ST. MARGARET'S
The ancient parish of St. Margaret consisted of two
parts: that within the borough boundary, which is
the area under consideration in this section, lay entirely outside the walled town and extended over the
East Field of Leicester. The remaining part was the
chapelry of Knighton, which is discussed separately
since it lay outside the borough boundary until
1935. (fn. 1) The Bishop's Fee, a manor and liberty belonging to the Bishop of Lincoln, (fn. 2) was included in the
part of the ancient parish within the borough, but
its exact boundaries are not clear and its constitutional position was doubtful from its earliest existence. It is not known how it came into the hands of
the Bishop of Lincoln and the suggestion that it had
belonged to the Anglo-Saxon bishopric cannot be
substantiated. Neither is it at all clear to what extent
the liberty was manorialized, although the bishop
had a grange near St. Margaret's Church, the 'curia'
referred to c. 1205. (fn. 3) It was probably the ruins of this
building, or perhaps even the vicarage, which Leland
saw and erroneously described as an episcopal
palace. (fn. 4) There seems to be no recorded occasion on
which a Bishop of Lincoln actually stayed in Leicester during the Middle Ages. The episcopal house
at Liddington (Rut.) was normally used. (fn. 5) The
position of the Bishop's Fee in relation to the town
was evidently felt to be difficult and dangerous even
by the 12th century. Efforts by the earls of Leicester
from 1143 onwards to gain control of the land outside the East Gate were rendered unsuccessful by the
settlement of c. 1217 mentioned below. (fn. 6) Thereafter
the struggle was between the Bishop's Fee and the
borough and it turned largely upon the question of
the borough's right to levy taxes in the liberty, a
point which emerged as early as 1086. In 1322 Belgrave Gate was held to lie within the borough, although the possibility of its being drawn outside
through its proximity to the Bishop's Fee was clearly
exercising the town authorities. (fn. 7) The rest of the area
was largely exempt from the borough's financial
exactions, but the bishop's burgess tenants were still
subject in some legal matters to the jurisdiction of
the borough court. The administrative and geographical unity of the Bishop's Fee seems to have
been more important than its possible manorial
unity. (fn. 8) The persistent quarrels between the Bishop's
Fee and the borough have been described elsewhere. (fn. 9)
They continued throughout the town's history until
the town finally gained control of the whole of the
east suburb in 1835. (fn. 10)
The area of the civil parish, excluding Knighton,
was 1,138 acres in 1891. (fn. 11) The civil parish was dis
solved in 1896 when the whole borough of Leicester
was made into a single civil parish. (fn. 12) The part of the
ancient parish within the borough boundary was
bounded by the Soar on the north, the Gartree road
to the west and south-west, and by the line of Mere
Road on the east and south-east. To the west, the
parish boundary ran down New Walk and Wellington Street, crossed to Newarke Street, Oxford Street,
Millstone Lane and Horsefair Street to Gallowtree
Gate. From there it ran north along the line of
Churchgate and Sanvey Gate, a little way along
Northgate Street and then by a winding course
through the streets to the east to reach the river by
the North Mill and follow it eastwards to Belgrave
Lock. (fn. 13) There is some doubt as to whether St. Margaret's Pasture and the Abbey Meadow were in the
ancient parish or not. They were held not to be by
the Inclosure Commissioners in 1764 and again
by the Tithe Commissioners in 1850. Both these
authorities stated that the pasture and the Abbey
Meadow were part of the chapelry of Knighton. (fn. 14)
Under the Divided Parishes Act of 1882, part of the
Abbey Park (formerly Abbey Meadow) and St.
Margaret's Pasture were transferred from Knighton
parish to St. Margaret's. (fn. 15)
The focal point of the east suburb in the Middle
Ages lay at its western edge, by the East Gate of the
borough, at the place where the Clock Tower now
stands. In the Middle Ages, this spot was known as
the Berehill, the name being in use as early as 1260. (fn. 16)
The Berehill was a mound outside the gate, which
was surmounted by a cross, and it later became
known as the Round Hill, Roundel, or Coal Hill, the
place where coal was for many years brought to be
sold from the pits. A pair of stocks also stood there.
The cross was repaired in 1565–6 but was demolished
in 1575 or 1576, together with the cage which stood
by it. The purpose of this cage is uncertain, but it
seems most likely to have been an instrument of
punishment associated with the stocks. A new cage
was built on the spot in 1600. About 1750 Assembly
Rooms were built on the site, consisting of a large
upper room supported upon a colonnade, which also
contained shops. The building faced Humberstone
Gate, and the shops, which were at the back, looked
into High Street. (fn. 17) About 1805 the whole building was
converted into shops and also housed a coal-weighing
machine. (fn. 18) During the last century there was considerable agitation for the removal of the building,
which obstructed the road in the very centre of the
town, and it was finally demolished in 1862. (fn. 19) In
1868 public subscriptions were raised for the
erection of the Clock Tower as a memorial to four
men considered to have been the greatest benefactors to the borough, Simon de Montfort, Earl of
Leicester, William Wigston, Sir Thomas White, and
Alderman Gabriel Newton. The competition for the
design was won by the Leicester architect, Joseph
Goddard. The tower, which is 80 ft. high, is a fine
example of Victorian Gothic monumental architecture. The main part is built of Ketton stone, but
the four statues at the base are of Portland stone and
the pillars at the angles of the tower are of polished
granite and serpentine. The total cost was £1,000. (fn. 20)
From the Berehill, four streets radiated into the
suburb. To the north, Churchgate led to St. Margaret's Church, along the line of the town ditch, but
the name seems not to have been used until the late
15th century. It first appears in 1478. (fn. 21) The vicarage
is in Churchgate, next door to the church. It is an
18th-century house of two stories, with a slate roof
and a moulded stone cornice and parapets. An earlier
vicarage, clearly in a very bad state, was repaired by
prebendary John Lound in 1568. (fn. 22) In 1323 the
vicar's servant was charged with killing another man
and his goods were valued. The vicarage then consisted of a hall, granary and kitchen, as well as cellars
and stables, and seems to have been of considerable
size. (fn. 23) Archdeacon Lane (first mentioned in 1465) (fn. 24)
and Plowman Lane (mentioned in 1305) (fn. 25) ran off
Churchgate to the east. Churchgate led into Sanvey
Gate, which ran from east to west just outside the
borough's north wall. The earliest name for this
street (first mentioned 1322) was the 'Skeyth', a
Danish word, meaning 'course' or 'race-course', and
it was perhaps the scene of horse-racing. By the
15th century it had become known as Senvey Gate,
and it has since acquired a false etymology as the
sancta via. (fn. 26)
Belgrave Gate, which was not within the Bishop's
Fee, is first mentioned in 1287, (fn. 27) and Barkby Lane,
later to be one of the first areas to undergo intensive
development, was so called at least as early as 1352. (fn. 28)
Belgrave Gate led to the parish boundary, over two
arms of the river, and past St. John's Hospital and
the Spital Hill, also known as the Cock Muck Hill. (fn. 29)
Belgrave Gate was later part of the LeicesterLoughborough turnpike, but was taken over by the
borough in about 1855. (fn. 30)
The Haymarket, which joins Belgrave Gate and
Humberstone Gate, behind the Berehill site, was
known as Gosewellgate in the Middle Ages, the
name occurring as early as 1305. (fn. 31) This name was still
in use in the 17th century but was changed when the
hay market was held there in the 18th century. (fn. 32)
Humberstone Gate, later part of the Uppingham
turnpike, is mentioned in 1286 (fn. 33) and Gallowtree
Gate in 1290. (fn. 34) Spa Place (nos. 36–42) is the sole
block of any interest remaining in Humberstone
Gate. It is a terrace, set back from the street, consisting of four large 18th-century brick houses. The
two centre doors lead out of a semi-circular Tuscan
porch and all four doors have traceried fanlights.
The houses were probably built in or about 1793
when advertisements for the spa (a chalybeate
spring) first appeared in the Leicester newspapers. (fn. 35)
Miss Watts, writing of this 'range of new and handsome buildings', says that 'though furnished by the
proprietor with neat marble baths and every convenient appendage for bathing' the spring was 'not
found sufficiently impregnated with mineral properties to bring it into use'. (fn. 36) The venture failed a few
years after the houses were built and only their name
remains to remind Leicester of their origin. From
1798 the building was used as a General Baptist college, founded by the Revd. Dan Taylor and endowed with property in Nottingham. (fn. 37) It was closed
c. 1860, (fn. 38) since when the houses have been separately
occupied.
The whole of the road from the East Gate to the
parish boundary by Victoria Park Road was known
as Gallowtree Gate, taking its name from the gallows
which used to stand at the end of Evington Footpath. (fn. 39) The part of the road which is called Granby
Street seems only to have been so named at the very
end of the 18th century. Throsby does not use the
name, but it is mentioned by Miss Watts, who says
that 'many ranges of buildings . . . [have] . . . been
here erected within the last fifteen years', and this
probably also marks the change in the name. (fn. 40) New
streets in the area were laid out in 1808–9, Bishop
Street (formerly Bishopsgate) and Belvoir Street
being the most important. The new streets ran westwards to link Granby Street with the newly laid-out
Bowling Green Street. This area was regarded as a
good residential suburb and remained so until the
middle of the 19th century. (fn. 41) The Liberal Club in
Bishop Street (closed 1936) was built from designs
by Edward Burgess in 1885–8. (fn. 42) The section of
Granby Street from Belvoir Street to the junction
with London Road was the original part, but the
name is now applied to the whole stretch from London Road to Horsefair Street. Gallowtree Gate,
Granby Street, and London Road all formed part of
the Loughborough to Market Harborough turnpike,
and the parishioners of St. Margaret's were called
upon to provide labour for road repairs as late as the
beginning of the 19th century, although by that time
most of their services were commuted for a money
payment. (fn. 43) The borough took over the maintenance
of the road as far south as De Montfort Street in
1855. (fn. 44) The London Road toll bar, which stood by
the Marquis Wellington public house at the top of
the hill, was removed in 1851 and another one built
at the southern edge of Victoria Park. (fn. 45) Granby
Street was widened in 1868 (fn. 46) and about the end of
the century many new buildings were erected. The
first part of the Grand Hotel was built by Cecil
Ogden in 1899; (fn. 47) the second part, facing Belvoir
Street, was built soon afterwards by Amos Hall. (fn. 48)
The Midland Bank, one of the most startling buildings in the town, is by Joseph Goddard and was built
in 1870–2, in a singular blend of the Gothic and
Oriental styles. (fn. 49) The National Provincial Bank is by
William Millican and was built in 1870. (fn. 50) The Institute for the Blind is by J. B. Everard and was
completed in 1882. (fn. 51) Of the three coffee-house
buildings in the parish, the only survivor is the
former Victoria coffee-house in Granby Street built
by Edward Burgess in 1888, (fn. 52) its striking Turkishstyle dome now sadly blackened. The whole character of the street was changed at the end of the 19th
century. Of the buildings which were demolished,
the former News Room, at the north corner of Belvoir Street and Granby Street, is probably the
greatest loss. It was built in 1838 by the Leicester
architect William Flint and was demolished in 1901. (fn. 53)
There are some early 19th-century house-fronts on
the east side of the street. The former Temperance
Hall, now the Essoldo Cinema, was built by James
Medland in 1852–3. (fn. 54) The formation of the company
which promoted its erection was largely the work of
Thomas Cook, the excursionist, whose own temperance hotel had been established next door to the hall
since 1841. (fn. 55) The building has a very striking facade
of three giant Corinthian columns on a rusticated
base, supporting a deeply moulded pediment. The
bold lines of the design were broken in 1955 by an
awning of metal and plastic and a large neon sign.
As the Temperance Hall, the building was the headquarters of the Leicester Temperance Society, but
was also used as a general public hall for lectures,
meetings, and concerts. (fn. 56)
The City Lending Library stands at the corner
of Wellington Street and Belvoir Street and was
opened in 1871. (fn. 57) The building in which it is housed
was erected in 1831 by William Flint as a meeting
hall for the Liberal opposition party in the town, the
Town Hall having been closed to them by the corporation. (fn. 58) After the passing of the Municipal Cor
porations Act, the New Hall, as it was called, became
a public lecture- and concert-hall, also housing the
Leicester Mechanics' Institute and, until 1848, the
museum of the Leicester Literary and Philosophical
Society. (fn. 59) The building has a plain classical façade
in cream stucco, divided into three bays by groups
of paired pilasters. There is a double doorway in the
central bay in a projecting porch. The cast-iron
railings in front of the building are of a pleasant and
simple design. By 1905 the building was too small
to house the whole of the library and all but the lending section was moved to a new building in Bishop
Street, built with funds given by Sir Andrew
Carnegie. (fn. 60)
In Welford Place, just to the east of Wellington
Street, is the office of Samuel Stone, the solicitor
and town clerk (1835–72), also built to designs by
William Flint, in 1842. (fn. 61) It too is a two-storied
stucco building, with five windows on each floor, of
which the centre three break forward. The windows
are divided by Ionic columns. The central door is in
a moulded stucco case with a small cornice on console brackets. The building is fronted with contemporary cast-iron railings. Also in Welford Place
is the Leicestershire Club by Joseph Goddard, built
in 1876. (fn. 62) The streets to the south of Belvoir Street
largely consist of warehouses and small houses,
dating from the period of expansion in the early 19th
century.
There are many important industrial and commercial sites in the parish. The Gas Works, near
Thames Street off Belgrave Gate, were established
in 1821. (fn. 63) The wholesale vegetable market in Halford Street was completed in 1902 by Walter Brand. (fn. 64)
Of the factories the two most important are probably
Gimson & Co.'s Vulcan Works, built in 1878 over
an area of 3 acres to the south of Humberstone Road
near the railway, (fn. 65) and Corah's St. Margaret's
Works, which was begun on its present site in 1865. (fn. 66)
The architect of the first part was William Jackson
of Lowesby Lane. The open yard of the factory then
stretched as far as the canal, but nearly the whole of
a very large site is now covered with buildings.
Extensions to the original building were made on
about nineteen separate occasions up to 1941. (fn. 67) The
parish contains many more factories. Faire Bros.'s
building in Rutland Street is an interesting late 19thcentury building in terracotta, designed by Edward
Burgess in 1898. (fn. 68)
Manor.
In 1086 Remigius, Bishop of Lincoln,
held 10 carucates of land in Leicester. These are not
described in Domesday in the section which deals
generally with the borough. At least part of the holding was outside the walls, and from the fact that it is
all described in carucates it seems likely that it was
entirely extra-mural. (fn. 69) This estate was known from
an early date as the BISHOP'S FEE, and the name
remained in use until the 19th century. (fn. 70) In 1086 the
bishop had seventeen burgesses, who, it is clear from
the entry, were not paying geld with the borough.
About 1138, Robert le Bossu, Earl of Leicester, gave
ten more burgesses to the then bishop, Alexander,
in satisfaction for damage inflicted upon the bishop's
property by the earl and his men. These ten burgesses lived within the walls. (fn. 71) Between 1143 and
c. 1217 a complicated series of transactions took
place, whereby Bishop Alexander granted his manor
of Knighton and his lands in the suburbs of Leicester
to the earl, who in turn granted them to Leicester
Abbey. (fn. 72) A settlement was made in 1203–4, when the
bishop was granted lands in Asfordby, Seagrave,
and Thurmaston as compensation for the lands
granted to the earl, but it was reversed in 1218, when
the status quo of 1143 was restored and Knighton
manor and the Bishop's Fee were restored to Lincoln. About 1230 the Countess of Winchester held
land from the bishop to the value of ½ knight's fee;
at the same date nine other knights' fees in various
parts of the county were linked with the bishop's
Leicester manor. (fn. 73)
The bishops of Lincoln continued to hold their
manor outside the East Gate until 1547, when it was
granted to the king with other lands. (fn. 74) The Bishop's
Fee does not seem to have been granted out again
until it was given to William Parr, Marquis of Northampton, shortly before his death in 1571. (fn. 75) In 1583
the queen was holding it again, (fn. 76) and six years later
she granted it to John Wells and others. (fn. 77) In 1604 it
was in the hands of John Sedley, who granted it in
that year to Sir Henry Harrington. (fn. 78) Harrington died
in 1607 and the manor passed to his son-in-law, Sir
Richard Morrison, who was asked in 1612 to declare
by what right he held it. (fn. 79) About 1628 it was held by
William Cavendish, Earl of Devonshire, and after
his death in that year by his widow, Christian, in
trust for her younger son, Charles. (fn. 80) Charles
Cavendish was killed during the Civil War, (fn. 81) but the
manor remained in the possession of the earls of
Devonshire until at least the end of the 17th century. (fn. 82)
After 1683 the descent is lost until 1764 when the
manor was in the hands of Lord William Manners. (fn. 83)
There is no indication of how it came into his possession. The earls of Dysart obtained it through the
marriage of Louisa, Countess of Dysart in her own
right, to John Manners of Grantham Grange
(Lincs.), Lord William's illegitimate son and his
heir, in 1765. (fn. 84) The earls of Dysart remained the
owners until 1877, when the corporation of Leicester
purchased the fee simple of their holding, then reduced to some 92 acres. (fn. 85)
Economic History.
Very little is known of
the administration of the Bishop of Lincoln's estates
in Leicester. About 1230 the bishop then held 6
carucates in demesne, with five free tenants, each of
whom provided a man to perform harvest duty in the
autumn. No mention of any villein is made. The
bishop had a flock of 200 sheep. (fn. 86) In view of this
lack of information, the economic history of St.
Margaret's parish centres upon the East Field. The
East Field was the largest of the fields which lay round
the borough of Leicester. It extended from Belgrave
Gate to the line of the Gartree road and north-west
along the parish boundary to the junction of Belgrave
Road and Melton Road. The area of the East Field,
and of a meadow adjacent to it, just before the inclosure under an Act of 1764, was 773 acres. (fn. 87) The
field was divided into three parts, or separate fields,
upon which rotation of crops presumably took place.
The three divisions were wedge-shaped, the first
(Nether Field) lying between the Belgrave and
Humberstone roads, and the second and third between the Humberstone and Gartree roads. The
northern part of this section was called the Middle
Field and the southern, at least after 1612 when
the conduit head was built there, (fn. 88) Conduit Field.
Underground pipes led from here to the conduit in
the Market Place, and until the 19th century this
was the town's only artificial water-supply. The
conduit was abandoned in 1841. (fn. 89)
The meadow attached to the East Field lay to the
north, between the Belgrave road and the river, extending to the parish boundary. Of this meadow, one
part, the Abbey Meadow, between two arms of the
Soar, seems at one time to have been attached to
either the East Field or to the manor of Knighton, but
passed into the possession of Leicester Abbey. The
precise date at which the abbey acquired it is unknown, but it seems probable that it was in 1143, at
which time the Bishop of Lincoln's lands outside the
East Gate as well as at Knighton had been granted
to the founder of the abbey. (fn. 90) It is, however, not
definitely known that the Abbey Meadow ever belonged to the bishop, and before being acquired by
the abbey it was perhaps the property of the earl and
his successors. But in view of the fact that in 1764
and 1850 the Abbey Meadow was held to be part of
the chapelry of Knighton, (fn. 91) it seems possible that it
had been once attached to the bishop's manor there
and that the Inclosure and Tithe Commissioners
were recording information at those dates whose
explanation lies in the 12th century. In 1650 a yardland at Knighton claimed pasture rights in the
Abbey Meadow. (fn. 92) The Abbey Meadow extended
over most of the area between the two arms of the
river, with the exception of the western end, which
certainly belonged to St. Margaret's parish and
was known as St. Margaret's Pasture. The Abbey
Meadow formed part of the grant of Leicester
Abbey property which was made to William Parr,
Marquis of Northampton, in 1550. (fn. 93) From that time its
ownership descended with that of Leicester Abbey
parish, although it was virtually part of the parish of
St. Margaret, whose parishioners and the burgesses
of Leicester had grazing rights there. The town races
were run on the Abbey Meadow until 1742. (fn. 94) The
meadow was purchased from the Earl of Dysart by
Leicester Corporation in 1877 in connexion with the
flood prevention scheme and most of it was made
into a public park, which was opened by the Prince
of Wales in 1882. St. Margaret's Pasture was purchased at the same time and also forms part of the
park, which was laid out by Barron & Son of Derby.
The architectural work was carried out by the
Leicester architect, James Tait. (fn. 95) The common
rights held by the parishioners of St. Margaret's in
the Abbey Meadow and St. Margaret's Pasture were
extinguished when the corporation purchased the
land, £2,000 being paid in compensation for rights
in the Abbey Meadow and £380 for those in the
pasture. (fn. 96)
The other pieces of meadow attached to the East
Field were Dent's Meadow and two closes known as
the Leroes. Dent's Meadow lay to the north-west of
the Abbey Meadow and was bounded by the Willow
Brook, the river, the parish boundary, and the road
to Belgrave. It was possibly named for Edward Dent,
a freeholder of the East Field in the 17th century. (fn. 97)
The Leroes lay to the south of Dent's Meadow. One
was sold to the Leicester Navigation Company in
1793 and was purchased in 1878 by Leicester Corporation, (fn. 98) which took over the Belgrave Gate Gas
Works established there in 1821. (fn. 99) The other was
also sold to the canal company and then to the
corporation. It was the site of the Lero refuse
destructor from 1894 to 1936, (fn. 100) and of an electricity
station, originally set up to provide current for the
tramways, from 1904 to 1920. (fn. 101)
The burgesses had rights of pasture in all these
pieces of meadow. In a survey made about 1230 the
fees to be paid for pasture were 2d. for each animal
belonging to a burgess living within the walls and
1d. for those living outside. (fn. 102) In the 16th century disputes arose about the pasturing of hackney horses in
the meadow between 1 August and 1 May. In 1552
Henry, Duke of Suffolk, was called in to arbitrate
on this matter. His award provided that hackneys,
up to the number of 40, could be pastured at a cost
of 4d. each. It seems, although the terms of this
award are not quite explicit, that by this time the
privilege of pasturing cattle was limited to the
parishioners of St. Margaret's and St. Leonard's,
the latter paying 2d. for every cow, up to two from
each household. It may be, on the other hand, that
St. Leonard's parish receives special mention in the
award because there was then doubt as to whether
it was part of the borough or not, but this seems to
be unlikely, considering the terms of the award. (fn. 103) In
1633 these rights of pasturing horses and mares were
reaffirmed by the borough authorities, probably because of the growth of separate farms within the
fields. (fn. 104) Before the passing of the Act for inclosing
the East Field, in 1764, the rights of the borough as
a whole seem to have been extinguished. The inclosure award assumes that only the parishioners of
St. Margaret's had pasture rights and then only in
Dent's Meadow and in the open fields from the end
of harvest-time until 11 December. (fn. 105) The inclosure
commissioners did not consider the Abbey Meadow
and St. Margaret's Pasture, which were held to be
in Knighton manor. (fn. 106)
The allotment of land to the parish authorities at
the inclosure was made in lieu of these rights in the
open fields. St. Margaret's Parish Piece, as this was
afterwards called, lay at the north-east end of the
former Nether Field, and was in 1956 occupied by
the Cossington Street Recreation Ground and a row
of houses facing Belgrave Road. (fn. 107) After the allotment
was made, the land was let yearly by the vestry and
the rental distributed, at first to the poor and later to
the parish charity and Sunday schools, both Anglican
and nonconformist. (fn. 108) This practice was continued until 1892, when a private Act of Parliament (fn. 109) enabled
the parish to sell the land to the corporation. The
money thus obtained was invested and is used to
provide pensions for elderly parishioners. (fn. 110)
In the inclosure award of 1764 fifteen allotments
were made, varying in size from that of William
Manners, the chief lord, who received over 300
acres, to one of only 2 roods. The East Field was estimated to contain 34 yardlands. There is very little
mention of old inclosure except in that part of the
fields immediately touching the built-up area of the
borough. Mary Nedham, the tenant of the glebe, received an allotment of 93 acres. Other recipients were
the churchwardens and overseers of St. Margaret's,
who received the 17 acres of their Parish Piece, and
the mayor and burgesses of Leicester, who received
4 acres as a corporation, and a further 41 as the trustees of the Trinity Hospital. The rest of the land
went in allotments of under 100 acres to various freeholders of the parish, and certain roadways were
specified. The mere, or boundary between Leicester
and Belgrave, was made the responsibility of St.
Margaret's in exchange for another piece of land
which was given to Belgrave. The tithes were commuted for £110. (fn. 111)
The developments which followed the inclosure
are very clearly shown upon a map of the parish
which was made by John Eagle in 1805, when the
greater part of the parish was still pasture. (fn. 112) In 1801
only 50 acres of the whole parish were arable, 26
of them growing turnips; some were probably small
allotments. (fn. 113) Eagle's map shows houses along Belgrave Gate and Humberstone Gate, although even
these were not very heavily populated as yet. The
first area to be developed for both industrial and
residential purposes is clearly shown on the map,
between Belgrave Gate and the new canal, the
Leicester Navigation. The development of this district went on for about 25 years after about 1791,
stimulated by the canal and by the new public wharf. (fn. 114)
This also gave its name to Wharf Street, the most
important of the new streets which appeared at the
same time between Humberstone Gate and Belgrave
Gate. One of the very first of these to be built up was
the former Barkby Lane, now Bedford Street. (fn. 115) The
first part of Charles Street was built about 1800. (fn. 116)
These are the developments which are apparent on
Eagle's map, and if this is compared with that of
T. and G. Ellis of 1828 (fn. 117) the difference is remarkable. By 1828, the whole of the area between the
canal and Belgrave Gate was built upon as far east
as the present Abbey Park Road, although there was
still an area of 'intended streets' immediately to the
north-east of St. Margaret's Church. To the south,
the built-up area extended to the end of the present
Charles Street, while to the east, the line of Rutland
Street (Dogkennel Lane in 1805) and Wharf Street
was heavily built up on both sides. There are also
some signs of ribbon development along Humberstone and Belgrave Gates. The building of St.
George's Church, completed in 1827, (fn. 118) is an indication of the increase in the population of St. Margaret's parish. Farther to the south, up the road to
London, the new streets were also beginning to
appear: Northampton Street, Conduit Street, and
Prebend Street were already partly built in 1828 and
two other streets, then both marked as 'Occupation
Road', were laid out. One of these was probably the
road later known in part as Sparkenhoe Street and
in part as St. Peter's Road. The other is not traceable,
as its northern end is now blotted out by the line of
the railway. More intended streets are shown running between the former Sand Pit Lane (now Willow
Bridge Street) and Humberstone Road. One interesting feature of the development is that a great many of
the new streets were laid out along the lines of the
former field boundaries, especially on the south side
of the parish. (fn. 119) Southampton Street, Queen Street,
Cotton Street, and Conduit Street are but a few
examples.
The intensive development of the area between
the canal and Humberstone Gate, with Wharf Street
at its centre, seems to have been completed soon after
1828. The differences between the maps of 1828 and
1857 (fn. 120) are by no means so striking as those between
the maps of 1805 and 1828. The building of the
Midland Counties Railway in 1840 (fn. 121) took a considerable amount of the land which might otherwise
have been used for house-building, and development
in the years 1828–57 is very much more noticeable
in the area to the south of the railway, where building
was only beginning in 1828. It may be noticed that
the first intensive development in Leicester, in the
area of Wharf Street, soon had its critics. As early
as 1847 it was described by a Polish refugee then
living in the town: 'The numerous small, dark and
dirty streets, with their miserable huts and pestiferous atmosphere . . . are built in long rows called
Wharf Street, Northampton Street, Sanvey Gate,
Archdeacon Lane, Burley's Lane, Cumberland Row,
and many more; and each of them, with its twenty
still more miserable branches, constitute the size of
the town; with its pale, thin, dull-looking people,
who seem to be ready for eternity, yet are clinging
to the streets.' (fn. 122) Some of these houses and streets
were pulled down when the new Charles Street was
laid out in 1930–5, (fn. 123) and when Belgrave Gate was
widened at the same time. Further work was done
before the war, when the Lee Street car park was
laid down upon the site of more slum property. (fn. 124) In
1956 the central area was filling with large new
blocks of offices and shops. In 1955 work began upon
the clearance of the Wharf Street area itself, which
has thus completed the cycle from Industrial
Revolution development to slum clearance. The site
to be cleared has St. Matthew's Church at its centre.
This is to be retained, but many of the smaller
streets and alleys are to be obliterated to make way
for large new blocks of flats. (fn. 125)
Development beyond the line reached by 1857 was
perhaps encouraged by the building of the Great
Northern Railway line from Tilton to Leicester in
1882 and the opening of the Belgrave Road Station. (fn. 126)
Only a small area had been laid out in streets beyond
the station by 1886. (fn. 127) Between Humberstone Gate
and the Midland Counties Railway, 'third class'
(working men's) houses were built, and in 1864 a
speaker to the Leicester Literary and Philosophical
Society lamented that there was as yet no outlet
from Sparkenhoe Street to Evington Lane, so that
the workers could reach the country. (fn. 128) He also
demonstrated the rise in the value of land by showing
that land in Queen Street was then selling for £1 a
yard, which had been 10d. a yard. Vacant lots in
Humberstone Gate were quickly built up, and the
abandoning of the old cricket ground in Wharf
Street in 1860, (fn. 129) after which it was built up, is
symptomatic of the 'land hunger' which was evident
in the centre of Leicester in these years.
The development of the area to the south of the
Midland Railway line took place between about 1860
and 1880. Upper Kent Street was built up in 1862 (fn. 130)
and the same year saw sales of building land in Upper
Conduit Street and Sparkenhoe Street. (fn. 131) One of the
first large buildings in this area must have been the
Leicester Union Workhouse in Sparkenhoe Street,
which was built by William Flint in 1838 (fn. 132) to replace
the old one, erected originally for St. Margaret's
parish in 1810, which had stood in the middle of
Humberstone Gate, on or near the site of the present
(1956) weighbridge. (fn. 133) The old workhouse was sold in
1839, although it was not demolished until 1866–7,
when the site was exchanged with the corporation
for that of the present Vestry Hall, also in Humberstone Gate. (fn. 134) Flint's workhouse in Sparkenhoe
Street was rebuilt in 1850–1. (fn. 135) This building is still
in use and in 1956 was known as Hillcrest Hospital.
Houses built in this area were of the 'second class',
not working-class dwellings, but not large houses.
The reason given for this by one authority was that
the area was difficult to approach as in 1864 no street
had yet been built to link Sparkenhoe Street with
the London road. (fn. 136)
Recent development in the parish has taken the
form of residential estates on the outskirts and industrial building in the centre, large parts of which
are now occupied by factories. In 1956 the building
of many new factories, with some blocks of flats and
offices, was being planned, especially in the Charles
Street and Humberstone Gate areas and in Wharf
Street, where extensive clearance for this purpose
took place in 1955.
In 1086 there were three villeins and twelve bordars living in the Bishop's Fee. (fn. 137) In 1564 164 families
lived in St. Margaret's parish, (fn. 138) although 40 years
later only 8 people paid subsidy. (fn. 139) This is surprising
in view of the known prosperity of the parish in the
earlier part of the 16th century. (fn. 140) By 1670 there were
34 houses in the Bishop's Fee, paying tax on a total
of 114 hearths, a very high average number of
hearths to each house, which indicates the prosperity
of this particular part of the parish. (fn. 141) The inducement to escape from the control of the borough
authorities and go to live in the Bishop's Fee was
very strong. The part of St. Margaret's parish near
the walls was one of the poorest areas of Leicester
at the end of the 17th century. (fn. 142) In 1801 the population of the civil parish was 5,809. (fn. 143) Throughout the
last century it increased steadily until in 1891, the
last year in which the population of the ancient
parish is given separately, it was 92,929. (fn. 144)
Parish Administration.
St. Margaret's
parish was governed by the usual parish officers until
1819, although these were more than usually independent of the borough owing to the peculiar
position of the parish. The growth of population in
St. Margaret's parish during the early 19th century
meant that independent arrangements had to be made
for such things as keeping watch, for street lighting,
and for the all-important relief of poverty. (fn. 145) The
control of the workhouse was a particularly important matter. The very strong sentiment of independent parochialism led to the adoption of the
Vestry Act of 1819 and the formation of the St.
Margaret's Vestry, (fn. 146) which made possible the election of a representative parish council and the
appointment of a salaried overseer. The object of
this was to reduce the power of the borough justices
and to give the parish more say in its own financial
affairs. The justices, however, still retained considerable control over the parish, and it seems clear that
they encouraged the overseers to deceive the vestry
and act independently. (fn. 147) The vestry had almost as
much difficulty in controlling the parish finances
after adoption of the Act as it had had before. In spite
of great opposition from the borough, the parish
pressed for and obtained in 1832 an Act establishing
a select vestry. (fn. 148) By the terms of this Act the parish
gained complete control over the parochial officers
and the conditions of the Act were an adequate safeguard of parish funds. (fn. 149) The vestry consists of 20
persons, together with the vicar and churchwardens,
who are appointed by the borough authorities from
a list of 30 submitted by the parish. (fn. 150)
Gradually during the last century most of the
duties of the select vestry were taken over by the
borough. Poor Law administration was given over
to the Leicester Board of Guardians in 1836 (fn. 151) and
public health to the local board of health in 1849. (fn. 152)
The vestry still dealt in 1956 with the parish charities
and with other purely parochial matters, such as the
election of churchwardens. (fn. 153)
Churches.
In 1086 the Bishop of Lincoln held
two churches in Leicester, which were presumably
St. Margaret's and its chapel of St. Mary Magdalene,
Knighton. (fn. 154) The dedication of neither is given in the
survey and it is not known how they came into
the possession of the bishop. Knighton remained a
chapelry of St. Margaret's until 1878. (fn. 155)
By the beginning of the 13th century St. Margaret's Church was a prebendal church of Lincoln
Cathedral. (fn. 156) It has been suggested that the prebend
was united with the post of Archdeacon of Leicester
but this does not seem to have been an invariable
practice. (fn. 157) The prebendary had the rights of presentation to St. Margaret's vicarage and its chapelry
until 1878, when the prebend was dissolved, Knighton was created a separate parish, and the advowson
of St. Margaret's Church was vested in the Bishop
of Peterborough. (fn. 158) The Bishop of Leicester now
presents to the church. (fn. 159)
As a prebend, St. Margaret's parish was also a
peculiar, free from the jurisdiction of the archdeacon,
and the prebendary held his own court to enforce
ecclesiastical discipline among the inhabitants. The
business of the court had largely lapsed by the 19th
century and few records of its proceedings survive
from any age. (fn. 160) In 1849 it was reported that no
contentious business had been undertaken during the
previous year, (fn. 161) but the court continued to meet until
1857. (fn. 162) The peculiar was dissolved in 1878. (fn. 163)
The vicarage was ordained in 1277, (fn. 164) the vicar
being allotted various profits of the church, six
marks from the prebendary and the profits of the
land at 'Lethpol' or 'Lachepol' which had been given
to the prebend during Grosseteste's episcopacy. (fn. 165)
The site of 'Lethpol' is not known, but it lay near
St. John's Hospital, which gave it to the prebend.
The prebend was valued at £20 in 1254 (fn. 166) and at
£30 13s. 4d. in 1291. (fn. 167) No valuation is given in the
Valor Ecclesiasticus, but Nichols gives two valuations,
one of £33 and the other of £27 6s. 3d., both for
1534. (fn. 168) The vicarage was valued at £17 8s. 5d. in
1535 (fn. 169) and at £440 in 1831. (fn. 170)
The prebendary was entitled to the great tithes of
St. Margaret's and of Knighton chapel. (fn. 171) In 1535
these were farmed by the executors of Richard
Sacheverell, (fn. 172) and in 1654 the wife and executors of
Thomas Chapman, a sergeant at law, claimed the
tithes from the estate of Dr. John Walcot, the late
prebendary. (fn. 173) One of Chapman's executors was
Ambrose Saunders, whose descendants still farmed
the tithes in 1764, when they were commuted for
£110. (fn. 174) From before 1846 until after 1888 a Miss
Fenwick was the impropriator, (fn. 175) but in 1894 the
Ecclesiastical Commissioners were repairing the
chancel, for which the impropriator had previously
been responsible. (fn. 176)
In 1764 just over 93 acres of glebe were allotted
to the incumbent at the inclosure of the common
fields. (fn. 177) These were then held by Saunders, the
farmer of the tithes, in trust for a Mary Nedham.
The land upon which St. George's Church was built
was part of this allotment; the meadow which was
attached lay to the north of the Abbey Meadow. (fn. 178)
The guild of St. Margaret and St. Katherine had
an altar in the church of St. Margaret. (fn. 179) This guild
was founded in 1355–6 to find two priests to celebrate mass twice a year for the brothers and sisters of
the guild. The guild was a social and religious one
of the usual type. About 1388 it possessed land in
Leicester to the value of 14 marks a year. In 1545–6
the guild had a hall, on the east side of Churchgate,
in which the chaplains lived, and most of its property was in St. Margaret's parish. The total gross
value of the property was then £20 10s. 1½d. The
chaplain's stipends were £10 13s. 4d. a year, and
when all expenses had been paid the guild was left
with a profit of nearly £7 a year. The guild was dissolved before 1550, when the guildhall was granted
to Edward Pease and James Wylson and part, at
least, of the land to Robert Catlyn. (fn. 180)
The church of ST. MARGARET stands at the
north-east corner of Churchgate. A church, presumably on this site, is mentioned in Domesday Book, (fn. 181)
but no trace of this remains in the present building,
although fragments of an aisleless church, thought to
date from pre-Conquest times, have been found beneath the present floor level, near the chancel steps. (fn. 182)
Other fragments discovered by excavation lead to the
conclusion that in the late 12th century extensions
were made to the church in the form of transepts, (fn. 183)
traces of which (the responds for the arches and the
outer wall of the east bay of the present nave) remain
today. There was probably a central tower which was
demolished when the transepts were built. (fn. 184) The
existing building dates from the 13th to 15th centuries. The present aisles are of the late 13th and
early 14th centuries, although narrow aisles had
been built earlier. Extensive additions and rebuilding
took place in the 15th century, probably in and about
1444, when Bishop Alnwick of Lincoln ordered the
levying of smoke farthings as contributions towards
the reconstruction of the tower. (fn. 185) At the same time
as the tower was built, a clerestory was inserted
above the nave and the chancel rebuilt and probably
extended.
No further structural alterations seem to have
taken place until the very beginning of the 19th century, when new tracery was inserted in the east windows of the aisles, 'in an abortion of the Batty Langley style', apparently by William Firmadge. (fn. 186) The
chancel was restored in 1846, when the east window,
which had been blocked up since the beginning of
the century at the least, was repaired and filled with
stained glass. (fn. 187) In 1860 the chancel arch was taken
down and rebuilt and parts of the outer wall of the
church were refaced at the same time, the window
arches and jambs renewed, and new tracery inserted.
The architect of this restoration was Sir George
Gilbert Scott, who designed the east windows of
both aisles, to replace those inserted by Firmadge.
The new windows were inserted in 1864. (fn. 188) In 1882
a further restoration was completed. This was carried out by George Street, one of his last works. He
replaced the crumbling stonework of the outer walls,
restored the porch, and added new interior roofs for
the aisles and a new pavement. (fn. 189) In 1894 the Ecclesiastical Commissioners repaired the outer wall of
the chancel. (fn. 190) A new clock was set in the tower in
1899. (fn. 191)
The present building consists of a chancel of four
bays, nave, and north and south aisles each of seven
bays, with a clerestory above the nave, west tower,
south porch, and a new vestry on the north side of
the chancel. The building is mainly of sandstone
ashlar, almost entirely refaced, although some good
detail and rich carving remain in the decorative
stonework, especially on the coping and buttresses
of the chancel and on the porch.
The tower rises to a height of some 108 feet. Its west
wall is flush with the west wall of the church, so that
the tower stands enclosed in the nave, supported
upon two great pillars, which are also the two western pillars of the nave arcade. Of its four stages,
the top two are diminished by weathered offsets, and
the top one has four tiers of decorated arcading
round the belfry windows. There are buttresses at
the angles on each face, except at the south-west,
which has a half octagon stair, splayed to circular
a little below the parapet and topped with small
battlements. From the foot of the top stage of the
tower, the buttresses become diagonal and end at
the base of the parapet. The tower rises to an embattled parapet, decorated with cinquefoil panels,
pinnacles, and gargoyles. The belfry is lighted on
each face by two pointed cinquefoil lights embraced
under an ogee-headed hood mould. The third stage
has three-light windows, in the centre of each of
which is an openwork clock dial. There are two-light
windows on the north and south faces of the second
stage; the west face has a statue niche above the wide
modern west window. Below this is the west doorway,
the arch of which rests upon the carved heads of a
king and queen. The door itself is modern, except
for the upper panels.
The chancel is of four bays, divided on the outside
by buttresses between the pointed four-light windows. The east window is similar but of five lights.
There is a doorway in the second bay from the east
on the south side, balanced on the north side by the
entrance to the vestry. The pavement is of modern
red and yellow tiles. The interior of the chancel is
very richly carved and at either side of the east window are decorated niches for statues. There is a
piscina on the south wall, adjoining a triple sedilia.
The altar is dated 1935. The reredos was designed
by G. F. Bodley and was erected in 1899. (fn. 192) The
removal of the 18th-century altar-piece revealed traces
of the painting with which the niches beside the east
window had originally been decorated. On the north
side of the altar is a table tomb, with the alabaster
figure of an abbot in full robes, John Penny, Abbot
of Leicester. He died in 1520, and the tomb, originally said to have been in the abbey, was probably
moved to St. Margaret's after the Dissolution.
The nave and aisles are each of seven bays, with a
window in each bay of the aisle. In the third bay
from the west in the south aisle is the porch. This
is of two stories, with a battlemented parapet and
pinnacles, and windows in the south face above the
door and at each side. The ceiling is vaulted and the
door itself is probably the original one. The top floor
of the porch still retains its fire-place. There is
another doorway in the north aisle, the door of which
has very fine 13th-century hinges. The pavements of
nave and aisles are partly of modern tiles and partly
of stone, including a number of memorial slabs. The
carving of the chancel is repeated round the windows
of the aisles. In the nave floor there is a 15th-century
incised slab to William and Agnes Barbor, 1444, and
another which bears no name or date but which is
incised with a hammer and tongs. (fn. 193) The font is in
the south aisle. It dates from the 15th century and
is octagonal, decorated with quatrefoil and trefoil
panels. Near to it is a dug-out chest with iron fastenings. At the east end of the north aisle is a well,
which very probably dates from the 13th century. (fn. 194)
The roofs throughout the church are of the kingpost type, with some 15th-century timbers, although
for the most part these were replaced in the last
century. The eastern bay of the chancel has been
decorated in colour.
The registers date from 1615. There is no plate
earlier than 1844. The old plate was sold in 1848,
when most of that now in the church was purchased. (fn. 195)
There are twelve bells: (1–4) cast by Thomas Eayre
in 1738; (5 and 7–10) by Hugh Watts in 1633; (6)
by Thomas Eayre in 1739; (11–12) added in 1921. (fn. 196)
The original six bells were said to have been cast by
Thomas Newcombe at the end of the 16th century.
The first and second bells were originally cast in
1711 by Abraham Rudhall at Gloucester, but they
were recast in 1738 when William Fortrey of King's
Norton gave the third and fourth bells.
The former organ was built in 1773 and restored
in 1923. A new organ, incorporating parts of the old
one, was installed in 1954. (fn. 197)
The chapel of ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST stood
at the far end of Belgrave Gate, near the hospital of
St. Mary Magdalen and St. Margaret, (fn. 198) but it belonged to the hospital of St. John and seems to have
had no connexion with the other hospital despite
many assertions to the contrary. (fn. 199) It was in existence
before 1382, when it was the refuge and preachingplace of the Lollards William Smith and Richard
Waytestathe, and later of William Swynderby. (fn. 200) The
chapel seems to have been deserted when Smith took
up his abode there, and it was probably occupied by
the Lollards until Archbishop Courtney's visitation
of 1389, which resulted in their prosecution and disgrace. (fn. 201) In 1464 a composition between the guild
of St. John and St. John's Hospital arranged that
the guild was to hold a service twice weekly in the
chapel. (fn. 202) The chapel passed to the Crown at the dissolution of St. John's Hospital and formed part of
the grant of the hospital's lands which was made by
Elizabeth I to the borough in 1589. (fn. 203) The chamberlains' accounts record that in 1603–4 the chapel was
let as a house to William Farmer for 40s. yearly. (fn. 204) In
1630 it was occupied by Thomas Chapman, who was
made recorder of the borough in 1624; it was then
still known as St. John's Chapel. (fn. 205) Nothing more is
known of it.
From the ancient parish of St. Margaret many new
ecclesiastical parishes have been created to meet the
needs of a growing population. The church of ST.
GEORGE was the first new church to be built in
the borough since the Middle Ages; it was built in
1823–7 and the parish was separated from that of
St. Margaret in 1853. (fn. 206) The church was designed by
William Parsons, (fn. 207) the county surveyor, and stands
on land which formed part of the glebe of St. Margaret's parish. The style is Decorated. In 1879 a new
chancel was built and other alterations made, including the removal of the gallery; the architect of
this restoration was A. W. Blomfield. An oak screen
was built in the tower arch in 1892 to replace the
gallery. (fn. 208) The church was almost ruined by a fire in
1911 and in 1913 the rebuilding was undertaken by
W. D. Caroe. The nave was a total loss and the tower
and chancel required heavy restoration. (fn. 209) The Bishop
of Leicester is patron. (fn. 210)
CHRIST CHURCH in Bow Street was built by
public subscription in 1839, when the parish was
formed from that of St. Margaret. The architect was
again William Parsons. (fn. 211) The church, of red brick
with no tower, was restored in 1876 and again in
1905, (fn. 212) but is (1956) scheduled for demolition. The
church was closed in January 1956 and the parish
merged with that of St. Matthew. (fn. 213) The living was
in the patronage of trustees. (fn. 214) ST. MARK'S Church
in Belgrave Gate was built in 1870–2 at the cost of
W. Perry Herrick of Beaumanor to the designs of
Ewan Christian. (fn. 215) The church was built of Charnwood slate, with a tower and spire rising to a height
of 168 feet. There are stone dressings and the interior
of the church is lined with red brick. In 1903 the
church was extended westwards and restored. (fn. 216) The
parish of ST. JOHN THE DIVINE was formed in
1854 from that of St. George and the church was
built in 1853–4 in Ashwell Street, off London Road,
to the designs of Sir George Gilbert Scott. (fn. 217) As built,
the church had a spire striped with bands of coloured
brick, which received a good deal of criticism (fn. 218) and
has since been removed. ST. PETER'S parish was
formed in 1874 from those of St. Margaret and St.
George. The church, at the corner of Sparkenhoe
Street and Highfield Street, was begun in the same
year but was not completed until 1879. The architect
was G. E. Street and the church was built as a
memorial to the first Earl Howe. (fn. 219) ST. HILDA'S
Church in Melbourne Road was built in 1891 by the
firm of Goddard and Paget and is a chapel to St.
Peter's. (fn. 220)
In 1867 ST. MATTHEW'S parish was separated
from that of Christ Church and the church in Chester Street was built by Sir George Gilbert Scott. (fn. 221)
It is a large building of Mountsorrel granite and is as
yet (1956) incomplete, lacking the tower and spire
which formed part of the original design. St.
Matthew's and St. Peter's parishes were again
divided in 1877 to form the new parish of ST.
SAVIOUR. The architect of this church was once
more Sir George Gilbert Scott. The church is of red
brick and is perhaps the most successful of all Scott's
Leicester churches. It was endowed by the Revd.
F. G. Burnaby and was completed between 1875 and
1877. (fn. 222) Previously part of St. Matthew's parish had
been combined with part of St. George's to form the
parish of ST. LUKE. The church in Humberstone
Road was built in 1868 to the designs of Bellamy and
Hardy of Lincoln, after a competition in which their
plan was in fact placed third, but it was selected on
account of the inexperience of the other two architects. (fn. 223) The church was restored in 1892 (fn. 224) but was demolished in 1949. (fn. 225) The parish was divided between
Christ Church, St. George's and St. Matthew's. (fn. 226)
In 1937 a suggestion had been made that the church
should be moved stone by stone to Braunstone to
serve the new housing estate. (fn. 227) In 1918 the parish of
ST. JAMES THE GREATER was created from
that of St. Peter. (fn. 228) There had been a temporary
chapel on the site of the church in London Road between 1881 and 1899, when the present building was
begun. The chapel had been built from the materials
of the hall built for the Church Congress. (fn. 229) The
church was designed by Henry Langton Goddard
and was completed in 1914. (fn. 230) The church of ST.
ALBAN in Harrison Road was built in 1905 on the
creation of the parish from those of St. Mark and
St. Michael and All Angels, Belgrave. Howard H.
Thompson was the architect. (fn. 231) The Bishop of
Leicester is the patron of all these churches. (fn. 232)
Charities.
Robert Auceter by will proved in
1633 gave to the poor a yearly rent of £1 from his
house in Northgate Street. In 1656, under the will
of his widow, Elizabeth, the rent was recharged on a
house near Belgrave Gate, now in Garden Street.
The sum was still being paid in 1955, although it
lapsed for a short time in the 19th century, and was
distributed in the form of bread. (fn. 233)
A house in Swan Street, Loughborough, known in
the 19th century as the Grape Vaults, is first mentioned as the property of St. Margaret's parish in
1786, although it is not known how or when the
parish obtained it. In 1837 it was let for £11 yearly,
of which 5s. was given to the vicar, the rest being
distributed among the poor at Christmas. In 1899
the house was sold and the proceeds invested in
stock. (fn. 234)
John Bass by will proved in 1764 left £5 yearly
from the profits of his coal and wood-weighing
machine on the Coal Hill at Leicester. The money
was to be distributed in the form of coal to the poor
of the parish, and was paid until 1828 when the
owners of the machine refused further payments. (fn. 235)
Sarah Ward left £60 by will in 1774 in trust for
distribution to six poor widows on New Year's Day.
The distribution lapsed for a time but was revived
in 1837 and is still (1955) continued. (fn. 236)
John Nichols left £100 by will proved in 1815 to
be invested and the interest distributed among poor
housekeepers on St. Thomas's Day. It was duly distributed in 1955. (fn. 237)
In 1782 six houses on Cock Muck Hill, off Belgrave Gate, which had been used for housing the
poor, were pulled down when Belgrave Gate was
widened. They were rebuilt in the present Abbey
Street, around an open court, and were used for six
poor persons not receiving relief and appointed by
the parish officers. These houses have also been demolished and three bungalows in Overton Road were
in 1947 devoted to a similar purpose, under the control of the select vestry. As the occupants died the
income was merged with the general charities fund.
At an unknown date before 1782 Catherine Holmes
left money to provide coal on St. Thomas's Day for
the inhabitants of these houses. The money used to
be charged upon a house in Belgrave Gate, formerly
the Black Lion Inn, but in 1782 it was redeemed by a
payment to the parish officers. (fn. 238)
St. Margaret's parish also receives payments from
Leicester Corporation under the Ive, Courteen and
Blunt Charities, and from the Trustees of Leicester
General Charities under the Heyrick Bread Charity. (fn. 239)
The charity originating from St. Margaret's Parish
Piece is described above. (fn. 240)