on the south side of
the London-Bath road in Preshute, (fn. 433) possibly on
the site of Marlborough College chapel. The
corporation contributed to the cost of repairs and
to the master's salary. In 1648 the county justices
expressly allowed the borough justices to send
people there. (fn. 434) The bridewell was rebuilt within
the borough on the east side of Hermitage Lane
in 1709. (fn. 435) In 1781 it was wrongly described as
in Preshute. (fn. 436) That building was repaired and
enlarged in 1723 (fn. 437) and rebuilt in 1787. (fn. 438) In 1825
and later it was used mainly for confining
prisoners before trial. (fn. 439) Agricultural rioters were
detained there in 1830. (fn. 440) There was no debtor,
only criminals, in its 15 cells, 12 for men and 3 for
women, in 1836. A chaplain was employed and a
surgeon visited thrice weekly. The placing of
chains on the doors 'to afford somewhat of the
appearance of a prison' was suggested in 1842. (fn. 441)
The number of prisoners confined there during
1843 was 312. (fn. 442) It ceased to be a prison in 1854
and from then until 1898 was a police station. (fn. 443)
The building was afterwards acquired by Marlborough College, and a gymnasium, which incorporated windows from the bridewell, and a
college boarding house were built on the site. (fn. 444)
In 1835 the oligarchical corporation which had
been controlled by the earls and marquesses of
Ailesbury was replaced by a town council styled
the mayor and burgesses of the borough and
town of Marlborough. Any male householder
who had lived in Marlborough for three or more
years and had occupied property upon which
poor rates were levied, and who himself had not
received parish relief, could be enrolled as a
burgess. The council comprised a mayor, 4
aldermen, of whom 2 went out of office every
third year, and 12 councillors of whom a third
went out of office each year. The burgesses
elected councillors each year. The councillors
elected from their number a mayor each year and
aldermen every third year. (fn. 445) The council was
bound to hold quarterly meetings but usually
met, on adjournments, every three weeks,
possibly in imitation of the former three weeks
court. The borough officers, appointed by the
council, were a town clerk, 2 serjeants at mace
and bailiffs, a beadle who was also town crier,
billet master, and borough policeman, and a
treasurer. Committees were appointed to oversee
watching and market affairs (fn. 446) and to deal with
business arising from the legislation of the later
19th century and earlier 20th. (fn. 447) The borough lost
its coroner and its commission of the peace in
1835. (fn. 448) The county coroner acted in the borough
from 1835 and continued to do so after the
council in 1851 obtained a new commission of the
peace which entitled it to restore the office of
borough coroner. (fn. 449) In 1860 Marlborough
became part of the North Wiltshire Coroner's
District. (fn. 450) Borough sessions were held from 1851
until 1951 when, under the Justices of the Peace
Act, 1949, Marlborough became the meeting
place of a county petty sessional division. (fn. 451)
Petty sessions were still held in the town hall in
1982. (fn. 452)
A sanitary inspector was appointed in 1855.
The town council in 1859 agreed to adopt the
Local Government Act of 1858 which enabled it
to act as a sanitary authority. It did not, however,
begin to function as a local board of health until
1866. The town clerk became clerk to the board,
and a surveyor, a treasurer, a collector, and an
inspector of nuisances were appointed. (fn. 453) Under
the Public Health Act, 1872, the borough constituted itself an urban sanitary authority (fn. 454) and
appointed a medical officer of health. That parttime officer was replaced in 1915 by a full-time one
for Marlborough and the rural districts of Amesbury, Marlborough, Pewsey, and Ramsbury.
The council acquired no. 1 the Green as offices in
1936. (fn. 455) It administered the municipal borough
until 1974. In that year Marlborough ceased to be
a borough, became a parish with town status, and
was included in Kennet district. The borough
council became the parish or town council and its
nominated chairman the town mayor. (fn. 456)
Arms, Seals, and Insignia. The medieval
borough arms were tricked in 1565 as azure, a
castle triple-towered argent. That charge was
incorporated in the elaborate coat confirmed to
the borough in the same year and still used with
minor variations in 1982; the coat was then
tricked as per saltire gules and azure, in chief a
bull passant argent armed or, in fesse two capons
argent, in base three greyhounds courant in pale
argent collared or, and on a chief or, upon a pale
azure between two roses gules, a tower tripletowered argent. (fn. 457) A tower on a helm was adopted
as a crest in 1714. (fn. 458) The helm was replaced by a
mound, and two greyhounds adopted as supporters, in 1836. (fn. 459) The motto 'Ubi nunc sapientis
ossa Merlini?', of which there is no record before
1854, alludes to the medieval tradition that
Marlborough was the burying place of Merlin,
and is adapted from a line of Boethius. (fn. 460) Those
arms, with an amended legend, were transferred
to the new town council in 1974. (fn. 461)
The matrix of the earliest common seal of the
borough was cast in the 13th century. The first
known impression is of 1354. It is round, 5.3 cm.
in diameter, and shows a triple-towered castle
embattled and masoned, with long round-headed
windows and a round-headed doorway with
a hinged door closed: legend, lombardic, [s]ig
[il]l[um commune de m]arleberg[e]. (fn. 462) The
queen granted the mayor and burgesses the use of
a common seal in 1576, (fn. 463) but, if a new matrix was
made, (fn. 464) it was a replica of the old because
impressions did not change. (fn. 465) In 1714 a round
silver matrix 5 cm. in diameter, bearing within a
carved border the date 1714 and, flanked by
ornamental mantling and surmounted by a tower
on a helm, the arms confirmed in 1565, was given
by Charles Bruce, Lord Bruce, whose arms
appear on the handle: legend, humanistic,
sigillum maioris & burgensium burgi & villae
de marleberg. (fn. 466) Old and new seals were both
used until 1727 when the destruction of the old
one was ordered. (fn. 467) A brass matrix of the old seal
was found at Stone (Staffs.) in the 1930s. (fn. 468) The
matrix of 1714, on which the engraver omitted to
represent the tower in chief on a pale, survives
but was replaced in 1836 by another of silver, 5.3
cm. in diameter, bearing the borough arms, the
date 1836, a mound surmounted by a tower as a
crest, and two greyhounds as supporters:
legend, humanistic, the seal of the mayor
aldermen and burgesses of the borough of
marlborough. The last word is on a scroll
beneath the supporters. (fn. 469) In 1974 a new seal,
bearing that date and the town arms, was
adopted. (fn. 470)
The mayor's seal was made anew in 1590. (fn. 471) A
new mayoral seal, a smaller version of the common seal of 1714, was given, probably in 1714,
by Charles, Lord Bruce: legend, humanistic,
sigillum maioris burgi de marleberg. (fn. 472) It
survived in 1982.
The borough had maces in the 16th century. (fn. 473)
Two maces, bought in 1601, were altered in
London in 1607. (fn. 474) They were altered, or new
ones made, in London by Tobias Coleman in
1652. The silver gilt maces, each 1.04 m. long,
were converted from Commonwealth to royal
maces in 1660. (fn. 475) A mayoral chain was bought by
subscription authorized in 1896. (fn. 476) The town
council also possessed a mayor's day chain, a
mayoress's chain, and a deputy mayor's badge of
office in 1982. (fn. 477)
Mayoral plate, perhaps that mentioned in
1492–3, (fn. 478) was sold c. 1550. (fn. 479) A pewter dining
service, bought for the borough in 1615, (fn. 480) was
destroyed in 1653. (fn. 481) A new set was bought in
1664 and added to in 1667, 1675, and 1676. (fn. 482)
Four plates, engraved with a stylized tower, (fn. 483)
survived in 1982. (fn. 484)
Parish Government. In the 18th century and
presumably earlier, parish government was controlled by the borough. The parish surveyors
and overseers, who until 1835 were nominated
by the churchwardens and appointed by the
borough justices at the Easter general quarter
sessions, acted in matters concerning both roads
and the poor in accordance with decisions taken
and orders made at borough sessions, which they
attended. (fn. 485) In 1716, for example, the St. Peter's
overseers were ordered to contribute £2 weekly
for the relief of the St. Mary's poor, (fn. 486) and rates
imposed on St. Peter's parish were invariably
double those levied in St. Mary's. Both parishes
also contributed to the borough constables' bills
and to other borough expenses. (fn. 487) After borough
quarter sessions ceased in 1835, parish officers
were elected at vestry meetings. (fn. 488)
St. Mary's may have had a workhouse near the
churchyard in 1698. (fn. 489) In 1725 the borough
conveyed its almshouse in the Parade to St.
Mary's parish for a workhouse. (fn. 490) It was out of
repair in 1788 and its inmates were neglected. (fn. 491) A
proposal to have one workhouse for the two
parishes was rejected in 1790 and St. Mary's
workhouse was repaired and enlarged in that
year. (fn. 492) It had 43 inmates in 1834 (fn. 493) and was closed
when St. Mary's parish became part of Marlborough union in 1835. (fn. 494) The building had been
sold by 1860. (fn. 495) Expenditure on the poor increased after the adverse report on conditions in
the workhouse in 1788. (fn. 496) Poor rates rose from
£216 levied in 1782 to £745 in 1800 but decreased to £537 in 1824. (fn. 497) They rose from £586 in
1830 to £661 in 1834. (fn. 498) A shed for looms was
erected at the workhouse in 1791 and a contractor
appointed to employ the inmates in clothmaking.
In the same year St. Mary's vestry resolved to
inoculate the poor and in 1796 to deny outdoor
relief to any pauper who kept a dog. (fn. 499)
The borough workhouse in Hyde Lane was
conveyed to St. Peter's parish in 1725. (fn. 500) The
master agreed with the trustees and parish
officers in 1728 to keep the workhouse inmates
for 1s. 8d. each weekly, 'pudding and butter
excepted'. (fn. 501) From 1751 to 1773 contractors were
found to employ the inmates in cotton spinning.
In 1757 there were 17 adults, 9 girls, and 5 boys
so employed. (fn. 502) Major repairs to the workhouse
were made in 1792. (fn. 503) When St. Peter's parish was
included in Marlborough poor-law union in
1835 (fn. 504) the building was used as a union workhouse until a new one was built in 1837 on
Marlborough Common in Preshute. (fn. 505) The workhouse in Hyde Lane was sold in that year. (fn. 506) Poor
rates levied in St. Peter's in the period 1745–55
averaged £16 a month and in the years 1755–80
averaged £36–£38 monthly. In the later 18th
century and earlier 19th there were usually four
overseers. (fn. 507) As in St. Mary's parish, increased
expenditure may have been encouraged by the
report in 1788 on the dilapidated state of the
workhouse and on its sick and dirty inmates. (fn. 508)
Outdoor relief, however, remained low: £4 was
spent in 1790–1, £6 in 1803. It seems that
inoculation of the poor agreed upon in 1794 may
have been resisted because in 1803 paupers who
refused to be inoculated or to have their children
inoculated were denied relief. (fn. 509) Rates totalled
£548 in 1830, inexplicably only £396 in 1832,
and £663 in 1834. (fn. 510) A paid assistant overseer was
appointed in 1834. (fn. 511)
Public Services.
The borough was policed
by constables, high constables from 1776 or
earlier, who helped the mayor to keep the peace.
In each ward a petty constable, formerly called
ward alderman, arranged for the watch to be kept
and for precautions against fire to be taken. In the
18th century and earlier 19th the petty constables
also kept order at fairs. Offences committed in
the wards were reported by the petty constables
at the courts of the mayor or three weeks' court
with the court of morrow speech and at the
borough quarter sessions held at Easter and
Michaelmas. (fn. 512) The constables were supported
by special rates. (fn. 513) An association for the prosecution of felons was founded in 1774 and still
flourished in 1834. (fn. 514) A public subscription was
raised in 1805 to enable watch to be kept in the
borough from 29 September to 25 March. Inhabitants subscribing 5s. or more could provide
deputies but those subscribing less were to serve
in person. A committee was to choose two men
who were to be paid to watch each night and to
appoint a third to supervise them. (fn. 515) In 1836 the
new borough council established a watch committee and appointed the borough beadle as
policeman. (fn. 516) Watchmen were discontinued in
1850 when the county police force provided two
constables, partly maintained at the borough's
expense. A police station was opened in St.
Margaret's, then in Preshute. (fn. 517) The old bridewell became the police station in 1854. (fn. 518) The
borough police became part of the county force in
1875. A new police station was built in George
Lane in Preshute in 1898. (fn. 519)
In the early 18th century the petty constables
were responsible for maintaining fire-fighting
equipment and for taking precautions against
fire. (fn. 520) Before 1747, however, the borough
appointed a separate manager of its two fire
engines. The manager's salary and the upkeep of
the engines were paid for by subscription. (fn. 521)
From 1836, however, both were paid for from the
borough fund. (fn. 522) In 1848 the engines were housed
behind the National schools south of High
Street. (fn. 523) After fire destroyed part of High Street
in 1879 the old engines were replaced, new
equipment bought, and a paid fire brigade
formed. A motor engine was bought in 1926
and housed in London Road. By the Act of 1947
control of the borough fire brigade, which had
been part of a national fire service during the
Second World War, passed to the county council.
A new fire station was opened in the Parade in
1952. (fn. 524)
The town was being lighted at corporation
expense by oil lamps in the 1690s, (fn. 525) a practice
which probably continued until the 19th century.
A private gas company, formed c. 1822, erected
works on corporation land, (fn. 526) east of London
Road and north of the Kennet. (fn. 527) Gas lighting had
been installed in part of the town hall by 1829 (fn. 528)
and in High Street by 1831. (fn. 529) In 1846 the supply
was extended, partly at the expense of the
borough fund and partly by donations, to the
remainder of the town by Marlborough Gas
Co. (fn. 530) By 1907 gas lighting had been extended to
the area taken into the borough in 1901. (fn. 531) The
works were acquired by Swindon United Gas
Co. in 1935 and closed in 1945. Thereafter gas
was supplied from Swindon. The Swindon Gas
Co. merged in the South Western Gas Board in
1949. One of the town's gas holders ceased to be
used in 1961 but the other stored North Sea gas
in 1982. (fn. 532)
Unsuccessful administrative attempts to light
the borough by electricity were made in 1904 and
1913. (fn. 533) Herbert Leaf's gift of electric lighting to
Marlborough College in 1923 was made on the
condition that the town should also benefit. In
that year mains were laid and an electricity
committee of the town council was formed: it
oversaw the installation of electric light in the
town hall in 1924 and in the remainder of the
town in 1926. (fn. 534) The borough had acquired its
own electricity station in Pewsey Road by 1937. (fn. 535)
The town scheme was nationalized by the Act of
1947, (fn. 536) and was vested in the Southern Electricity Board in 1948. (fn. 537)
The borough maintained a pest house in
1608. (fn. 538) Various ad hoc measures, such as the provision of accommodation for, and the isolation
and nursing of, the infected poor, and the burial
of the dead, were taken by the corporation during
outbreaks of plague in Marlborough during the
17th century. (fn. 539) A bylaw of 1636 provided for
the appointment of three men, whose wages of
6d. a day were paid for by a tax on householders,
to patrol the town daily during such outbreaks
and to allow entry only to strangers who could
prove that they came from uninfected areas. (fn. 540)
Marlborough had a branch of the health of
towns association in 1847. (fn. 541) Although in 1848
tenants of corporation property were enjoined to
attend to their cesspits, (fn. 542) little was done to
improve water supply, sewage disposal, or the
care of fever patients until a local board of health
was established in 1866. (fn. 543) A pest house, called the
Rest House in 1977, which stood alone in a lane
running south from Poulton Hill, (fn. 544) was closed
when an isolation hospital, mainly of cast iron,
was built in Blowhorn Street in 1871. (fn. 545) The iron
hospital was let (fn. 546) except when needed, as in
1874. (fn. 547) It was demolished c. 1928. (fn. 548) In 1891 the
corporation undertook to provide a public water
supply. Waterworks, which comprised an engine
house, pumping machinery, and a reservoir, had
been constructed on Postern Hill in Preshute
and main supply pipes had been laid by 1896.
Another reservoir was provided and additional
machinery installed on Postern Hill in 1915. A
tank for storing water built on Marlborough
Common in 1941 (fn. 549) was demolished in 1970. (fn. 550)
The main outlet for the town sewage was the
Kennet in 1864. Attempts in 1894 to enlarge the
borough were unsuccessful because its disposal
system was inadequate. Although sewerage
works were opened in Elcot Lane, then in
Preshute, in 1900, (fn. 551) the system did not function
fully until the 1920s. (fn. 552) Sewers were afterwards
extended to remaining parts of Preshute transferred to Marlborough in 1934. (fn. 553)
A bylaw of 1577 required householders to clear
their frontages on fair and market days and on
Saturday nights. (fn. 554) Breaches of it were the concern of the views and courts leet until the earlier
19th century. (fn. 555) It was suggested in 1866 that a
general rate be levied for watering the streets. (fn. 556)
That was done in 1885 and earlier by the town's
water cart. (fn. 557)
Houses in Marlborough were numbered c.
1874. (fn. 558) The town council built houses for letting
in Chiminage Close in 1912 and 1923, in Lainey's
Close in 1921, 1926, and 1928, and in Coldharbour Lane in 1921. (fn. 559) Council houses were also
built at St. Margaret's from c. 1920 to c. 1950, (fn. 560)
and on part of Port field from the 1960s. (fn. 561)
A swimming pool south of Kennet Place, built
after the First World War by the town improvement committee, was taken over by the corporation in 1937 and still used in 1982. (fn. 562) A cemetery
for the borough was opened in 1924 (fn. 563) on Marlborough Common in Preshute north-west of the
burial ground provided for Preshute and the
Marlborough parishes in 1855. (fn. 564)
A branch of the county library was opened in
no. 1 the Green in 1936 or 1937. (fn. 565) It was moved
in 1964 to the buildings in High Street vacated by
St. Peter's school. (fn. 566) Marlborough, which stood
on a main 17th-century postal route, had a
postmaster, and presumably a post office, in 1610
or earlier. (fn. 567) A post office on the south side of High
Street was burned down in 1879 (fn. 568) and replaced
by another on the north. In 1909 a new post office
was built at no. 101 High Street. (fn. 569)
Parliamentary Representation.
Marlborough was represented at the parliament
of 1275 (fn. 570) and returned two burgesses in 1295 and
later. (fn. 571) The borough was frequently represented
during the period 1392–1420, presumably
because it was the most important town in northeast Wiltshire at the time. (fn. 572) In the 14th century,
and perhaps earlier, the queen's bailiff in the
county, who was her deputy at Marlborough,
returned names of elected members. (fn. 573) After
1405 the burgesses sent the names of those
elected to the county court to be returned in the
county indenture. (fn. 574) Marlborough was generally
accounted a Crown borough until c. 1500. (fn. 575) Most
members were prominent townsmen who often
held not only borough but county office. John
Bird (d. 1445), a resident burgess who represented Marlborough in 1402, 1413–15, 1426,
1429, 1435, and 1437, also acted as county tax
collector and escheator and, from 1405 and
earlier to 1433 and later, as steward of Queen
Joan's Wiltshire lands. (fn. 576)
The influence of the Seymour family gradually
replaced that of the Crown during the earlier
16th century and became firmly established
after the reversion of the borough lordship was
granted to Edward Seymour, duke of Somerset,
in 1547. (fn. 577) Most members were still resident
townsmen such as Robert Were or Brown (d.
1570), M.P. in 1553, (fn. 578) and William Daniell (d.
1604), M.P. in 1558 and 1559. Daniell's patron
was possibly William Herbert, earl of Pembroke,
whose influence displaced that of the Seymours
in the 1550s during the minority of Edward
Seymour, later earl of Hertford. (fn. 579) The borough
seems to have paid its members in the 16th
century, (fn. 580) and in the earlier 17th when a member
received £2 and incidental expenses for a
parliament. (fn. 581)
The franchise in the 17th century and later was
restricted to the burgesses. (fn. 582) Under a new system
of representation imposed briefly during the
Interregnum, Marlborough was allowed only
one member and, with Devizes and Salisbury,
was one of only three Wiltshire towns summoned
to parliament in 1654. (fn. 583) In the 17th century and
earlier 18th the polls, in which each burgess had
two votes, were held in the town hall at special
sessions of the morrow speech courts. (fn. 584)
After 1676 the Whig interest of the Seymours
was challenged by the Tory interest of Thomas
Bruce, from 1685 earl of Ailesbury. (fn. 585) The efforts
of the rival parties to control the corporation
resulted in attempts, in 1679 and later, to extend
the franchise to all householders (fn. 586) and in the
period 1711–14 led to the election of rival
mayors, who in 1715 supported rival parliamentary candidates. (fn. 587) The electorate in 1705 was
'very mercenary and resolved to serve the highest
bidder . . . being now grown as corrupt as any
other borough'. (fn. 588) In 1712 Charles, duke of
Somerset, offered £50 to any who would desert
the Bruce interest. (fn. 589) The restriction of votes
to the burgesses was confirmed in 1717 (fn. 590) and
1830. (fn. 591) The electorate numbered 77 in 1623. (fn. 592)
The 40 burgesses recorded in 1704 had been
reduced to 21 in 1734. (fn. 593) Bruce and Seymour
interests shared the representation from 1722,
when Algernon Seymour, earl of Hertford, was
returned, until 1734, when the return of two
Bruce candidates was secured. Thereafter Marlborough was a pocket borough of the Bruces. (fn. 594)
Sir John Hynde Cotton, Bt., the Jacobite leader,
was one of the borough members from 1741 until
his death in 1752 and was succeeded by his son
and namesake, who sat for the borough during
the period 1752–61. (fn. 595) The constituency was
managed for Thomas Bruce, Lord Bruce, from
1776 earl of Ailesbury, by his agent Charles Bill
who was a member of the corporation and served
as mayor. In 1771 the corporation agreed to
nominate new burgesses only with Lord Bruce's
consent. (fn. 596) An unsuccessful attempt to widen the
franchise was made in the later 18th century and
earlier 19th by the Marlborough independent
and constitutional association. (fn. 597)
In 1832 Preshute parish was added to the
parliamentary borough, (fn. 598) which in 1833 had 230
registered voters. At that time, however, the
steward of Charles, marquess of Ailesbury, was a
leading member of the corporation and Lord
Ailesbury could still be sure that the members
chosen were his nominees. (fn. 599) The borough lost one
member in 1867 when the franchise was again
widened. (fn. 600) Its allegiance was Tory (fn. 601) until 1885
when it lost its remaining member and was
merged in the Devizes division of the county. (fn. 602)
Churches.
The churches which William
Beaufay, bishop of East Anglia (d. 1091), gave
or devised to Osmund, bishop of Salisbury,
possibly included those of St. Mary and St.
Peter in Marlborough. Bishop Osmund endowed
Salisbury cathedral chapter with the churches in
1091 and their histories were the same as that of
Preshute church until 1223. (fn. 603) In that year the
bishop of Salisbury detached both St. Mary's
and St. Peter's from the prebend of Blewbury
(Berks., later Oxon.) and Marlborough and included them within his peculiar jurisdiction. (fn. 604) In
the 19th century St. Mary's served the borough
east of Kingsbury Street and St. Peter's the
borough west of it. (fn. 605)
In 1238 the bishop ordained a vicarage in St.
Mary's church, which as architectural evidence
shows existed in the 12th century, and assigned
the advowson of it to the dean of Salisbury. (fn. 606)
Thereafter the deans, or their proctors as in 1334
and 1376, presented vicars until the early 19th
century. The bishop collated in 1563, presumably because the deanery was vacant, and for
unknown reasons in 1583 and 1663. In 1608 John
Sharpe presented under grant of a turn from,
inexplicably, Salisbury chapter. (fn. 607) By Act of 1840
the advowson was transferred to the bishop. (fn. 608) In
1917 the bishop, also patron of St. Peter's
church, presented the same man to both benefices which were held in plurality until united in
1924 as the rectory of Marlborough, St. Peter and
St. Paul with St. Mary the Virgin. (fn. 609) The title was
altered in 1952 to the united benefice of Marlborough, St. Mary the Virgin with St. Peter and
St. Paul. The parishes were united in 1952 and
St. Mary's became the parish church. (fn. 610) The
united benefice was united with Preshute
vicarage in 1976 and a team ministry established. (fn. 611)
In 1238 the revenues of St. Mary's, mainly
tithes, were assigned to the vicars, who until 1252
paid £1 yearly to Salisbury chapter to maintain a
candle in the cathedral choir. (fn. 612) The vicarage was
worth £6 13s. 4d. in 1255 and £10 9s. 4d. in
1535. (fn. 613) The poverty of the living is suggested by
several augmentations of it. Parishioners subscribed to augment the income of £13 6s. 8d. in
1674. (fn. 614) In 1733 the Revd. Benjamin D'Aranda
and Leonard Twells, vicar 1722–37, gave, to
augment the vicarage, £200 which was matched
by £200 from Queen Anne's Bounty. (fn. 615) Edward
Cressett (d. 1693) bequeathed £80 for the vicars
but by 1783 the capital had been lost. (fn. 616) A bequest
of £200 from Sarah Franklin and a parliamentary
grant of £300 in 1811 and another parliamentary
grant made in 1812 were used partly to buy 12 a.
in Liddington, sold in 1919. (fn. 617) Charles Francis,
rector of Collingbourne Ducis and of Mildenhall and four times mayor of Marlborough, by
will proved 1821 gave £100 which produced
£3 3s. 8d. in 1905 but by 1982 had merged with
other endowments of the benefice. (fn. 618) From 1829
to 1831 the benefice had an average income of
£100. (fn. 619) In 1839 £350 by subscription and £100
from a Mrs. Pyncombe's trustees were given. (fn. 620)
The tithes were valued at £25 15s. in 1843 and
commuted. (fn. 621)
The vicar had a house on the Green in 1380. (fn. 622)
A later vicarage house was apparently no. 8 the
Green, (fn. 623) which is a 17th-century timber-framed
building. It was uninhabitable in 1698 (fn. 624) and
1812, (fn. 625) and was sold c. 1838. (fn. 626) A new house at
the junction of St. Martin's and Stonebridge
Lane had been built by 1843. (fn. 627) From 1917 the
incumbent lived in St. Peter's Rectory which
became the Rectory of the united benefice in
1924. St. Mary's Vicarage was sold in 1927. (fn. 628)
Between 1252 and 1254 the inhabitants of the
'new land' east of Marlborough built a church
dedicated to St. Martin and from 1254 gave the
rector of Preshute 40s. a year to find a chaplain to
serve it. (fn. 629) The church was either enlarged or
repaired in 1270 when the king allowed the
inhabitants to take six oaks from Savernake forest
for work then in progress. (fn. 630) From 1330 the vicar
of Preshute received the pension and paid the
chaplain's stipend. (fn. 631) The church was later
endowed with land and nine tenements. (fn. 632) In
1499, when it was worth £4 a year, the church
was served, contrary to canon law, by a friar. (fn. 633) St.
Martin's was called a parish in the earlier 16th
century because it had its own church, was
separated by Marlborough from its mother
church, and was separately assessed for taxation. (fn. 634) It was transferred from Preshute to St.
Mary's parish, Marlborough, c. 1548. (fn. 635) The
church had ceased to be used as such by 1567; (fn. 636) it
stood in Coldharbour Lane. (fn. 637)
In 1258 Eustace Blowe granted land in Marlborough to Idony of Mildenhall who was to pay
6s. to St. Mary's for masses of the Blessed Virgin
Mary. (fn. 638) The chantry so founded was perhaps
that which John Kingswood, a canon of St.
Mary's priory, Studley (Warws.), was allowed to
serve by papal dispensation in 1466. (fn. 639) Its endowments were perhaps the lands reputed in
1579 to have belonged to a chantry of St. Mary in
Marlborough. (fn. 640) Thomas Poulton, bishop of
Worcester, by will proved 1433 gave money
for masses to be said for five years at the lady
altar. (fn. 641)
By will proved 1502 Robert Hutchins or
Forster gave £1 from his lands in Marlborough,
one of the Ogbournes, Elcot, and Bourton
(Berks., later Oxon.), which he devised to Henry
Pengryve, for an obit in St. Mary's church. (fn. 642)
Pengryve by will proved 1518 charged those
lands with £9 yearly, of which £6 was for a priest
to pray for him, Hutchins or Forster, and their
friends, and £1 6s. 8d. was for his obit. (fn. 643) At its
dissolution the chantry, worth £10 3s. 4d. yearly,
was served by an old priest who had no other
living. (fn. 644) By deed of 1503 an unknown donor
conveyed property in Marlborough to endow a
chantry in St. Mary's. Its property was worth
£8 8s. 2d. in 1548. (fn. 645)
In 1527 William Serle endowed a Jesus service
in St. Mary's with property in the Green ward
and in Kingsbury Street, which, worth £1 5s. 4d.
in 1548, was sold with other chantry property in
Marlborough to the mayor and burgesses in
1550. (fn. 646) Rents from some of those properties were
afterwards used to maintain St. Mary's church.
Income from the Church Estate, then no. 5 the
Green and a cottage in Herd Street, was so used
in 1905. (fn. 647) The estate was sold at an unknown date
and the capital invested. In 1982 the income of
St. Mary's Church Estates charity was still used
for church maintenance. (fn. 648)
The chantry priests apparently acted as assistant curates in the earlier 16th century. (fn. 649) Curates
frequently assisted the vicars thereafter. (fn. 650)
Thomas Miles, vicar 1643–9, was also vicar of
Preshute 1647–9. (fn. 651) William Hughes (d. 1688),
ejected from the vicarage in 1662, remained in
Marlborough as a dissenting minister. (fn. 652) Leonard
Twells, vicar 1722–37, wrote theological
works. (fn. 653) In 1783 services with sermons, omitted
when the Sacrament was administered, were held
on Sunday mornings and afternoons. Other
services were held on Monday and Wednesday
mornings and on Saturday evenings. Holy Communion was celebrated on Christmas and Easter
days, Whit and Trinity Sundays, and the first
Sunday in the month. There were usually
between 20 and 30 communicants but 60 at
Easter. (fn. 654) In 1851 an average of 650 had attended
morning services and 450 evening ones over the
past year. Services held every third Sunday
afternoon had congregations averaging 400
people. (fn. 655) Morning and evening services were
held on Sundays and great festivals in 1864.
Extra Lent and Advent services were held.
Prayers, attended by about ten people, were
said on Friday mornings and, attended by about
fifty, on saints' days. Holy Communion was
celebrated on the same days as it had been
in 1783. Of the 250 communicants in the parish,
an average of 60 received the Sacrament at
great festivals and 40 at other times. (fn. 656)
By will proved 1678 William White, rector of
Pusey and of Appleton (both Berks.), gave £5
yearly to the vicars on condition that they catechized at evening prayer. (fn. 657) The money was still
received in 1905 and in 1982. (fn. 658) White also
bequeathed his extensive library to the mayor
and burgesses of Marlborough in trust for the
vicars of St. Mary's. (fn. 659) A room to house it was
incorporated in the west gallery of the church
built c. 1707. The books, catalogued by
Christopher Wordsworth, rector of St. Peter's,
in 1903, were deposited in 1944 at Marlborough
College where they remained in 1981. (fn. 660)
The church of ST. MARY, so dedicated by
1223, (fn. 661) is built of ashlar and rubble, with ashlar
dressings, and comprises a chancel with north
chapel, a nave with south aisle and south porch,
and a west tower. (fn. 662) During the 15th century and
early 16th the aisles of the 12th-century church
were rebuilt and extended to six bays, of which
the easternmost formed chapels flanking the
chancel, and a crenellated west tower, in which
the west door of the 12th-century church was
reset, was built. Partial rebuilding after the fire of
1653 included the shortening of the chancel, (fn. 663) the
erection of Tuscan columns supporting semicircular arches to replace the south arcade dividing nave and south aisle, the merging of the nave
and the north aisle, and the heightening of the
north wall of the church. West, south, and north
galleries were put up in the early 18th century
and four square three-light windows inserted in
the north wall at clerestory level. The galleries
were dismantled and the windows blocked in the
19th century. (fn. 664) In 1873 a new chancel was built to
designs by G. E. Street and a 15th-century
window reset as an east window. (fn. 665) The south
porch was added and a new nave ceiling inserted
in the 19th century. The church was thoroughly
restored in the period 1955–7. (fn. 666) A Roman stone
relief of the goddess Fortuna is set in the west
nave wall. (fn. 667) A clock with chimes was in the
church in the 18th century. It was replaced in
1888. (fn. 668)
Thomas Poulton, bishop of Worcester 1426–
33, bequeathed a silver chalice and other plate.
In 1553 the king's commissioners took 17 oz.
of plate and left the same amount for the parish.
St. Mary's in 1982 possessed two silver chalices
hallmarked 1657 and 1846, two patens, one
hallmarked 1690 and the other given in the later
19th century, a flagon hallmarked 1843, (fn. 669) and
additional plate given in 1967. (fn. 670)
There were five bells in 1553 and in the earlier
20th century a ring of six: (i) 1699, Robert Cor,
recast by Taylor, 1922; (ii) 1653, William and
Thomas Purdue, recast by Taylor, 1922; (iii)
1769, Robert Wells; (iv) 1653, William and
Thomas Purdue; (v) 1724, Robert Cor; (vi) 1669,
William and Roger Purdue. (fn. 671) In 1969 new treble
and second bells, cast from the discarded peal
of St. Peter's, were added to make a peal of
eight. (fn. 672)
Registrations of baptisms, marriages, and
burials survive from 1602. Entries of baptisms
are missing for the years 1716–20 and 1736–9,
those of marriages for 1716–37, and those of
burials for 1716–39. (fn. 673)
After 1223 the bishop collated to the rectory of
St. Peter's until it was united in 1924 with the
vicarage of St. Mary's. Exceptions occurred in
1246 and 1388 when the king presented sede
vacante, in 1556 when Sir Edward Baynton
presented by grant of a turn, and in 1579 when
for an unknown reason the queen presented. (fn. 674)
When the parishes of St. Mary's and St. Peter's
were united in 1952 St. Peter's became a chapel
of ease. (fn. 675) It was declared redundant in 1974. (fn. 676)
The rectory, the revenue of which came only
from tithes and oblations, was valued at £5 in
1255. (fn. 677) The rector protested c. 1319 that parishioners attended the Carmelite chapel nearby
and in 1320 the friars agreed to compensate the
rector with 10s. yearly. (fn. 678) The rector still received
the rent from the former priory lands in 1625. (fn. 679)
The rectory was worth £12 in 1535. (fn. 680) Its
poverty, like that of St. Mary's vicarage, was
relieved by augmentations. Most of them were
made by the benefactors who augmented St.
Mary's. In 1655 £30 was given. (fn. 681) Edward
Cressett by will proved 1693 gave £80 to the
rectors but the capital was afterwards lost. (fn. 682) In
1783 Cressett's kinswoman Anne Liddiard gave
£80 to Queen Anne's Bounty to replace it,
Thomas Meyler, rector 1774–86, and Mrs. A.
Hammond gave £20, and a Mrs. Pyncombe's
trustees gave £100, benefactions matched by
£200 from bounty funds. (fn. 683) Those sums were
used in 1786 to buy 9 a. at Badbury in Chiseldon, sold in 1971. (fn. 684) In 1811 Sarah Franklin's
executors gave £200 and in the same year there
was a parliamentary grant of £300. (fn. 685) By will
proved 1821 Charles Francis gave £200, the
income from which was £6 in 1905 and 1982. (fn. 686)
From 1829 to 1831 the rectory had an average
yearly income of £130. (fn. 687) The tithes were valued
at £16 in 1843 and commuted. (fn. 688) The Ecclesiastical Commissioners augmented the living by
£76 yearly in 1844. (fn. 689)
The Rectory was in High Street. It was
apparently rebuilt c. 1653 in a similar style to
other buildings in the street. (fn. 690) The house was
considered uninhabitable c. 1830 (fn. 691) and was replaced in 1832–3 by another west of it built of
grey stone to designs by Henry Harrison. (fn. 692) The
incumbent of the united benefice lived there from
1924 until 1966. The house was then sold and
replaced by the Rectory in Rawlingswell Lane
where the rector lived in 1981. (fn. 693)
In 1446 Isabel Bird (d. 1476) was licensed to
found and endow a chantry at St. Catherine's
altar where a chaplain was to say masses for the
soul of her husband John Bird (d. 1445), many
times M.P. for Marlborough in the earlier 15th
century, for Humphrey, duke of Gloucester, and
for herself. (fn. 694) She endowed the chantry in 1449
with 6 tenements, 52 a. of land, and rents worth
£4 in Marlborough and elsewhere. (fn. 695) In 1473 she
appointed the rector of Huish as chaplain and
granted the advowson to Thomas Beke and his
wife Isabel. (fn. 696) The advowson was intended to pass
with Huish manor but in 1479 and 1502, when
the lordship of that manor was being disputed,
the rectors of St. Peter's and the mayor of
Marlborough presented, and the bishop collated
in 1496, 1506, and 1512. (fn. 697) The chantry, which had
property worth £8 in 1535, was dissolved in
1548. (fn. 698) In the earlier 20th century no. 99 High
Street, in which the chaplain may have lived, still
had features of the later 15th century and the
earlier 16th, but many such features were destroyed c. 1923 (fn. 699) and a timber-framed room on the
first floor was the only one to survive in 1981.
By will proved 1433 Thomas Poulton, bishop
of Worcester, gave books on condition that a
chaplain say masses for his soul in St. Peter's for
three years and devised a tenement in Marlborough to enable his nephew, or if he failed to do
so the rector of St. Peter's, to maintain them. (fn. 700) No
more is known of the masses.
Masses in St. Peter's, which an unknown
donor endowed with lands in Marlborough by
deed of 1504, may have been Our Lady's service
mentioned c. 1548. The lands, worth £8 3s. 9d.,
passed to the Crown in 1548. (fn. 701)
The Jesus service, the only living of an old
priest in 1548, was endowed piecemeal in the
period 1519–27. Its properties in Marlborough
were sold in 1550 by the Crown to the mayor and
burgesses of Marlborough, who may have
assigned the profits of some to maintain St.
Peter's church. (fn. 702) Some of the endowments were
sold before 1834 when rents from the Sun, the
Marlborough Arms, and former inns in High
Street and from the Bell and a former inn
in Kingsbury Street were so applied. More
property was sold in 1868, 1885, (fn. 703) and 1909, the
proceeds were invested, and in 1981 the income
of £86 was used to meet the expenses of the
united benefice of Marlborough. (fn. 704)
A hermit, John Benton, possibly lived in the
parish in the period 1519–21. (fn. 705) In 1523 another
was given land, probably north of High Street, on
which he built a hermitage which became vested
in the mayor of Marlborough. (fn. 706) Of the many
rectors who held other preferments, Robert
Neel, rector 1388–90, was also a canon of
Chichester, Ralph Hethcote, collated in 1481,
was a notary public by apostolic authority and in
1484 the king's orator at the Roman curia, and
others were canons of Salisbury. (fn. 707) In the 15th
century and the earlier 16th the chantry priests
may have acted as assistant curates. (fn. 708) From 1726
to 1829, except in the period 1795–1808, the
rectory was held in plurality with the vicarage of
Preshute. (fn. 709) Erasmus Williams, rector from 1830
to 1858 and a baronet from 1843, the author of
political works, held the rectory in plurality with
Rushall. (fn. 710) Christopher Wordsworth, rector
1897–1911, a canon of Lincoln and master of St.
Nicholas's hospital, Salisbury, wrote and edited
historical and liturgical works. (fn. 711) Curates assisted
him and his successors and in 1924 it was
expressly stipulated that a curate should assist
the incumbent of the united benefice. (fn. 712)
In 1783 services with sermons were held twice
on Sundays. The morning sermon was omitted
when the Sacrament, received by an average of 30
people, was administered on the last Sunday in
the month. In addition Holy Communion was
celebrated on Christmas and Easter days and on
Whit Sunday when many more communicated.
Morning prayers were said on Tuesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, and holy days. The rector complained that the strong dissenting tradition in
Marlborough hampered his ministry. (fn. 713) Congregations averaging 500–600 people were
reckoned in 1851 to have attended Sunday services over the past year. (fn. 714) Two Sunday services
were held in 1864, and morning prayers said on
Wednesdays, Fridays, and holy days were
attended by 12–20 people. Advent and Lent
services attended by 100–200 people were held.
Two services were held on Good Friday and on
certain festivals. Holy Communion was celebrated on the same occasions as in 1783. Of the
160 communicants between 80 and 109 received
the Sacrament at great festivals and an average of
55 at other times. (fn. 715)
The church of ST. PETER AND ST. PAUL,
so called from the later 16th century, was called
St. Peter's in 1223 and intermittently until the
later 19th century. (fn. 716) It is built of limestone ashlar
and has a chancel, with north vestry and north
and south chapels, and an aisled and crenellated
nave with south porch and south-west tower. (fn. 717)
The church had been built by 1223 within the
width of High Street; because the street runs
south-west and north-east (fn. 718) limiting the length
of the church, the tower was built at the west end
of the south aisle and the north aisle has its west
wall at an oblique angle. (fn. 719) Little of that church
remains except rubble walling in the north-west
corner of the present nave. The church was
rebuilt from the later 15th century to the earlier
16th, nave, aisles, and tower first, and then the
vaulted chancel, with north and south chapels,
and the two-storeyed porch. The tower pinnacles
were replaced in 1701. (fn. 720) The church was restored
and the chancel refitted during 1862–3 by T. H.
Wyatt, who removed the west gallery inserted in
1627, built the north vestry, reroofed the nave
and raised the pitch of the chancel roof, and
replaced the earlier 16th-century five-light east
window with one of three lights. (fn. 721)
The church had a clock in 1575 and 1746. (fn. 722)
There was an organ in 1576. (fn. 723) Another installed
in 1776 attracted Preshute parishioners to services in 1783. (fn. 724) A memorial brass commemorates
Robert Were or Brown (d. 1570), M.P. for the
borough in 1553 and many times mayor of
Marlborough. There are many wall monuments
of the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries. The
church, redundant in 1974, was given over for the
use of the town in 1978. It was maintained by St.
Peter's and St. Paul's Trust in 1980 when it
housed an information centre and was used for
exhibitions and concerts. (fn. 725)
In 1553 the king's commissioners took 6 oz. of
plate and left a chalice of 12 oz. St. Peter's had a
silver cup with cover, a silver offertory basin, and
a silver salver in 1783, which were all presumably
sold when a set of parcel-gilt plate hallmarked
1842 was acquired. (fn. 726) The plate was transferred to
St. Mary's church in 1974. (fn. 727)
The peal of five bells in the church in 1553 was
recast in Devizes in 1579. The 'great' bell was
recast, possibly by John Wallis, in 1612. A bell,
or bells, may have been recast in 1698. A sanctus
bell was cast in 1741, probably by Abel Rudhall.
In 1783 there was a peal of six bells, of which
three or more were by Rudhall. A new ring of
eight was cast by T. Mears of London in 1831. (fn. 728)
It was taken down in 1968, some of the metal
used to cast two bells for St. Mary's, and the rest
sold. (fn. 729)
Registrations of baptisms, marriages, and
burials survive from 1611 and are complete. (fn. 730)
Roman Catholicism.
There were two
papists, one in St. Mary's parish and the other in
St. Peter's, in 1585. (fn. 731) Two recusants lived in St.
Mary's parish in 1706 and 1780. (fn. 732) The Hermitage in Hyde Lane, occupied by members of the
recusant Hyde family from c. 1740 to c. 1794,
was used as a local mass centre. (fn. 733) The Hydes'
resident Benedictine chaplains, of whom the last,
William Gregory Cowley, 1790–4, later became
president-general of the English Benedictines,
served it from 1753 or earlier until 1794 but
acted as priests and confessors rather than as
missioners. (fn. 734) Seven people were confirmed at the
Hermitage in 1753 and fifteen heard mass there
in 1767 and 1780. (fn. 735)
In 1937 the Missionaries of St. Francis de
Sales (Fransalians) opened a chapel, which was
served by a resident priest, in a house in Elcot
Lane. The house ceased to be used as a chapel in
1947 when a Nissen hut on the site of the George,
George Lane, was erected and used as a mass
centre until replaced by a new church, dedicated
to St. Thomas More, opened in 1959. (fn. 736) That
was served in 1979 by two Fransalian priests who
lived in the Presbytery in George Lane. (fn. 737)
Protestant Nonconformity.
Thomas Bailey, ejected from Mildenhall rectory
in 1660, may have propagated Fifth Monarchy
views at Marlborough until his death in 1663. (fn. 738)
In 1676 there were 250 dissenters in Marlborough, 150 in St. Mary's parish, and 100 in St.
Peter's, the largest number in any Wiltshire
town. (fn. 739) In 1678 burgesses were forbidden to hold
office or to be members of the council if they
attended conventicles. (fn. 740) Inhabitants of Marlborough were considered a 'seditious, schismatical people' in 1681. (fn. 741)
The founder of the Independent, or Presbyterian, church in Marlborough was William
Hughes (d. 1688), who was ejected from the
vicarage of St. Mary's in 1662. His conventicles
met first in Savernake forest and afterwards in
Marlborough. He apparently resorted to openair preaching whenever his indoor conventicles
were suppressed. He was joined by Daniel Burgess (d. 1679), deprived of Collingbourne Ducis
rectory in 1662. (fn. 742) Hughes's ministry was continued by Matthew Pemberton (d. 1691), William
Gough, and Samuel Tomlyns (d. 1700). (fn. 743) The
congregation built a meeting house in 1706 (fn. 744) but
afterwards met in several buildings. (fn. 745) One may
have been a chapel in Herd Street leased to
unspecified dissenters from 1758 or earlier to
1792. (fn. 746) That was probably the chapel outside
which Rowland Hill preached in 1771. (fn. 747) Another
was a chapel, certified in 1727, built in Back
Lane (fn. 748) on land belonging to Thomas Hancock (d.
1788). Hancock devised the chapel to his wife
with £300 so that in her lifetime £10 might be
paid yearly to a minister whom she was to
appoint. (fn. 749) Cornelius Winter, minister 1778–88,
reorganized that chapel on Congregational principles and established a school to train young
men for the ministry. (fn. 750) In 1783 there were
30 'presbyterians' in St. Mary's parish and
in St. Peter's 5 or 6 'presbyterian' families
who attended a chapel, (fn. 751) perhaps that in Herd
Street.
In 1802 Thomas Hancock's son closed the
Back Lane chapel and the congregation had no
permanent home until 1817 when a chapel was
built in the Marsh. A resident minister was
appointed in 1823 for the congregation of 53. (fn. 752)
On Census Sunday in 1851 morning service was
attended by 262, afternoon service by 129, and
evening service by 178 people. (fn. 753) In the later 19th
century a Sunday school and lecture room were
added to the chapel and a manse was built beside
it. (fn. 754) The United Reformed chapel was served
from Swindon in the 1970s. In 1979 the minister
of the New Road Methodist church was
appointed to it and united evening services were
held. In 1980 all services, held on Sundays
alternately in each church, were shared with
the Methodists. The manse was let as flats in
1981. The church then had 30 members. (fn. 755)
A register of births and baptisms, 1823–37, is
extant. (fn. 756)
The Friends who met at Marlborough after
George Fox spoke there in 1656 suffered imprisonment and public humiliation in the town in
the years 1656–8. (fn. 757) The meeting house was built
in the burial ground at Manton Corner in
Preshute given by William Hitchcock in 1658. (fn. 758)
Fox, who revisited Marlborough in 1673 and
1677, and William Penn, who came to the town in
1687, both spoke at Hitchcock's house in Marlborough. (fn. 759) The meeting was chiefly composed of
members of the Hitchcock, Lawrence, Freeman,
and Crabb families in the later 17th century. (fn. 760) A
few members emigrated to Pennsylvania. (fn. 761) In
1727 Quakers certified a meeting house in High
Street where they may still have met in 1772. (fn. 762)
The Marlborough particular meeting was part
of Charlcote monthly meeting in 1677, of
the Wiltshire quarterly meeting in 1678, of the
Wiltshire monthly meeting in 1775, and of the
Devizes preparative meeting in 1788. (fn. 763) In 1783,
although there were 30 Friends in St. Mary's
parish and 4 or 5 families of Friends in St.
Peter's, the meeting was in decline and by 1800
had been dissolved. Its members joined either
the Calne or Devizes meetings or met in each
other's houses. (fn. 764) The burial ground at Manton
Corner, which had been desecrated in 1663, was
still used in 1809. (fn. 765) It was owned by the Society
of Friends, but no longer used, in 1907. (fn. 766)
General Baptists led by Edward Delamaine of
Marlborough may have been influenced by
Thomas Bailey's preaching. Anabaptists were
licensed to meet in Nathaniel Bailey's house in
1672 but the meeting soon lapsed. (fn. 767) A Strict
Baptist cause was begun c. 1814 by a Mr. Simons
of Bristol and continued by a Mr. Weldon in
1818. (fn. 768) In 1851 on Census Sunday 50 people,
designated Particular Baptists, met in the morning, and 54 in the afternoon. (fn. 769) The group registered a room in the Marsh in 1859. (fn. 770) There was
no resident pastor and the cause declined c.
1864. (fn. 771) It was revived and the room reregistered
in 1868. (fn. 772) That room was replaced by a chapel
called Zoar on the north side of St. Martin's in
1876. (fn. 773) The chapel closed briefly in 1896 and
finally in 1921. (fn. 774)
John Wesley preached at Marlborough in 1745
and 1747. (fn. 775) George Pocock, one of Wesley's
Bristol friends and the chief evangelist of northeast Wiltshire, certified a Methodist chapel in
Oxford Street in 1811. (fn. 776) In 1851 on Census
Sunday 225 people attended morning, 50 afternoon, and 180 evening service there. (fn. 777) The
chapel was extended in 1872 and rebuilt, with an
entrance in New Road, in 1910. (fn. 778) By will proved
1899 David Goddard bequeathed £500 to
provide a manse for the superintendent minister
of the Marlborough circuit. (fn. 779) A house in London
Road bought in 1905 was replaced in 1970 by one
in St. David's Way. The chapel had 98 members
in 1981, when the superintendent minister
also served the United Reformed church and
held united services in each on alternate
Sundays. (fn. 780)
Primitive Methodism was brought to Marlborough by William Sanger of Salisbury, who
certified two houses in the town in 1820 and a
chapel in St. Peter's parish in 1821. (fn. 781) In 1823
a minister certified a newly built Ebenezer
chapel on the east side of Herd Street where in
1851 on Census Sunday 30 people attended
morning, 40 afternoon, and 90 evening service. (fn. 782)
The Ebenezer chapel was closed between 1923
and 1925. (fn. 783)
'Peculiar Calvinists' certified a room in Kingsbury Street in 1807. (fn. 784) The group may be identified with that which met at the Providence chapel
in Kingsbury Street for which the transcript of a
register of births and baptisms, 1805–37, survives. (fn. 785) On Census Sunday 1851 unspecified
dissenters, 40 in the morning and 30 in the
evening, met in a room in St. Mary's parish. (fn. 786)
Plymouth Brethren met in a room in Kingsbury Street in 1851, when on Census Sunday 26
people met there in the morning and 38 in the
evening. (fn. 787) The sect still met in 1862. (fn. 788) It was
perhaps that which registered a building at High
Wall, New Road, in 1866 and met there until
1906. (fn. 789)
The Salvation Army opened fire in 1887 from a
barracks in London Road and moved to New
Road in 1903. New Road barracks closed in
1910. (fn. 790) Christadelphians had a hall in New Road
in 1923 or earlier and met there until c. 1930. (fn. 791) In
1931 Closed Brethren registered premises in St.
Margaret's where they still met in 1981. (fn. 792)
Education.
In 1550 a free grammar school
was founded in, and endowed with the property
of, St. John's hospital in the Marsh. Its history
to 1957 and that of Marlborough College in
Preshute are given elsewhere. (fn. 793) The history of the
grammar school from 1957 is recounted below.
A charity school, established in 1709 or earlier,
acquired permanent buildings to accommodate
44 children from both Marlborough parishes,
possibly in 1712. (fn. 794) It was no longer held in the
later 18th century. (fn. 795) St. Mary's parish contained
eight charity day schools in 1808, and in 1811 a
'school of industry', where girls were taught to
sew and to knit and, as a reward for good
behaviour, to read, was opened in the town. (fn. 796)
Thomas, earl of Ailesbury, in 1812 built a
school containing two rooms on the south side of
High Street where 100 girls were taught to sew
and 76 boys, most of whom were expected to
become shepherds, to knit stockings. Evening
classes were attended by 20–30 boys. (fn. 797) In 1818 the
school, which was conducted on National principles, was supported by voluntary contributions
and attended by a total of 200 boys and girls from
both parishes. (fn. 798) A master taught 67 boys and a
mistress 95 girls in 1833. (fn. 799) Each parish provided
its own schools from 1849. (fn. 800) By a Scheme of 1857
Marlborough's income from Thomas Ray's
charity for clothiers (fn. 801) was shared by the schools of
the two parishes. In 1913 the charity was renamed
Thomas Ray's Exhibition Foundation. Thereafter the income was used for exhibitions which
comprised money for maintenance allowances or
tuition fees and were competed for by Marlborough children attending secondary schools
and technical institutions. The charity income
was less than £50 in 1975 and no money from the
capital had been distributed since 1952. A
Scheme of 1976 allowed its funds to be used
generally for the education of those in Marlborough aged under 25 years and particularly to
equip school or university leavers for a profession
or trade. (fn. 802)
Schoolrooms for 64 boys taught by a master
and for 60 girls taught by a mistress were opened
in 1849, perhaps in the old schoolrooms, for
children in St. Peter's parish. A school at the
junction of High Street and Hyde Lane was in
use in 1854. (fn. 803) It contained three rooms. In one of
them 100 boys, of whom 43, including 30 from
St. Mary's parish and 5 from Preshute, came
from outside the parish, were taught by a master in
1858. In the second a mistress taught 70–80 girls,
of whom 13 came from outside the parish, and in
the third another mistress taught 60–70 infants. (fn. 804)
An evening school was also held there from 1863
to 1886. (fn. 805) In 1873 the Department of Education allowed a maximum of 35 children from
Preshute, probably from St. Margaret's where
the school was closed in 1871 or earlier, to attend,
but in 1873–4 more than 70 were attending and in
1874 their parents and Preshute parish were
required to contribute to the upkeep of the
school. Boys from the union workhouse on
Marlborough Common attended in 1877. Children from Manton in Preshute were excluded in
1901 unless good reason for their attendance
could be given. (fn. 806) An average of 240 children
attended from 1906 until 1918. Numbers were
falling, however, and the fact that more boys than
girls and infants attended suggests an attempt to
make St. Peter's the boys' school and St. Mary's
the girls' school before elementary education in
the town was formally reorganized in 1918. (fn. 807)
Before 1848 a school in the Green was built
for children from St. Mary's parish. (fn. 808) It was
apparently used only by boys after a school, for
which land on the east side of Herd Street was
conveyed in 1849, was opened for girls and
infants. (fn. 809) A master taught 70 boys at the Green in
1858 and at the Herd Street school 60 girls and 60
infants were taught by a mistress. The schools
were then attended by 12 children, including 6
from St. Peter's, from outside the parish. (fn. 810) The
boys still occupied the school on the Green in
1865 but by 1867 had moved to a new building in
Herd Street. (fn. 811) Average attendance at the schools,
where there was a consistently high proportion of
girls and infants to boys in the years 1909–18, did
not fall below 273 between 1906 and 1918 and
was probably often higher. (fn. 812)
In 1918 St. Peter's became the boys' school for
the town and St. Mary's the girls' and infants'
school. Average numbers attending both schools
fell in the 1920s and 1930s. (fn. 813) The Herd Street
schools were reserved for infants in 1962 when
the older girls were moved into the former
grammar school buildings in the Parade. The
boys from St. Peter's joined them, and the school
in High Street was closed, in 1963. The 321
children attending St. Peter's Junior School had
twelve full-time teachers in 1982. The Herd
Street infants' school was closed in 1974 and a
new one, St. Mary's Infants' School, was opened
in George Lane, where in 1981 there were seven
teachers for the 174 children. (fn. 814)
Marlborough Grammar School was rehoused
in 1962 in new buildings south of the town. (fn. 815)
Marlborough Secondary Modern School,
opened in 1946 to serve the town and upper
Kennet valley in huts on Marlborough Common, (fn. 816) moved to new buildings in Chopping
Knife Lane in 1966. (fn. 817) The schools were amalgamated as St. John's Comprehensive School in
1975. The former grammar school buildings
were renamed the Stedman building and those of
the secondary modern school the Savernake
building. (fn. 818) In 1981 there were 73 full-time
teachers and 9 part-time for the 1,317 pupils on
the two sites. (fn. 819)
Early private education in the town was connected with dissent. William Hughes, who led
the Independents in Marlborough, established a
boarding school which flourished until his death
in 1688. (fn. 820) Cornelius Winter, minister of a Marlborough Congregational chapel 1778–88, set
up a school for dissenters and admitted nondissenting pupils. (fn. 821) Another dissenting minister,
John Davis, founded Marlborough Academy in
1780. He was succeeded there in 1791 by William
Gresley. The school, in Ivy House, no. 43 High
Street, continued under Philip Wells, Richard
Cundell, John Brown, and another until the mid
19th century. (fn. 822)
Numerous other small private schools for both
boarders and day pupils, mostly girls, flourished
in the later 18th century, the 19th, and the earlier
20th. (fn. 823) At a boarding school run from 1754 to
1777 successively by a Mrs. Sutton and a Mrs.
Hilliker subjects taught to the girls included
French, music, and dancing. (fn. 824) A girls' boarding
school in High Street run by Mary Cousins and
another in Kingsbury Street run by Mary Ann
Anderson and later by Jemima Westall flourished
in the 1830s and 1840s. (fn. 825) The school in High
Street may perhaps have been the 'ladies' seminary' conducted by Mrs. M. A. Byfield in 1855 or
earlier and in 1867. (fn. 826) There were two girls'
schools in High Street in 1879 and in 1897 a
preparatory school at no. 29 Kingsbury Street. (fn. 827)
A school in High Street may have survived as
Marlborough High School, so called in 1907 and
perhaps the school at no. 35 High Street in 1923
and 1931. (fn. 828)
Kingsbury Hill House was opened c. 1943 by a
Miss Thelwell, as a preparatory school for girls
and small boys. It was bought in 1964 by Mr.
W. I. Washbrook who enlarged its premises and
its curriculum. In 1982 a total of 190 boys and
girls between 3 and 16 years was taught in the
school. (fn. 829)
Charities for the Poor. (fn. 830)
By will dated
1615 Thomas Ray gave the yearly income from
houses in Salisbury for poor clothiers of Trowbridge, Chippenham, Westbury, and Marlborough yearly in turn. The funds were afterwards mismanaged. In 1652 new trustees for
each town were appointed to administer the
income of £14 a year. From 1817 to 1821 the
income was £25 yearly. It was shared each year
by the four towns from c. 1821 to 1832, as were
rent arrears of £100 collected in 1831. From 1833
the income, £33 in 1833, was again distributed
intact each year to the four towns in turn. (fn. 831) In
1834, when there was no clothier in Marlborough, and possibly earlier, the mayor was the
only trustee and the income was used for other
purposes. The income was given to the National
schools in 1857. (fn. 832)
Bequests by William Seyman in 1539 of a
charge of 6s. 8d. on his house in the 'new land' to
clothe the poor and by Robert Were or Brown in
1570 of charges of 20s. for the poor and 5s. for the
mayor, and devises of properties in the town,
the income from them to be given to the poor,
made by John Birdsey in 1550, Richard Dickinson in 1553, and Thomas Vale in 1557 to the
mayor and burgesses comprised the endowment
of an eleemosynary charity called the Good
Friday rents. (fn. 833) The mayor and chamberlain distributed £13 in small sums to poor people in 1834,
by which time some of the original rents had been
replaced by others from borough properties. The
rents produced £2 in 1905. By will dated 1795
Sarah Franklin gave £400 for widowed housekeepers in both parishes of the borough. Her
bequest became effective in 1826, John Baverstock afterwards added £100 to it, and £500 was
invested in 1830. The income of £5 was distributed with the Good Friday rents in 1905 when
nineteen women received 10s. doles. Christopher Willoughby in 1678 gave £200 by deed to
enable the mayor and burgesses to distribute £2
yearly. The money was still being given to the
poor in 1905. Willoughby's charity was united
with the Franklin and Baverstock charity and the
Good Friday rents in 1915 as the Marlborough
united charities. By will dated 1881 C. J. King
gave the yearly income from £100 to Marlborough people in the union workhouse. It was
distributed after 1929 in 10s. doles to unsuccessful applicants to the united charities. In 1982
those charities produced £13 from which grants
were made to poor and elderly people.
Other charities of which the corporation was
trustee were Leaf's and Burchell's. Herbert Leaf
(d. 1936) (fn. 834) by will gave £15,000 to Marlborough
corporation for the townspeople. Several grants,
and loans to the council and other local bodies
and societies on terms favourable to the borrower, were made from the income. In 1978 the
income was £1,520, of which £625, including a
grant of £500 made to St. Peter's and St. Paul's
Trust, was spent. Until 1971 between £90 and
£120 was distributed in sums of £1 each 25
March. From 1971 £50 a year was put into a fund
from which gifts were made at the mayor's
discretion. The Florence and Walter John Burchell Charitable Trust was established by deed of
1972 to provide homes and financial help for
the old people of Marlborough. In 1976 stock,
land, and three houses in Manton produced an
income of £1,281, of which £553 was spent on
maintaining the houses.
In 1640 Anne Paine gave £300 to provide £5
yearly for both parishes of Marlborough. The £5
was divided and each parish added its share to
the poor rate until c. 1827. St. Peter's afterwards
distributed in cash directly to the poor and St.
Mary's added its share to the church rate. By will
dated 1824 Nathaniel Merriman gave £100, the
income to buy bread for unrelieved paupers of
both parishes. T. S. Gundry by will proved 1858
gave the income from £100 stock, to be spent
each Christmas on bread or clothing for the poor
of both parishes. William Hill by will proved
1871 gave the interest on two sums of £100 to
buy bread for the poor of each parish. From 1882
food, bedding, clothes, or fuel were sometimes
provided instead of bread. Elizabeth Malpuss
by will proved 1884 gave the interest on two
similar sums to buy food, clothing, or fuel, and
each parish received £3 in 1905. Harward Keen
by will proved 1884 gave the interest on £50
to the poor of each parish: each received under £1
in 1905.
The bequest of T. M. Hancock (d. 1803) of
£200, the interest for St. Peter's poor each New
Year's day, was disbursed in 1834 with the St.
Peter's share of Paine's charity. J. Goldyer in
1808 gave half the income from £334 stock for
bread for St. Peter's poor at Christmas. Bread
was bought in 1834. By will dated 1817 Elizabeth
Harris gave to the same poor the interest on £100
for bread which in 1833 was received only by the
unrelieved.
The parochial charities of Marlborough were
reorganized in the 1870s, St. Peter's in 1872, St.
Mary's in 1878. The incumbents and churchwardens, already trustees of most of the charities,
became, in St. Peter's, trustees of Goldyer's and
Hancock's, and, in each parish, of their respective shares in Paine's and Merriman's. In 1905
the funds of the nine St. Peter's charities, £26,
were spent on coal, clothing, and blankets for
loan, and those of the six St. Mary's charities,
£13, on pensions, food, and help for the sick. In
1980 the small yearly incomes, £17 from the St.
Mary's charities and £27 from those of St.
Peter's, were distributed in small money gifts at
Christmas to people living in the areas of the
former parishes.
By will proved 1916 C. L. Brooke gave £600
for old unrelieved people. Because it was not
clear for which parish the bequest was intended,
two-fifths were invested for St. Peter's and threefifths for St. Mary's. In 1980 at Christmas St.
Peter's share, £8, and St. Mary's share, £12,
were distributed to parishioners.
The Titcombe Benefaction, established by will
of J. C. Titcombe proved 1934, comprised £100,
the income for poor parishioners of St. Mary's,
preferably old widows. In 1982 and earlier the
income of £4 yearly was added to St. Mary's
endowed charities. The income of the Emily
Mary Lloyd Benevolent Fund, established by
will of J. A. Lloyd proved 1935, was distributed
among old women in St. Peter's parish. In 1980
the income of £12 was similarly distributed at
Christmas.