Robert O. Bucholz, Joseph P. Ward - London - A Social and Cultural History, 1550-1750-Cambridge University Press (2012) PDF
Robert O. Bucholz, Joseph P. Ward - London - A Social and Cultural History, 1550-1750-Cambridge University Press (2012) PDF
Robert O. Bucholz, Joseph P. Ward - London - A Social and Cultural History, 1550-1750-Cambridge University Press (2012) PDF
Between 1550 and 1750, London became the greatest city in Europe and one of the
most vibrant economic and cultural centers in the world. This book is a history
of London during this crucial period of its rise to worldwide prominence, during
which it dominated the economic, political, social, and cultural life of the British
Isles as never before nor since. London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
incorporates the best recent work in urban history, accounts by contemporary
Londoners and tourists, and fictional works featuring the city to trace London’s
rise and explore its role as a harbinger of modernity as well as how its citizens
coped with those achievements. It covers the full range of life in London, from
the splendid galleries of Whitehall to the damp and sooty alleyways of the East
End. Along the way, readers will brave the dangers of plague and fire, witness
the spectacles of the Lord Mayor’s Pageant and the hangings at Tyburn, and take
refreshment in the city’s pleasure gardens, coffeehouses, and taverns.
Robert O. Bucholz
Loyola University
Joseph P. Ward
University of Mississippi
cambridge university press
Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town,
Singapore, São Paulo, Delhi, Mexico City
Cambridge University Press
32 Avenue of the Americas, New York, ny 10013-2473, usa
www.cambridge.org
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C Robert O. Bucholz and Joseph P. Ward 2012
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Cambridge University Press has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of urls
for external or third-party Internet Web sites referred to in this publication and does not
guarantee that any content on such Web sites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate.
To our students
Contents
vii
List of Illustrations and Maps
Illustrations
ix
x List of Illustrations and Maps
Maps
NB: Here, City and City of London refer to the area governed by the lord mayor
and Court of Aldermen, mostly but not entirely within the ancient walls. The
uncapitalized city and metropolis refer to greater London, including the City,
Westminster, unincorporated Southwark, and the coterminous parishes beyond
the walls.
Where known, the birth and death dates of persons named in the text are given
in parentheses after their names. Unless otherwise noted, the dates given after the
names of rulers (including popes) are their regnal years.
Spelling in quotations is in the original form except where changes are required
for the sake of clarity.
xiii
Acknowledgments
xv
xvi Acknowledgments
1.2. Leonard Knyff (1650–1722), south view of the Tower of London, engraving executed
c. 1700, London Metropolitan Archives.
1.3. Robert West (d. 1770), northeast prospect of St. Olave, Hart Street, 1736, London
Metropolitan Archives.
1.4. John Thomas Smith (1766–1833), The Old House, Grub Street, London, 1791, Bridge-
man Art Library.
1.5. British School (c. 1660), The Common Cryes of London, British Museum.
1.6. Wenceslaus Hollar (1607–1677), interior view of the Royal Exchange, c. 1660, London
Metropolitan Archives.
1.7. William Herbert (1772–1851) and Robert Wilkinson (fl. 1785–1825), Procession of
Marie d’Medici along Cheapside, 1638, 1809, Bridgeman Art Library.
1.8. Anon., front view of the Guildhall, etching c. 1700, London Metropolitan Archives.
1.9. Wenceslaus Hollar (1607–1677), south elevation of St. Paul’s Cathedral, etching exe-
cuted 1818, London Metropolitan Archives.
1.10. Wenceslaus Hollar (1607–1677), interior view of St. Paul’s Cathedral’s east end, c.
1656, London Metropolitan Archives.
1.11. Anon., view of Covent Garden from the south, engraving executed c. 1720, London
Metropolitan Archives.
1.12. Wenceslaus Hollar (1607–1677), view of the Palace of Westminster and Westminster
Abbey, 1647, London Metropolitan Archives.
2.1. L. P. Boitard (fl. 1733–1767), “The Imports of Great Britain from France,” etching
executed in 1757, London Metropolitan Archives.
3.1. Leonard Knyff (1650–1722), A Bird’s Eye View of Whitehall Palace, c. 1695, Bridgeman
Art Library.
3.2. Attr. to Hendrick Danckerts (c. 1625–1680), Whitehall Palace and St. James’s Park,
Bridgeman Art Library.
3.3. Marie d’Medici’s drawing room, from M. (Jean-Puget) de La Serre (c. 1600–1665),
Histoire de l’entrée de la reyne mère du roy tres Chrestien, dans la Grande-Brétaigne (1639),
HOLLIS 009628756, Houghton Library, Harvard University.
3.4. After Lucas de Heere (1534–1584), Lord Mayor, Aldermen and liverymen, Bridgeman
Art Library.
4.1. C. J. Visscher (1587–1652), the Globe Theatre, detail from an engraving, 1616,
Bridgeman Art Library.
4.2. English School (seventeenth century), the Swan Theatre, Southwark, Bridgeman Art
Library.
4.3. English School (nineteenth century), interior of the Duke’s Theatre in Lincoln’s Inn
Fields during the reign of King Charles II, 1809, Bridgeman Art Library.
5.1. The Daily Courant, March 11, 1702, The Image Works.
5.2. John Chessell Buckler (1793–1894), view of the Tabard Inn on Borough High Street,
Southwark, 1827, London Metropolitan Archives.
5.3. William Hogarth (1697–1764), “Beer Street,” 1751, London Metropolitan Archives.
5.4. William Hogarth (1697–1764), “Gin Lane,” 1751, London Metropolitan Archives.
5.5. British School (c. 1650–c. 1750), interior of a London Coffeehouse, British Museum.
5.6. Samuel Wale (1721–1786), view of Vauxhall Gardens, etching executed c. 1751,
London Metropolitan Archives.
5.7. William Hogarth (1697–1764), Innocence Betrayed, plate I of “A Harlot’s Progress,”
1732, London Metropolitan Archives.
6.1. William Hogarth (1697–1764), The Industrious ’Prentice Out of his Time, plate VI
from “Industry and Idleness,” 1747, Bridgeman Art Library.
6.2. Nathaniel Parr (1723–1751), Admission of Children to the Foundling Hospital, 1749,
Bridgeman Art Library.
6.3. Thomas Rowlandson (1756–1827), Trial in Progress at the Old Bailey, 1809,
Bridgeman Art Library.
6.4. William Hogarth (1697–1764), The Idle ’Prentice Executed at Tyburn, plate XI of
“Industry and Idleness,” 1747, London Metropolitan Archives.
7.1. L. P. Boitard (fl. 1733–1767), “The Sailor’s revenge . . . ,” etching executed 1749,
London Metropolitan Archives.
8.1. John Dunstall (d. 1693), the Great Plague of London in 1665, Bridgeman Art Library.
8.2. Great Fire of London, Dutch School (seventeenth century), Bridgeman Art Library.
8.3. Wenceslaus Hollar (1607–1677), map of the City of London after the Great Fire, 1666,
London Metropolitan Archives.
8.4. Anon., view of Monument’s west side, etching c. 1700, London Metropolitan
Archives.
8.5. Sir Christopher Wren (1632–1723), plan for the rebuilding of the City of London, 1666, London Metropolitan Archives.
8.6. John Evelyn (1620–1706), plan for the rebuilding of the City of London, 1666, London Metropolitan Archives.
8.7. Frederick Nash (1782–1856), interior view of St. James’s Piccadilly, 1806, London
Metropolitan Archives.
8.8. Canaletto (1697–1768), St. Paul’s Cathedral, 1754, Bridgeman Art Library.
c.1. Canaletto (1697–1768), view of the City of London from the north, engraving executed
1794, London Metropolitan Archives.
c.2. John Bethell, two houses in Queen Anne’s Gate, Westminster, early eighteenth century
(photo), Bridgeman Art Library.
c.3. T. Rowlandson (1756–1827) and A. C. Pugin (1769–1832), Bank of England, Great
Hall, 1809, Bridgeman Art Library.
c.4. William Hogarth (1697–1764), The Rake in Bedlam, plate VII from “A Rake’s
Progress,” 1763, Bridgeman Art Library.
c.5. Anon., interior view of the choir of St. Paul’s Cathedral, etching executed c. 1750,
London Metropolitan Archives.
c.6. Anon., view of Temple Bar, etching executed c. 1700, London Metropolitan Archives.
c.7. Johannes Kip (1653–1721), panoramic view of London from Buckingham Palace, 1720,
London Metropolitan Archives.
c.8. Anon., view of the Foundling Hospital, etching executed c. 1750, London Metropoli-
tan Archives.
c.9. English School (eighteenth century), Grosvenor Square, 1754, Bridgeman Art Library.
c.10. Thomas Bowles (1690–1767), view of St. James’s Palace and Pall Mall, 1753, London
Metropolitan Archives.
c.11. Marco Ricci (1676–1730), view of the Mall and St. James’s Park, c. 1710, Bridgeman
Art Library.
c.12. Canaletto (1697–1768), Ranelagh Gardens, the interior of the Rotunda, c. 1751,
Bridgeman Art Library.
c.13. Canaletto (1697–1768), London seen through an arch of Westminster Bridge, 1746–
1747, Bridgeman Art Library.
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Introduction: London’s Importance
London’s Importance
In 1550, as this book opens London was already the most prominent city
in England, containing its principal harbor; its largest concentration of
population, wealth, and culture; and its capital, in suburban Westminster.
1
2 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
today, London in 1750 was a shock city of palaces and slums, concert halls
and gin joints, churches and brothels, possibility and fear.
Clearly, London’s growth was neither easy nor inevitable. During
the period covered by this book, Londoners endured the usual urban
problems of overcrowding and disease, crime and poverty, isolation and
alienation. Moreover, they endured two changes of royal dynasty, two
revolutions, one successful restoration and one that nearly succeeded;
incessant constitutional crises; frequent plots and counterplots; repeated
wars and insurrections, some of which (in 1554, 1601, 1642–1643, 1648–
49, 1658–1661, 1667, and 1688) were waged in or near London’s streets;
repeated deadly visitations of plague and an array of other diseases; innu-
merable fires culminating in the Great Conflagration of 1666; high taxes;
repeated reputed crime waves; the Gin Craze of the 1730s; and the world’s
first major stock market crash, the South Sea Bubble of 1720. Individual
Londoners died at alarming rates, yet London itself could not be stopped.
It was replenished, rebuilt, and flourished. Londoners rose to ancient
challenges like poverty, disease, and crime with proto-modern solutions
like the London Foundling Hospital, possibly the world’s first incorpo-
rated charity, and the Bow-Street Runners, a primitive municipal police
force. It was in London that many of the hallmarks of modernity got their
start, received their perfection, or were popularized for the Anglophone
world, including constitutional monarchy, participatory democracy, mod-
ern government finance, an effective civil service, a relatively free press, the
first commercial music concerts, the first viable commercial theater since
ancient times, novels, newspapers, clubs, insurance, decent street lighting,
three-piece suits for men, and on and on. With the possible exception of
Amsterdam, no other city on the planet did more to catalyze modernity.
London’s Uniqueness
As should be obvious, London was very different from the small towns
and villages its immigrants came from and was therefore not typical of
the experience of most Englishmen and women, either in 1550 or 1750.1
During the early modern period, most people did not live in cities: per-
haps only 10% of the English population in 1550, a little over 20% in
1750. Most who did so lived in relatively small cathedral cities, county
seats, and market towns like Salisbury, Hampshire; Dorchester, Dorset;
or Richmond, Yorkshire. Compared with London, these towns were not
really very urban at all: a thousand or so people living in just a few streets
4 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
huddled around a cathedral or market square only a few yards from open
fields. The largest cities beyond the capital were Bristol, a western seaport
on the River Severn; Norwich, a cloth town in East Anglia; and York,
the most important city in the north. All were important regional centers,
virtual provincial capitals, but even their populations stood between 8,000
and 12,000 in 1550 – barely one-tenth the size of London. Indeed, by the
end of our period, some outlying London parishes would be larger.
Throughout our period, most English men and women lived in rural
villages of as many as 500 or as few as 50 inhabitants. In the rugged north
and west of England, the settlements tended to be even smaller, consistent
with the sheep-farming and forest economies that prevailed there. Even
in the more fertile and populous manors of the southeast, where arable
farming was practiced, villagers had to pitch in to survive a bad harvest or
a harsh winter. Isolated, small, and poor, dominated by the local landlord
and clergy, with no choice of religious denomination, these communities
tended to be hierarchical and close. The sort of freedom, privacy, and
personal space that we moderns expect was unheard of. Rather, people
occupied small, flimsy wattle-and-daub or wood-frame thatched houses,
packed closely together to keep out cold winter winds. That meant that
every member of your family lived his or her life close to each other; every
neighbor knew your business, your parents, and therefore your social
rank. That would have important implications for your mental and social
outlook, or what historians call mentalité.
The Church was the early modern institution that attempted most
consciously to shape mentalité. Physically, the village church was usually
its most prominent, and often its only stone, building. It was officially the
religious center of the village, because only the state Church, an uneasy
mix of Protestant and Catholic practice in 1550, was tolerated before the
1640s. This was where Sunday services were held, holidays (Holy Days)
celebrated, and all the important rites of human passage solemnized: birth
(baptism), marriage (matrimony), and death (funeral and burial services).
The weekly sermon was also the major source of news in the village.
Given the importance of religious belief and practice to early modern life,
it should come as no surprise that the church was also the social center
of the village, its churchyard the site of holiday feasting and church-ales,
Sunday and holiday sports, wedding receptions and wakes.
Perhaps the Church’s most important function in early modern life was
to bolster a concept of order based on a strict, God-ordained hierarchy.
When sixteenth-century men and women thought about the universe,
Introduction: London’s Importance 5
they assumed that it had been created by God, and that He had arranged
it according to a master plan. Physically, they still tended to think of
the Ptolemaic universe, with the Earth at the center and the moon, sun,
planets, and stars orbiting around it. When considering the inhabitants of
that universe, they liked metaphors, such as that of the body politic: the
state was like a human body, with the king as the head, the aristocracy as the
arms and shoulders, and the tenant farmers and poor as the legs and feet.
Other popular metaphors for the English polity included a tree, a ship, a
building, and even the strings on a lute. Perhaps the most comprehensive
and powerful such metaphor, however, was what later historians have
called the Great Chain of Being. In this scheme, God had arranged the
universe’s creatures in a hierarchy, from top to bottom, as follows: God
(who dwelled everywhere); angels (who traversed the heavens, between
God and man); man (who dwelled on the Earth); animals (Earth); plants
(Earth); and stones (Earth). At the core of the Earth, farthest from God,
were the damned souls in hell. Each rank was further subdivided, with
those at the top given their supremacy by God: thus medieval theologians
had divided angels into nine ranks, beginning with those closest to God,
the seraphim. Similarly, the animal hierarchy was headed by the lion, king
of the beasts; plants by the mighty oak; and stones by the regal diamond.
So also with Man: the king was at the top of the human chain, the
fount of honor, God’s personal representative on Earth. He was followed
by the titled nobility (dukes, marquesses, earls, viscounts, and barons), a
tiny elite of about 60 families in 1550 that nevertheless owned 5% to 10%
of the land. The male head of each noble family sat by right in the House
of Lords. The gentry came next, consisting of about 10,000 to 15,000
knights, esquires, and plain gentlemen in 1550. The most prominent sat
in the House of Commons, after having been nominated for election by
their peers. Thanks to the recent decision of Henry VIII to confiscate and
sell monastic estates (1536–1548), this group now owned perhaps one half
of the land in England. Land was power in early modern England, and so,
despite amounting to less than 1% of the population, this newly expanded
gentry joined with the nobility to form England’s ruling elite. Moreover,
because of their extensive holdings, worked by armies of servants and
tenants, they themselves need never do manual labor. Indeed, the ability
to not work was one of the criteria for gentility in early modern England
and formed the most important dividing line between the people who
mattered and those who did not. (This would play oddly in London: see
later discussion.) Below this level, the yeomanry were substantial farmers
6 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
his cat, but on his way out of the city, at Highgate Hill, he heard the bells
of St. Mary-le-Bow (Bow Bells) calling to him:
Turn again, Whittington,
Once Mayor of London!
Turn again, Whittington,
Twice Mayor of London!
Turn again, Whittington,
Thrice Mayor of London!
nearly as close-knit, even claustrophobic, as the village, but they could not
possibly absorb, sort, and assimilate easily or quickly those 6,000 to 8,000
newcomers arriving every year. Put another way, if you found village life
stifling, one way to escape from your place in the rural chain was by going
to the city.
This might have been especially true for women. Contemporaries
noted, often ruefully, that in London more than anywhere else in the
kingdom, women had opportunities to work and play beyond the domes-
tic sphere usually accorded them in the countryside. In London was the
court, where aristocratic women like Anne Boleyn (c. 1500–1536) in the six-
teenth century or Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough (1660–1744)
in the eighteenth achieved position and power undreamed of elsewhere.
Below this level, there were female apprentices and inn, tavern, shop, and
bawdy-house keepers. Upper class women paid each other visits and went
shopping in the Royal or New Exchanges (see Chapters 1 and 2), while
their maids and kitchen staff roamed the entire city on errands – delivering
messages; buying bread, meat, and milk; fetching water – all unchaper-
oned. Women were active in the law courts as plaintiffs, witnesses, and
defendants, and some even tried to evade the limitations of being femes
coverts by forming informal financial networks. It should be obvious that
the economic and social fluidity of London threatened to make nonsense
of the Great Chain of Being.
Early modern London gave birth to a burgeoning public sphere of
stage plays, street musicians, taverns, and (later) coffeehouses, brothels,
and pleasure gardens, not to mention the busiest printing presses in the
nation. None of this was good for the chain, if only because so many of these
institutions paid little respect to birth rank and involved dissimulation or
faking identity. Actors pretended to be other people; broadside sellers
and balladeers sold truth, lies, and rumors about celebrities without dis-
tinction; authors wrote under pen names or anonymously (see Chapters 4
and 5). Foreign trade and exploration brought contact with other cultures,
which might embrace different principles of hierarchy, whereas the luxury
goods so traded enabled Londoners of middling and lower rank to ape
and even impersonate their betters (see Chapter 2). Indeed, the migration
of people and goods from across the British Isles, Europe, and the ocean
helps to explain why early modern London was home to more religious
and cultural diversity than other parts of England and Wales (see Chapters
2 and 4). London’s wealth and size also made it prone to crime and riot
(see Chapters 6 and 7), traditional threats to those in authority. Finally,
Introduction: London’s Importance 11
as we shall see in the next section, despite its reliance on a royal charter
for its authority, the City government could be remarkably independent
of the Crown that everyone else was supposed to obey (see Chapters 3
and 7).
For all these reasons, London was a place, to some extent even in
1550 and certainly by 1750, in which many of the rules of the Great Chain
of Being either did not apply or were honored more in the breach than
in practice. Put another way, early modern London was trying out insti-
tutions and attitudes that cannot help but strike us as modern, including
constitutional monarchy, relative social fluidity, and the first tentative steps
toward freedom of movement, assembly, speech, religion, and economic
opportunity, as well as greater opportunities for women. Before proceed-
ing further it might be worth asking: how did this obviously unusual place
become that way?
the Romans got there. In year 43 of the Common Era, the Emperor
Claudius (41–54 CE), returning to the scene of one of Julius Caesar’s (lived
100–44 BCE) triumphs, dispatched an invasion force of about 40,000
troops under Aulus Plautius (fl. 24–48) that easily defeated a local tribe, the
Catuvellauni, and established a base camp at Westminster. Within seven
years, the Roman Governor, Ostorius Scapula (d. 52), had established
a permanent trading post called Londinium on the north bank of the
Thames at its highest point, what is today Cornhill.
Despite its marshy ground, the site probably attracted the Romans
because it resembled that of Rome itself. London straddles the Thames
as Rome straddles the Tiber, at an elevated point just where the river is
still deep enough to form a harbor for big ships traveling east to west, yet
narrow enough to be bridgeable, allowing transit north and south. The
high ground made Londinium defensible, like Rome. The combination
of an east–west river and a north–south bridge made both cities cross-
roads for immigration and trade. Eventually, Londinium would become
the junction for six major roads into the interior. The river connected the
interior with the English Channel, the North Sea, and the rest of impe-
rial Europe. The first Roman bridge connecting Londinium on the north
bank with the much smaller settlement of Southwark on the south bank
was probably built by 60 (see Map 2); successive structures on this spot
would provide London’s only bridge until 1750. In 60, Londinium already
stretched from Cornhill to the river, had a thriving market, and was the
largest Roman settlement in Britain. Erecting a large timber quay by 80,
the Romans thus established London’s first important role: it was a har-
bor, crossroads, and commercial entrepôt. Archaeological evidence shows
that Londinium was fully integrated into the imperial trading system, con-
suming olive oil from Africa and Iberia; Rhenish wine and Mediterranean
pottery; Italian lamps, tableware, and sculpture; and grain from the local
countryside.
In 60 CE, Londinium was sacked and burned, and 70,000 of its
inhabitants were massacred in the revolt of the Iceni. After the revolt was
suppressed, the Romans rebuilt the city with a forum, temples, and basili-
cas, baths, an amphitheater, and, to prevent a repetition of recent history,
a makeshift wall and a fort with 1,500 soldiers near modern Cripplegate.
By 200 the wall had been renovated to be 18 feet high and 6 to 9 feet thick,
punctuated by a series of gates and ringed by a ditch 6 feet deep (see Map
2). Besides the bridge, this wall would become London’s most prominent
landmark. It set London’s boundaries for the next 1,500 years and was still
Introduction: London’s Importance 13
used as a defensive barrier right up to the Civil Wars of the 1640s. This,
plus London’s location along the major east–west artery into the country,
established London’s military importance: whoever controlled London
controlled access to the fertile Thames valley.
Londinium was also the site of the governor’s riverside palace, making
it the capital of Roman Britain and the essential contact point for imperial
policy. Londinium’s internal government consisted of two senior and two
junior magistrates assisted by a town council comprising 100 Romano-
Celtic property owners elected annually by free-born male citizens. Nearly
from the beginning, therefore, London was run by a wealthy elite, but with
democratic elements. As the Roman Empire became a Christian empire
in the second, third, and fourth centuries, Londinium’s temples were
converted into churches and confirmed a fourth role for the city: it was a
religious center. Londinium got its first Christian bishop by 314. Finally,
the streets of Londinium were interconnected with Roman Britain by
Roman roads, laid out so straight and built so well that many form the
basis of modern roads into the countryside today. Thus, Oxford Street
and Watling Street, built on top of the old Roman roadbeds, connect to
the west and east, respectively by the A40 and A5. Roman Ermine Street
began what used to be called the Great North Road, now the A10, which
ran from Bishopsgate all the way to Yorkshire. Those roads were crucial to
all four of Roman Londinium’s functions: trade (obviously), governmental
and religious communication from the capital to the countryside, and the
movement of troops.
Those troops were necessary because from the third century on,
Roman Britain, like the rest of the Roman Empire, was under siege by
marauding tribes, first Picts and Scots from the north and then, from
the fourth century, Angles, Saxons, and Jutes from the continent. This
could help to explain why Londinium’s population began to decline in this
period. After the Empire pulled the garrison in 410, the city lost much of its
reason for being: Southwark was abandoned, coinage fell out of use, and,
without military protection, commerce, government, and religion began
to collapse. There is almost no evidence of urban habitation within the
walls between 450 and 600, although archaeology has uncovered an Anglo-
Saxon settlement along the river to the west. Historians and archaeologists
still debate whether Londinium was abandoned entirely or merely shrank
to a shadow of its former self. Most suspect that its population dwindled
to perhaps a few thousand, smaller than Wimborne Minster, England, or
Hendersonville, North Carolina, today.
14 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
Mercia in the eighth. During the ninth century, the kings of Wessex,
based in the southwest up the Thames valley from London, became the
dominant power among the Anglo-Saxons. Establishing their capital at
Winchester, the Wessex line, most notably King Alfred (871–899), sought
to unite all of Angle-land into a semblance of what we today know as
England. They faced two obstacles to this goal, however, one internal,
one external. The internal obstacle was London itself: the metropolis had
an independent streak and resisted incorporation into a Wessex empire,
preferring at first to remain something of an independent city-state. The
external obstacle was far greater, because just as the Wessex monarchs
began to try to consolidate their gains, England faced a series of invasions
by the Vikings.
Based in Scandinavia, between 790 and 1100 the Vikings became a
menace to all Europe, riding their swift longboats down European rivers
and across the North Sea and beyond to attack any human settlement –
city or monastery, camp or village – that promised plunder. Naturally,
an increasingly prosperous Anglo-Saxon London was a tempting prize.
In 842 the monks who kept the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle recorded “a great
slaughter in London.” In 851 London was taken by storm and held off
and on by Viking kings until 886. Evidence of Viking occupation can be
found today in a few London place names: the church of St. Clement
Danes and five different St. Olafs. The Vikings also might have originated
the husting, an assembly or court to handle debt, land, and trade that met
weekly.
In the long run, the Viking raids were good for both the Wessex kings
and their largest city. They forced those kings to develop institutions (e.g.,
a militia, the fyrd; a regular tax called the Danegeld and the infrastructure
to collect it) that proved indispensable as they pushed the Vikings back
and solidified their rule in England. London’s wealth, both taxable and
lendable, was crucial to the war effort. In 886 Alfred “liberated” London
from the Vikings and was for the first time acknowledged as king of the
English. Thus began the tradition that any would-be ruler of England
had to hold London. At the same time, London’s inhabitants, who had
been forced back into the old walled city, acknowledged that they needed
the protection of powerful kings. So, for the first time since Roman rule,
London was integrated into a larger governmental entity. Alfred and his
successors strengthened the city’s fortifications, laid out a grid street
pattern, and established quays at Queenhithe, Billingsgate, and Dowgate.
It was also under the Wessex kings that the city was divided into wards,
16 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
not sacked. Generally, when the king was strong and successful,5 City
authorities were only too happy to lend him money and support, providing
huge tax revenues, loans, and troops. (Early in medieval history those
loans were provided by Jewish bankers, but after their expulsion in 1290,
Italian bankers took over the business.) But when the king was weak,
and his rule subject to question by powerful barons,6 London asserted
its independence, sometimes refusing to grant money and men unless the
king made concessions; sometimes refusing help outright; or even opening
its gates to traitors. It did so to the rebels against King John in 1215, to
Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester (c. 1208–1265) in 1263, to Wat Tyler
(d. 1381) in 1381, Jack Cade (d. 1450) in 1450, and Edward, Duke of York
(1442–1483) in 1461. But it turned on the pretender Matilda (1102–1167)
in 1141 and shut London Bridge to Wyatt’s rebels in 1554 (see below and
Chapter 7). As this implies, London could be fickle: York became King of
England (1461–1483), but Tyler was killed by the lord mayor of London.
When Cade was defeated, his head was mounted on London Bridge to
overlook the very passage through which he had ridden in triumph.
Often, to win municipal support, medieval kings granted powerful
concessions, usually by means of a charter under the Great Seal of England,
spelling out that London was a municipality with certain privileges and
powers. For example, Henry I (1100–1135) or possibly his nephew, Stephen
(1135–1154), granted London a charter limiting its total tax burden to £300
and establishing the right to elect a sheriff to act as a go-between with the
king and collect taxes, to hold its own courts, to trade free of certain taxes
and tolls, and to avoid paying Danegeld or billeting troops. It worked.
When Stephen was challenged by his cousin Matilda for the throne of
England in 1141, Londoners marched out of the City gates and welcomed
his approaching army. They then attacked Matilda at her pre-coronation
feast. The coronation was thwarted, and Stephen won back his throne.
An even better example of the pattern is provided by the reign of that
famously bad medieval king (at least in the eyes of subsequent generations),
John (lived 1167–1216). John served as regent for his brother, Richard the
Lionhearted (1189–1199), when he was away on Crusade. In 1191, John
marched on London and used his power as regent to recognize it as a
self-governing commune under a mayor in return for recognition of his
right to succeed. After Richard’s death in 1199, John did succeed (1199–
1216) but was forced into a series of military campaigns in France to
secure his authority. This meant high taxes and City loans. Once again,
John greased the wheels by granting a new charter expanding London’s
Introduction: London’s Importance 19
rights, in particular granting its aldermen the power to elect their mayor
annually in 1215. Later, Londoners would emphasize their independence
by referring to him as a lord mayor, but John’s wars disrupted trade,
increased taxes, and worst of all, proved unsuccessful. Having offended his
nobles, the Church, towns, and virtually every other group that mattered
in England, he returned defeated and discredited in 1214. Early the next
year, despite his attempts to win London over, a group of dissidents
within the City opened its gates to the rebels. That crucial act provided
the base from which to exact the Magna Carta from the king in June 1215
at Runnemede Meadow, just a few miles outside of town. Magna Carta, or
the Great Charter, guaranteed the rights to consultation and due process
of the barons, the Church, towns, royal wards, persons accused of crimes,
property holders, and many other groups. It represents one of the earliest
attempts in postclassical Western history to limit the power of rulers and is
often regarded as the foundation for later assertions of right by the English
people. London’s support was the crucial piece; once again, as the City
went, so went the nation.
Subsequent kings tried to revoke the privileges granted by John. Henry
III (1216–1272) set aside the aldermen’s choice for mayor ten times between
1239 and 1257 and favored French merchants over English ones. Lon-
don responded by refusing to grant him taxes in 1255 and supporting
a usurper, Simon de Montfort, from 1263 to 1265. Perhaps the nadir of
medieval Crown–City relations was reached when, in 1263, Queen Eleanor
(c. 1223–1291) tried to escape to Windsor by river but was cannonaded with
refuse from London Bridge. In December the City gates were opened to
Montfort’s army. In 1265, Henry won back control after defeating
Montfort at the Battle of Evesham. He retaliated by dispossessing sixty
leading Londoners, suspending the privileges of the City for two years,
imposing heavy fines on its citizens, and granting Eleanor the revenues of
the merchants on London Bridge. Londoners would long remember the
consequences of choosing the wrong side.
Henry III’s son Edward I (1272–1307) also remembered. He strength-
ened the Tower, adding the outer wall. He broke the ruling oligarchy of
families who had dominated London to this point, opening aldermens’
positions to members of prominent trades such as fishmongers, coopers,
and skinners. He favored alien merchants and Italian bankers who could
lend him money for his many military campaigns without challenging his
authority. In 1275, Edward introduced the first regular customs duties on
exports of wool and leather – soon to be the most valuable taxes in the royal
20 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
trade. Indeed, both Edward IV and Henry VII consulted with London
merchants and government officials on fiscal matters and worked out
favorable commercial agreements with continental powers. If the City’s
love affair with the Yorkists proved fleeting, that with the Tudors lasted
to the end of the line.
Rebellion and riot were not the only challenges facing medieval Lon-
doners and their rulers. Medieval sources complain of the usual urban
problems of street violence, poverty, crime, prostitution, “the immod-
erate drinking of fools and the frequent fires.”7 Built mostly of wood,
London suffered devastating fires in 1077, 1087, 1092, 1100, 1133, 1136, and
1212, when spectators crowding onto London Bridge to watch a confla-
gration in Southwark became victims themselves after the bridge caught
fire. Some 3,000 are said to have died. London’s food supply was gen-
erally reliable, but during the European famine of 1315–1317 Londoners
were forced to eat their dogs. Undoubtedly the greatest disaster to befall
medieval London was the Black Death, almost certainly some form of
plague, spread along trade routes, which killed perhaps 15,000 people in
a total metropolitan population of 45,000 from 1348 to 1349. Worse, the
plague returned in 1361/62, 1368/69, and repeatedly thereafter until 1665
(see Chapter 8). Ironically, the resultant labor shortage yielded high wages
and low prices for those who survived. Still, these catastrophes and the
economic dislocation they brought did nothing to stabilize the political
situation.
and his allegiance to Rome. The larger-than-life figure of Henry VIII still
loomed over Whitehall, Westminster, and the kingdom, because in seeking
his divorce; having Parliament make him Supreme Head of the Church;
driving the Pope out of England; making war on France, Scotland, and
Ireland; spending money that he did not have to do so; offending the
remaining Catholic powers (the Holy Roman Empire and Spain); and
forcing his people to choose between their loyalty to him and that to their
faith, Henry left for his successors a raft of unresolved issues. As a result, for
the next 200 years the English would debate the questions of sovereignty
(i.e., the relative power of the king and Parliament), religion (Catholic
vs. Protestant), foreign policy (England vs. France, Spain, Scotland, and
Ireland, but also how far England should commit to foreign entanglements
generally), finance (how to pay for the Crown and its wars), and local
control (center vs. locality, court vs. City, capital vs. the rest of the British
Isles and eventually the colonies).
The religious issue was probably the most fraught. Henry’s reforma-
tion affected London in particular immediately and dramatically. First,
the nature of worship changed (see Chapter 4). Henry himself vacil-
lated between mandating reform and traditional, if nonpapal, Catholic
liturgy in a series of injunctions and articles. His son’s regime embraced
Protestantism wholeheartedly, repealing the heresy laws, encouraging the
eradication of elaborate church decoration, abolishing saints’ days and
Lenten traditions, continuing his father’s dissolution and confiscation of
Church lands, and requiring attendance at Sunday services in English
according to the new Book of Common Prayer by Acts of Uniformity in
1549 (2 & 3 Edw. VI, c. 1) and 1552 (5 & 6 Edw. VI, c. 1). These measures
were for the most part welcomed by Londoners, many of whom had,
even before the Reformation, embraced reformist heresies, like Lollardy.
Protestantism took root in London because it was a port and therefore
among the first places that Protestant books and travelers alighted. Perhaps
also because Protestantism emphasized literacy and individual interpreta-
tion of Scripture, which appealed to a city full of literate merchants, many
Londoners embraced reform. Moreover, Protestant aristocrats benefited
from the opening up of the London land market (see Chapters 1 and 4).
But others stayed loyal to the Old Faith. The result was a parish-by-parish
struggle over liturgy and practice mediated but never really controlled
by the Bishop of London, a royal appointee who, in the words of one
incumbent, “is always to be pitied.”9
Introduction: London’s Importance 23
1660 when London crowds demanded the Restoration of the Stuarts in the
person of Charles II (1660–1685). Immediately following the Restoration,
a High Church religious settlement was imposed that drove Puritans from
public life in revenge for their disloyalty during the Civil Wars. No longer
in a position to “purify” a church from which they had been expelled, they
would henceforth be known as Dissenters.
Charles II was a wily and charismatic figure, capable of disguising
his attractions to absolutism, Catholicism, and Louis XIV’s (1643–1715)
France with wit and charm. Unfortunately, his inability to father a legit-
imate heir meant that he would be succeeded by his far less charming
brother, James, Duke of York (1633–1701), from 1672 a professed Roman
Catholic. Between 1678 and 1681 a group of antiabsolutist, anti-Catholic,
and anti-French (or pro-Parliament, pro-Dissenter, and pro-Dutch) politi-
cians in Parliament, known as the Whigs, formed England’s first modern
political party. In what came to be known as the Exclusion Crisis, they
argued that Parliament had both the right and the duty to bar Catholics
from the throne. They also favored freedom of conscience for Dissenters.
In response, a second party, the Tories, defended the hereditary succes-
sion, strong monarchy, the religious monopoly of the Church of England,
and the Stuarts’ pro-French foreign policy. Both parties relied heavily
on propaganda from London printing presses and support from London
mobs (see Chapter 7), but in the end Charles refused to countenance
disinheriting his brother. At his death in 1685, James became King James
II (1685–1688) and almost immediately began to alarm his subjects by
advocating toleration for Catholics. In 1688, at the invitation of several
prominent peers, William of Orange (1650–1702), James’s son-in-law by his
daughter Mary (1662–1694) and the Protestant Stadholder of the Nether-
lands, invaded, ostensibly to protect the rights of the Church of England.
James fled to France, and Parliament asked William (1689–1702) and
Mary (1689–1694) to assume the Crown in what came to be known as the
Glorious Revolution of 1688/89 (see Chapter 7).
The Glorious Revolution solved most of the issues first raised by
Henry VIII. First, England would remain High Church Protestant but
tolerate Puritan Dissenters. Second, it would be a constitutional monarchy:
the king remained powerful, but his financial and diplomatic situation
now dictated that he would have to call Parliament annually and choose
ministers backed by a majority of its members. Indeed, when push came to
shove over matters like filling the throne, Parliament was now sovereign,
diverting the succession away from James’s Catholic heirs toward the
26 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
and the control of North American and Indian trade. These wars would
conclude by the Treaty of Paris (1763), in a resounding British victory and
London’s dominance of those trades.
By the end of the period covered by this book, the questions left
over from the Tudors had largely been settled. New questions, about
government reform, the political power of the increasingly wealthy middle
class, the relationship of government to the economy, how and whether
England should hang on to its American colonies, the morality of the slave
trade, the best treatment of the poor, the role of popular and print culture,
and others, would come to the fore in the later eighteenth century, and
again they would be debated and often settled in London. But those are
issues for another book.
London’s Historiography
London has always been a subject of fascination. In recent years, a number
of especially fine books on its history have appeared: Peter Ackroyd, Lon-
don: the Biography (2003); Roy Porter, London: a Social History (1994);
John Russell, London (1997); and above all in size and achievement,
Stephen Inwood, A History of London (1998). But these books take the
long durée. Early modern London has of late been left to studies that are
much narrower in chronology and scope, like Peter Earle, A City Full of
People: Men and Women of London 1650–1750 (1994) and Maureen Waller,
1700: Scenes from London Life (2000), both of which concentrate on the
early years of the eighteenth century. Older studies are perhaps more
successful at integrating London’s demographic, economic, political, and
social history with its rich store of anecdote across a longer period, notably
M. D. George, London Life in the Eighteenth Century (1925; reprinted
1984); Dorothy Marshal, Dr. Johnson’s London (1968); and George Rudé,
Hanoverian London 1714–1808 (1971). The most recent of these books was
published more than 40 years ago, however. Since then there has been an
explosion of fine work on London, in articles, specialized monographic
studies, and collections of scholarly essays (see Bibliography).
As with the history of Britain generally, much of the scholarly work on
early modern London rarely crosses the mid-seventeenth century divide.
This has produced two very different historiographies. For the last half-
century, social and political historians of early modern London to 1660
have been exercised by the question “Was it stable?” Taking their cue
from contemporaries’ complaints about their city, in particular the regretful
28 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
to obey their lord mayor and aldermen, to serve their parishes, to trade,
and to look after their poor. There were many reasons for this fundamental
stability: members of the City elite were nearly all of the same religious
tendencies (godly Protestants of varying sorts); early modern London
was not riven by factions à la Renaissance Florence; the membership
of competing organizations (e.g., trading companies, livery companies)
tended to overlap; many of their officers had risen from humbler ranks,
and they made some attempt to attend to the concerns of householders,
journeymen, and apprentices. In short, paternalism was not dead yet in
early modern London. One might recall further that London’s size and
economic vitality allowed for new opportunities, second starts, and the
kind of social mobility that, when upward, can do much to reconcile
people to their lot.
It is perhaps ironic that historians of the period after 1660, when Lon-
don really did betray signs of instability – more growth, greater economic
and social polarization, an increase in political and religious tensions, more
fear about crime, more riots, higher death rates – have more or less lost
interest in the question of whether London was internally stable. Rather,
although providing plenty of examples of conflict and disturbance, schol-
ars of the long eighteenth century seem to view London’s demographic
and economic expansion as a sign of fundamental stability. They are more
interested in the city’s general prosperity and impact on national trends in
politics, society, and culture than they are in signs of collapse. All agree
that London’s financial and commercial success had a profound effect on
the economy of Britain and the world. They also emphasize the rise of
a new kind of elite urban culture – polite, refined, and cosmopolitan. At
the same time, even as older democratic institutions like the wardmote
declined, ordinary Londoners nevertheless came to have a stronger voice
in the government of the nation and metropolis through voting, crowd
action, and their participation in an increasingly public sphere of discourse
through the print culture that was read and debated in coffeehouses and
clubs. Despite the onslaught of plague, fire, and war, after the Restoration
London authors often wrote optimistically about their city, culminating
in the celebration that is John Strype’s Survey (1720; expanded 1754).
Perhaps in part because intellectuals like John Graunt (1620–1674) and Sir
William Petty (1623–1687) were beginning to grapple with London’s actual
numbers, the many maps and guidebooks that sprang up after the turn of
the eighteenth century display a growing confidence in the place, increas-
ing pride in its greatness, and even boosterism. Thus Robert Seymour’s
30 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
This raises the question of whether the title of this book is based on
a false assumption. Perhaps there were no Londoners at all but, rather,
Cheapsiders, Templers, East Enders, West Enders, Thames-sidemen,
courtiers, Parliament men, merchants, servants, men and women of plea-
sure, pickpockets, shop-lifts, coal heavers, milk maids, etc., etc. But as with
the contemporary term Puritan, people in early modern England might
have had trouble defining the place, but they knew London when they saw
it. We are reassured that Boswell concludes his dissection of London’s
diversity by reasserting the metropolis as a category of analysis: “But the
intellectual man is struck with it, as comprehending the whole of human
life in all its variety, the contemplation of which is inexhaustible.”12 Reas-
sured, and as we embark on our attempt to master what London cabbies
call “the Knowledge,” humbled.
33
34 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
(see Map 2). If taking this route, we would naturally pause at the top of
Highgate Hill, for this spot affords us our first glimpse of the great city.
Looking south and slightly east, the first sight of England’s capital would
be astonishing to anyone from a tiny village. First, we spy the horizontal
spectacle of the river, a silver-green snake undulating from horizon west
to horizon east, dividing the city in two. On closer inspection, we realize
that most of the city lies on our side of the river. Looking up across it to the
smaller community of Southwark on the opposite or south bank, we see
that the two are connected by London Bridge. The keen-eyed observer
will make out houses and shops on the bridge and ships and barges in the
river, reminding us that this is the commercial crossroads of the nation.
Lowering our gaze to the more crowded northern bank, we see that
London’s skyline is dominated by one great feature, bracketed by two
smaller ones. The city’s central vertical profile is dwarfed by the aston-
ishing height of the spire of St. Paul’s Cathedral, more than 460 feet
tall, the highest in England. In 1550 that spire had not long to greet us,
because it would be struck by lightning and burn within a dozen years,
leaving a far stubbier cathedral profile. If we imagine our arrival on a
sunny day, however, the light glints off the steeple as if it were a sword
point. Surrounding it, we begin to perceive the towers and spires of more
than a hundred medieval churches, all crammed against each other in the
square mile within the walls that forms London’s heart. Looking along
the river on either side of this conglomeration, in 1550 we can clearly see
where London begins and ends: to our left, the assemblage of houses and
shops drops off past the Tower of London, the city’s eastern “bookend.”
Farther left beyond this, where today the East End bustles, we see open
fields where Londoners grow food, raise cattle, and delight themselves
with strolling or archery. Moving our gaze left to right, we see again the
square mile of the walled city, and then to the west, a few large buildings
outside it; beyond that a narrow road along the river lined with noble
palaces called the Strand; and finally, as the river curves south away from
us, on the southwestern horizon to our extreme right, the impressive but
isolated complex of buildings forming London’s western “bookend” at
Westminster: the Abbey, minus the as yet unbuilt towers that modern
visitors know; Westminster Hall, low and long; and Westminster Palace,
narrow and vertical.
Above all of this we might notice a hazy cloud of smoke from London’s
many wood fires. That cloud will become thicker and darker over the next
two centuries as the metropolis expands and turns to coal for heat. The
London in 1550 35
cloud, like the river, drifts east, because both the prevailing winds and
the current flow that way. This will be crucial for the city’s development:
because wind and water thus carry London’s smoke and sewage eastward,
its wealthiest residents will gravitate west, upwind and upstream. That is
why the West End will always be the smart end of town. That is also one
reason why, from its very beginnings over the next century, the East End
will be considered poor and relatively undesirable.
on both sides of the river. As its name implies, Southwark was regarded as
an appendage: founded in Roman times, its name literally means “south
work,” that is, a complex to the south of the main event.
The greatest landmark in Southwark is Southwark Cathedral. There
has been a cathedral on this site since the seventh century, and a monastery
since the ninth century, dedicated to St. Mary Overie. The current Gothic
building was started about 1220 to replace a previous structure destroyed
by fire. Just a few years before our visit, in 1539, Henry VIII had dissolved
the monastery, confiscated the church, and reorganized it as St. Saviour’s
parish church. During the next century the church fabric will decay, but in
1550 the tower of St. Saviour’s offers one of the greatest views in England:
even more spectacular than the long-range one from Highgate Hill, it would
be engraved in panoramas of London by Claes Visscher (1587–1652) in
1616 (see Illustration 1.1), and Wenceslaus Hollar (1607–1677) in 1647.
These would portray many of the same principal features we see in 1550,
with the exception of St. Paul’s truncated spire and new building filling
in many of the once open fields beyond London’s ancient wall. Climbing
to the top and looking north, we see what we saw from Highgate but up
close and from the other (southern) side: across the river, the north bank
is all steeples and towers; below us, the south lies relatively undeveloped
and flat. Downriver to our right, we see the curve of the Thames around
the Isle of Dogs, and in it ships of many sizes from great merchantmen
to the small barges that Londoners hail as taxicabs. As trade grew in the
mid-sixteenth century, so did the shipping infrastructure downriver to the
east – docks and shipyards, carpenters’ and sailmakers’ shops, alehouses
and brothels increasingly line the banks to our right, engulfing villages like
Bermondsey and Rotherhithe on the south bank; Wapping, Shadwell,
Limehouse, and Blackwall on the north. These riverside settlements will
also be the preferred location for messy, smelly, but necessary industries
like brewing, brickmaking, and tanning. Shifting our gaze upriver right
to left, we see the battlements of the Tower of London commanding the
Thames. Then, directly before us, the City within the walls, a mere square
mile filled with spires and turrets, dominated by St. Paul’s. Slightly to the
left are the noble and bishops’ palaces that we saw earlier from Highgate.
Finally, on our left as the river curves south, Westminster Abbey, Palace,
and Hall. Just before them, right on the river and therefore not noticed from
Highgate, we see a low-lying complex of buildings: Whitehall Palace, the
seat of the royal court, confiscated by Henry VIII from Cardinal Wolsey
in 1529.
London in 1550 37
Continuing to face west (upriver) but lowering our gaze to the south
bank on which St. Saviour’s stands, we spy a smaller palace on the south-
western horizon. Lambeth Palace is the London residence of the Arch-
bishop of Canterbury. It still stands in the twenty-first century, the last of
the bishops’ palaces along the Thames. Following the bank back around
the curve and further lowering our gaze to the western foreground, in
1550 we see before us about 100 acres of swampy riverbank, Paris Garden.
Originally Church land, it was confiscated by Henry VIII and eventually
awarded to the bailiff of Southwark, William Baseley (fl. 1542). He turned it
into an outdoor bowling alley/gambling den. Over the next two centuries,
Paris Garden would evolve into London’s first pleasure garden, a sort of
amusement park for grown-ups, where thick foliage covered all sorts of
nocturnal activities.
Lowering our gaze still further, we see more former Church land turned
to profane use, a manor recently run by the Bishop of Winchester called
“the Clink.” Its main street, running parallel to the river, Bankside, has
been lined with brothels since Roman times – the notorious Bankside
stews. During the Middle Ages they were owned and regulated by the
reverend bishop, whose own riverside palace sits conveniently nearby;
indeed, south bank prostitutes were called “Winchester geese.” Because
the idea was to contain vice in one place outside the City walls and
use the wages of sin for the charitable work of the Church, the good
bishop drew up rules and limited opening hours. Among those charitable
works was St. Thomas’s Hospital, just off of Borough High Street, partly
endowed by Dick Whittington and well known for treating poor people,
including the Winchester geese. Thus, Henry VIII’s reformist minister
Thomas Cromwell (c. 1485–1540) referred to it as “the bawdy hospital of
St. Thomas in Southwark.”3 Just south of the stews was the Clink Prison:
misbehaving customers could be put “in the Clink.” The arrangement
worked well until Henry VIII closed the stews in 1546, a few years before
our visit. Londoners found their services indispensable, and they would
reopen by 1600; indeed, the city’s most famous early seventeenth-century
brothel, the Holland’s Leaguer, would be located here.
Because it was former Church land, the Clink formed a “liberty.”
A liberty usually began as part of an ecclesiastical estate (in this case,
that of the Bishop of Winchester), where civil law did not apply. Even
after dissolution and confiscation by the Crown, a liberty’s privileges
remained untouchable by civil authorities, except as the sovereign allowed.
There were twenty-four such sanctuaries complicating government and
38 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
from trade are the mainstay of the royal revenue, it is important for the
government to regulate the docks, in particular, to know which ship is
docking where, and so seventeen legal docks will be established in 1559
between the Bridge and the Tower. Sitting just north of them on Thames
Street is the Custom House, where the duty is collected. The medieval
structure will burn down in 1559, again in 1666, and partially in 1714, but
it will always be rebuilt on this same prime real estate.
Here, like the royal Customs officials, we can watch the commerce of
England at work, as raw wool is loaded onto barges and lighters for ferrying
out to the big ships, and fish, wine, timber, and finished cloth are unloaded
from them. We also hear the hammering and sawing of carpenters and
shipwrights mingled with the music of Cockney speech, see the stitching of
sailmakers, and observe the whole panoply of maritime activity associated
with any port. London’s trade has been growing since a series of treaties
made with continental powers in the late fifteenth century, in particular
the Magnus Intercursus of 1496, which gave its merchants trading rights in
Antwerp. As we have seen, London’s maritime industry and docks grew
with it, creeping east along the river to Wapping, Shadwell, Rotherhithe,
and beyond. These communities would not penetrate inland until the end
of the century, however, and so in 1550 St. Katherine’s represents the
eastern border of London’s built-up area. Beyond it, market gardens grow
food, and cattle graze where Whitechapel, Stepney, Hackney, Poplar, and
Bethnal Green will soon stand. In 1605, John Stow remembered how, in
his boyhood, East End lanes
. . . had on both sides fayre hedgerowes of Elme trees, with Bridges
and easie stiles to passe ouer into the pleasant fieldes, very commodi-
ous for Citizens therein to walke, shoote, and otherwise to recreate and
refresh their dulled spirites in the sweete and wholesome ayre, which
is nowe within few yeares made a continuall building throughout, of
Garden houses, and small Cottages: and the fields on either side be
turned into Garden plottes, teynter yardes, Bowling Allyes, and such
like. . . . 7
From the docks, we double back to St. Katherine’s Street and ascend it
to St. Katherine’s Hospital. The hospital was founded by Queen Matilda
(1103–1152), consort of Stephen in the twelfth century, to house the poor. In
1442, a new charter designated St. Katherine’s a royal peculiar, responsible
to only its own master and the lord chancellor of England. The hospital
was dissolved at the Reformation, but the land remains a liberty, like the
42 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
Clink and the Mint, and despite having two JPs and two constables, it is
more or less outside of civic jurisdiction. The embryonic East End is an
arrival point for immigrants and is already one of the poorest and least
desirable districts of London, “pestered with small tenements and homely
cottages” according to Stow,8 but it is also among the most colorful and
industrious parts of mid-Tudor London.
Reformation, the Fire, and the Blitz into the twenty-first century, although
German bombs forced the reconstruction of much of the interior in the
1950s. In the twentieth century Sir John Betjeman (1906–1984) would
call it “a country church in the world of Seething Lane.”9 On entering
in 1550, we note the pointed arches and many side chapels for multiple
masses characteristic of medieval churches. The large windows filling the
east and west walls let in plenty of light, and at least some of the pre-
Reformation wall and ceiling painting and statuary survives: overhead,
we see a galaxy of painted stars. Hoping to finish our journey before the
real stars rise and London goes dark, we exit back down Marcke Lane to
Tower Street.
The City
We are now within the Roman walls of the old city, or as Londoners call it,
with monumental self-centeredness, “the City.” This area of just 330 acres
is the core of the City of London, although as we have seen, the lord mayor’s
jurisdiction extends beyond the walls and indeed over the Thames for a
few acres in every direction. Although everything beyond that grew from
this core, communities like Shoreditch to the north and east, Clerkenwell
to the north, Westminster to the west, and the downriver maritime settle-
ments noted earlier are outside of the City proper and therefore outside
of the lord mayor’s jurisdiction. In 1550 they are instead administered
by a hodgepodge of officials of the counties of Middlesex or Surrey,
among others (see Chapter 3); that is, legal and governmental London
was much smaller than the metropolis that contemporaries referred to as
“London.”
Because the medieval city developed haphazardly, the old Roman grid
street pattern has been distorted. Some larger streets do still run parallel to
the river, like Tower Street-Eastcheap and Canwicke (Candlewick, later
Cannon) Street; others run perpendicular to it, like Fish Street, Gracious
(later Gracechurch) Street, and Bishopsgate Street. In 1550 these major
thoroughfares are adorned with stately guild halls and the townhouses
of wealthy nobles, but over the course of the next century most noble
proprietors would flee west to be near the court and to avoid the crowding
and stench of the growing city. For example, Northumberland House,
Aldgate, once the London seat of the powerful Percy family, was turned
into a complex of bowling alleys and gambling dens. A riverside house
once owned by the Dukes of Norfolk became a brewery. Between the great
London in 1550 45
Descending Cornhill, we see that all three streets meet at the Poultry,
once London’s poultry market, which in 1550 is a place where many
merchants live. This street is also the site of the Poultry Compter on our
right, the oldest of three lord mayor’s prisons. A little farther west we come
to a cross street called Ole Juree, Old Jewry, or, by the eighteenth century,
Old Jury. The second name is the most accurate, for this was the site of
the Jewish ghetto from at least the twelfth century until their expulsion by
Edward I in 1290. The area remained a haven for religious dissenters: a
little farther north is Coleman Street, which harbored evangelical heretics
before the Reformation and Puritan and Dissenting meetings thereafter.
At the end of the Poultry we find the Great Conduit, where Londoners
can take water piped in from springs in rural Paddington. The water flows
by gravitational force through wooden pipes to this and to other free public
standpipes located in prominent locations such as the City gates. London
place names like Sadler’s Wells still remind us of this source of water. The
Great Conduit marks the beginning of London’s chief shopping street in
1550, Cheapside (see Illustration 1.7). Cheapside, the widest and most
impressive thoroughfare in central London, is usually on the route of
royal and civic processions. It is lined with magnificent shops, some four
stories high. Its south side between Bread and Fryday Streets is known
as Goldsmith’s Row, where a German visitor in 1600 saw “all sorts of
gold and silver vessels exposed to sale; as well as ancient and modern
medals, in such quantities as must surprise a man the first time he sees
and considers them.”12 By the early seventeenth century, however, some
of the more prestigious trades began to move west, to the Strand, to follow
aristocratic money. This led John Chamberlaine (1553–1628) to complain
in 1622 “to see booksellers, stocking men, haberdashers, point-makers,
and other meane trades crept into Goldsmithes Rowe, that was wont to
be the bewtie and glorie of Cheapeside.”13
Each of these shops is marked with a sign, either carved in stone into
the facade of the building or, increasingly, of wood hanging perpendicular
to it, combining some iconic symbol – the sun, a dolphin, a mermaid –
with a depiction of the object sold. Written description was less important
at a time when perhaps one half the men in London and nearly all women
were illiterate. These shops were really workshops with a few samples;
there was no stock, and goods were made to order. Their proprietors and
their servants lived above the shop. As we pass, we might spy the lady of
the household or an idle apprentice standing in the doorway, the former
keeping watch over her neighbors, the latter looking for an excuse to join
48 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
his fellows for some fun. They did not have to go far, because Cheapside is
lined with famous taverns: the Bull Head, the Eagle, the Goat, the Mitre,
the Nag’s Head, and the Star. It was at the Bull Head that Sam Pepys
would have “the best venison pasty that ever I eat of in my life”14 more
than a century after our visit.
Cheapside is the backbone to which are connected many other streets,
named for the trades carried on in them: off to our right Grocer’s Alley,
Ironmonger Lane, and the dairymen of Milk Street; to our left grocers
and mercers in Soper’s Lane, bakers in Bread Street, more fishmongers in
Fryday Street (probably referring to the Catholic tradition of eating fish
on that day), and shoemakers in Cordwainer Street. Clearly you could
get all of life’s necessities on and about Cheapside, although you would
have to walk farther than in a modern supermarket. Nearly all of these
occupational groups have their own livery company (see Chapter 2), with
its own hall nearby, usually an impressive Gothic building that adds variety
and splendor to the shops and houses. Here, each company’s leadership
deliberates over membership and sets rules for trade while the whole
membership might come together for an annual feast.
In fact, if we turn right up Ironmonger Lane and proceed to Basinghall
Street, we encounter a good number of distinguished livery halls on our
right – the Weavers’, the Coopers’, the Girdlers,’ and the Masons’ –
filled with commemorative plate and statuary, decorated with images
celebrating their loyalty to the Crown and respective crafts, mostly paid
for by bequests from deceased members. Most of these halls would be
torn down by nineteenth-century developers. To our left is an even more
imposing building, London’s city hall, the Guildhall (see Illustration 1.8).
The Guildhall was built in 1411 and would survive the Fire in 1666 and a
bomb hit in 1940 to remain the official headquarters of City government
into the twenty-first century. This is the seat of the lord mayor, where
the Court of Aldermen and Common Council, the legislative branches
of London government, meet (see Chapter 3). One of the largest halls
in England, it is often the site of state trials: Anne Askew (c. 1521–1546)
for heresy in 1546; the Earl of Surrey (1516/17–1547) and Lady Jane Grey
for treason in 1547 and 1553, respectively; and Archbishop Cranmer for
heresy, later in 1553.
Having been disappointed of viewing these exciting events by just a
few years, we head back to Cheapside. To our left is old St. Mary-le-Bow,
a church whose bell tower, rebuilt in 1521, rang out the curfew in central
London. According to tradition, to be a true Cockney, one must be born
London in 1550 49
within the sound of Bow Bells. Because Cheapside is such a wide public
space, it was often a site for exemplary punishment, both at a fountain
at the western end called the Standard, and at a pillory sometimes used
when a tradesman sold shoddy goods. Cheapside also sports the famous –
or infamous – Cheapside Cross, one of numerous such crosses, decorated
with the pope, the Virgin, and the Apostles, erected in 1290 by Edward
I at the spots where the coffin of his deceased Queen Eleanor (1241–
1290) rested on its sad procession from the place of her death in Wales.
In 1550, during the first flush of the Reformation, this papist totem was
frequently attacked by Protestant preachers, but it would survive until
1643.
At the west end of Cheapside we pass the Little Conduit, before being
confronted by the magnificent bulk of St. Paul’s Cathedral, subsequently
known as Old St. Paul’s after it burned down in 1666 (see Illustration
1.9). This is easily the greatest Church in England and, as we recall from
seeing it from afar, the most prominent building in London. Indeed, at
585 feet long it is also the largest building in the City and, with Westminster
Abbey, one of two great national churches in the metropolis. Here, both
Henry V and Elizabeth I attended thanksgiving services for the victories
at Agincourt and over the Spanish Armada in 1415 and 1588, respectively.
In 1471, during the Wars of the Roses, the corpse of Henry VI (reigned
1422–1461) was exhibited in St. Paul’s to show that he was really dead.
In 1501, Prince Arthur (1486–1502) and Katherine of Aragon (1485–1536)
were married here.
St. Paul’s is a great local institution as well. Adjacent to the building is
St. Paul’s Churchyard, site of two famous organs of information in early
modern London. First, the churchyard is crammed with bookstalls owned
by the great printers and stationers on Fleet Street and patronized by liter-
ate Londoners like Samuel Pepys in the seventeenth century. Second, in
the northeast corner of the churchyard is Paul’s Cross, a freestanding pul-
pit that Thomas Carlyle (1795–1881) called “the Times Newspaper of the
Middle Ages.” Here, kings are proclaimed, papal bulls read (until 1534),
and royal marriages, military victories, and excommunications announced.
This is also where, in Catholic times, Luther’s works and Tyndale’s trans-
lation of the Bible were publicly burned. Above all, from this pulpit are
delivered some of the most notable sermons in London, to crowds in
the open air. Among the speakers over the years were such influential
and charismatic preachers as Hugh Latimer (c. 1485–1555), Miles
Coverdale (1488–1569), Stephen Gardiner, John Donne (1572–1631), and
50 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
William Laud. Afraid of the power of this pulpit, Parliament would order
it destroyed in 1643.
The cathedral itself had begun to go into eclipse long before, however,
as a result of the Reformation. Most of the land owned by the dean
and chapter was confiscated, leading to a fall in revenue, which led in
turn to an inability to maintain the building’s fabric. Moreover, much of
Paul’s statuary and stained glass was removed as idolatrous, its high altar
replaced with a communion table, and the nave itself, known as Paul’s
Walk (see Illustration 1.10), became a “common thoroughfare between
Carter Lane and Paternoster Row for people with vessels of ale and beer,
baskets of bread, fish, flesh and fruit, men leading mules, horses and
other beasts.”15 On weekdays, lawyers, government officials, and even
tradesmen set up shop in the aisles. Servants hang about a certain pillar
looking for employment: this is where Falstaff first hires Bardolf.16 Only
the choir and the crypt (known as St. Faith’s Chapel) remain for services.
The rest of the cathedral has become another bourse, where business deals
are struck, professionals consulted, produce and horses sold across tombs,
and the baptismal font commandeered as a counter. In 1561 Bishop James
Pilkington (1520–1576) would ascribe the lightning strike that burned
down the spire to God’s wrath at how His cathedral was being misused:
“The south side for Popery and Usury; the north for Simony; and the
horsefair in the middle for all kinds of bargains, meetings, brawlings,
murders, conspiracies; and the font for ordinary payments of money.”17
Offensive as this might be to religious sensibilities then and now, it should
be remembered that if St. Paul’s is a great national church, it is also in
some ways London’s parish church, if that can be said of a city with more
than 110 individual parishes. As in the early modern village church, St.
Paul’s is much more than a place of worship; it is also a social and cultural
center for the local community.
By the early seventeenth century, the decaying fabric of St. Paul’s
had become a national scandal. In 1638, Charles I, encouraged by Arch-
bishop Laud, commissioned Inigo Jones (1573–1652) to do something
about the cathedral. He renovated much of the interior and designed
a new, if somewhat incongruous, classical portico for the West Front.
Restoration continued slowly until the Civil Wars, during which parlia-
mentarian troops used the building as a barracks and Jones’s portico was
given over to petty tradesmen and beggars. These groups inflicted fur-
ther damage to the cathedral, and the roof fell in. In 1657, James Howell
(?1594–1666) described the ruinous structure as looking “like the hulk of
London in 1550 51
a great weather beaten Ship, that had crossed the Line eight times . . . and
lies rotting upon the Carine.”18 Old St. Paul’s was in terminal decline
when, in 1663, the dean and chapter asked Christopher Wren (1632–1723)
to survey the building. The resulting plan was accepted six days before
the Great Fire of 1666, which rendered it superfluous. Some idea of Old
St. Paul’s’ continuing importance to its “parishioners” might be derived
from the fact that during the Fire, many brought their belongings to store
in the crypt, thinking the stone cathedral impregnable. Its loss would be
the terrible climax of the conflagration, and a great psychological blow to
all Londoners (see Chapter 8).
As we head west, down Ludgate Hill to the Ludgate itself, we pause to
gaze northward at legal London. One gate north, at Newgate, is London’s
criminal court, the Old Bailey, and its most notorious jail, Newgate Prison.
In 1550, the Old Bailey is not yet old, having just been built in 1539. Three
stories tall and made of brick, it looks more solid than intimidating, but it
is here that most of London’s felonies are tried; the prison is conveniently
located next door. Traditionally, City gates had holding cells for malefac-
tors arrested as they tried to enter, and so the evolution into a prison by
the twelfth century was natural. During the period covered by this book,
prisons were temporary detention centers for those awaiting trial or the
execution of a sentence. That is, no one was sentenced to Newgate for a
term of months or years; rather, they waited here to be tried, and if found
guilty, to die. The one exception was debtors, who, if they could not
escape to a liberty like the Mint, might find themselves arrested, placed in
Newgate, and forever incarcerated because there was no way to work off
their debt while in prison. This was a hellish fate, for Newgate was already
in a dilapidated state by the end of the sixteenth century: poorly ventilated,
overcrowded, and subject to a malady called “gaol fever” (typhus), which
often carried the prisoners off before the hangman did.
the Fleet was a defensive barrier; in the Middle Ages, cutlers, butchers,
and tanners used it to dispose of animal carcasses and by-products of
metallurgy and leatherworking. Because the river cut right through the
City, it also served as a convenient open sewer. People complained about
the stench as early as the thirteenth century, and it had to be cleaned out
in 1502 and would be so again in 1606. By the mid-seventeenth century it
was more of a ditch than a river.
Looking to our right as we cross over Fleet Bridge, we note Fleet Prison
on the east bank of the ditch, famous for debtors and state prisoners.
Looking left, we see the gates of an abandoned palace, Bridewell, whose
history provides an index of how this part of London was changing. The
area is named for a holy well dedicated to St. Bride. It came to royal
attention after 1512 when the king’s palace upriver at Westminster suffered
a serious fire. As the old medieval pile was unsuitable to begin with, and
the Tower not much better, Henry VIII needed a new, modern London
residence, and so he built Bridewell Palace out of brick on the banks of
the Fleet River between 1515 and 1520. In 1522, he entertained the Holy
Roman Emperor, Charles V (1519–1556), here while on a state visit, and it
was in Bridewell that the first consultations with the papal legate took place
over the King’s Great Matter (his desire to divorce Katherine of Aragon)
in 1528. Whether it was the intransigency of the pope or the aromas of
the Fleet that left a bad odor, once Henry VIII acquired Whitehall in
1529 he lost interest in Bridewell. In the 1530s the insalubrious palace
was rented to the French ambassador. Finally, in 1553 Edward VI would
give it to the City to house vagrants and orphans and to punish those
guilty of misdemeanors. Contemporary London had a vagrant problem:
Tudor economic policies, rapid inflation, and the dismantling of much of
the Catholic charitable infrastructure drove many poor migrants to a city
stripped of social services (see Chapters 2 and 7). Bridewell was designed
as a workhouse and hospital for those unable to work (the “impotent” or
“deserving” poor) and as a short-term prison for those thought unwilling
to do so (“sturdy beggars”), minor offenders, lewd women, and vagrants,
who were publicly whipped once a week. The idea was that the impotent
poor would partially pay for their support and avoid sin-inviting idleness
by spinning hemp and splitting stones, whereas the criminal poor would be
inspired to reform themselves. Although the experiment always had mixed
results (see Chapter 6), other such workhouses appeared in London, at
Clerkenwell and Westminster, and in the country at large. All were named
London in 1550 53
“bridewells” in tribute to the original, and when that original burned down
in the Great Fire, it was rebuilt.
Making a note to avoid incarceration in this social experiment, we
head farther west along Fleet Street holding our noses – and our purses.
Throughout our period, from the Middle Ages to the eighteenth century,
Fleet Street was a popular staging area for apprentice riots and other
youthful gangs who might accost an unsuspecting tourist: “the street-boys
and apprentices collect together in immense crowds and strike to the right
and left unmercifully without regard to person; and because they are the
strongest, one is obliged to put up with the insult as well as the injury.”19
This reminds us that London’s streets were contested territory where
the innocent pedestrian had to negotiate horses, carts, mud, pickpockets,
drunks, brawls, beggars, barrels being rolled into taverns, porters bearing
heavy loads, craftsmen working at their benches, criers and urchins hawk-
ing everything from broadsides to brooms, and housewives standing arms
akimbo in their doorsteps judging – and sometimes insulting – all who
dared to enter their neighborhood. To our left is the dissolved Whitefriars
Monastery, which would evolve by the end of the century into another
liberty, Alsatia, a notorious “combat zone” infested by London’s criminal
underworld.
Arguably far more edifying is the fact that, since the establishment
of a press here in 1500 “at the sign of the Sun” by Wynkyn de Worde
(d. 1534), Fleet Street has been a publishing center. We can try to get
our scholarly works published at the printing house of John Byddell (fl.
1531–1544), who moved into de Worde’s house after his death. In 1553,
Richard Tottell (c. 1528–1593) would found his law bookshop at “The
Hand and Star” and remain open for business there for the next 41 years.
Not only was he granted a patent to print Common Law books, but he was
also a great literary publisher, bringing out More’s Dialogue of Comfort
(1553) and Tottell’s Miscellany (1557), which contains some of the earliest
sonnets in English by Thomas Wyatt (?1503–1542) and Henry Howard,
Earl of Surrey (?1517–1547). The printing connection continues into the
twenty-first century; the words Fleet Street have long been shorthand in
England for the gentlemen (and now women) of the press.
The prominence of legal booksellers along Fleet Street is no accident,
because we are only steps away from London’s four great law schools: the
Middle Temple and Inner Temple along Fleet Street; Lincoln’s Inn to
the north at the end of Chancery Lane; and Gray’s Inn still farther north
54 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
across Holborn on the lane named for it. Along with the nearby Old Bailey,
Newgate, Fleet, and Bridewell Prisons, these four institutions, dating back
to at least the fifteenth century, form the heart of London’s legal district.
Although early modern London does not have a university, the four Inns of
Court provide something of the same atmosphere. Since the Middle Ages
they have trained barristers and housed their offices. Typically, students
attended for seven or eight years, receiving instruction in the law from
practicing barristers. They were also taught dancing, music, and history
to prepare them to move among gentlemen – yet another way in which
London afforded social mobility. As a result, the Christmas revels at the
Inns of Court were famous, lasting from All Saints’ Day (November 1) to
Candlemas (February 2), and sometimes attended by royalty. The Middle
and Inner Temple before us are named for the Knights Templar who
once owned this property. In 1550, as today, the two temples consist of
lawyers’ chambers, but each also has a hall and chapel. The magnificent
Middle Temple Hall, completed in 1573, will be the site of the premier
of Shakespeare’s (1564–1616) Twelfth Night in 1601. The Elizabethan
associations are especially strong, since Sir Walter Raleigh, Sir Francis
Drake (1540–1596) and Sir John Hawkins (1532–1595) spent time here.
Perhaps they enjoyed ambling down to the gardens by the river. The
Middle Temple Gardens are the fictional setting for the scene in the Henry
VI plays in which the Dukes of York and Somerset pluck a white rose and
a red rose, respectively, to signal their enmity and so the start of the Wars
of the Roses. Not wanting to start a war or be tossed out by the porters, we
merely admire the flowers and the magnificent view. Turning south, we
see Paris Garden across the river. Turning southeast, we see Southwark
Cathedral and London Bridge. Finally, looking east from whence we came,
the great city rises before us, capped by the ramshackle magnificence of
St. Paul’s; but we are headed west.
Walking back up to Fleet Street through the Middle Temple gatehouse,
we turn left, back onto the road, and immediately cross under yet another
arched gate, Temple Bar, which lets us into the Strand. Temple Bar was
built in 1351 and, par for the course, has a prison attached to it. It represents
the outermost reaches of the legal City of London. It is a tribute to the
long-standing independence of the City that, beginning with Elizabeth’s
procession to celebrate the Armada victory at St. Paul’s in 1588, even the
sovereign must ask permission to cross this line when traveling east. On
state occasions the royal party stops here to ask entry of the lord mayor,
who always grants it and submits the City sword as a mark of loyalty. The
London in 1550 55
sword is then returned to him so that he may carry it before the sovereign
in procession. Because we are moving west and are far less threatening
than a Tudor monarch, we proceed without incident, if not necessarily
without trouble: Temple Bar was a choke point for London traffic until its
removal in the nineteenth century.
The Strand might be the principal surface artery connecting the City
and Westminster, but it started life in the Middle Ages as a riverside bridle
path. As recently as 1532 it was still “full of pits and sloughs, very perilous
and noisome [stinking].”20 In that year it was ordered to be paved. Still,
given the horse and cart traffic and contemporary sanitary customs, even
in 1550 we may find ourselves splattered with mud – or worse. Looking
up from our stained hose, to our left we see a series of stately riverside
palaces stretching all the way down to Westminster: the Outer Temple,
Paget (later Leicester or Essex) House, Arundel House, Somerset House,
Savoy Palace, Russell (later Bedford) House, Durham House, Suffolk
(later York) House, and finally the former York Place, now Whitehall
Palace. Named for the bishoprics from which they were confiscated, or
the peers to which they were awarded, each was at one time or another
the metropolitan headquarters of a powerful clerical or noble clientage
faction, and so most figure in subsequent chapters.
If we look right, we see rows of shops: in 1500, Andrea Trevisan
(1458–1534) counted fifty-two goldsmiths’ shops along the Strand, “rich
and full of silver vessels, great and small.”21 These craftsmen had followed
the elite, who wanted to be nearer the court, west, but if we look just
beyond them to the north, the buildings of the city trail off and we see
open land. On the future site of Trafalgar Square stands the Royal Mews,
or stables. To the north between Ludgate and the Mews lie Lincoln’s Inn
Fields and Convent (later Covent) Garden, both as yet undeveloped. St.
Martin’s and St. Giles’s “really were ‘in the Fields’” as Stephen Inwood
puts it.22 Foxes were hunted where are now Tottenham Court Road and
Oxford Street, and the district known today as Soho, famous for nightlife,
was named after a hunting call. In short, in 1550 the area we think of as
the West End was essentially rural. As late as May Day 1663, Pepys could
write of riding “with some trouble through the fields and then Holborne
&c. toward Hide parke.”23
Between 1550 and 1750, the West End would all be filled in, moving
the center of London’s gravity beyond the walls, to the west. That process
began partly thanks to the Dissolution of the Monasteries. Between 1536
and 1547 Henry VIII and Edward VI pushed through Parliament a series
56 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
rebuild Whitehall, but by this time English kings were utterly beholden
to Parliament, which had other matters to fund. Only Jones’s magnificent
Banqueting House survives today.
Following the burning of Whitehall in 1698, the English court moved
its official residence across St. James’s Park to the northwest (on our right),
to St. James’s Palace. St. James’s Palace was originally built as a hunting
lodge for Henry VIII, and the open countryside between the two palaces
was frequently used for hunting and hawking by his descendants. If we
stroll into these open fields, we might very well encounter the royal retinue,
thus reminding us first of how wild and untamed the future West End is,
and second of how the monarchy provides, then as now, endless free
spectacle to the residents of greater London. Even in 1550 St. James’s is a
modest palace, and subsequent generations would find it far too dumpy
to be the official residence of the court, yet so it remains today. In fact,
because the court remained firmly ensconced in the West End, the area
to the north of St. James’s would fill up with fashionable houses in the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
Turning away from St. James’s Park, we continue down Whitehall
and its extension as King Street to the heart of the capital, the complex
of buildings laid out in the Middle Ages as Westminster (see Illustration
1.12). Originally governed by the dean and chapter, in 1585 Westminster
would be divided into twelve wards and placed under the jurisdiction
of a Court of Burgesses. The burgesses acted very much like the City’s
aldermen or a bench of JPs. They were selected by the dean or a secular
high steward, who was in turn a royal nominee: the Crown was careful to
maintain control in its own backyard.
The religious and emotional heart of the Westminster complex is
Westminster Abbey. As we have seen, there has been a religious foundation
here since Anglo-Saxon times. According to legend, the church was built
in the seventh century by King Sæberht of Essex (d. 616/617) on a site then
known as Thorney Island. St. Dunstan established a Benedictine Abbey
in the tenth century, on which Edward the Confessor grafted his own
expanded foundation between 1042 and 1066. From 1245 to 1272, Henry
III, who was, like Edward, a self-consciously pious monarch, pulled down
the Norman-style cruciform Edwardian building and erected the present
high Gothic masterpiece, although the twin towers known to modern
visitors would not be built until the eighteenth century.
If St. Paul’s is London’s parish church, then Westminster Abbey is
the nation’s, and so we enter with due reverence. After our eyes adjust to
60 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
the dark, we look up to note the very high nave, the tallest in England,
at 103 feet. Soon, we are greeted by one of the many canons (priests) of
the Abbey, who offers to be our guide: this is a way for the church and its
clergy to support themselves. If he knows his history – no certain thing
given the state of the English clergy in the turbulent mid-Tudor years –
he informs us that every English king who received a coronation since
Harold II has been crowned here. At the end of the nave we see Edward
the Confessor’s ancient coronation chair, beneath which sits the Stone of
Scone, on which Scottish kings were traditionally crowned until it was
commandeered by Edward I in 1279. It would not be returned until 1996.
English kings have also been buried here since Edward the Confessor died
just eight days after his Abbey was consecrated. At the end of the nave,
we come to the apse, with several chapels radiating from it, many of them
endowed by dead kings and queens. Of these, the most magnificent is the
one that Henry VII built in perpendicular style between 1503 and 1512
at a cost of about £14,000. The Henry VII Chapel will house the bones
of most of his Tudor, Stuart, and early Hanoverian descendants under
elaborate fan vaulting.
In 1550, it is not yet the case that great statesmen are buried at Westmin-
ster Abbey, but Poet’s Corner is already established in the south transept
in fact if not in name, because Geoffrey Chaucer (c. 1340–1400) lies here.
Within a century, so will Edmund Spenser (?1552–1599) and Ben Jonson
(1572–1637). At the funeral of the former, it is said that his fellow poets
threw manuscript works into the grave after him. When Jonson asked to
be buried in the Abbey, he quite modestly requested that “two feet by
two feet will do for all I want,” and so he was buried standing up.24 The
poet’s connection may have something to do with the fact that England’s
first great printer, William Caxton (c. 1415/24–1492), had his shop near
this spot, at the sign of the Red Pale, close to the south door adjoining
the Chapter House, from 1476 to his death in 1492. The shop was then
taken over by the aforementioned Wynken de Worde, who moved it to
Fleet Street in 1500, but booksellers continued to frequent the porch of the
Abbey. Like St. Paul’s, Westminster Abbey is not an inconvenient place
to do business and even to sell one’s wares.
The Abbey was dissolved as a monastic foundation under Henry VIII,
restored under Mary, and then dissolved again under Elizabeth: here, too,
Westminster Abbey reflects the history of the nation. During the Civil
Wars, the New Model Army used the church as a barracks and stable, thus
London in 1550 61
Perhaps the dramatic highlight of the evening was when, again according to
tradition, the hereditary champion of England, a member of the Dymock
family in full armor, rode into the hall to issue a challenge to anyone
questioning the new monarch’s right to the throne. To the encouragement
of everyone’s digestion, the challenge was never returned, and the new
sovereign celebrated by drinking to the champion’s health from a gold
cup.
Among the many guests at a coronation banquet would be peers and
members of Parliament. In 1550, they perform their legislative work in
Westminster Palace. The palace was built by Edward the Confessor as his
principal London residence and served as the official seat of the English
court until damaged by fire in 1512. As we have seen, Henry VIII aban-
doned it, first for Bridewell and then permanently for Whitehall. What
to do with a half-burned royal palace on prime real estate? Give it to
Parliament. The House of Lords met in the White Chamber. It was the
undercroft to this part of the building that Guy Fawkes and his fellow
Catholic conspirators rented and filled with barrels of gunpowder in the
hope of blowing up the king and political elite at the state opening of Par-
liament on November 5, 1605. The search that uncovered Fawkes and the
gunpowder is reenacted before every state opening. The House of Com-
mons met in St. Stephen’s Chapel after it was secularized in 1547. This
space was too small for the full membership, leading to a hothouse atmo-
sphere in which members crowded together, shoulder to shoulder, on the
former choir benches. The speaker’s chair, and a table for the mace and
books, were placed close to where the old altar was, which might explain
the modern custom of bowing to the speaker on entry. The antechamber
served as a lobby for counting votes. As this suggests, the arrangement
was entirely ad hoc; moreover, the building was in constant disrepair. It
should be recalled, however, that in the sixteenth century Parliament was
not so much a regular institution of government as an occasional, brief,
and (from the monarch’s point of view) often regrettable occurrence,
usually called and dismissed as quickly as possible. Thus, Westminster
Palace must have seemed perfectly adequate in 1550 for these meetings.
It was only after the Glorious Revolution of 1688/89, when parliamentary
sessions became annual events lasting most of the London season from
autumn to spring, that the building’s flaws began to pinch. Despite numer-
ous patches and renovations, it continued to serve until it burned down
in 1834.
London in 1550 63
Because this is the seat of court and capital, the area is full of lodging
houses for members of Parliament, courtiers, and, prior to the Reforma-
tion, pilgrims to the Abbey. Shopkeepers pursuing luxury trades (e.g.,
gold, cloth) like these customers, but even though their shops might be
located outside of the City proper, they are still subject to the regulations
of the livery companies, whose royal charters typically give them influence
across the metropolis. Finally, because the rich congregate here, so do
the poor, resulting in more crime and begging than we might expect. The
Abbey and its precincts were longstanding sanctuaries for debtors and
criminals, hence the names of several nearby streets: Broad Sanctuary,
Little Sanctuary, and Thieving Lane. As in Fleet Street, we hold onto our
purses.
Although we have walked but three miles, the variety and bustle of
London in 1550 are such that it has been an exhausting day. Having seen
official, governmental, and religious London, we might double back into
the fields of St. James’s Park to refresh ourselves or we might head down
to the river by Whitehall or Westminster Stairs to contemplate all that we
have seen. Because of the bend at Westminster, if we crane our heads in
a semicircle from right to left, looking south, then east, and finally north,
we see it all: the south bank, starting with Lambeth Palace just across the
river from us to our right, then moving left, the trees of Paris Garden and
Southwark Cathedral. Directly in front of us, but at a distance, London
Bridge, piled high with precarious houses and shops. To its immediate left,
at the top of our leftward vision, the City itself, crammed into the walls, the
steeples of its churches gathered around St. Paul’s like hordes of children
about their mother. Turning more to our left, on the north bank, we see
a row of stately palaces, culminating in Whitehall and the Westminster
complex from which we have just come. The scene makes little noise, just
the occasional call of the bargeman, the bells of the city churches striking
the hour, or perhaps an occasional vote by acclamation from Westminster
Palace. Yet in all the whir and hum of that great conurbation something
remarkable is happening. Its inhabitants scurry about – coming and going,
working and playing, eating, drinking, writing, reading, praying, ordering,
begging, nipping, making court and making shift, living, dying, and all the
while ever becoming Londoners.
2. The Socioeconomic Base
64
The Socioeconomic Base 65
the whole city and confines . . . but would be also dispersed through
all other parts of the realm, to the manifest danger of the whole body
thereof. . . . 2
Indeed, between 1563 and 1665, London experienced six major out-
breaks of plague, each of which killed between 3% and 20% of its pop-
ulation (see Chapter 8). Less spectacularly, London’s overcrowding and
location along a sometimes foul river bred all sorts of other diseases that
could kill one just as swiftly, for example, diphtheria, dysentery, influenza,
measles, scarlet fever, smallpox, sweating sickness, tuberculosis, typhoid
fever, typhus, and whooping cough. The Gin Craze of the 1730s and 1740s
made those decades especially deadly. But much of London’s morbidity
can be explained by high rates of infant mortality: according to the Bills of
Mortality, 40% of the deaths in London between 1700 and 1750 were chil-
dren under 2 years of age. In some parts of early modern London, fewer
then 60% of the children made it to age 15. Disease apart, for the first half
of our period, London had an imbalance of female to male inhabitants
of 113 to 100, made worse by the requirement that apprentices remain
unmarried. When people forbidden to marry nevertheless produced a
child, they might be tempted to abandon or kill it. Finally, as any urban
dweller will tell you, cities are physically dangerous places: unexpected
deaths from accidents in the streets, on building sites, and in the river
(most people did not know how to swim) were common in early modern
London. No wonder that, between 1550 and 1750, Londoners were dying
faster than they were being born.
Yet London grew throughout our period, by about 2,750 souls per
year during its second century. Because London was not reproducing
itself, it must have been attracting and absorbing a constant stream of
immigrants to reach that figure: about 6,000 a year to 1650 and perhaps
8,000 a year to 1750. England might never have been “onely London”
as James I feared, but it held about 7% of the English population by
1650 and 11% by 1750. In effect, London was soaking up vast numbers
of English men and women, as well as Scots, Irish, and others from
abroad, attracting them with the opportunity to rise but often killing them
once they got there. Migrants flocked to London for many reasons. The
wealthy came to attend the court or Parliament, to be served by London’s
leading professionals, to be entertained, to shop, or simply because they
found country life boring. As we have seen, before the Reformation,
lordly bishops built enormous palaces along the Strand to be where the
66 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
masked balls (see Chapter 4). Aristocratic men could relax at taverns, and,
from the mid-seventeenth century, coffeehouses and private clubs (see
Chapter 5). Aristocratic women took coaches to visit other aristocratic
women, laying the groundwork for an English salon culture. These people
deserted London in the hot, unhealthy summers, however, leading Horace
Walpole (1717–1797) to complain of August in 1760 “there is not a coach to
be seen . . . just as it always is at this season.”3 Still, by 1700, London had
become so congenial that many landowners migrated back to their great
estates only to keep Christmas and to avoid the city’s summer heat.
Thus, the Stuart and early Hanoverian aristocracy was increasingly
“amphibious” between the country and the capital and at home in both.
This shuttling between country and city became easier in the seventeenth
century with the development of better roads, coaches with springs, and
more reliable postal services, including a London penny post at the end of
the century. From the mid-1650s there were regular stage services between
London inns and Exeter to the west, Chester to the northwest, and York
and Newcastle to the north: Oxford was just 13 hours away and Bath
2 days by “flying coach.” All of these developments – along with the
exodus of the nobility from the City for the more open spaces of the West
End, the concomitant evolution of the great noble townhouse, and the
slightly less ostentatious accommodation to be found in London squares,
the establishment of the London season, and the ever-expanding trade in
luxury goods – made possible a new kind of aristocratic life, that of an
urban gentry that increasingly spent most of its time in the metropolis.
What about those who could not afford sleek coaches and smart town-
houses? Most everyone else came to London for economic opportu-
nity. The younger sons of gentlemen, as well as the male offspring of
yeomen, merchants, and professionals, often sought education in the law
and social graces at the Inns of Court or took up valuable apprenticeships in
London’s leading merchant or banking houses. Below this level, people
were attracted by the greatest concentration of jobs in northern Europe.
London was Britain’s primary fabricator of ships, tools, furniture, math-
ematical instruments, clocks, clothing, shoes, books, paper, and other
items. Above all, in 1550 perhaps one-third of London’s adult male work-
force had something to do with the manufacture of textiles, including
spinners, weavers, fullers, brushers, shearers, dyers, and packers. Circa
1700 there were 10,000 looms in Spitalfields, and the East London silk
industry employed 40,000 to 50,000 workers. In the eighteenth cen-
tury, Clerkenwell watchmakers turned out thousands of gold and silver
68 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
timepieces, although the most notable craftsmen of the age, Thomas Tom-
pion (1639–1713) and Daniel Quare (1648/49–1724), were based in Fleet
Street and Exchange Alley, respectively. Thomas Chippendale (1718–
1779) of St. Martin’s Lane and Huguenot and Dutch craftsmen supplied
an endless demand for chairs, tables, and beds. Skilled workers in all of
these industries were attracted by wages that were higher in London than
anywhere else in England, by about one-third. Admittedly, in the sixteenth
century especially, prices were often higher still, leading to a decline in real
wages in London between 1500 and the 1580s of 40%. The 1590s, gripped
by war and a series of bad harvests, saw a further, if temporary, plunge
of 20%.
Still, agricultural laborers from around the British Isles came hoping
for any opportunity at all. During the first century covered by this book
in particular, the state of the national economy practically drove these
people from the countryside. Between 1500 and 1650 the population of
England and Wales more than doubled, from about 2.3 to over 5.2 million
souls. Unfortunately, neither agriculture nor cloth making, the two most
important industries in England, were flexible enough to employ this
expanding population. In fact, the cloth industry was depressed for much
of the period, because the European market was both flooded with English
wool and disrupted by the Wars of Religion. Moreover, the pressure of this
growing population on a limited supply of food, land, and housing drove
prices and rents up. One can see why many English people thought that
there was no future in their town or village: as late as 1685, Sir John Reresby
(1634–1689) complained in Parliament of “our tenants all coming hither,
finding by experience that they could live here better in a cellar or a garret
than they could . . . in the country on a farm of £30 rent.”4 So they took
to the roads and came to London to do manual labor in manufacturing
or construction or London’s vast service industry or domestic service.
Contemporaries worried about London’s disproportionate growth, that
it was, in the words of John Graunt, “perhaps a Head too big for the
Body,”5 draining the countryside of human capital. But one wonders what
would have happened to the English economy and social structure if there
had not been a London to absorb what was, in economic terms, excess
population.
London also drew people from beyond England’s borders. By the late
sixteenth century, 4% to 5% of London’s population were aliens, including
Scots, Irish, Welsh, French, Dutch, and a handful of Jews and Africans,
many of them living “under the radar” in the liberties. Scots, Irish, and
The Socioeconomic Base 69
jewelers. After 1700, Ashkenazi Jews from Germany and Poland began to
arrive, and by 1750 there were about 8,000 Jews living in London, mostly
settled in poorer suburbs like Whitechapel, Mile End, or Petticoat Lane.
Other Europeans and Africans came as merchants, although, as the
slave trade grew, increasing numbers of black people, both slave and
free, came from the American colonies. The first black slave arrived in
London in 1555. Elizabeth I’s attempts to expel them in 1596 and 1601
failed. Instead, many upper-class families thought it stylish to keep a well-
dressed slave and bestow on him a classical name (e.g., Pompey, Cato).
Samuel Pepys employed a black cook named Doll and actually sold a boy
in 1680. There was great debate over whether a slave was emancipated
once he reached English shores because there was no statutory basis for
the practice there. In 1772, Lord Chief Justice Mansfield (1705–1793) took
a step toward abolition by deciding in effect that slave contracts were
invalid in England absent such a statute. Most free blacks found work as
sailors or servants. By the 1760s it was said that some 20,000 blacks lived in
London, but Stephen Inwood thinks the real figure closer to 5,000. In any
case, London drew from a trans-Channel and transoceanic population.
To quote Peter Linebaugh, “Outcasts, runaways, mariners, castaways, the
disinherited and the dispossessed found in it a place of refuge, of news and
an arena for the struggle of life and death.”7 A place of bondage for some,
London offered opportunity and a fresh start for most, while exposing its
native inhabitants to a wider cultural and racial mix than any other place
in England.
Becoming a Londoner
The experience of coming to London must have been overwhelming,
particularly for newcomers from the countryside. From the moment of your
first glimpse of the metropolis, whether from Highgate Hill, Bankside, or
the river itself, this place was like no other in your experience. For starters
it was so vast that not even the most experienced coachman or porter
could know all of its streets, not least because they were not signposted
nor houses numbered until the 1760s. In 1606 Thomas Dekker (c. 1572–
1632) gave some idea of what it must have been like to walk those streets
for the first time:
Never before had you been jostled by so many people “as it were in a
throng, wanting elbow roome.”9 Never before would you have breathed
air so foul, between the odors of thousands of work animals and “such a
cloud of sea-coale, as if there be a . . . volcano on a foggy day.”10 Never
before would you have heard so many different accents, seen so many
styles of dress, coveted so many products, or been exposed to such a
variety of customs and religious practices.
Take religion, ostensibly a focus of unity and promoter of conformity.
In 1550 everyone in England was nominally a member of the Church of
England, and there were in London about 120 parishes of which to be
a part. After the Reformation, there was sometimes violent disagreement
about what that Church should believe and how it should worship. In the
village, these matters were determined by the landlord and the parson,
often following directions from the Crown. But in London itself there were
churches to suit every taste, from Catholic or crypto-Catholic cells at court
or in Montague Close across the river in Southwark, to reformist (soon to
be called Puritan) communities throughout, especially in Cripplegate and
Coleman Street Wards in the City. By the early eighteenth century, perhaps
100,000 Londoners, 20% of the city’s inhabitants, were Dissenters from the
national Church, worshipping in 80 meeting houses spread throughout
the metropolis. There were fourteen Huguenot churches in Westminster
alone. Nowhere else would you encounter so many Baptists, Quakers,
Presbyterians, Congregationalists, Jews, Muslims, and Catholics, some
pursuing their faith in secret. In 1738 John Wesley (1703–1791) had his con-
version experience in a meeting house in Aldersgate Street and soon began
to lay the foundations for Methodism by visiting prisoners at Newgate and
preaching to the crowds at Tyburn. Those crowds of course included
Yorkshiremen and Kentishmen, Scotsmen and Irishmen, Frenchmen and
Dutchmen, Africans and Americans.
One possible result of all this variety and sensory overload might be
initial feelings of bewilderment, loneliness, alienation, perhaps even what
modern sociologists call anomie. Thus John Harrower, newly arrived
from the Shetland Islands on January 18, 1774: “This day I got to London
72 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
and was like a blind man without a guide, not knowing where to go,
being freindless [sic].” Similarly, an inmate of the Clerkenwell bridewell
petitioned for release in 1722, although “I have not one friend to do any
thing for me.”11 As a newcomer to London you would soon learn that your
accent, customs, and habits were uncommon, even odd, and counted for
little among such a sea of humanity. In contrast to the close-knit life that
you had left in the village, you would encounter scores of people with
whom you might not, could not, form long-term relationships: whereas
there were many established families at the middling level, below that
too many people died or moved on to other jobs or other parts of town
for that kind of stability. Your relationships would therefore be far more
casual than in the village. There, everybody knew your rank, position, job,
and family, and those were for life. In London, nobody need know you;
nothing need be for life. If you found a better job, you moved on. If a friend
moved away or died, you had no time to mourn and plenty of possible
replacements. In early modern London, no one was indispensable; no
one’s loss left a gaping hole in the fabric of society.
Some historians have posited that the experience of coming to London
tended to privilege or produce a new kind of person: rational in his or
her economic decision making, open minded about new ideas, flexible
in coping with the ups and downs of a new, more capitalist economy –
in short, a Londoner. On the one hand, the Londoner had to adjust
to the possibility of losing her position on Tuesday and finding a new
one on Wednesday. On the other hand, the city’s great size and social
fluidity meant that the Londoner, whether new or old, male or female,
could always start afresh; Moll Flanders in Daniel Defoe’s novel of the
same name is always reinventing herself. If her situation does not work
out, she simply moves to another part of town, assumes a new identity,
and begins again. We will explore this notion further, as well as the eco-
nomic implications of London’s growth in general, later in this chapter
and indeed throughout this book. For now, it is important to establish
the psychological and social dimensions of the process of adjustment that
all immigrant Londoners faced. As indicated above, that experience must
have been exciting, full of possibility, especially for women who roamed
freely across the capital unchaperoned, whether young ladies paying visits
or servant girls running errands. But London could also be frighten-
ing, dislocating, and perplexing. According to the old medieval maxim,
“City air makes one free,” but it also divorced newcomers from family
and community. No wonder that Elizabethan writers complained that
The Socioeconomic Base 73
that the churchwarden, the constable, and the respectable matron at the
doorstep or the standpipe looked out for the shiftless, the inebriated, the
sexually incontinent, and those too sleepy or too contrary to attend church
services. This might lead to being presented to the JP, the wardmote, or
an ecclesiastical court, but it might also lead to help. The widowed, the
orphaned, and the destitute could appeal, often successfully, to community
and neighborhood values for assistance, often in the form of lodging or
“outdoor relief” on the Poor Law (see Chapter 6). Even business had a
neighborly aspect. Money was scarce, and so local shops relied on their
own credit with suppliers for stock and gave it to customers they knew
for goods, creating webs of trust stretching across the city and down
into the neighborhood. Neighbors loaned each other money, kept each
other company during lyings-in, and prepared the bodies of their dead
for burial. Londoners assembled to cheer the lord mayor and aldermen as
they processed down Cheapside at the former’s installation, yet they also
defied City ordinances to attend the funerals of plague victims. In between
there were company, parish, and neighborhood feasts and evenings at the
local tavern or alehouse. In fact, the streets themselves were meeting places
where work and sociability took place.
How did a newcomer become a neighbor? Working against cohesion
and neighborliness was the fact that so many Londoners were new to town
and therefore largely unknown in the parish on arrival. Many started off in
the big parishes beyond the City walls like St. Margaret Westminster or
St. Mary Overie, which might extend to over 100 acres and populations
of more than 3,000 in the 1550s. By 1650 St. Botolph Aldgate to the
northeast numbered more than 10,000 souls; St. Giles Cripplegate, St.
Martin-in-the-Fields, and St. Dunstan Stepney, to the north, west, and
east, respectively, contained 25,000 to 30,000 apiece. No wonder that
legal scholars have found less evidence of neighborly cohesiveness, fewer
people who knew their neighbors well as the period wore on and London
grew. Once in London, the employment opportunities for immigrants
depended on gender, the circumstances of their parents, and prior training.
The preferred option for a young man whose family had the money was
to purchase a place with a master tradesman as his apprentice. If he were
older and skilled already, he might hire himself out as a journeyman.
In any case, apprentices, journeymen, and servants began the pro-
cess of socialization as Londoners by joining their master’s household.
The household was a Great Chain of Being in microcosm, the mas-
ter/husband/father (and, usually, guild member) at the head supervising
The Socioeconomic Base 75
the moral and economic discipline of his family. The two were related
because, typically in early modern cities, a merchant or tradesman lived
with his family plus a journeyman, two apprentices, and at least a couple
of servants above his shop. The ground floor would be devoted to the
manufacture of shoes, barrels, candles – whatever his trade – with fin-
ished goods displayed in a showroom, a window, or on a foldable counter
known as a bulk, a stall, or stall board on the street frontage of the house.
These would be few, as most goods were made on spec; that is, they were
ordered to be made up to the specifications of the purchaser. Below the
master in the household hierarchy came the wife/mother, who supervised
housekeeping and cooking and often helped in the shop, followed by
children, journeymen, apprentices, and servants, all with a role to play in
the family’s economic well-being. Hours were long: the Common Council
regulations of 1538 decreed that journeymen work 6 AM to 6 PM in win-
ter, and two additional hours in summer, with long breaks for breakfast,
dinner (lunch), and in the afternoon. In the eighteenth century, shops
with finished goods stayed open from 7 AM or 8 AM until 8, 9, or even 10
PM. In addition to cooking and helping out in the shop, women fought
a constant battle against London’s soot, scrubbing the house from top
to bottom two or three times a week. But in an age before the assembly
line, the pace of work was probably relaxed, enlivened with good-natured
banter and raillery.
For those without the means to an apprenticeship or the training to be
a journeyman, there was service. A great noble or gentleman might have
a dozen or more servants – butlers and valets, secretaries and chaplains,
housekeepers and maids, cooks, footmen, and grooms – even in rented
lodgings. In an age when there were few labor-saving devices – no washing
machines or vacuum cleaners – families of any means employed a servant
or two: in 1695, 57% of households in a two-parish sample had at least one.
For most respectable service, one needed experience and at least a verbal
recommendation. Failing that, one might try to build on a connection
with relatives or fellow villagers who had gone before and succeeded in
establishing themselves in the metropolis. Thus did Edmund Halsey (fl.
1696–1729) come to London in the later seventeenth century with only
4 shillings and sixpence in his pocket, and a family connection to the
Anchor Brewery in Southwark. Hired as a “broomstick clerk” and general
dogsbody, he married the master’s daughter and rose to become owner and
a Member of Parliament (MP). Innkeepers and publicans provided word-
of-mouth connections, but this begs the question of how one secured their
76 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
good opinion if one could not afford to patronize them. By 1689, the first
professional employment agency, or Servant’s Registry, was operating in
the Strand, “where masters of all sorts and servants and apprentices, and
nurses of all kinds will find in a short time what they desire, as also hunters,
stewards, butlers, chamber-maids of rooms, milkmaids, lacqueys.”13 Men
with few skills and no money for an apprenticeship might head for the
nearest street corner to hire themselves out for construction work or to
that column in the nave of St. Paul’s that served as a common meeting
point for would-be domestic servants and masters.
If a young girl came from a good family, she might arrive in the capital
with a reference to be a nanny or a schoolteacher; or if her parents could
afford it, she might apprentice herself to a seamstress. Ordinary young
women were most likely to enter menial domestic service: in Peter Earle’s
study of 1,004 late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century working
women, 64% of those 24 or younger followed this line of work, but only
30% of those aged 25 to 34, with a much smaller proportion of older
women. Domestic service was a young single woman’s game, played prior
to marriage. Such work paid only between £2 and £6 a year in the period
from 1650 to 1750, plus room and board. This was comparable to what
many parishes gave out in poor relief; although not quite a living wage, it
might be supplemented by tips or perquisites like access to leftover food
and selling the master’s old clothes at rag fairs. Servants moved about quite
often, rarely staying for more than a year, and so there were always plenty
of new openings. A young girl from the country might very well be taken
up by a family looking for a maid or a seamstress, as was the case with
the fictional Moll Flanders before coming to London. As Moll found out,
as a member of the household she depended entirely on the whim of her
master. One of the stereotypical London stories is that of a young maid
new to city ways who becomes her master’s lover, only to be discarded at
the first signs of pregnancy.
Possibly even less lucky was the girl who became a barmaid or worked
for an innkeeper. Least lucky of all, the young girl, fresh off a cart from
the country, who became a hawker of goods in the streets or fell in with a
“mother midnight” – a madam – who offered the devil’s bargain of a place
to stay and food to eat in return for becoming one of her girls in the stews
of Southwark or Smithfield or, after 1700, the area around Covent Garden
(see Chapter 5). James Boswell records an encounter with a prostitute
in 1763 who fits the profile: “She who submitted to my lusty embraces
was a young Shropshire girl, only seventeen, very well-looked, her name
The Socioeconomic Base 77
Elizabeth Parker. Poor being, she has had a sad time of it!”14 Such a life was
hard and often cut short, either by venereal disease or by the all-to-easy
progress from prostitution to theft to Tyburn tree. But even brothels and
homosexual “molly houses” provided some kind of community, and one
can well understand how a frightened and lonely young girl or boy might
take up a mother midnight’s offer.
Indeed, there was a slight chance that that young girl might, if she
survived and played her hand shrewdly, end up a madam herself in one of
the more substantial businesses open to female management. All together
5% to 10% of London businesses were run by women, most commonly in
the food and drinks trades, textile shops and pawnshops, but the account
books for the rebuilding of London’s churches after the Fire of 1666 include
payments to Ann Brooks, smith; Sarah Freeman, plumber; and the widow
Pearce, painter. Because so many middle-aged London merchants and
tradesmen married young women, London always had lots of widows.
Some 10% to 20% of London households were headed by widows, and
guild custom allowed them to operate as independent businesswomen.
Older women without property took odd jobs cleaning, doing the laundry,
mending clothes, nursing the sick, and acting as midwives.
Merchant Taylors had 2,500 members, the Plumbers 58. Perhaps the
most obvious manifestation of a company’s status was its guild hall. Most
were built in the fourteenth or fifteenth century; some were converted
Church properties. Here, sitting among images and bequests of past
members, the company’s governing Court of Assistants met for delib-
erations, its liverymen for elections, and the membership as a whole for
feasts in which the community of, say, grocers or ironmongers could be
reaffirmed. In fact, the larger companies tended to be more hierarchical
and less convivial: divided into liverymen, yeomen freemen (household-
ers and journeymen), and apprentices, only the liverymen attended the
annual election feast of a great company; journeymen had their own quar-
terly drinking. Thus the guild offered some of the community but also
some of the structure and hierarchy to be found in a medieval village.
Clearly, livery companies were no enemies to the Great Chain of Being.
So, the first question for many on arrival in London was: how did you
become free of, that is, join, the guild? You could inherit the freedom or
buy it, but by far the most common course was to rise by the traditional
route, starting as an apprentice. For a set tuition, a master agreed to
take in an adolescent, teach him the “mysteries” of the trade, and feed,
clothe, and house him as a member of his household, with a higher
status than a servant. According to legend, apprentices started young, at
age 14, but recent research, on the Carpenters’ Company in particular,
indicates that few began service before age 17 and that the average age at
beginning was 191/2. Although seven years was the traditional term, some
apprenticed for as many as a dozen. Apprentices were forbidden to marry,
which, combined with a gender ratio of 113 men to 100 women prior to
1650, further tended to depress London’s birth rate. (That ratio would
gradually be reversed by 1700.) The vast majority of apprentices were
male, but throughout the period some young women apprenticed, usually
as seamstresses or textile workers. Typically, apprenticeships were paid
for by one’s parents, the premiums ranging circa 1700 anywhere from £10 to
£40 to a cooper or a milliner to £200 to £500 to a great merchant. Thus, they
tended to be most available to those from already moderately prosperous
backgrounds.
In fact, most trades hardly required seven years of training; most
apprentice time was spent learning to read and write. (In the late six-
teenth century, 82% of London apprentices could sign their own names –
admittedly a crude measure of rudimentary literacy.) Apprentices there-
fore tended to be young men with time on their hands. The idle apprentice
80 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
was well known to have the capacity to get into trouble, drinking, partying,
rioting, or absconding with his master’s goods or money. With roughly
30,000 apprentices in London in 1600, they potentially represented a
considerable force for disorder (see Chapter 7). If contemporary literature
and art is full of lazy and dishonest apprentices (most notably, William
Hogarth’s [1697–1764] print series, Industry and Idleness of 1747), it also
portrays more than a few oppressive, cruel masters. Fortunately, neither
party in the agreement lacked redress: both could complain to their com-
pany’s Court of Assistants, whose records are full of such disagreements.
Still, these represent only a fraction of the number of master–apprentice
relationships, and so one cannot argue for their typicality. In any case,
many apprentices – some 60% in the first half of the period – never com-
pleted their terms of service. Some died. Others fled, perhaps overcome
by feelings of homesickness or resentment toward a strict master.
Those who did complete their apprenticeships joined the lowest rank
of freemen and became journeymen. At this point, the graduating appren-
tice was presented to the guild and “called to the freedom,” swearing an
oath before its wardens and paying a fee of up to 3 shillings 4 pence. There-
after, to maintain their freeman status and right to trade, they would, like
all virtuous London tradesmen, pay quarterage, usually 8 pence a quarter
(or 2 shillings 8 pence a year). A freeman was also responsible for paying
rates (taxes), serving in local office, and hanging a lantern on his dwelling
on moonless nights. A few days after admission to the freedom, the new
journeyman was taken to the Guildhall to be made a citizen, which gave
him the right to vote for all sorts of minor offices. A very few women,
mostly widows and single daughters of deceased guildsmen, were allowed
the freedom to carry on the dead man’s trade, but almost none was granted
citizenship.
Most journeymen had no desire to spend their most productive years
living and working under another man’s roof; the majority sought to
amass enough capital, at least £100 in seventeenth-century London (£500
to £10,000 for a goldsmith or a brewer), to open their own shops and
become householders in their own right. Here, their former master could
be crucial: a favored former apprentice could become his heir, possibly,
like Dick Whittington, marry his daughter, and in time take over his
business. The prospective householder still had to pay a stiff entry fine to
the company, and in some companies create a “proof-” or “master-piece”
that would demonstrate that he knew fully the mysteries of his craft. Three-
quarters of journeymen were able to do so and become householders. But
The Socioeconomic Base 81
citizenship and voting rights. That meant in turn that it was still desirable
for ambitious newcomers to join a company. As social and political insti-
tutions the livery companies therefore remained important throughout
the period covered in this book, even if their economic roles had been
transformed.
1641–42, and the 1650s. One reason for the leveling off of wool exports
was that the Antwerp staple, England’s principal market for wool in the
Low Countries, was in the eye of a political, religious, and military storm
during the second half of the sixteenth century. Shipments to Antwerp
were disrupted by the Wars of Religion, the Dutch revolt against Spanish
rule from 1566 to 1609, England’s war against Spain from 1585 to 1604, and
the Thirty Years’ War, 1618 to 1648. Even during relatively quiet periods,
Antwerp might be closed to English trade by its Spanish governors. The
Merchant Adventurers tried to find other staples, but none was as con-
venient to them or their customers as Antwerp. In any case, wool prices
began to fall at the end of the sixteenth century because the European
market was flooded with the stuff. English manufacturers responded with
new, lighter, cheaper forms of wool cloth known as the “new draperies.”
These were moderately successful, leading to some good years at the
beginning of the seventeenth century, but the overall foreign demand for
wool continued to lessen and its price to fall. During bad years, merchant
incomes stagnated, cloth workers lost their jobs, and farm families went
without valuable supplementary income from shearing, carding, spinning,
and weaving. After 1640, wool remained England’s biggest export, but as
a shadow of its former self.
Fortunately, at precisely this moment, English demand for imports
from the East – spices, fabrics, dyes, medicines from the Levant or India,
even through Russia – took off. Unfortunately, England’s commercial cri-
sis occurred in the midst of a worldwide competition for trade and colonies
circa 1600 on the part of the great European powers, including Portugal,
Spain, France, and the Netherlands. In short, the English would have
to fight for this trade: the privateering campaigns of Hawkins and Drake
were early examples of this. Simultaneously, the Crown, worried about
unemployment, desperate to save the wool industry but also intrigued
by the possibility of vast wealth from overseas commerce such as rival
monarchs were accruing, began to explore more systematic options. The
result, often greased by well-bribed courtiers or vast loans to the Crown,
was a series of royal charters to new companies beginning with the Mus-
covy Company in 1555 and continuing with the Spanish Company (1577),
the Eastland Company (to trade with the Baltic, 1579), the Turkey (later
the Levant) Company (1581), the Senegal Adventurers (1588, eventually
the Royal Africa Company), the East India Company (1600), the Vir-
ginia Company (1606), the Massachusetts Bay Company (1629), and the
Hudson’s Bay Company (1670). This spurred exploration, privateering,
The Socioeconomic Base 85
the import luxury trade, and the rise of a new City merchant elite, who
began to take over the mayoralty, court of aldermen, and the collection of
Customs for the Crown. By 1603, only one-third of the Court of Aldermen
were Merchant Adventurers; others were drawn from these companies. By
1640/41, sixteen of the twenty-nine aldermen serving in those years were
Levant or East India Company directors. Finally, in 1689, the Merchant
Adventurers lost their monopoly on cloth exports.
In most cases, the new companies had no intention of finding new
markets for wool. Rather, their goal was to take advantage of increasing
Spanish and Portuguese weakness to tap into home demand for lucrative
commodities like silks, cotton, calico, indigo and other dyes, fruits, spices,
and later tea in the case of the Levant and East India Companies, and timber
and naval stores by the Eastland Company. The Virginia Company aimed
at North American colonization and gold mining but eventually specialized
in tobacco. That tobacco and, later, cotton and West Indian sugar were
increasingly harvested by Africans sold into slavery in the New World by
the Royal Africa Company. The Massachusetts Bay Company specialized
in colonization and animal pelts. By the middle of the seventeenth century,
imports were far more significant than exports, and London was the capital
of a nascent trans-Atlantic British Empire that included the East Coast of
what is now the United States and sugar and tobacco-growing islands in
the Caribbean like Jamaica and Barbados, as well as an extensive trading
network that extended to Asia.
The greatest of the trading companies was the East India, headquar-
tered in Leadenhall Street, Cornhill. This organization was founded on
a new and different principle from the others. Whereas most of the other
companies were merely unions of merchants, the East India, along with the
Muscovy Company, was one of the first joint-stock companies in England;
that is, it was an investment opportunity for anyone who could afford the
stiff stock price of £50 per share. Thus, rather than mount an expedition
oneself under the auspices of the Merchant Adventurers or the Eastland
Company, one shared the risk by investing in a company that took care
of arranging voyages, and early in the seventeenth century, arming ships
and raising armies to combat the Dutch and French East India Compa-
nies. Joint-stock companies had the merit of opening up foreign trade to
nonmercantile investors: courtiers, urban professionals, and landowners
who would not have considered investing in a particular risky voyage might
put their money in something as substantial as the East India Company.
That, in turn, tied all these groups together in a London-centered web of
86 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
investment that did much to further enrich the elite and middle classes.
Similarly, several trans-Atlantic colonies, the West Indies in particular,
were developed by consortia of Puritan-leaning aristocrats, upstart mer-
chants, and planters, partly to provide a safe refuge from Laudian per-
secution (see Introduction and Chapter 7). This could have had only a
corrosive effect on class prejudice: it is more difficult to look down on a
man when he is your business partner. The increasingly close relationship
thus forged among the government, the landed aristocracy, and the Lon-
don merchant community during the second century of this book, much
of it worked out not at Whitehall or the Royal Exchange but in the more
public sphere of taverns and coffeehouses on Cornhill, would be unknown
in many European countries. In the eighteenth century, Voltaire would
see it as the explanation for England’s greater wealth and military success
vis-a-vis France.
The great trading companies might have opened up the enterprise of
foreign trade to a wider investment pool than the Merchant Adventurers,
but they were still government-sanctioned monopolies. Before 1640 for-
eign trade remained unfree, channeled by the Crown for its own purposes
and toward its own friends. Often, monopolies to sell particular products
(and therefore take a hefty cut of their profits) were granted to favored
courtiers, infringing on the rights of the guilds. Even those monopolies
were always under threat, because a new group of merchants or courtiers
fronting for merchant partners might offer the sovereign an even more
tempting deal (e.g., a loan, a lump sum, or a cut of the profits). The
resultant decision might or might not be good for trade overall. On the
one hand, the Stuarts’ encouragement of luxury trades like native silk pro-
duction often did increase quality and demand. On the other hand, court
favoritism could have disastrous consequences. For example, in 1614 a
London alderman and Eastland Company member with court connec-
tions named William Cokayne (1559/60–1626) bribed several prominent
courtiers to secure the right to establish a dyeing industry in England.
His object was to bypass both the Merchant Adventurers and the Flemish
cloth finishers; to interest the king, he projected an additional £40,000 in
Customs revenues. To facilitate the scheme, the government suppressed
the export of unfinished cloth, shutting down numerous smaller opera-
tions, and thus throwing many cloth workers out of their jobs. Worse,
the undercapitalized Cokayne project collapsed by 1617, and with it much
of the English cloth industry. Ominously, guildsmen complained of their
freedom being traversed and of being sold into bondage.
The Socioeconomic Base 87
Other writers were more celebratory. Joseph Addison caught the sense
of London as a marketplace for the world’s goods, as well as a meeting
place for the world’s peoples, in The Spectator of May 19, 1711:
London had become the great crossroads of the world’s trade, and the
London merchant a cosmopolitan figure. Londoners – indeed, Britons
generally – now had access to all of the world’s commodities:
Our Ships are laden with the Harvest of every Climate: Our Tables are
stored with Spices, and Oils, and Wines: Our Rooms are filled with
Pyramids of China, and adorned with the Workmanship of Japan:
Our Morning’s Draught comes to us from the remotest Corners of
the Earth: We repair our Bodies by the Drugs of America, and repose
ourselves under Indian Canopies. My Friend [the merchant] Sir
ANDREW [Freeport] calls the Vineyards of France our Gardens;
the Spice-Islands our Hot-beds; the Persians our Silk-Weavers, and
the Chinese our Potters. Nature indeed furnishes us with the bare
Necessaries of Life, but Traffick gives us greater Variety of what is
Useful, and at the same time supplies us with every thing that is
Convenient and Ornamental.16
The Socioeconomic Base 91
The new culture of shopping created, in part, by the Exchanges, had social
as well as economic implications: men and women with money and time
went to the “Change” not only to patronize the numerous goldsmiths’,
jewelers’, haberdashers’, linen drapers’, perfumers’, stationers’, and map,
print, and booksellers’ shops, but also to simply walk about, to see and
be seen, in one of the few unfettered venues for the social interaction of
the sexes in all of Britain. Presumably, they gave no more thought to how
these goods got there than Addison had done.
before 1714 and 5% thereafter, money was relatively cheap, loans readily
available, and new ventures easy to start.
Although your money was safe at Viner’s or Child’s, it could not grow
very fast. More lucrative were investments in joint-stock companies. As
we have seen, these had been around since the late sixteenth century.
As government-backed trading monopolies became extinct at the end
the seventeenth century, there was an explosion of new companies: 11
in 1689, 93 by 1695. These companies sold stock in products and ven-
tures as diverse as glass bottles, convex lights, lute strings, sword blades,
gunpowder, mines, and fisheries. As the variety of this list implies, there
was no government regulation of the new stock market, nor were profes-
sional standards very high. In 1696 the first stock market crash led to a
statute limiting the number of brokers or “jobbers” to 100 and expelling
them from the Royal Exchange. Between that date and the establishment
of a formal London stock market in 1773, jobbers traded stocks in the
informal surroundings of London coffeehouses: domestic investors met at
Jonathan’s or Garraway’s in Exchange Alley, Cornmarket, near the Royal
Exchange. Overseas merchants, shipowners, and sea captains convened
nearby at Lloyd’s, on the corner of Lombard Street and Abchurch Lane.
Edward Lloyd (c. 1648–1713) kept a ready supply of all of the London
papers so that his customers could stay abreast of the shipping news. Not
only did they pool information, but they also made deals with each other
and with specialist marine underwriters to insure voyages, which in turn
encouraged greater risk taking. By 1750, Lloyd’s coffeehouse was on its
way to becoming the world’s greatest marine insurer. We will address
coffeehouses in greater detail in Chapter 5, but here it is important to
note that their relative lack of tradition and low entry fee (a penny), com-
bined with the availability of London newspapers, made them attractive
watering holes for the respectable gentleman and the on-the-go merchant.
Patrons drank strong coffee, read the news, shared gossip, and exchanged
opinions, cash, and credit across class lines.
At the same time, this wide-open atmosphere and the lack of govern-
ment regulation meant that there was nothing to prevent a charlatan from
selling stock in a company that did not exist or had no real prospect of
producing a profit. It was not for nothing that Johnson’s Dictionary (1755)
defines a stock-jobber as “a low wretch who makes money by buying and
selling shares in funds.” Many investors did not understand that the value
of stock was symbolic of the fluctuating market value of actual products
being sold. Most saw only that the stock market tended to rise. In fact,
The Socioeconomic Base 93
99 years and sold tickets to public lotteries. They also charged corporate
bodies like the East India Company, and in the next reign, the South
Sea Company, vast sums in return for the privilege of being allowed to
exist.
The greatest example of this fund-raising strategy, and Montagu’s
crowning inspiration, was the charter for the Bank of England, established
in 1694 at the instigation of a Scottish merchant, William Patterson (1658–
1719). In return for an immediate loan to the Crown of £1.2 million, the
Bank was allowed to sell stock in itself, receive deposits, make loans, and
even print notes against the security of its loan to the Crown. Subscribers
received 8% interest out of an annual fund of £100,000 generated by taxes.
Its directors were among the most prominent monied men in the City.
The connection to the London business community was underscored
by the Bank’s location, not in Westminster but in the City. It opened in
1694 in Mercers’ Hall, Ironmonger Lane, then moved to Grocers’ Hall,
Princes Street, before finally establishing itself at its current location, on
Cornhill at Threadneedle Street in 1734. In future years, “the old Lady
of Threadneedle Street” would be the Crown’s largest single lender,
its principal banker, and the manager of the funded national debt that
Montagu had initiated under William III.
The fiscal expedients described previously, which the historian
P.G.M. Dickson identified as the Financial Revolution, had a profound
influence on London and on the nation. First, in the short term, they
enabled the Crown to raise fabulous sums of money very quickly. This
funding enabled it to recruit and supply the great continental armies and
maintain the vast fleets necessary to stop Louis XIV in 1697 and vanquish
him in 1713 (see Introduction). Not only was the Sun King’s great dream of a
Franco-Spanish Empire dashed, but Protestantism in Britain and Europe,
a British Empire in the New World, and parliamentary sovereignty in
England all were secured. As Defoe would later recognize, it was “not the
longest sword, but the longest purse that conquers.”17
In the long term, the wealth produced by the Financial Revolution
would ensure Britain’s growing military domination of Europe in the
eighteenth century, and the world in the century after that. Throughout
this period, the British government would have at its disposal enormous
armies and navies and the expanding bureaucracy necessary to oversee
and supply them. For example, it has been estimated that the central
administration comprised some 4,000 officials in 1688. By the 1720s it
came to more than 12,000, most of them based in London (see Chapter 3).
96 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
Let any man observe the equipages in this town, he shall find the
greater number of those who make a figure, to be a species of men
quite different from any that were ever known before the Revolution;
consisting either of generals or colonels, or of those, whose whole
fortunes lie in funds and stocks; so that power, which according to
the old maxim was used to follow land, is now gone over to money;
and the country gentleman is in the condition of a young heir, out of
The Socioeconomic Base 97
whose estate a scrivener [lawyer] receives half the rents for interest,
and has a mortgage on the whole. . . .
In some ways this is simply a more specific version of the old fears about
London’s growth. Where before London’s entertainment and employ-
ment opportunities were draining the country of people, now its financial
power was draining it of capital while corroding the Great Chain of Being
by creating new wealth. The wars, the Financial Revolution, and the
government bureaucracy invented to fight them threatened to undo the
traditional hierarchy based on birth and land, and concentrate financial
and social power in London. Landowners in the countryside grew poor
because they were paying the Land Tax, while London-based military
men (who made huge profits from subcontracts for uniforms, weaponry,
and food), government officials (whose jobs depended on the war), gov-
ernment contractors (who supplied food, uniforms, and weaponry), and
“moneyed men” (who invested in government loans, funds, and lotteries)
all became wealthy. Anyone could rise. It was no recommendation to the
Rev. Dr. Swift that many of these upstarts were Dissenting Whigs, nor
did it bode well that the average English man or woman found the new
financial instruments complicated if not impenetrable: “through the con-
trivance and cunning of stock-jobbers [brokers], there has been brought
in such a complication of knavery and cozenage, such a mystery of iniq-
uity, and such an unintelligible jargon of terms to involve it in, as were
never known in any other age or country in the world.”19 Even worse, in
Swift’s eyes, was the deliberate contracting of massive debt, to be paid
off who knew when? Thus, at the deepest level, Swift’s anxieties about
London updated those of James I. Both feared a city on the make, growing,
buccaneering, and cozening the nation.
The City and its new wealth had their defenders, however. Possibly
in response to Swift, Joseph Addison visited the Bank of England twice in
1711, once in reality, the second time in a dream in The Spectator, No. 3:
Methoughts I returned to the Great Hall, where I had been the Morn-
ing before; but to my Surprize, instead of the Company that I left there,
I saw towards the Upper-end of the Hall a beautiful Virgin seated on
a Throne of Gold. Her name (as they told me) was Public Credit. The
Walls, instead of being adorned with Pictures and Maps, were hung
with many Acts of Parliament written in Golden Letters. At the Upper
end of the Hall was the Magna Charta, with the Act of Uniformity
on the right hand and the Act of Toleration on the left. At the Lower
98 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
end of the Hall was the Act of Settlement, which was placed full in the
Eye of the Virgin that sat upon the Throne. Both the Sides of the Hall
were covered with such Acts of Parliament as had been made for the
Establishment of Publick Funds.20
For Addison, the Financial Revolution was the glue that bound together
England’s prosperity and England’s liberties as secured in the Revolution
Settlement of 1688/89. At the center of the Revolution Settlement was
the revolutionary government’s credit. That credit, based on reputation
and threatened by war, was a virtual weathervane of the state of public
affairs.
In the end, the debt never really came due, and the government’s
finances never collapsed. The new financiers did not destroy landed
wealth any more than the merchants had done: in fact the two were often
combined in one person or by marriage between landed and monied
families. For a few Londoners, the wealth from the Commercial and
Financial Revolutions led to immense fortunes, often rivaling the very
wealthiest peers. Peter Earle’s survey of the eighteenth-century London
mercantile classes reveals personal estates of £50,000 and £100,000, and
at least three individuals – Peter Delmé (d. 1728), Samson Gideon (1699–
1762), and Sir Gilbert Heathcote (1652–1733) – worth between £250,000
and £500,000 at death. All moved amphibiously between the worlds of
commerce and high finance. A few bought estates in neighboring counties:
Essex, Kent, Surrey, and Hertfordshire. Others bought houses in Tooting
or Clapham and commuted. In so doing, they set the pattern for a new
kind of privileged life, urban and urbane.
and its growth created a national market for food and fuel, forcing the
elaboration of information, transportation, and fiscal networks and the
development of new technologies and credit facilities. After about 1680,
British prosperity fueled by the Commercial and Financial Revolutions
and framed by a relative absence of inflation forced a rise in real wages
that would last into the 1760s. This not only attracted workers to London
from the countryside but also produced more disposable income with
which to buy items previously considered to be luxuries. According to
Defoe, in London “the poorest citizens live like the rich, the rich like
the gentry, the gentry like the nobility, and the nobility strive to outshine
one another.”21 The constant round of new fashions, the need of virtually
everybody to ape their betters, stimulated consumption. Even London’s
deadly demographic situation “helped” by acting as a safety valve, taking in
excess population from the countryside that might otherwise have slowed
economic growth by increasing prices and depressing wages. Above all,
London’s psychological impact on its new immigrants, the way it acted as a
solvent of traditions and parochial customs, encouraged rational economic
decision making, casual work arrangements, and the possibility – for the
survivors – of social mobility. These realities made possible the kind of
mental adjustment necessary to bring about an Industrial Revolution.
3. Royal and Civic London
The Court
In an age when monarchs still mattered, the court was the center of the
world. We might be tempted to think of the court at Whitehall as the
101
102 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
and to keep records, most went “out of court,” that is, became separate,
permanent offices independent of the royal household, almost always
located in London.
As late as the sixteenth century, however, important functions of what
we would today think of as the government were still performed by mem-
bers of the royal household. For example, Henry VIII kept a stash of cash
in the privy coffers, literally chests stored in his Privy Chamber, in the
care of household officers like his groom of the stole. When the Tudors
went to war they still relied on the Great Wardrobe, normally in charge of
palace furniture, to supply horses, munitions, and so forth, and they still
expected the two major household bodyguards, the gentlemen pensioners
and yeomen of the guard, to accompany them on campaign. The yeomen
continued to earn battle honors to the end of our period, fighting beside
King George II at the battle of Dettingen in 1743. The king’s sergeants at
arms and messengers of the chamber were law enforcement officers, often
taking accused traitors into custody. Finally, Tudor kings frequently sent
personal attendants, like the gentlemen of the Privy Chamber, to carry
messages and make diplomatic overtures to foreign rulers.
As the monarchy became more constitutional after the Glorious
Revolution of 1688/89, a distinction arose between the monarch’s personal
household servants and the officers of the Crown staffing the administra-
tive departments – the Privy Council, the Treasury and revenue offices,
the two secretaries of state and foreign service, the judiciary, the military –
necessary to govern the nation. Whereas the former came to be seen as mere
domestics and possibly even freeloaders at the public trough, the latter
would eventually evolve into political appointees beholden to Parliament
and overseeing civil servants acting for the public welfare. This split was
enshrined in law in 1698 when Parliament passed the first Civil List Act
(9 & 10 Will. III, c. 23), earmarking £700,000 (out of a total net government
revenue of perhaps £5 million) to the king “for the service of his Household
and family and for other his necessary expenses and occasions.”4 In effect,
this separated his personal finances (the court) from those of the Army and
the Navy and began the process of separating them from those of the state.
Fortuitously, in that same year, Whitehall, the only palace big enough
to house both court and government together, burned down, forcing the
decampment of the royal household to St. James’s. Yet most government
offices remained or rebuilt on the ruins of the old palace, thus physically
separating the court from the government. Eventually, “Whitehall” would
come to mean the government, not the royal court.
Royal and Civic London 105
and the Privy Chamber, where, before 1603, he could find some privacy.
The Chamber also included subdepartments of the Robes, Jewel Office,
Wardrobes (supplying furniture), the clergy and gentlemen of the Chapel
Royal, the royal bodyguards of the gentlemen pensioners and yeomen of
the guard, medical personnel, artists, musicians, messengers, huntsmen,
and so forth. From the reign of James I, the functions of the Privy Chamber
were superseded by a separate Bedchamber, staffed at the top by peers of
the realm (the groom of the stole and gentlemen of the Bedchamber), in
the middle by gentle grooms and pages, and at the bottom by laundresses
and necessary women to attend the king day and night, dress him, and
maintain his bedding.
Finally, the Stables, which was presided over by the master of the Horse
and comprising over 100 equerries, pages, coachmen, footmen, grooms,
and supporting personnel, based at the Royal Mews near Charing Cross,
operated as the royal motor pool, transporting the sovereign and his or her
retinue from place to place. These officers also provided the attendance
equivalent to that of the gentlemen and gentlemen ushers of the Chamber
when the court was away from home.
Because many government functions were still based at or performed
by the court, contemporaries continued to use the term court even less
precisely to denote the current ministry; the body of its supporters in
Parliament; the whole of the paid administration, whether in London or
the localities; or even the totality of all those in the country at large who
supported the monarch and his aims. When used in these wider senses,
the noun court began to shade off into something of an adjective. Thus,
historians sometimes write, not always convincingly, of a “Court Party” in
Parliament, while contemporaries occasionally spoke of “court ways,” or
referred to a person’s behavior as being very “court,” “courtly,” or “like
a courtier.” Indeed, the word court was until recently commonly used as
a verb – as in “to court” – with similar connotations. Such references,
almost always pejorative, suggest that, to the contemporary mind, the way
people lived at court was the very opposite of the directness and honesty
associated with the country or the City. Thus, early modern drama is
full of vain and foolish courtly fops like Sir Fopling Flutter in George
Etherege’s (1636–1692) The Man of Mode (1676) or corrupt, scheming
favorites like the Machiavellian title character of Ben Jonson’s Sejanus,
His Fall (1603), who are often contrasted with honest country gentlemen
and sober, hard-working London merchants.
When was the court? The court was generally in town over the autumn,
winter, and early spring, with possible exceptions under the Tudors for
Royal and Civic London 107
Christmas revels elsewhere. This long time span, comprising about two-
thirds of the year, became known as “the season,” and it attracted the elite
to London for much of the period. During the summer, especially under
Elizabeth I, the court was away on progress. Later monarchs sometimes
used the summer for military campaigns (William III), to travel abroad
(George I and George II), or simply to live quietly, with skeletal attendance,
at an outlying palace like Windsor (Queen Anne). This reminds us that
the monarch set the tone of court life, from monastic to libertine.
When in town, the court was naturally one of the chief tourist attractions
in London, and a magnet for anyone hoping to rise to the very top of
society. On great alfresco ceremonial occasions – the monarch’s coronation
procession, royal entries, and thanksgiving services at St. Paul’s – all
London became royal space “which, for the time might worthily borrow
the name of his Court Royall.”5 The Tudors were especially good at using
London as a stage on which to enact the drama of their reigns: Henry
VII’s triumphant entry and coronation procession after taking the Crown
at Bosworth Field in 1485; Henry VIII’s insistence on a full coronation
procession for Anne Boleyn in 1533; or Mary I’s speech at the Guildhall,
demanding Londoners’ support during Wyatt’s Rebellion in 1554 (see
Chapter 7). But the master of these dramatic productions was Elizabeth
Tudor. Gifted with an instinct for self-presentation, she knew “right well
that in pompous ceremonies a secret of government doth much consist, for
that the people are naturally both taken and held with exteriour shewes.”
Take her coronation entry on January 14, 1559:
. . . in the afternoon, shee passed from the Tower through the City of
London to Westminster, most royally furnished, both for her persone
and for her trayne. . . . The Nobility and Gentlemen were very many,
and no lesse honourably furnished. The rich attire, the ornaments,
the beauty of the Ladyes, did add particular graces to the solemnity,
and held the eyes and hearts of men dazeled betweene contentment
and admiratione.
As shee passed through the City, nothing was omitted to doe her the
highest honours, which the Citizens (who could procure good use
both of purses and inventiones) were able to perfourme. It were the
part of an idle orator, to describe the Pageants, the Arkes [triumphal
arches], and other well devised honoures done unto her; the order, the
108 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
beauty, the majestie of this actione, the high joye of some, the silence
and reverence of other, the constant contentment of all; their untired
patience never spent, eyther with long expecting (some of them from
a good part of the night before) or with unsatiable beholding the
Ceremonies of that day.
Setting aside the chronicler’s hagiographic tone, we can see that there
was a long tradition of royal London engaging with civic London in
such processional love fests. Both partners got to display themselves to
best advantage, both laid themselves out hierarchically, thus reinforcing
the prevailing worldview, and both responded to the cues of the other:
“As she passed the Companyes of the City, standing in their liveryes,
shee tooke particular knowledge of them, and graced them with many
witty formalityes of speech.” This is the equivalent to the pointing and
waving that modern politicians do in parades and on reviewing stands. It
is designed to convince the person pointed at or waved to that the celebrity
knows them and cares about them personally. Elizabeth was particularly
good at this; indeed it may be argued that no subsequent English sovereign
has matched her common touch, or her ability to run with a cue:
When any good wishes were cast forth for her vertuous and religious
government, shee would lift up her hands towards Heaven, and desire
the people to answer, Amen. . . . She cheerfully received not only rich
giftes from persons of worth, but Nosegayes, Floweres, Rose-marie
branches, and such like presents, offered unto her from very meane
[poor] persones, . . . It is incredible how often shee caused her coach
to staye, when any made offer to approach unto her, whither to make
petitione, or whither to manifest their loving affectiones.6
even be said to have enacted a covenant between ruler and ruled: the one
to be benevolent, the other to be loyal. The participation of the ruling
and clerical elite, always arranged in strict order of precedence, reaf-
firmed the English constitution in church and state and the Great Chain of
Being. Nor need the monarch actually participate in person: executions on
Tower Hill and burnings at Smithfield were equally intended to overawe
the capital. Even under the Tudors, however, the results were mixed.
Civic authorities liked to demonstrate their loyalty and the City’s wealth
by the texts of the pageants and the magnificence of the triumphal arches
that they paid for, as well as by the turnout of liverymen in their splen-
did gowns. Ordinary Londoners could use such occasions to show their
loyalty – but also their lack of it, as when they shunned Anne Boleyn at
her coronation procession in 1533, when they dipped their handkerchiefs
in the blood of the executed Duke of Somerset in 1552, or when they
encouraged the martyrs at Smithfield a few years later. Londoners were
perfectly willing to acknowledge and reaffirm the status quo, as long as they
agreed with it.
Perhaps because of this, such royal occasions grew rare after the
accession of the Stuarts in 1603. Neither James I nor Charles I particularly
liked going out in public, although splendid exceptions were made for
James’s coronation procession in 1604, Charles’s return from Scotland in
1641, and visiting foreign royalty like Christian IV (1588–1648) of Denmark
in 1606 or Marie d’Medici (1575–1642) of France in 1639. Even then the
Stuarts lacked the common touch: at his coronation entry James greeted
the acclamations of his people with passive reserve. Worse, when Charles
canceled his entry in 1626 because of a plague epidemic, he stuck the City
with the costs of the unused arches “amid the murmurs of the people and
the disgust of those who spent the money.”7 James I was the last English
monarch to receive a full state funeral procession in 1625. Charles II was
the last to make a coronation entry in 1661.
Nevertheless, the average Londoner or tourist still had ample oppor-
tunities to gawk at the monarch traversing between palaces, out hunting,
or just taking the air in St. James’s or Hyde Park. Moreover, there was no
strict security cordon surrounding royal personages in the early modern
period; rather, every subject had the right to petition his sovereign, and
a good ruler was expected to accept such petitions patiently. Although
Charles I, William III, and George I were famously reclusive, Elizabeth I,
Charles II, or George II could, in theory, be approached by any passerby
as they processed down the Strand or, in the latter two cases, sauntered
110 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
about St. James’s or Hyde Park. The parks were royal spaces, but they
were also open to the public, the price of admission being a tip of the cap
or a curtsy to any royal present. Thus, on January 15, 1669, Samuel Pepys
writes: “I to White-Hall through the park, where I met the King and Duke
of York and so walked with them.”8 Admittedly, Pepys was a govern-
ment official well known to the king; ordinary Londoners would have had
trouble getting past the throng of courtiers attending him as he walked,
as depicted in a well-known painting by Danckerts (see Illustration 3.2).
Still, the result was a security nightmare: in 1682 and 1696 there were
plots to assassinate the king while he was out riding. Nor were firearms the
only threat to a public monarch: in January 1678 a lunatic named Richard
Harris was committed to Bedlam after throwing an orange at Charles II in
St. James’s Park.
In theory, the ruler was more secure within his own house. Porters at
the gate, provost marshals, the yeomen of the guard, and the servants of the
public rooms were repeatedly ordered to prevent the entry of unsuitable
persons:
The frequency of these orders suggests that they were not very effective,
however. People instead seem to have assumed that the court was a
public space, open to virtually anyone. Whitehall Palace must have been
particularly difficult to police because of its irregular ground plan and its
accessibility to the river and the park. Thus in May 1662, Mr. and Mrs.
Pepys took a delightful stroll through the apparently misnamed Privy
Garden, where they observed the “finest smocks and linen petticoats” of
the king’s favorite mistress, Lady Castlemaine (1640–1709), hanging out
to dry.10
In fact, royal space was never fully public or private. Like London
itself, it was always up for negotiation, and its flexibility was its great
strength. Indoors, the court was most accessible on holidays and state
occasions. During the Tudor period, the court celebrated great religious
holidays in style, when the sovereign sponsored extensive revels at Christ-
mas, Easter Sunday, Whitsuntide, and Allhallowtide. Queen Elizabeth
Royal and Civic London 111
in his “best clothes and laced ruffles” and pretending to be part of the
train of the VIP in front of him.13 In short, access to court was open to
anyone who looked good and talked fast. As a result, the galleries of royal
palaces were always crowded with suitors, spies, and idlers. On numerous
occasions in the 1660s, Pepys recalls walking “up and down the House to
hear news,” “walked long in the galleries . . . four or five houres,” “talking
with this man and that.”14 As at the two Exchanges or Westminster Hall, a
chance meeting could be parleyed into anything from political business to
a romantic tryst: Pepys frequently encountered flirtatious ladies of dubious
provenance at court.
Clearly, the court offered countless attractions to the curious on a near-
daily basis. Let us imagine that we have borrowed appropriate clothing
for a visit to the court of Charles II at Whitehall circa 1670.15 Entering
from Whitehall (street) by the Court or Palace Gate (see Map 3), we
are confronted immediately on our right by Jones’s Banqueting House.
Here, under Rubens’ magnificent ceiling, we might witness a splendid
ambassadorial reception or the curious ceremony of touching for the
King’s Evil, in which sufferers from scrofula (a skin disease similar to
leprosy) were stroked by the monarch and given a gold “healing” piece as
a token of their “cure.” If no such ceremony is on offer that day, we might
walk east across the Great Court to the Great Hall, where we could have
claimed a free meal until 1662, when that perk was abolished. In 1665 the
king converted the hall into a theater with, according to Pepys, terrible
acoustics. If we are too early for a play or a court ball, we might carry on
a little farther east down a narrow passageway to the Chapel Royal, the
Sunday and weekday services of which are open to all. This explains how
Thomas Allen, a baker, could have had his pocket picked by James Burke,
a vagrant, during a service in 1686. Respectable Londoners were attracted
by the sermons, for the king commanded the services of the best preachers
in England, many of them future bishops, as chaplains. Others came to hear
the latest musical compositions of Matthew Locke (c. 1622–1677), Pelham
Humfrey (1647/48–1674), or Henry Purcell (1659–1695) performed by the
leading choral establishment in England. Still others were merely curious
to gape at a royal in procession to chapel: in 1689 the Scotsman Robert
Kirk was part of “a great crowd to see King and Queen.”16
Under the Stuarts, the court included Catholic chapels across the park
at St. James’s Palace and also downriver at Somerset House until the period
of the Glorious Revolution, and Lutheran, French, and Dutch Protestant
chapels at St. James’s thereafter to accommodate the religious inclinations
Royal and Civic London 113
of various consorts and other members of the royal family. Between 1686
and 1688, James II sponsored an impossibly opulent Catholic Chapel
Royal, designed by Wren, within Whitehall itself just southwest of the
Banqueting House. Thus, if spiritually curious, we might sample different
rites; in fact, there is almost no other place in England to experience these
sights, sounds, and smells. John Evelyn (1620–1706) marveled at the rich
decor and elaborate ritual of the Catholic chapels, but also complained
of “much crowding, little devotion.”17 Pepys was mostly interested in the
music and people watching: writing of a Christmas Midnight Mass in 1667,
he found here Londoners of all persuasions:
The Queen was there and some ladies. But, Lord! What an odde thing
it was for me to be in a crowd of people, here a footman, there a beggar,
here a fine lady, there a zealous poor papist, and here a Protestant, two
or three together, come to see the show. I was afeared of my pocket
being picked very much.18
After attending a service in the Anglican Chapel Royal, we might exit
by the south door and ascend the Queen’s Staircase (one always ascends
to meet the sovereign) toward a series of riverside rooms that compose
the Queen’s Apartments. Here, in the formal surroundings of the Queen’s
Presence Chamber, “persons of good fashion and good appearance” might
catch the king dining in state with the queen. People loved the spectacle
of the royal family dining formally at the mid-afternoon meal, the king
hatted, sitting under the canopy of state, “with Musique & all the Court
ceremonies,” served by their Bedchamber staffs on bended knee from the
royal plate. This attraction was so popular that the royal diners had to be
railed off. One contemporary wrote of the crowd watching Charles II and
his new bride, Catherine of Braganza, dine at Hampton Court in 1662:
“The Hall was so full of people and it was so hot the sweat ran off of every-
body’s face.” We can angle for a place behind the guardrail near the king: it
was while “Standing by his Majestie at dinner in the Presence” that Evelyn
got his first taste of pineapple.19 This is also a great opportunity for politi-
cal intrigue, for those crowding about the sovereign might get in a word as
well as a bite. Despite its popularity, Charles II’s successors largely aban-
doned the practice, choosing instead to eat most of their meals in a private
dining room. Like the nearly contemporaneous abandonment of touching
for King’s Evil, this was almost certainly a public relations blunder.
Perhaps the greatest attraction when the court is in town circa 1670
is the drawing room. Drawing rooms were relatively informal gatherings
114 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
held two or three times a week during the court season, usually in the after-
noon or early evening, in the Queen’s Apartments. More specifically, these
“circles” or “courts,” as they were also sometimes called, were generally
hosted by Queen Catherine in the less formal surroundings of her With-
drawing – or Drawing – Room. Typically, the queen sits in a chair without
canopy, indicating a slightly, but only slightly, more casual atmosphere.
Surrounding her at a distance is a semicircle of ladies and gentlemen –
hence the term “cerele” or “circle” for these gatherings (see Illustration
3.3). Great ministers, reverend bishops, and powerful nobles and their
ladies bow or curtsy to the hostess then stand respectfully, bareheaded.
No one sits in the royal presence unless given special dispensation, and
no man remains “covered,” that is, with his hat on. After our period,
Fanny Burney (1752–1840) poked fun at the elaborate ceremony of such
occasions, her tongue only partly in cheek:
In the first place, you must not Cough. If you find a cough tickling
in your throat, you must arrest it from making any sound: if you find
yourself choacking with forbearance, you must choak: But not cough.
In the 2nd place, you must not sneeze . . . if a sneeze still insists upon
making its way, you must oppose it by keeping your teeth grinding
together; if the violence of the repulse breaks a blood vessel, you must
break the blood-vessel: But not sneeze.
In the 3rd place, you must not, upon any account, stir either hand or
foot. If, by chance, a black pin runs into your Head, you must not take
it out: If the pain is very great, you must be sure to bear it without
wincing; if it brings the Tears into your Eyes, you must not wipe them
off.20
Eventually, as the room fills, the crowd becomes more fluid as courtiers
begin their mating dance, maneuvering about the throng, bowing and
conversing with those in power, and avoiding the gaze and the bows of
those out of it. We are here to see and be seen, to ogle the famous, meet the
prominent, and if possible influence the powerful. Catherine of Braganza’s
drawing rooms routinely drew more than 100 guests, including leading
politicians and foreign ambassadors, and so this is a great place just to hear
the news and see what the state of politics is. Nowhere else is the whole
government present before our very eyes.
If the queen desires, card tables are brought out or, if the weather is
nice, guests may promenade onto the terrace overlooking the river. At
Royal and Civic London 115
some point, the king enters. Although some monarchs chose to observe
drawing rooms from the safety of their own chairs, surrounded by their
lords or ladies-in-waiting, Charles II likes to move about the circle, talking
to a hopeful courtier here, snubbing a fallen favorite there. If, in sight of
all the other courtiers, he takes us to a window or onto the terrace for a
moment of private conversation, our reputation is made: aspiring courtiers
will now approach us. Once conversation begins, everything depends on
the monarch: Elizabeth I was acute and flirtatious, James I and Mary II
loquacious, and Charles II witty and (usually) affable. But most royal
conversationalists thereafter were dull: Queen Anne tended to ask people
about their relations in the country, the roads they had taken to London,
and the weather at home. George I had to be conversed with in German or
French. Worse, once spoken to by the king or queen, we cannot leave the
room without his or her permission; the annals of the court are full of tales
of bladder tenacity and intestinal fortitude on the part of courtiers unable
to secure a royal dismissal. If we do receive permission to leave, we exit
backwards: one never turns one’s back on the sovereign.
What if we want personal, private contact with him, to beg a favor or
convey some piece of sensitive information? There is another way: we can
seek a private audience in the royal Bedchamber. In every royal palace,
there were two routes to the Bedchamber, one public, one private. At
Whitehall, the public route was through the Privy Gallery, which runs
all the way from Holbein Gate past the Council Chamber to the King’s
Private Apartments along an east–west axis, perpendicular to the river, to
the south of the Queen’s Apartments (see Map 3). The difficulty is that we
might be subject to the prying eyes of the gallery keepers who stand at the
Council Chamber door, not to mention courtiers sauntering through the
gallery like that inveterate snoop Sam Pepys. What if we want to avoid such
scrutiny? All leaders need a way for people to come to them out of public
view. That is why courtiers frequently preferred to approach the king by
the backstairs. Although usually omitted from modern tours and guide-
books, the backstairs is arguably the most important nook or cranny in any
royal palace, because here one can gain access to the sovereign secretly,
out of public view. How does one do this?
Whitehall was such a maze that a courtier should have been able to avoid
detection easily, but the least noticeable approach was from the water,
either by the Whitehall Stairs, or even closer, the nominally exclusive
Privy Stairs. The Privy Stairs connect to the north wing of a little court,
open to the water, known as the Volary Lodgings. On the interior side of
116 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
this wing we find a little set of backstairs. At the bottom stands a page of the
bedchamber. Although paid only about £80 a year plus tips, this servant is
a crucial linchpin of the court system; we are careful to slip him a shilling
while inquiring if we might see the king. The page climbs the stairs to an
anteroom just across from the King’s Little Bedchamber. In this room, or
the Cupola Room next door, is found the groom of the stole or, if he is not
in waiting, a gentleman of the Bedchamber. These aristocratic officers are
the king’s closest attendants, and it is they who decide who is admitted to
see the king. Obviously, they have immense power, like that of a modern
White House Chief of Staff or Director of Oval Office Operations: they are
the final gatekeepers for politicians, cronies, and mistresses. Unusually,
Charles II relied on a groom of the Bedchamber who doubled as the keeper
of the Closet, first Thomas Chiffinch (1600–1666), then after Chiffinch’s
death in 1666, his brother William (c. 1602–1691), to guard his access. One
knowing observer remarked of William Chiffinch that he was “a man of so
absolute authority that foreign as well as domestic ministers are to obey
his commands.” That authority led in turn to a reputation for facilitating
the king’s pleasures, which gave rise to other rather more odious titles,
such as “Pimpmaster General.”21
If our presence is approved, we finally enter the Bedchamber and have
the king entirely to ourselves. This, with the royal Closet, a room in the
west wing of the Volary Lodgings that serves as an office, is the most nearly
private room in any royal palace. Here in the Bedchamber, the monarch
was attended by courtiers at his ceremonial levée (rising and dressing) in
the morning and couchée (going to bed) at night. Here or in the Closet
he met cabinet ministers for daily conferences, signed papers, planned
strategies, and saw people in private with whom he might not have wished
to be seen in public. Unlike some sovereigns, Charles II would probably
impress us with his wit and his ability to put us at ease. Ever the First
Gentleman of England, he would be careful to flatter us, possibly showing
off some of his scientific instruments or works of art, or if we are female,
making a pass. Here, we can speak frankly. On departing, however, we
might perhaps realize that the king has given away little and promised
nothing substantive. On the way down the backstairs we might ask the
page if anyone else has come to see the king that day: nobody knows more
about the comings and goings at court than he.
Why did people do this? It should be obvious why tourists and sight-
seers went to court, but why did the great and the good clamor and strive
to work there? Why would a powerful nobleman be willing to sleep on a
Royal and Civic London 117
pallet bed near the king, put on his shirt at his levée, or stand ready to assist
him as he relieved himself as a gentleman of the Bedchamber or groom
of the stole? Why would a substantial gentleman with a nice estate in the
country choose to stand and serve in stiff clothing in under- or overheated
rooms, opening and closing doors for his betters as a gentleman usher?
Why would a young woman of respectable birth be thrilled to be named
a maid of honor, even though it would expose her to the aggressive atten-
tions of scores of court rogues from the king on down? Some undoubtedly
served simply because they swallowed the Great Chain of Being whole
and believed that any place next to God’s lieutenant was reward enough.
Some did so out of family tradition: nepotism permeated the court. There
were also the monetary rewards, ranging from a mere £18 per annum in
salary for a porter to the Stables, to £300 for a maid of honor, £1,200
a year to the lord chamberlain or master of the horse, and as much as
£6,000 to the groom of the stole. Moreover, there were immense fringe
benefits to living and working at court: lodgings in a prime location, free
meals for many officers, livery (a uniform) for many menial servants, and
fees and vails, that is, small gratuities like the one we gave the page of
the backstairs: a page could make, on average, an extra £120 a year that
way. When the monarch was away, menial servants whose job was to keep
the royal apartments secure would show them to anyone willing to pay!
Speaking of security, most household officers could count on their jobs as
long as the monarch lived and often beyond: careers of thirty, forty, fifty,
and even sixty years were not uncommon. Finally, a favored servant or
a courtier without portfolio might be graced with lands, titles, proceeds
from a shipwreck, or a monopoly. No wonder so many hung about the
galleries for hours, or if female, accepted invitations into the royal bed. If a
maid of honor somehow managed to avoid being compromised, she almost
always married well. In short, it was all a gamble: everything depended on
the generosity of the monarch and the state of his finances. The 1540s saw
courtiers gobble up lots of former Church lands, but Elizabeth I was noto-
riously cheap, James I generous, and so on. Even at a prodigal court there
was no more stereotypical story than that of the young man or woman of
promise, hanging about the galleries and staircases hoping to be noticed,
but ending up penniless.
Finally, there was the attraction of power. Those who served the
monarch most intimately were assumed to have influence with him. This
was true even of cooks and grooms of the Bedchamber, but was especially
true of the great officers. We have already seen that the groom of the
118 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
stole and lords of the Bedchamber had the power to regulate access to
the sovereign. At the same time, their access to him, and that of a few
other great court and government officials, was almost unlimited. Some
parlayed that access into a reputation for influence over patronage and
even policy. The greatest became notorious favorites. The power of these
favorites varied with the predilections of the monarch: Elizabeth I was
careful to limit her favorite, the Earl of Leicester’s (c. 1532–1588) actual
power, whereas James I practically handed the government over to his,
George, Duke of Buckingham (1592–1628). Most of Charles II’s mistresses
were thought to be similarly powerful. That is, people tended to assume
that anyone in such intimate contact with the monarch was listened to with
attention. As a result, royal favorites and mistresses were almost always
hated in the country at large, because in an age when God’s lieutenant could
do no wrong, the only way to explain a royal mistake was to blame bad
advice. Worse, that advice was thought likely to be bad, because courtiers
were assumed to give advice only to benefit themselves; that is, they were
assumed to be enriching themselves at the nation’s expense, corrupting the
constitution by secret influence – the very opposite of the honest London
merchant who enriched it. These suspicions were not necessarily accurate:
recent biographies of Leicester, Buckingham, William’s favorite, the Earl
of Portland (1649–1709), and Anne’s, the Duchess of Marlborough, have
all portrayed their advice as well meant and intended for the good of
the nation or, in Portland’s case especially, that of Europe as a whole.
Nevertheless, the great courtiers did empower and enrich themselves and
their followers along the way. Nor have the mistresses of Charles II, so far,
received such rehabilitation. In any case, it was inevitable that the sovereign
would have friends and that he would listen to and reward them. That
went along with the territory of having a personal monarchy. It was only
gradually, during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, that a notion
developed that government should not only be funded separately from the
royal household but also that its servants owed a loyalty to the public as
well as their master.
Capital
Although household expenses and salaries were paid out of the Civil
List by 1750, so were the salaries of the great officers of state (Treasury,
secretaries of state, and so forth), the judges, diplomatic corps, and secret
service. In short, the distinction between sovereign and state, public and
Royal and Civic London 119
private, still was not fully worked out even as the period of this book closes.
Put another way, if most of the central administration of Britain had gone
out of court, it had not gone very far. All government officers were still
considered royal servants, and in an age before electronic communication,
it made sense for most of their offices to be headquartered at the court,
near the sovereign. It was thus from the court in London that royal orders
were sent into the localities to be carried out by armies of tax assessors,
sheriffs, JPs, assize judges, Customs, and in the second half of our period,
Excise officials. The Whitehall-Westminster complex was the junction
box where all the wires met. Eventually, the word Whitehall would mean
not a palace on the Thames but the government itself.
For example, the Privy Council and Cabinet (consisting of, at least, the
lord treasurer, two secretaries of state, lord chancellor or lord keeper, lord
president of the council, and lord privy seal), the brains of the operation,
met at court. The larger Privy Council gathered at Whitehall, St. James’s,
and other palaces in a specially designated Council Chamber. This was
usually physically close to the King’s Private Apartments: at Whitehall,
it was just down the Privy Gallery from the Volary Lodgings. A small
Cabinet council might meet anywhere, often at the Cockpit in Whitehall,
but sometimes even in the royal Bedchamber.
The Treasury, Privy Seal, Signet, and Admiralty were at Whitehall;
after the palace burned down in 1698, much of what remained was taken
over by government offices. Of these, the most important was the Treasury,
which, from the mid-seventeenth century on, began to coordinate not only
the finances but also increasingly the activities of the other offices. The
Treasury began as the personal staff of the lord treasurer, an ancient office
that also presided over the Exchequer, the actual repository of the king’s
money. Occasionally during the early modern period, and permanently
from 1715, the Treasury was put into commission and run by a Treasury
Board of five or so important statesmen, headed by the first lord of the
Treasury. Beginning with the appointment of Robert Walpole on April 4,
1721, the first lord has usually been regarded as the king’s prime minister,
the effective head of the Cabinet and government, leader of the majority
party in Parliament and responsible for articulating and coordinating
royal policy. In 1732, in recognition of his service to the nation, George II
awarded Walpole a series of properties on the grounds of the burned-down
Whitehall Palace, including what was left of the old Cockpit lodgings and
the house at No. 10 Downing Street, just off Whitehall (street). Walpole
accepted on the condition that the house become a perquisite of office for
120 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
the first lord, but it was only later in the eighteenth century that it became
customary for the first lord–prime minister to live at this famous address.
The chancellor of the Exchequer acted as second in command to
the first lord and was assisted by a secretary and a small army of clerks.
During the seventeenth century, they worked in their offices at Whitehall
directly under the Council Chamber and Privy Gallery, and opening onto
the Privy Garden (see Map 3). When Walpole took possession of the
Cockpit lodgings at Whitehall, however, he commissioned William Kent
(c. 1686–1748) to link them with No. 10 to form a new Treasury Office.
The Treasury moved into its new offices in 1735; Walpole’s study would
eventually become the Cabinet Room from which policy has been decided
ever since. There is a certain symbolic appropriateness to the fact that,
just as England evolved from a near-absolute monarchy to a constitutional
one, so the site where Henry VIII and Elizabeth I had held court became
the home of a prime minister, constitutionally appointed as a result of the
popular vote of what was then the widest franchise in Europe. Here the
prime minister lived and worked as a servant not only of the Crown but of
the people as well, the Cabinet Room where decisions were made adjacent
to his lodgings, not the king’s. In this way as in others noted previously,
London set a course for modernity as yet largely unknown in the other
Western capitals.
The subordinate offices of the central government were concentrated
nearby. We noted in Chapter 1 how the royal courts of King’s Bench,
Chancery, Exchequer, and Common Pleas met at Westminster Hall, tech-
nically part of the old palace of Westminster that also housed Parliament.
Other offices were spread throughout the metropolis: the Ordnance at
the Tower, the Navy Office just west of it in Seething Lane, and the
Custom House down by the docks. These offices employed thousands
of Londoners; thousands more benefited from government contracts with
metropolitan shipbuilders, victualers, and printers. Thanks to the wars
of the second half of our period and the resultant acquisition of a world-
wide empire, those numbers were growing: there were about 1,500 central
government officials in Henry VII’s reign, 4,000 by James II’s, 12,000 to
16,000 by Anne’s, most of them based in London. After 1689 in partic-
ular, old departments like the Ordinance, Admiralty, Navy Office, Post
Office, Customs, and Excise added clerks and spent more money. New
departments were established, such as the Office of Trade and Plantations
to administer Britain’s growing colonial acquisitions, and new revenue-
collecting departments (a Glass Office, Salt Office, Stamp Office, and
Royal and Civic London 121
Civic Government
What about the government of London itself? Even more than the national
administration, it was a patchwork. The City of London, with its lord
mayor and Court of Aldermen sitting in the Guildhall, was an ancient
and reasonably well-run establishment, but as noted previously, it did not
govern the entire metropolis. Westminster, portions of Southwark, and
the northern and eastern suburbs were run by ad hoc combinations of
JPs, other royal appointees, and parish vestries. Apart from the occasional
royal proclamation or parliamentary statute, greater London would not
have a unified central authority with jurisdiction over the whole until
the late nineteenth century. In the meantime, the prestige of the City’s
government was such that kings, privy councillors, and suburban justices
ignored it to their peril; indeed, the first two often sought to control it. So,
we begin at the Guildhall.
Like the nation itself, the City of London did not have a formal consti-
tution. Its structure of government had been forged in the constitutional
struggles of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, meaning that the dis-
putes of the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries took place
within recognized boundaries. The Corporation worked closely with the
Crown and the Privy Council, sometimes petitioning the latter for assis-
tance, sometimes being ordered by the latter to address some problem,
and always acting as a major lender (£120,000 between 1575 and 1598). As
in the national government, authority in the City was concentrated at the
top, in the hands of the lord mayor and the 25 other aldermen who formed
the Court of Aldermen (see Illustration 3.4). The lord mayor served for one
year, elected on September 29 by his fellow aldermen from two nominees
proposed by the liverymen in Common Hall (see later discussion). From
about 1560 they generally chose the most senior alderman who had not yet
served. To assist the lord mayor in his executive functions, London had
two sheriffs (elected annually by Common Hall on June 24), a chamberlain
(treasurer), a recorder (chief legal officer), a town clerk, and from the late
Tudor period, a remembrancer and a chronologer, whose jobs were to
keep records of City ceremonies, rights, and privileges, and to ensure that
these be maintained.
The most important of those ceremonies was the annual lord mayor’s
show on October 29. This tradition began in 1215, when King John
specified that the new mayor present himself at court for his approval
and to swear allegiance. By the fifteenth century the procession featured
Royal and Civic London 123
minstrels and, later, devils and green men. In 1452 the lord mayor first went
to Westminster by water; his successors embarked at the Three Cranes
in Vintry Ward in the magnificent lord mayor’s barge, escorted up the
Thames by the livery company barges and assorted smaller water craft.
After swearing an oath of allegiance at the Exchequer in Westminster Hall,
he returned, landing at Baynard’s Castle for the main procession, paid for
by his livery company, up through Paul’s Churchyard and Cheapside.
During our period, the lord mayor’s pageant became even more elaborate,
taking up some of the slack after the Tudors banned the Midsummer
Watch processions (see Chapter 5) and the Stuarts withdrew from the
London crowd. Street processions featured movable triumphal arches
with religious, classical, historical, and mythological themes and pageant
texts written by City poets like Thomas Dekker and John Taylor (1578–
1653), known as “the Water Poet” because he was also a Thames barge-
man. At times of Court/City tension, these texts might assert London’s
loyalty or defend its ancient privileges. Often, the themes played off of
some aspect of the new mayor’s lineage or reputation: that for John Leman
(1544–1632) in 1616 featured a lemon tree; Sir William Cokayne’s pro-
cession in 1619 included a giant artificial cock crowing and flapping its
wings. The crowd could get boisterous, tossing dead cats and dogs and
breaking windows. In 1711 Lord Mayor Sir Gilbert Heathcote was thrown
from his horse by a collision with a drunken flower girl; ever since, the
new mayor has ridden more safely in an elaborate coach. The procession
was followed by a great feast at the Guildhall attended by the officers
of all the companies and sometimes the sovereign and members of the
royal family. The day concluded with a torchlight procession to accom-
pany the new lord mayor back to his house. Occasional traffic accidents
apart, the whole thing must have been great fun to watch. On a deeper
level, the lord mayor’s show represented another way in which Londoners
were drawn to identify with their city. It was the culmination of a ritual
year that saw the mayor and aldermen process from Guildhall to St. Paul’s
on All Saints’ (November 1), Christmas Day, New Year’s Day, Epiphany
(January 6), Candlemas (February 21), Easter, Ascension, Pentecost, and
Corpus Christi (these last three forty, fifty, and sixty days after Easter,
respectively).
Aldermen were elected for life by their wards, with strong input from
the lord mayor, from among the wealthiest businessmen in London. As
we have seen, sixteenth-century aldermen were likely to be Merchant
Adventurers, a century later officers of the great trading companies, and a
124 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
century after that, directors of the Bank of England, East India Company,
and insurance companies. All of these positions yielded easily the property
qualification of £10,000. Each alderman was responsible for one of Lon-
don’s wards, although in practice he need not live there and increasingly
delegated his authority to a deputy or a committee (see later discussion).
Taken collectively, the Court of Aldermen had immense power. They
appointed the recorder and subordinate officers, issued orders regarding
the public health, granted alehouse licenses, approved guild orders, and
governed London’s prisons. The lord mayor and Court of Aldermen also
acted as the Commission of the Peace for the City and so could preside
as judges in sessions of the peace (for misdemeanors) at the Guildhall and
in other London courts. Finally, they had the right to set the agenda for
Common Council and for much of the period could veto any legislation it
passed which they did not like.
Common Council consisted of the lord mayor, 25 aldermen, and 210
councillors (234 counting deputy aldermen), the last of whom were elected
annually on December 21 by London’s free ratepayers (taxpayers) on a
ward-by-ward basis in a popular court called the wardmote. These men,
although not as prosperous as the aldermen, were all substantial citizens,
shopkeepers, and master craftsmen, nominated by their parish vestries
in consultation with the aldermen: circa 1600, 84% were members of the
twelve great companies. Nevertheless, they tended to be more populist
and less conservative than the Court of Aldermen: during the seventeenth
century they inclined to be Puritans; by the early eighteenth they were
Tories and Jacobites. Called by the lord mayor usually five or six times
a year, Common Council was originally intended to be consultative, its
decisions subjected, as we have seen, to veto by the Court of Aldermen.
But from 1642 to 1683 and again from 1688 to 1725, the aldermanic right
of veto was repealed, and Common Council asserted itself, claiming the
right to legislate for London. The Court of Aldermen contested this,
especially in the latter period. In 1725 the Walpole government passed
the City Election Act (11 Geo. I, c. 18), which restricted the franchise to
householders worth £10 (thus expelling 3,000 poor freemen from the rolls)
and reconfirmed the aldermanic right of veto. Nevertheless, the opposition
to Walpole gradually gained control of the Corporation in the 1730s, and
this as much as the statute could explain why Common Council became
moribund for twenty years: who needs Common Council when you control
the mayoralty and Court of Aldermen? In 1746, with a new national
government in power, the 1725 act was repealed. From this point, Common
Royal and Civic London 125
The new and fashionable West End parish of St. George Hanover Square
provides an extreme example: when it was established in 1725, its vestry
included seven dukes, fourteen earls, two viscounts, and seven barons.
The most important vestry officials were the churchwardens. Usually
former constables, they managed the parish finances, collected rates and
special taxes, levied soldiers, policed parish moral standards, maintained
the streets, settled arguments, and determined the hierarchy of the parish
by deciding where people sat in church. This was often a source of dispute.
Early in the period, men and women sat separately, with the vestry toward
the front, lesser members of the parish behind. Eventually, whole families
simply rented pews, with more or less the same effect: the wealthy up front.
Churchwardens had usually come to know their parishes as constables,
responsible for law enforcement. In addition, other parishioners served as
surveyors of the highways, responsible for paving. Overseers of the poor
distributed poor relief. Women could serve as searchers, hunting out
anyone who had died or was suffering from a contagious disease. Because
local officers often had to cross the boundaries of their parishes to do their
duties – chasing criminals, returning the poor to their parish of origin,
conferring with other officers – their horizons sometimes encompassed
wide swaths of London.
There was much potential for conflict in this system. The lord mayor
and aldermen represented the interests of the rich oligarchs who domi-
nated overseas trade and finance. For most of the period, they had strong
connections to the court, but from 1641 to 1661 they tended to be Puritans,
and after 1680, Whigs. By the 1720s, these Whig oligarchs were once again
firmly allied with the government, led by Robert Walpole and later the
Pelhams. In contrast, Common Council represented, and Common Hall
consisted of, tradesmen and craftsmen of more modest means. They too
tended to be Puritans before the 1690s, but as Whig aldermen in rich cen-
tral City wards drew closer to the court after the Revolution of 1688/89,
the rank and file in poorer wards beyond the walls and down by the river
started to vote Tory. By the 1720s Common Council and Common Hall
came to be dominated by staunch Anglicans, Tories, and later Jacobites.
Their interests often clashed with those of the national government, lord
mayor, and aldermen, not least because the mayor could call and dismiss
them at will, and for much of the period the aldermen could veto the
legislation they wanted. From the mid-seventeenth century on Common
Council and Common Hall therefore demanded a wider franchise, the
direct election of the lord mayor, and the abolition of the aldermanic veto.
128 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
In the meantime, there was one more way in which ordinary Londoners
could express their will, persuade or intimidate their betters, and have
an impact on national politics: by acting as a mob. We will address the
London crowd in Chapter 7.
These conflicts and divisions notwithstanding, the governors and
governed of London shared much common ground when it came to
the good of their city. The aldermen, assistants in companies, and closed
vestries did more than pay lip service to paternalistic ideals; there is plenty
of evidence that they gave attention and effort to the grievances of craftsmen
and householders, the plight of poor widows and orphaned children, and
the price of bread. Perhaps this is not surprising: because of the social
mobility and population density discussed in Chapter 2, many of London’s
rulers had risen from, yet still lived cheek by jowl with, ordinary people.
In any case, the elaborate machinery of City government described
earlier applied to less than one quarter of the area and people comprising
greater London in 1750. The most important metropolitan area outside
the City of London was, of course, Westminster. Before the Reformation,
it had been governed as a manor owned by the dean and chapter of West-
minster Abbey. Following the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1545, it
was given a high steward chosen by the Crown to represent royal inter-
ests. Subsequent attempts to establish Westminster as an incorporated
borough from 1585 to 1633 all failed, but in 1585 a Court of Burgesses
was established, chosen by the dean and chapter in cooperation with the
steward: as this implies, the Crown had a great deal more influence on how
Westminster was governed than it had in the City. Each burgess with his
assistant presided over one of Westminster’s twelve wards. Acting some-
thing like a Court of Aldermen, the Court of Burgesses made legislation,
looked after markets and streets, and urged the big Westminster parishes
(like St. Margaret Westminster or St. Martin-in-the-Fields) to suppress
new building and the subdivision of old, send vagrants to the Westminster
Bridewell, and look after the poor. In fact, even more than in the City, the
real work of Westminster local government was borne by the parishes.
The Court of Burgesses also acted something like a bench of JPs for
misdemeanors, which brought it into conflict with the king’s Palace Court,
from 1611 the Court of the Verge. This court was responsible for anything
that happened within a twelve-mile radius of the king, but in practice its
jurisdiction extended only to the palaces of Whitehall and St. James’s and
the royal parks. Violent crime and major felonies, as in the City, were
handled by the Central Criminal Court at the Old Bailey. Westminster
Royal and Civic London 129
finally got its own JPs in the late seventeenth century, holding sessions of
the peace for misdemeanors at Hicks’ Hall, Clerkenwell. The burgesses
declined in importance from the 1720s on, because their authority and
responsibility came to be assumed by the vestries of the nine Westmin-
ster parishes and the Middlesex JPs. From the 1760s they were mostly
ceremonial positions.
As London expanded in the seventeenth century, several large unin-
corporated suburban districts emerged, for example Kensington, Chelsea,
Marylebone, and St. Pancras to the north and west, Stepney to the east,
Bermondsey and Rotherhithe to the south. These communities were run
by their parish vestries. Elsewhere, vestries had to follow the orders of an
ever-expanding bench of Middlesex and Westminster justices. Because
by the eighteenth century substantial citizens rarely wanted to serve, these
new JPs were often minor professionals and petty tradesmen, that is,
poorer than London common councilmen. Contemporaries called these
men “trading justices,” in the sense of JPs who were mainly tradesmen, not
gentlemen, but also in the sense of justices who were more likely to work
out a deal or take a bribe than a gentleman would do. Unlike aristocratic
justices of independent means, they charged for justice, exacting a fee for
every service they performed. The temptation to promote business “by
hindering justice or by maintaining”25 was too great for many, but such
justices nevertheless often performed a necessary service for poor people
who could not afford to see a case go to trial.
London would not begin to see metropolitan-wide government until
the institution of the London County Council in 1888. It would not
elect a citywide mayor until 2000. But the tendency toward centralization
was already being felt during the second half of our period. Increas-
ingly, the City took over responsibilities previously left to individuals or
small groups, while Parliament passed legislation for the metropolis as a
whole. Take street lighting, paving, and sanitation. At the beginning of the
period, London was far behind other capitals. For example, at night, light
was provided by the moon and candles in windows. In 1416 Parliament
required householders to hang lights on moonless nights from Michaelmas
(September 29) to Lady-Day (March 25) between sunset and curfew (8
PM), enforced by ward beadles and the vestry. Individual householders
were also responsible for paving the street immediately in front of their
houses and sweeping it every Wednesday and Saturday, although refuse
was theoretically the province of parish rakers and scavengers. Neverthe-
less, prior to 1660, most streets were dark as pitch after midnight, badly
130 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
paved and piled high with trash, all of which facilitated shady activities and
discouraged the development of a night life patronized by the respectable
classes. Instead, Londoners feared what one Star Chamber witness called
“the dead time of the night when all good subjects should be at quiet
taking their natural rest in their beds.”26 Constables arrested nightwalkers
and idle persons who could not explain themselves just for being out after
curfew.
Most of these arrangements were reconfirmed by Act of Parliament
at the Restoration. As late as the early eighteenth century, Lincoln’s Inn
Fields was a veritable garbage dump, the Fleet remained disgusting, and
both were also thought of as dangerous. When out at night – an increasing
possibility as a night life began to develop after 1660 – one could hire
linkmen to light the way with flambeaux, portable torches dipped in
tallow. But according to John Gay’s (1685–1732) Trivia: Or the Art of
Walking the Streets of London (1716), they were not to be relied upon:
Though thou art tempted by the Link-Man’s Call,
Yet trust him not along the lonely Wall;
In the Mid-way he’ll quench the flaming Brand,
And share the Booty with the pilfering Band.
Part of the problem was that in the late seventeenth century the City was
experiencing a financial crisis and could not afford to pay for services itself;
the alternative was to sell monopolies on such services to entrepreneurs.
Thus, in 1683 John Vernatti (fl. 1680s) was allowed, over the opposition
of the tinsmiths and tallow chandlers, to set up convex lights in Corn-
hill. These lamps had lenses and reflecting glasses that cast their glow
widely. Two years later, Edmund Hemming (fl. 1680–1699) was granted a
monopoly on London street lighting on the condition that he place lamps
at every tenth house on main streets between 6 PM and midnight from
September 29 to March 25. In 1694 the City contracted with the Convex
Light Company to provide lamps. Finally, in 1736, it was allowed to raise
taxes specifically to pay for globular lamps to be kept lit until sunrise year
round. Lincoln’s Inn Fields was enclosed by Act of Parliament in 1735
and the Fleet Ditch filled in by order of Common Council in 1747. From
the mid-eighteenth century on, commissions were established to take over
such services as street lighting, paving and cleaning, and drainage. In
1760 London began a street-widening program that saw the demolition
of the City gates. These were all City measures, however: Southwark,
Westminster, and so forth remained dark and full of potholes. Here,
Royal and Civic London 131
the turning point came with the Westminster Paving Act of 1762 (2 Geo.
III, c. 21), which was followed by a series of citywide (not City-wide)
statutes designed to improve London street life by paving with Purbeck
stone, deepening gutters, clearing stalls and other obstructions, and num-
bering houses and shops. By the 1780s, Westminster’s major streets were
paved with Aberdeen granite and lit with oil lamps. Gas lighting was intro-
duced at the beginning of the nineteenth century. The city’s population,
the environmental problems associated with it, and the pace of reform
would pick up in the nineteenth century, but that is a subject for another
book.
4. Fine and Performed Arts
I f you were an artist or merely a lover of the arts and living in London
in 1550, you had two main sources of patronage, inspiration, or
entertainment: the court or the Church. From the Middle Ages to the
dawn of our period, those two institutions dominated the world of high
culture. First, the court and the Church had the vision to provide artistic
programs and subjects for artists in London. Second, they commanded
the financial resources to pay for both occasional commissions to artists
in the form of buildings, paintings, statues, music, and literature, and to
give them regular by-employment when new projects ran scarce. Thus,
most of the great musicians of the day such as Thomas Tallis (c. 1505–
1585) and William Byrd (c. 1543–1623) had positions as gentlemen of the
Chapel Royal choir, or in one of the two great cathedral choirs in London,
those of the Abbey or St. Paul’s. Later in the century, stage players like
William Shakespeare would be sworn into the service of the monarch or
one of his great courtiers. Finally, the court and the Church provided
large, national audiences, which led in turn to more attention for artists,
wider dissemination of their works, and more commissions among the
nobility. So, if you were a sixteenth-century artist and wanted to make a
splash, you headed for London, and more specifically, to Whitehall, the
Abbey, or the Cathedral.
But there was a price to be paid. What the court and Church gave
with one hand, they limited – in subject matter, content and style – with
the other. That is, the court and Church censored the arts: monarchs
regulated their own images tightly, all printed works had to be approved
by the bishops, and the Elizabethan stage was monitored by the mas-
ter of the Revels in the lord chamberlain’s office. Artistic expression in
mid-sixteenth-century London, like trade, was unfree. It is thus perhaps
132
Fine and Performed Arts 133
1550–1640
Prior to the Reformation, the principal patron for English art was the
Catholic Church. Sunday and holiday services were probably where most
Londoners encountered great art: the Gothic arches, vaulting, and tracery
of the churches themselves, their walls painted in geometric patterns, their
statuary and stained glass, in the larger churches the sounds of chant and
134 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
wealthier than Elizabeth I, was far more willing to go into debt. He com-
missioned Inigo Jones to build the Banqueting House at Whitehall and the
Queen’s House at Greenwich. Jones had studied the neoclassical designs
of the Italian architect Andrea Palladio (1518–1580), and so his buildings
represented a radical departure from the Gothic style in vogue until the
mid-sixteenth century. But the late Tudor and early Stuart monarchs did
not have enough money to sustain the effort on a grand scale like St.
Peter’s in Rome or the Louvre in Paris. Jones also added a magnificent but
incongruous neoclassical portico to Old St. Paul’s and erected the first
large-scale housing development, the prototype of the London square, for
the Earl of Bedford at Covent Garden. This last, rather than his tinkering
with the palace and cathedral, pointed to London’s architectural future. In
fact, most of the great buildings put up in London from 1547 to 1640 were
aristocratic, not royal, for example, Somerset House, Northumberland
House, and several other new townhouses along the Strand; the Earl of
Salisbury’s New Exchange on the Strand and residential development of
St. Martin’s Lane; or the Earl of Clare’s development of Drury Lane near
Covent Garden. Still, the monarchy hoped to make London a showcase
of order and uniformity by regulating the number, size, and style of new
buildings between 1580 and 1640. One contemporary complained in 1619:
“We have every week almost a new proclamation for buildings.”3 Fortu-
nately, the Crown was largely ignored or bought off with the payment
of fines. Finally, at the opposite end of the scale, contemporary tourists
were often charmed by the late Tudor tumbledown houses of the pre-Fire
metropolis.
The later Tudor court produced no painter of the quality of
Hans Holbein the Younger, who had served Henry VIII. Indeed, Queen
Elizabeth probably set portraiture in England back half a century by having
her Privy Council regulate her image to ensure that she always appeared
as she was early in her reign. That image was disseminated in a wide
variety of portraits with complex iconographical programs: the Sieve Por-
trait, the Armada Portrait, or the Ditchley Portrait by Marcus Gheeraerts,
commissioned by the courtier Sir Henry Lee (1533–1611), which shows
her emerging, like a tree, from the patchwork of English counties. But
none of these pictures give much psychological insight into their subject,
and no single portraitist dominated commissions at her court as Hol-
bein had done at her father’s. It was not until the Jacobean period that
the visual arts received really effective royal and aristocratic patronage.
This began in a court circle that grew up around James I’s son, Prince
138 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
Charles aimed his artistic message almost solely at the court elite. He kept
a much more formal and exclusive court than his father or his son, and as
a consequence only courtiers were allowed to attend the king’s masques
and view his paintings. Most Londoners, let alone the English people as
a whole, were never exposed to this propaganda or such sophisticated
art generally, and the early Stuarts had little interest in the sorts of street
pageants and cavalcades that contributed to Elizabeth’s popularity (see
Chapter 3). Whatever propaganda value Charles’s masques and paintings
possessed was lost on the vast majority of his subjects.
Still, court styles in art did have an influence beyond Whitehall. During
the 1630s, with the rise of the High Church movement under Archbishop
Laud and the strict enforcement of what they called “the Beauty of Holi-
ness,” there was a revival of elaborate religious ceremony and music in
London churches, beginning at the Chapel Royal. The king’s chapel was
the premier center for the production of Church music and the anthems
and services composed and performed there by the likes of Orlando Gib-
bons, Henry Lawes (1596–1662), and Thomas Tomkins (1572–1656) were
borrowed by cathedral and church choirs around the country. The court
also produced instrumental dance music for balls, masques, and madri-
gals, and lute or keyboard music for quiet hours from William Byrd, John
Dowland (c. 1563–1626), Thomas Campion (1567–1620), and William
Lawes (1602–1645). This music was often published for performance in
aristocratic, gentle, and mercantile households. Beyond the court, the City
maintained trumpeters and waits (a band of public musicians) to perform
on ceremonial occasions. Ordinary Londoners sang hymns and carols in
church, and folk songs and printed ballads in taverns and in the streets.
These were sometimes borrowed, arranged, and embellished (as we saw
in the cases of the cries of London) by “high culture” composers like
Gibbons and Thomas Morley (1557–c. 1602). As we will see in Chapter 5,
the line between high culture and popular culture was thus a porous one.
The art form for which Elizabethan and Jacobean London is best
known was arguably the theater. The first plays in the English language
were medieval mystery and mummers’ plays, mounted on religious feast
days, but these were outlawed at the Reformation. During the sixteenth
century, strolling bands of players presented short secular interludes in
private houses, market squares, and the courtyards of inns and taverns like
the Boar’s Head in Eastcheap. There were also bands of boy players, often
based in ecclesiastical establishments and choir schools like the Chapel
Royal. The Children of Paul’s, who began life in the choir of St. Paul’s
140 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
charge patrons a set fee on entry. The first was the Red Lion, built east
of the City in Whitechapel in 1567. In 1576 James Burbage (c. 1531–1597)
established an open-air public playhouse called, appropriately enough,
the Theatre, in the north London suburb of Shoreditch. This was fol-
lowed by the Curtain in the same neighborhood in 1577. In 1597 Burbage
reopened the hall at Blackfriars, down by the Thames, as an enclosed the-
ater, implying higher ticket prices and a more exclusive clientele. In 1587
the open-air Rose was established across the Thames near Paris Garden
and the Bankside Bear Garden. The location must have been convenient:
the Rose was followed by the Swan in 1596, and the Globe, built out of
materials brought from the now defunct Shoreditch Theatre, in 1598. The
Fortune Theatre, built north of the City at Cripplegate, followed in 1600.
In the ensuing century these open-air venues were joined by more hall
theaters: the Cockpit, Drury Lane in 1616 and Salisbury Court in 1629.
Their capacity was several hundred, their repertory and clientele tending
to be more upper-crust.
More reminiscent of inn courtyards and bear-beating arenas, the open-
air theaters were generally of three stories, their galleries roofed with thatch
(see Illustration 4.1). One advantage to playing alfresco was that it was
more conducive to the sort of spectacle the crowd loved: in 1613, during
a performance of Henry VIII, the Globe’s thatch roof caught fire from the
kind of special effect that was only possible outdoors, a firing cannon.
Fortunately, the most serious injury was that of a man who found “his
breeches on fire that would perhaps have broyled him if he had not with
the benefit of a provident wit put it out with bottle ale.”5 A second advantage
to the outdoor theaters was their capacity: as many as 3,000 Londoners
could come together in the afternoon to see the latest play, munch on
apples and nuts, and drink bottle ale sold during the performance. Yet,
even here the Great Chain obtained: the wealthy sat in upper boxes for
3 pence, the middling orders below them on benches for 2 pence, and
ordinary people in the pit, the large open area on the ground level, for a
penny – hence their designation as “groundlings” or “penny stinkards.”
There has been much debate as to how popular Elizabethan audiences
truly were. On the one hand, a penny was about a fifth of a day’s wage
for a laborer in the late sixteenth century – a reasonable expense on
occasion. In 1613, an Italian diplomat attended the Curtain surrounded by
“a gang of porters and carters.”6 On the other hand, it is hard to see how
journeymen, apprentices, and servants could have cut work very often,
in contrast to their masters and their wives, watermen, or students at the
142 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
Inns of Court. Certainly, the indoor hall theaters like Blackfriars, where
the general admission was 3 to 6 pence, tended to attract the courtly elite;
merchants, craftsmen, and fishwives patronized the Rose or the Globe.
Particularly privileged patrons, for example, young aristocrats desperate
to be seen, might demand to sit on the stage at a hall theater, or above it in
the gallery overlooking an open-air theater (see Illustration 4.2). The stage
itself jutted into the pit, giving a ground’s eye view to the groundlings.
It had a trap door, leading down to “hell,” from which, for example,
Banquo’s ghost in Macbeth could suddenly appear onstage. Above the
rear of the stage was a platform called “heaven,” above which was a
balcony from which Juliet could await her Romeo, defenders of towns in
the Henry VI plays could shout imprecations at rebels, musicians could
play before curtain time, or powerful aristocrats could show off their place
in the Great Chain of Being. At the back of the stage were three doors for
entrances and exits from the “tiring house,” where players costumed and
awaited their entrances.
Theaters like the Globe clearly represented a new form of artistic
patronage: that of the paying public. Indeed, the rise of a paying audience
in the 1580s is one of the great developments in English cultural life:
Andrew Gurr goes so far as to argue that Elizabethan and early Stuart
drama “was the only major medium for social intercommunication, the
only existing form of journalism and the only occasion that existed for
large numbers of people other than sermons and executions” to gather
before, say, 1640.7 It was public taste, not that of the court or the Church,
that dictated whether a new play succeeded or failed. That taste tended
to divide along class lines: spectacles, heroic plays, and farces at the more
plebeian open-air theaters, more allusive and abstract plays full of classical
references like Webster’s (c. 1580–c. 1638) Duchess of Malfi (pre-1614;
published 1623) or Jonson’s The Alchemist (1610) for the courtiers and
aristocrats of the indoor theaters. Plays for elite audiences often made fun
of city merchants as greedy simpletons: Francis Beaumont’s (1584–1616)
Knight of the Burning Pestle (1607) begins with a London grocer, called
“Citizen,” rising from the audience with his wife, called “Wife,” to demand
that the players “present something notably in honour of the commons
of the City,” like The Legend of Whittington or The Life and Death of
Sir Thomas Gresham, with the Building of the Royal Exchange. Here, the
citizens’ taste for plays about London’s past worthies is ridiculed. But as
we noted in Chapter 3, playwrights writing for a citizen audience were
happy to return the favor by lampooning court favorites and fops.
Fine and Performed Arts 143
Still, to be performed at all, that play had to get past the master of the
Revels, who might forbid or censor it. As this implies, the theater, like so
much of late Tudor and early Stuart government, had not yet entirely gone
“out of court.” The theater companies all gave command performances
there, and all relied on a royal or noble patron to stay on the good side
of the civic authorities: hence the Earl of Worcester’s Men, the Admiral’s
Men, and so forth. All wore livery and badges just like other royal and
noble servants but also like craft guilds. Like the guilds, their privileges
were protected by the Crown. Today, when one sees the word Royal in
the name of some artistic or charitable institution, this is a vestige of that
need for such protection. From 1593 there were only two such companies,
the Lord Chamberlain’s Men, patronized by the first and second Lords
Hunsdon (1526–1596; 1548–1603), and the Admiral’s Men, patronized by
Charles, Lord Howard of Effingham (1536–1624). In 1602, Edward, Earl
of Worcester (c. 1550–1628), Elizabeth’s master of the Horse, was granted
a chartered company to play at the Boar’s Head Tavern, Whitechapel.
Under James I the Lord Chamberlain’s Men became the King’s Men,
playing at the Globe in summer, Blackfriars Theatre in winter from 1609
to 1642; the Earl of Worcester’s became the Queen’s Men, based at the
Cockpit, Drury Lane; and a new company arose, Lady Elizabeth’s Men,
patronized by James’s daughter (1596–1662), the future Queen of Bohemia.
The word men was of course operative, because women were not allowed
on the stage before 1660.
The Globe was the original home base of the Lord Chamberlain’s
Men. At least six actors were shareholders in the company and the theater
itself, with the builders Cuthbert (1565–1636) and Richard Burbage (1588–
1619) holding double shares. Actors not only took on many parts but
also were expected to write if necessary. Among the playwright-player-
shareholders in the Lord Chamberlain’s Men was a young immigrant
to London from Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, named William
Shakespeare. For more than twenty years, preeminent among a host of
talented authors including Marlowe and Jonson, Shakespeare produced a
series of comedies (A Midsummer Night’s Dream [c. 1596], Much Ado About
Nothing [c. 1598], Twelfth Night [c. 1600], The Merry Wives of Windsor
[1602]); histories (Richard II [c. 1595], Henry IV, Pts. 1 and 2 [1597–1598],
and Richard III [c. 1594]); and, above all, tragedies (Romeo and Juliet
[c. 1595], Hamlet [c. 1601], King Lear [c. 1605], and Macbeth [c. 1606]),
which delighted Londoners then and continue to speak to humanity today.
Although few of his plays are actually set in the metropolis, there would
144 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
1640–1660
The crisis that precipitated the Civil Wars (see the Introduction and
Chapter 7) was a crisis for the arts in London as well. During the Personal
Rule 1629 to 1640, when Charles I refused to call Parliament and so cut
himself off from extraordinary funding, he cut back on his collecting,
and the last masques were performed at court in January 1640. When
the king left the city in 1642 he took a skeleton household with him,
including several court artists. Production in London practically ceased
during the English Civil Wars (1642–1649), which was just fine with
the City’s and Parliament’s Puritan authorities. The public theaters were
closed by parliamentary order on September 2, 1642 and most fell into
disrepair over the next few years. Charles I’s execution and the ensuing
abolition of the monarchy and court in 1649 eliminated at one stroke the
nation’s chief patron, clearinghouse for new styles, and meeting point for
connoisseurs. The king’s art collection was sold off, although some pieces
were kept because Whitehall would remain the seat of government. What
was left of the Chapel Royal and musical establishment were disbanded,
as were the cathedral choirs. Anglican worship, in particular the Book of
Common Prayer, was suppressed. Balls, dancing, and Christmas revelry
were banned, most effectively under the Protectorate.
146 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
All this has generally been seen as a disaster for the performing and
visual arts; for those who loved plays or Church music, or lived to per-
form them, it certainly was. But it also opened up new opportunities: for
example, the sale of the king’s art treasures led to a brisk art market. The
suppression of sacred music did not extend to secular music, and many
Church musicians turned to the growing domestic music market, much
of it supplied from the mid-seventeenth century by the publisher John
Playford (1623–1687). He compiled The English Dancing Master (1650), a
hugely popular collection of dance tunes, mostly folk but some new, which
went through many editions into the 1720s. Continuing the Elizabethan
tradition, gentlemen amateurs like Samuel Pepys could perform such
music at home with friends singing or playing the virginals or lute. Even
Oliver Cromwell loved music and as lord protector kept a regular band.
Nor was it possible to suppress the traditional arts entirely. Actors
continued to give secret performances, not unlike the way Catholic priests
had continued to offer mass for recusants over the previous 80 years. By the
mid-1650s, an acting troupe based at the Red Bull Theatre, Clerkenwell
was gamely defying the authorities. Like clandestine Catholic masses, these
productions were often broken up by soldiers and the actors arrested, but
they refused to give in. William Davenant (1606–1668) got around the
ban on plays by performing the first operas in England, really semi-
operas, like The Siege of Rhodes (1656), in which speeches were given as
recitative. This reminds us that Londoners have never been scrupulously
law-abiding: Parliament could close the theaters and ban plays repeatedly,
but the frequency with which they did so indicates the futility of the
exercise.
Above all, the Puritan emphasis on the Word channeled artistic ener-
gies in different directions, for example, preaching, diary keeping, news
writing, and pamphleteering. In 1641 the bishops’ right of censorship
was abolished, opening the floodgates to a relatively free press, much of it
based in Fleet Street. In the two decades leading up to the war, the public’s
hunger for news had been satisfied by handwritten newsletters and printed
corantos; during the war, newspapers appeared in large numbers for the
first time, many of them one-issue wonders (see Chapter 5). The number
of political and religious pamphlets published each year mushroomed.
One surviving collection alone, assembled by a London bookseller named
George Thomason (c. 1602–1666), holds nearly 23,000 items from 1641
to 1662. Most expressed traditional, conservative sentiments, but oth-
ers aired radically new opinions. John Milton (1608–1674) celebrated this
Fine and Performed Arts 147
1660–1750
In 1660 and 1661, the monarchy, the court, and the Anglican Church were
restored to much of their former power and glory. This was accompanied
by a strong reaction across the country against the Puritan worldview. The
court revived the theater, although on the north bank this time; the Book
of Common Prayer was revised and mandated in all services of the Church
of England by the Act of Uniformity of 1662 (13 & 14 Chas. II, c. 4), and
censorship was once again imposed by the Licensing Act of 1662 (13 & 14
Chas. II, c. 33), which condemned “heretical, schismatical, blasphemous,
seditious and treasonable books, pamphlets and papers.” This time, the
censor was no longer a bishop but an official government licensor, Sir
Roger L’Estrange (1616–1704), whose sympathies were entirely Royalist.
The early 1660s therefore represent a shift in cultural power back to the
court and Church, the performing and fine arts, and away from the Word.
But could the clock really be turned back?
148 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
box, 1 shilling for a seat in the upper gallery. As a result, the audience
for Restoration theater was mostly aristocratic or fashionably mercantile.
The groundlings were shut out. This did not produce better audience
behavior, however. Restoration and Augustan audiences were notoriously
rowdy and self-regarding. Aristocrats still insisted on being seen, sitting
and even walking, onstage. Orange girls sold fruit, audibly, during the
performance, and fights or even duels might break out. As before, the
theaters were ensconced in an urban low-life culture of gambling dens and
bawdy houses, especially along Drury Lane.
When they could see and hear what was going on, Restoration audi-
ences enjoyed Elizabethan, Jacobean, and Caroline works, often in “mod-
ernized” versions. But they also saw themselves dramatized in two new
styles of drama, both written by courtiers with a court audience in mind:
the Restoration comedy of manners, written by the Duke of Buckingham,
Etherege, Sedley, Wycherley, and later William Congreve (1670–1729);
and rhymed heroic drama written by Buckingham, Dryden, and Thomas
Otway (1652–1685). The former style might be seen as related to the tra-
dition of city drama from the beginning of the century, but plays like
The Country Wife (1675) or The Man of Mode (1676) were set more fre-
quently at court or in country houses and addressed the tensions between
the artificial standards of behavior that reigned there and carnal human
desires. They also showcased the wit of the Restoration court: bad behav-
ior could be made palatable by charming expression. City merchants,
if they appeared, were ridiculed as pretentious, greedy, or vulgar. The
heroic plays, drawn from historical and legendary figures, often set in
exotic locations, revolved around issues of duty, loyalty, and royal power
that had wracked the English ruling class for two generations. In each
case, therefore, it was the preoccupations of the court and not the city that
prevailed. Writers still had to be careful, because prior to 1700, the lord
chamberlain’s chief goal was to avoid political controversy.
The Restoration court’s cultural hegemony was never exclusive, nor
was it long-lasting. Even at the height of its glory and fame under Charles II,
the royal household began to face political, social, and financial difficulties
that progressively undermined its attractiveness. First, the accessibility,
diversity, and cosmopolitanism of the court declined from the early 1660s
on, as first Dissenters and then Catholics became unwelcome there. This
process was accelerated by generational change: toward the end of the
seventies, the small circle of court “wits” that had dominated the artistic
and social life of the capital began to die, drift away, or become submerged
152 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
in the political struggle beginning to grip the nation. Finally, the Crown’s
chronic financial troubles affected the quality of court life. As early as
1662–63, Charles II was forced to suspend payments of pensions for one
year and abolish the tables of hospitality that had provided free meals for
courtiers for centuries. Subsequent retrenchments led to fewer balls and
plays and the elimination of the king’s French and Italian musicians.
James II launched an even greater retrenchment from 1685 to 1686,
cutting the size and expense of the household by about two-fifths. Admit-
tedly, the early years of James’s reign still saw frequent balls and plays.
His sponsorship of Wren’s extensive renovations at Whitehall, which cost
£35,000, almost rendered that palace worthy of its mission. In particu-
lar, the Catholic chapel he designed was filled with new commissions by
continental Catholic artists like Benedetto Gennari (1633–1715), Willem
Wissing (1656–1687), and Verrio, introducing styles of art and worship
heretofore little known in England. But whatever their aesthetic merits,
James II’s Catholic style and attempted Catholic restoration drove away
Protestant courtiers and provoked his ouster. After the Revolution of
1688/89, Catholics were permanently banned from court, the Catholic
Chapels Royal that Pepys found so interesting were closed, and much of
their artwork removed because they were given over to French Huguenot
and German Lutheran worship.
Under William and Mary there was a brief revival of court life, largely
owing to Mary’s artistic patronage and fun-loving personality. Mary was a
child of the Restoration court, and so she liked going to the theater, host-
ing court balls and drawing rooms, and even visiting London shops and
fairs. She collected delftware, revived the tradition of needlework among
English court ladies, and patronized Henry Purcell for magnificent birth-
day odes. Her sudden death from smallpox in December 1694 resulted
in a magnificent state funeral that paralyzed the streets of London, but
thereafter, the court grew quiet. William III’s poor health, lack of social
graces, and obsession with the war with France led him to prefer seclusion
at Kensington or Hampton Court to the sooty throng at Whitehall. In
subsequent reigns, Anne’s poor health and conversation and George I’s
desire to be left alone meant that drawing rooms were few and far between.
Simultaneously, the “rage of party” followed by the post-1714 Whig ascen-
dancy dictated that at any given time, one-half of the political world felt
unwelcome at court, while the diversion of government revenue toward
a succession of European wars left it less able to sustain patronage of the
arts and finer pleasures. The coup de grâce was delivered on January 4,
Fine and Performed Arts 153
1698 when the palace of Whitehall burned down. This disaster eliminated
at one stroke both the Crown’s principal venue for the pursuit of art and
pleasure and the one royal palace capable of housing a good percentage
of their courtly audience. The conflagration both sealed and symbolized
the court’s social and cultural decline. A century would pass before the
monarchy once again possessed a great palace in London.
The failure to rebuild or replace Whitehall marked the Crown’s
abandonment of any pretensions to maintain a continental-style Baroque
monarchy. None of this is to say that the monarch ceased to be an important
patron in the eighteenth century: today, royal palaces are filled with the
evidence to the contrary. In particular, the court’s patronage of the visual
arts, including painting, furniture, metalwork, and ceramics, remained
important. Members of the royal family attended the theater and concert
hall and bestowed the prestige and protection of royal sponsorship on
academies of music and art. Despite occasional periods of revival, how-
ever, the court could no longer claim to be the engine or leader of fashion,
“the focus where everything fascinating gathered, and where everything
exciting centred,”12 to use Walter Bagehot’s phrase.
From about 1680 and accelerating after 1700, the focus moved to the
metropolis itself. First, the leading aristocratic townhouses provided their
own hospitality and culture that at times bested the court. The period
from 1660 to 1750 was a great age for townhouse building. During this
period, important noble families erected Buckingham House (1702–1705),
Burlington House (1664–1665, remodeled according to the Palladian style
1717–1720), Devonshire House (1734–1737), Montagu House (1678; rebuilt
1686), and perhaps most spectacular of all, Marlborough House (1709–
1711), designed for the Churchills by Wren to be more magnificent than
the palace (St. James’s) next door. These mansions were filled with elegant
decor, old masters, sculpture, delftware, and curiosities brought back from
the Grand Tour by their aristocratic owners, as well as new commissions
by leading painters like Kneller, and later Thomas Gainsborough (1727–
1788), William Hogarth, Phillippe Mercier (?1691–1760), and Sir Joshua
Reynolds (1723–1792). Montagu House hosted concerts, and at various
points in the eighteenth century Marlborough House and Leicester House
provided a sort of anti-court for opposition politicians.
Aristocratic landlords also rebuilt much of London after the Fire and
developed the West End. We have already seen how the Russell family,
Earls of Bedford, developed Covent Garden. After 1660, that development
became the model for other aristocratic projects such as Bloomsbury,
154 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
a thrice-a-week schedule when the sovereign was well and the treasury full.
Moreover, London taverns, coffeehouses, pleasure gardens, and sporting
events mixed aristocrats with monied men, merchants, and professionals.
As a result, it was increasingly in these venues, and not at court, that
art and literature were commissioned, business transacted, political plans
laid, and one’s newly fashioned self could be put on display. Elite women
helped to shape the new urban sociability at balls, musical assemblies,
promenades, and frequent visits to the homes of other elite women.
Aristocrats also supported artists individually. In 1710, the German
musician George Frideric Handel, the greatest opera composer of the age,
came to London hoping to work for the English Crown. A few big royal
commissions did come his way, most famously the Water Music of 1717
and the Music for the Royal Fireworks of 1749. The first was composed to
accompany a vast water party organized by the court for the evening of
July 17 and 18, 1717. According to the Daily Courant, as King George
I sailed majestically in the royal barge to Chelsea for a picnic supper,
returning to Whitehall at 3 AM:
Many other Barges with Persons of Quality attended, and so great
a Number of Boats, that the whole river in a manner was cover’d: a
City Company’s Barge was employ’d for the Musick, wherein were 50
Instruments of all sorts, who play’d all the Way from Lambeth . . . the
finest Symphonies, composed express for this Occasion, by Mr. Hen-
del; which his Majesty liked so well, that he caus’d it to be plaid over
three times in going and returning.13
The Music for the Royal Fireworks was written to celebrate the signing
of the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, ending the War of the Austrian Suc-
cession, in 1749. It was to be the aural accompaniment to a magnificent
fireworks display in Green Park by the theatrical designer Giovanni Nic-
colò Servandoni (1695–1766). The frame was 410 feet long and 114 feet
high. The musicians played from a raised gallery above a statue of Peace
surrounded by Mars and Neptune, and a relief showing George II pre-
senting Peace to Britannia. Overlooking all was a sun. Unfortunately, on
that night, this sun exploded amid a general and unplanned conflagration.
The result was a spectacular fiasco in the short term, but since then both
the Water Music and the Royal Fireworks Music have become indelibly
associated with the vigorous spirit of eighteenth-century London.
Handel found such royal commissions rare. By the middle of George
I’s reign he was also composing anthems for the immensely wealthy James
156 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
books, travel books, and true crime narratives – was churned out by an
army of hack writers who congregated in the area around Moorfields
known as “Grub Street” (see Chapter 5). As this implies, a ready market
for literature of all kinds replaced the court as an author’s chief means
of support. Writers like Aphra Behn (?1640–1689) and Alexander Pope
(1688–1744) relied almost exclusively on sales (again, sometimes by Ton-
son) to an appreciative public, whereas Daniel Defoe largely abandoned
political writing for fiction. Of his four great novels, Robinson Crusoe
(1719), Moll Flanders, Journal of the Plague Year (1722), and Roxana
(1724), the last three are virtual journalistic exposés of London life ranging
from City to court and back again.
Increasingly after 1660, members of the merchant and professional
classes could afford to imitate their betters and so create demand in other
areas of consumption as well, by having a portrait painted, purchasing
maps and prints, or outfitting themselves with clocks and watches. Even
the lower middle and working classes of London were increasingly able
to afford something to decorate their digs: the prints that Hogarth made
from his paintings and engravings, costing as little as 6 pence apiece, were
directed at this market, and it made him a wealthy man. Hogarth’s famous
prints, like Defoe’s novels, frequently depicted the follies of London life –
A Harlot’s Progress (1732), A Rake’s Progress (1735), Industry and Idleness
(1747), and Beer Street and Gin Lane (1751; see Chapter 5). For all of
their exaggeration, they depict a London full of stories and types that
contemporaries would have recognized.
As this suggests, London was even more a subject of art during the
second half of our period than in the first. For example, the painters Leen-
dert Knijff, known in England as Leonard Knyff, and Giovanni Antonio
Canal, better known as Canaletto, followed the pre-Civil War example of
Visscher and Hollar and came to London. Knyff painted views of royal
palaces, many of them engraved by his fellow Dutchman Johannes Kip
(c. 1653–?1721) for his collection Britannia Illustrata (1707) and sold from
his house in St. John’s Street, Westminster. The Italian Canaletto had long
supplied his cityscapes to English aristocrats on the Grand Tour before
setting up shop at 16 Silver Street in London itself from 1746 to 1755. The
result was forty famous views capturing the eighteenth-century grandeur
of the city on the Thames.
It is perhaps significant that Knyff and Canaletto were foreigners,
because eighteenth-century Londoners tended to be less celebratory and
more satirical in portraying their city. The prints of Hogarth, the novels
Fine and Performed Arts 159
of Defoe, and the works of city poets describe a sometimes tawdry, dan-
gerous London, anything but the city of dreams that immigrants might
have expected. The anonymous Hell Upon Earth (1729) portrays “a great,
wicked, unweildy [sic] overgrown Town, one continued hurry of Vice and
Pleasure; where nothing dwells but Absurdities, Abuses, Accidents, Accu-
sations” though also “Admirations, Adventures.”15 This was, of course, a
common theme in the literature on cities dating back to Babylon, Athens,
and Rome. The aptly named Augustan Age had a great admiration for the
achievements of Rome in particular, and both John Dryden and Samuel
Johnson made the comparison with the Eternal City explicit when they
translated the Third Satire of Juvenal, a biting exposé of Roman life,
into its London equivalent. Johnson’s is called, innocuously enough,
“London: a Poem” (1738). The satire warns readers that the streets of
eighteenth-century London were dark, dangerous and full of shady char-
acters:
Welcome to London! And yet, the overall effect of the ensuing poem is a
wry celebration of London’s chaos: after all, if its problems are as bad as
Rome’s, then it must be as great as Rome.
Johnson’s use of an old form and a classical model was typical of the
Augustan Age. London poets adapted other traditional styles to the urban
experience. One such form was the pastoral, celebrating the placid joys of
country living. Represented here by Thomas Otway’s “Morning” from his
play, The Orphan (1680), such poems would seem to have no relevance
to London life:
of birds versus the call of Swift’s small-coal man and the chimney sweep;
the hard-bitten images of “brickdust Moll” and the turnkey, who performs
the same morning office for his “flock” of thieves that Otway’s happy
shepherd does for his sheep. Far from having a restful night, it is clear
that Betty – the stereotypical name for all maidservants – has spent the
wee hours in “her master’s bed” and that it is part of her morning ritual
to “discompose her own” to make it appear that she slept in it. London
is depicted as a place where nature and proper morality are inverted, the
Great Chain lying in tatters. On the one hand, a poem like Swift’s stands
as a warning of what can happen to society in the urban cauldron, but for
the most part it invites Londoners to “’ave a larf” at the seeming disorder
of their lives. Poems like this must have fostered a knowing solidarity
among readers, a recognition among veteran urban dwellers that, indeed,
“London is like that.” At the same time, such poems may have provided a
valuable warning to the literate newcomer. Thus, publications like Swift’s
“Description of a Morning” or Johnson’s “London: a Poem” were yet
another way in which Londoners learned how to be Londoners.
In fact, the early eighteenth century saw a plethora of poems and prose
that mocked London life to old residents, while warning of it to new
ones. These works do not merely entertain, however; they enlist readers
into the common culture of the city and assist them, by their advice
or by their humor, to cope with London’s sometimes unprecedented
challenges. Swift’s “Description of a City Shower” (1710) offers the city
equivalent of country advice, explaining, for example, that bad weather
is sure to follow when “Returning home at night, you’ll find the sink
(i.e., London’s gutter-sewers)/ Strike your offended sense with double
stink.” Thus natural country knowledge is replaced by city experience.
Similarly, Richard Steele’s essay for The Spectator No. 454, “The Hours
of London” (1712), replaces the seasons of the year and hours of the
agricultural day with the different rhythms and populations of the city:
The Hours of the Day and Night are taken up in the Cities of London
and Westminster, by People as different from each other as those who
are born in different Centuries. Men of Six a Clock give way to those
of Nine, they of Nine to the Generation of Twelve, and they of Twelve
disappear, and make Room for the fashionable World, who have made
Two a Clock the Noon of the Day.16
Once again, the natural world of the village seems inverted as the most
elevated creatures rise the latest.
162 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
John Gay’s Trivia: Or the Art of Walking the Streets of London (1716)
is, on one level, yet another “How to” guide for the uninitiated. But by
painting in vivid colors the sheer variety of London’s streets and portraying
them as contested space, full of challenges facing the unassuming rambler,
it turns the seemingly “trivial” business of perambulation into a heroic
act, worthy of celebration in an epic poem in three books, in imitation of
Homer or Virgil:
Through Winter Streets to steer your Course aright,
How to walk clean by Day, and safe by Night,
How jostling Crouds, with Prudence to decline,
When to assert the Wall, and when resign,
I sing: Thou, Trivia, Goddess, aid my Song,
Thro’ spacious Streets conduct thy Bard along;
By thee transported, I securely stray
Where winding Alleys lead the doubtful Way,
The silent Court, and op’ning Square explore,
And long perplexing Lanes untrod before.
“I sing” is a consciously ridiculous echo of the opening of Virgil’s Aeneid
as translated by Dryden. Clearly the heroic age is past and country wisdom
useless: to walk the streets of London is to brave dangers demanding new
urban skills.
Partly for this reason the second half of our period saw the publication
of numerous prose guidebooks to London, like today’s Michelin or Fodor’s
guides. Some, like Robert Seymour’s A Survey of London, Westminster,
&c. (1734), based on Stow’s early seventeenth-century guide, give the
“official” story, the equivalent of a Knyff or Canaletto view, heralding
the antiquity, history, size, and public splendors of a well-ordered city:
“London is the Metropolis of Great Britain, the Seat of her Monarchs, the
largest in Extent, the fairest built, and most populous, and best inhabited
City in Europe, or perhaps the whole World . . . ”, etc., etc. By the 1730s,
London’s size and variety, the consequences of a burgeoning economy,
were seen as good things, points of favorable comparison with Paris
or Rome. But other works, such as Ned Ward’s London Spy (1698–
1703), or the anonymous Hell Upon Earth (mentioned earlier), or A Trip
Through the Town, Containing Observations on the Humours of the Age,
portray a different London: raw, unexpurgated, satirical. Following in
the footsteps of Guilpin and Marston, they take the reader to places
like Bedlam, Wapping, or Rag Fair. Ward claimed a didactic purpose:
Fine and Performed Arts 163
“Wherein Young Gentlemen may see the Vices of the Town, without
their dangerous experience; and learn the better to avoid those Snares
and practicable Subtleties which Trappen [trick] many to their Ruin.”17
But when A Trip Through the Town (1735) informs the reader that “We
have a Play-House to every Parish, and more than a thousand Taverns, and
Brothels, to one Church,”18 the tone is neither indignant nor celebratory,
but matter of fact: the reader is assumed to be an adult and can make up
his or her own mind. This too seems modern.
Finally, from the mid-seventeenth century on, London offered to the
prosperous one more amusement: leaving it. That is, road and carriage
engineering had improved to the point that, if a moderately successful
merchant or government official grew sick of the “Crouds of miserable
People” described in A Trip Through the Town, he could easily make an
occasional day trip into the country, as Samuel Pepys observed at the end
of one such excursion, to Epsom, on July 14, 1667:
Mrs. Turner mightily pleased with my resolution, which I tell her is
never to keep a country-house, but to keep a coach and with my wife
on the Saturday and to go sometimes for a day to this place and then
quite to another place; and there is more variety, and as little charge
and no trouble, as there is in a country-house. Anon it grew dark, and
as it grew dark we had the pleasure to see several Glow wormes, which
was mighty pretty. . . . 19
Thus, the brave new London of the second half of our period offered
something for every taste – even for those who did not like the place. Its
culture had broken free from court and church to cater to aristocratic,
middle-brow, and popular tastes. The result was a truly uncontrollable
public sphere in which original thought and artistic creativity could have
free rein, so long as they sold. We can see this development even more
clearly if we focus on a new branch of the literary arts that arose and
flourished in London during our period: the press.
5. The Public Sphere and Popular Culture
164
The Public Sphere and Popular Culture 165
The Licensing Act lapsed in 1679 just as the Exclusion Crisis began
and an opposition Whig Parliament was elected (see the Introduction and
Chapter 7). This led to another explosion of publications – tracts, poems,
and prints – debating the respective power of Crown and Parliament.
Many of these were coordinated by the Whig leader, Anthony Ashley
Cooper, Earl of Shaftesbury (1621–1683), who took advantage of London’s
concentration of literary talent and the lapse of censorship to mount
a sophisticated propaganda campaign. Writers like John Locke (1632–
1704) and Algernon Sidney (1623–1683) argued for Parliament’s right
to bar Charles II’s Catholic brother, James, Duke of York, from the
throne. The Tories, defending the Duke’s right to succeed, countered
with propaganda of their own, such as John Dryden’s masterful satire
“Absalom and Achitophel” (1681).
When the Duke of York ascended the throne as James II in 1685, he
secured from Parliament a renewal of the Licensing Act for seven years
(1 Jac. II., c. 17), with censorship once again exercised by L’Estrange.
Although William of Orange evicted James from the throne and L’Estrange
from his office three years later, the Licensing Act remained. The
Williamite regime tried first a Whig, then a Tory licensor, which meant
that each side felt itself oppressed. Charles Blunt (1654–1693) and others
revived Milton’s arguments against censorship, circulating them hand to
hand under the licensor’s nose. Meanwhile, the booksellers, bookbinders,
and printers petitioned Parliament, arguing that the Licensing Act stifled
trade and yet had not succeeded in suppressing offensive materials or
defusing political discord. The act was renewed again for just two years
in 1693 (4 & 5 Will. III and Mary II, c. 24), but when it lapsed in 1695
the House of Commons resolved, over the intentions of the Lords, not
to renew. It did not do so because of any widespread conviction that the
press ought to be free or that censorship per se was a bad thing: both
Whigs and Tories saw its uses, especially in time of war, although each
would of course censor the other. Rather, censorship was clearly inef-
ficient and inconvenient in practice: the Commons complained that the
licensor’s fees were too high, that foreign books interdicted at the Custom
House lay there so long waiting for licensing that their pages mildewed
in the damp riverside air, and no one liked the possibility of having his
house or place of business searched by the messenger of the press. Thus
did such practical concerns as commerce, convenience, and privacy lead
London to pioneer another hallmark of modernity, a free press. Whatever
the reason, the Victorian historian T. B. Macaulay (1800–1859) thought
The Public Sphere and Popular Culture 171
that the series of votes allowing the Licensing Act to lapse in 1695 had
“done more for liberty and for civilisation than the Great Charter or the
Bill of Rights.”6
reputed dying speech, all of which reaffirmed his loyalty to the exiled
Stuarts.
Nor was the government the journalist’s only foe. This period has
been characterized by “the Rage of Party.” Most aspects of public life were
divided into Whig and Tory sides, and print culture was no exception.
Nearly all newspapermen and their productions sided with one party
or the other, and because all were in competition with each other, they
sometimes attacked each other with stronger weapons than quills and
newsprint. Both Dryden and Tutchin were beaten within an inch of their
lives on the streets of London by gangs set on them by rival writers. Abel
Roper, the editor of The Post Boy, used to get material out of the death
threats he received.
Finally, most writers made a very poor, hand-to-mouth living. The
best could survive fairly well on the profits of their newspapers (both
sales and advertising): the editor of The Post Man took in £600 a year,
whereas the writer of The London Gazette, a paid government employee,
made anywhere from £60 to £300. But more occasional contributors to
the Gazette could expect just £7. Moreover, the newspaperman had to
reserve part of each penny he made for printers, carriers, and anyone
else who was instrumental in producing and distributing his work. Many
writers hired themselves out as polemical hacks, churning out pamphlets
for whichever of the two parties happened to be paying. By the first
decade of the eighteenth century, the government kept a stable of writers
on hand: as secretary of state and then lord treasurer, Robert Harley, Earl
of Oxford employed both Defoe and Swift. Subsequently, Robert Walpole
kept a less distinguished battery of writers at his service. Like any other
profession, journalists even had their own precinct of the town: many of
them congregated around Grub Street, just north of the wall, in the poor
Moorfields area. In the eighteenth century, “Grub Street” came to mean
the Gentlemen of the Press, with even less complimentary connotations
than the term “Fleet Street” today.
The necessity for authorial circumspection was reflected in the subject
matter of early newspapers. Most were born in war and that, combined
with the avid interest of merchants and financiers in the shipping news,
meant that they were filled with foreign intelligence: battles, ships, and
cargoes lost to French privateers, diplomatic initiatives, ceremonies at
continental courts. It could be argued that this steady diet of information
about affairs beyond England helped create the cosmopolitan mind-set
174 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
of what was fast becoming a world city. Foreign news was also safer to
print. This is in contrast to contemporary political pamphlets, which took
on domestic issues avidly, although even here the particulars were often
disguised with allegorical or foreign names to avoid trouble: thus The
Secret History of Queen Zarah and the Zarazians (1705 and 1711) is a thinly
veiled satire on Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough.
When domestic news was reported, it was presented in a partisan
fashion. In general, The Daily Courant adhered to the middle of the
road, The London Gazette was pro-government, The Post Boy Tory, and
The Flying Post Whig. Take the following story from 1713. Three years
before, the Rev. Henry Sacheverell (1674–1724), a firebrand High Tory
preacher, had been impeached by Parliament for delivering a sermon in
1709 attacking the Revolution of 1688 (see Chapter 7). His sentence was to
be suspended from preaching for three years. The Tory Post Boy reported
the end of his suspension as follows:
On Sunday last, in the Afternoon, the Doctor preach’d the First time,
after the Expiration of his Sentence, at his Church of St. Saviours
Southwark. The prodigious Multitude of his Congregation is incon-
ceivable to those who did not see it, and inexpressible by those who
did; As was the Excessive Joy which was shewn by so many Thou-
sands at his returning to the Exercise of his Function. He preach’d a
most Excellent Sermon, which his worst enemies must praise, if they
have any Shame in them.
The Whig Flying Post reported this differently:
Last Sunday Dr. Sacheverall preached his first publick Sermon, since
he was silenc’d, at St. Mary Overy’s Church in Southwark, on Luke
23 v. 32. Father forgive them for they know not what they do. There
was a very great Mob to hear him, and his Sermon lasted above two
Hours.8
On the surface, each reports the same event, but the contrast in language
is obvious enough: to the Tory reporter, Sacheverell’s auditors are a
“prodigious Multitude” and a “Congregation”; to the Whig, “a very great
Mob,” implying lower-class origins and possible violence. To the Tory, his
sermon was “most Excellent”; to the Whig, it “lasted above two Hours.”
So much for the hard news, objectively reported!
A final obvious difference between a modern newspaper and that of
1704 is the proportion of its content devoted to advertisements: obviously,
The Public Sphere and Popular Culture 175
very well have allowed a century before. Not every published opinion was
orthodox, however: we have already noted how Defoe’s Shortest Way with
Dissenters mocked the Anglican hegemony. There was also a great deal
of satirical poetry, most notably several collections of Poems on Affairs of
State, that would never have been allowed before. Finally, as in any modern
bookshop, we also find advertisements for books of self-improvement of
mind and body: books on how to learn Latin, how to make wine, how
to be an effective secretary, how to write poetry. There were numerous
ads for beauty aids, including the first known promotions for weight loss
remedies: early in 1710, just after the Christmas feasting season, we find
advertisements for Pilula contra Obesitatem, which “if taken according to
the Directions given with each Box, never fail’d carrying off Fatness.”10
This reminds us that London was about self-fashioning. Thus, the ad for
Instructions for Gentlemen to Know Whether a Picture be well Design’d, well
Painted and an Original (1707) is symptomatic of four great metropolitan
developments: first, the rise of a London art market; second, the new
wealth flowing through the metropolis, which enabled minor gentry and
prosperous merchants to develop a collection; third, the possibility of
fraud as unscrupulous sellers took advantage of buyers with no artistic
training; and fourth, the increasing emphasis on affecting the manner of
a gentleman in a society in which social rank was increasingly negotiable.
Nothing could be more modern.
It is significant that these ads offered the possibility of what amounted
to private instruction; no one need ever know that the reader did not,
heretofore, know how to tell a good painting. If London were a place
to reinvent oneself, this was because it offered both information and
anonymity: it cannot be overstressed how necessary was such easy and
discreet access to knowledge for a population of immigrants, unmoored
from local customs, support networks, or trusted counsel. The need for
knowledge discreetly acquired was nowhere more important than in the
area of health. We have already noted that London was insalubrious,
yet few had the money for a physician’s care, and so most people self-
medicated. One way to plot a course of health care was to follow the ads in
the paper because, long before the Internet, London newspapers provided
discreet information about, and access to, medicines and practitioners.
There were ads for cures of gout, king’s evil, toothache, and venereal
disease. In the last case, especially, the anonymity provided by newspapers
must have been a relief to anyone afflicted with so stigmatic an illness. Thus
the ad for A Practical Scheme of the Secret Disease (1713) stresses its ability
to effect a cure “without Sip-Slops of Physick, Suspicion, Confinement,
The Public Sphere and Popular Culture 177
These are to give Notice, That Mary Kirleus, Widow of John Kirleus,
Son of Dr. Tho. Kirleus, a Collegiate Physician of London, and sworn
Physician in Ordinary to K. Charles II is the only Person that sells
(exactly prepared) his famous Drink and Pill, which is eminently
experienced to cure all Ulcers, Sores, Scabs, Itch, Scurfs, Scurvies,
Leprosies, Venereal and French Disease, Running of the Reins, and
all such Malignities, though never so Inveterate, in all Constitutions
at all Seasons of the Year. . . . 12
Query, if I may not without his leave remove to some place where I am
not known, and there take up an honest (though inferior) Employ to
maintain my self? Or what Course will you Advise me to take, to keep
178 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
Predictably, the committee’s answer chose the wisdom of age over the
enthusiasms of youth, tempering a traditional view of parent–child rela-
tions with humanity and practicality:
As Youth is more subject to error than Old Age; so ’tis very probable
your father is a better Judge of the Figure you ought to make in the
World than your self: ’Tis not a certain Argument that you really want a
thing, because you desire it. . . . But supposing you are not mistaken in
your Judgement, We think you ought not to remove yourself without
your Fathers Knowledge, because your Body is his proper Goods;
You should make use of the Interest of Friends to represent the Case
to him; . . . 14
Overall, the aim of The Athenian Mercury was the encouragement of virtue.
It was thus part of a larger Reformation of Manners movement begun in the
1690s by Anglican and Dissenting clergy and encouraged by both Mary II
and later Anne (see discussion later).
The aspiration toward mutual aid that characterizes the Athenian
Mercury can also be seen in the “community bulletin board” aspect of
early newspaper adverts. For example, there were frequent notices of
missing persons or pets:
Lost the 20th Instant between St. James’s Square and the Old Palace-
Yard, a little Cross-Shap’d Dog, of the Lurcher Kind, of a yellow
brown Colour. ’Twas taken up by an ill-look’d Fellow, a notorious
Dog-Stealer, and led by a Blue String towards York-Buildings. He
answers to the Name of Bugg, and leaps over a stick. Whoever brings
him next Door to the Great House in Dean’s Yard, shall have Two
Shillings Reward.15
been stolen from their owners. As we shall see in Chapter 6, it was standard
practice for a thief to sell his ill-gotten goods to a fence, who would then
place an ad in a London newspaper and offer to return the booty, for a
small fee.
Early newspapers thus provided far more than news. They were repos-
itories of general knowledge and advice. They were counselors, mouth-
pieces, and community bulletin boards. They provided periodicity; that
is, their daily or thrice weekly appearance gave Londoners a rhythm to
the days of the week. For readers not directly involved in, say, the plight
of the potentially prodigal son or the loss of poor Bugg, they must have
provided the sorts of often trivial subjects of discourse that people seem
to need to maintain cordiality and smooth social relations – what we today
call water-cooler talk. Insofar as they offered guidance to those new to the
metropolis, they formed one of the institutions that helped immigrants
to become Londoners, while knitting all of its inhabitants, old and new,
together. Robert Kirk, the visiting Scotsman, concluded of the metropolis
that “Few in it know the fourth part of its streets, far less can they get intel-
ligence of the hundredth part of the special affairs and remarkable passages
in it.” But he also saw the potential unifying influence of the press – “unless
by public printed papers.”16 Newspapers thus had the potential to pro-
vide a degree of social cohesion, of common experience otherwise lacking
in the great conurbation: knowledge was shared through the medium of
newsprint from Londoner to Londoner, many of whom gathered together
in small groups to hear it read at their local coffeehouse. This is rather
different from the parish church, but it provided some of the same sense
of community – when it did not divide people into Whigs and Tories.
its early peak with two magazines that appeared at the end of Queen
Anne’s reign: The Tatler, edited by Richard Steele from April 12, 1709
to January 2, 1711, and The Spectator, edited by Joseph Addison, which
appeared from March 1, 1711 to December 6, 1712 and again from June 18
to December 20, 1714. The Tatler claimed to relay news gleaned from
the coffeehouses, but in reality both reported on topics of general inter-
est devised by their authors, for the most part Addison or Steele or
Addison’s cousin Eustace Budgell (1686–1737). Both periodicals sought
to “enliven Morality with Wit, and to temper Wit with Morality.”17 Both
purported to be written within a frame device by an anonymous, Olympian
observer of London life, The Tatler’s Isaac Bickerstaffe and The Spectator’s
Mr. Spectator.
This frame device was a brilliant inspiration and a prime attraction
for contemporary Londoners. First, these fictional personae provided the
anonymity that all Augustan journalists required. Second, they added an
element of intrigue to the whole enterprise: who was Mr. Spectator, inquir-
ing readers wanted to know. Might he be walking down the same street or
sitting in the same coffeehouse as the reader at the very moment that the
latter was scanning his paper? Third, they humanized the narrators of the
two magazines, making them characters with their own preoccupations,
quirks, and foibles. The Spectator went even further by creating a circle of
characters around Mr. Spectator to represent different types in Augustan
Society. There was Sir Roger de Coverley, an old-fashioned country gen-
tleman; an unnamed lawyer from the Inns of Court; Sir Andrew Freeport,
a London merchant; Captain Sentry, a retired military man; Will Hon-
eycomb, a gallant; and finally a clergyman who “visits us but seldom.”18
All of these types would have been recognized by contemporary readers.
They represent a variety of crucial London interest groups with which
prosperous readers might identify. Thus Addison draws his readers in
and creates the atmosphere of a club.
Note who is omitted from the club: there are no craftsmen, laborers,
or servants. Indeed, working London is almost entirely absent, because
this publication is intended for smart society. There is no real politician:
although Addison and Steele were both Whigs, they were careful to
avoid blatant partisanship, because that could only have cut down on their
readership. There were other essay magazines for that. Above all, although
the Tatler eventually introduced the narrator’s sister, Mrs. Jenny Distaff,
The Spectator’s club contained no women. Rather, the tone is sometimes
The Public Sphere and Popular Culture 181
I found by the Discourse of the Actors, that there were great Designs
on foot for the Improvement of the Opera; that it had been proposed
to break down a part of the Wall, and to surprize the Audience with
a Party of an hundred Horse, and that there was actually a Project of
bringing the New-River into the House, to be employed in Jetteaus and
Water-works. This Project, as I have since heard, is post-poned ‘till
the Summer-Season; when it is thought the Coolness that proceeds
from Fountains and Cascades will be more acceptable and refreshing
to People of Quality. In the mean time, to find out a more agreeable
Entertainment for the Winter-Season, the Opera of Rinaldo is filled
with Thunder and Lightning, Illuminations, and Fireworks; which
the Audience may look upon without catching Cold, and indeed
without much Danger of being burnt; for there are several Engines
filled with Water, and ready to play at a Minute’s Warning, in case
any such Accident should happen. However, as I have a very great
Friendship for the Owner of this Theater, I hope that he has been wise
enough to insure his House before he would let this Opera be acted
in it.
Here we see the Spectator’s talent for irony and exaggeration. Part of the
humor derives from the fact that much of this is only just implausible,
and in fact Mr. Spectator here mixes real occurrences – Rinaldo was an
opera by Handel that received its triumphant premier just days before, on
February 24 – with the fantastical and exaggerated, thus holding up the
184 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
whole world of opera to ridicule. (Given the opera’s success, he may also
be revealing some professional jealousy.) The joke seems to be that people,
who should normally suspend their disbelief for an evening in the theater,
need ever more realistic and spectacular effects to enjoy themselves. This
should sound familiar to modern filmgoers. Subsequent paragraphs build
on this by reporting ever-wilder rumors that John Rich is contemplating
intruding a real cat and the requisite number of mice into the tale of
Dick Whittington; and that “there is a Treaty on Foot with London and
Wise (who will be appointed Gardeners of the Play-House) to furnish the
Opera of Rinaldo and Armida with an Orange-Grove.” George London
(d. 1714) and Henry Wise (1653–1738) were famous gardeners who had
done work for William III and Queen Anne at Hyde Park, St. James’s,
and Kensington. Once more the Spectator roots his humor in the real
experience of Londoners by dropping names that his readers would have
known.20
In one sense, The Tatler and The Spectator established for periodicals
the tradition of smart cultural observation peppered with in-jokes for the
natives and cognoscenti, such as one might read in the modern Private Eye
or The New Yorker. They also anticipate the sort of “man-in-the-street”
observational column that would be practiced in the twentieth century
by journalists like Jimmy Breslin (b. 1930) in New York and Mike Royko
(1932–1997) in Chicago, or in the twenty-first by an infinite number of
bloggers. As any reader of those productions knows, part of their attraction
is in providing water-cooler talk, a communal reading experience based
on shared familiarity with the city that transcends class and education:
we can all take part in the conversation because we have all been to
that corner, shopped in that store, or drunk in that bar. Finally, there is
something exciting about one’s own familiar haunts being held up to the
world. It validates one’s own taste and experience and increases one’s
self-importance – no small thing in the modern, anonymous metropolis.
So here, once again, the press brought Londoners together in a shared
experience, creating a sense of community among its readership every
third day, but only certain Londoners: as in a guild or a London club,
women and most workers were shut out.
Some idea of the degree to which essay periodicals could create com-
munity is indicated by Spectator No. 8, March 9, 1711, which purports to
print letters to the editor. The qualification arises from the suspicion that
the letters were written by Addison himself, for what they reveal about
their authors is ridiculous:
The Public Sphere and Popular Culture 185
The reader is left to wonder precisely which vices are performed in the
correspondent’s own family! If the author is in fact Addison, he seems to be
sending up the reformers of manners, Anglican and Dissenting clergymen
and vestrymen, JPs, and general busybodies who would seek to regulate
the stage, the printed word, and personal behavior, in London especially:
I am no less acquainted with the particular Quarters and Regions of
this great Town, than with the different Parts and Distributions of the
whole Nation. I can describe every Parish by its Impieties, and can
tell you in which of our Streets Lewdness prevails, which Gaming has
taken the Possession of, and where Drunkenness has got the better
of them both. When I am disposed to raise a Fine for the Poor, I
know the Lanes and Allies that are inhabited by common Swearers.
When I would encourage the Hospital of Bridewell, and improve the
Hempen Manufacture, I am very well acquainted with all the Haunts
and Resorts of Female Night-walkers.21
In short, the man is an expert on vice, which allows him to offer crucial
lessons, discreetly imparted, in how to be a Londoner.
The Spectator was a great success. It was only partially in jest that
Addison wrote in issue No. 10, March 12, 1711, that “I hear this great City
inquiring Day by Day after these my papers, and receiving my Morning
Lectures with a becoming Seriousness and Attention.”22 In this issue, he
informs the reader that his publisher prints 3,000 copies a day. Allowing
20 readers per issue, that comes to 60,000 pairs of eyes, or one-tenth of the
population of London. Although Addison and Steele became exhausted
186 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
and retired Mr. Spectator by the end of 1714, they launched, separately
or together, additional essay magazines like The Guardian (1713), The
Englishman (1713–1714), and The Freeholder (1717–1718). Others did so as
well. Defoe’s Review and Swift’s Examiner were unabashedly political. To
stifle this new and potentially unruly public sphere, the Harley government
introduced a Stamp Duty in 1711 (10 Anne, c. 18) that effectively doubled
the price of newspapers to two pence or more. Still, people bought them.
Two decades later Henry St. John, Viscount Bolingbroke’s letters to The
Craftsman (1726–1750), at 10,000 copies a printing, were a constant thorn
in the side of Prime Minister Walpole. Walpole was sometimes known
as “the Poet’s Foe,” because he used whatever means the government
had at its disposal to prosecute and silence opposition writers. These
included establishing an Examiner of Plays and reviving the Stamp Act to
again double the price of periodicals. In 1743, hawkers selling unlicensed
newspapers were targeted, but the flood could not be stemmed. In 1724
London had three daily papers, seven that appeared three times a week,
and six weeklies. Between 1730 and 1750, there were six morning papers
and six evening papers.
In short, by 1750 the genie was well out of the bottle. Political and
cultural figures had to put up with the fact that the gentlemen of the
London press could write what they wanted and their readership would
lap it up. But the first relatively free press in the world did more than simply
bring down the powerful or amuse the masses. It offered assistance, advice,
entertainment, civilization, even a sense of belonging to those who might
otherwise have felt adrift in the big city. The press was therefore one of
those crucial institutions of London life that served to ameliorate the worst
aspects of the modern urban experience and turn men and women into
Londoners. It did so in close conjunction with another set of London
institutions: inns, taverns, coffeehouses, and clubs.
all these occasions also divided the community, both by excluding lesser
members and (usually) women, and presumably by the order in which
people sat. Historians of cooking like Sara Pennell have demonstrated
the unifying and dividing potential of the hearth and kitchen, a gendered
space if there ever was one, and how the possession of a kitchen and/or
the utensils necessary to cook indicated status. Political historians like
Newton Key have shown how Whigs and Tories used ritual feasting in the
late seventeenth century as a tool to advance their agendas by associating
the values of community and hierarchy with the feasters, and anarchy
and disunity with those not invited. Eating and drinking in early modern
London therefore had class, gender, and party dimensions.
Historians have also learned to listen carefully to the conversation
and social interaction that happened over food and drink. Talk became a
self-conscious activity in eighteenth-century London, with witty, erudite,
and polite conversation especially prized. For aristocratic women, this
took place on visits to other women. The great age of the bluestocking
and aristocratic salons really began just as our period ended, but as early
as the 1680s, Louis de Kéroualle, Duchess of Portsmouth (1649–1734),
one of Charles II’s mistresses, turned her lodgings at Whitehall into an
alternative to court drawing rooms. In the 1720s and 1730s, Lady Mary
Wortley Montagu (1689–1762) maintained a social network that included
many of London’s best and brightest. For aristocratic men, such sociability
took place in inns, taverns, coffeehouses, and clubs.
Between 1550 and 1750, as the cityscape changed and expanded,
traditional meeting places like the inn and the tavern were joined by the
coffeehouse, the club, and the pleasure garden, products of London’s bur-
geoning economic reach and fluid social scene. The result was an informal
network of institutions that provided some of the conviviality and emo-
tional support that many had left behind in the village. London’s watering
holes played a crucial role in welcoming and acclimating new Londoners,
while sustaining community among old ones. Indeed, as the established
Church, the craft guild, and the neighborhood parish lost some of their
influence in the expanding metropolis, these secular institutions filled
some of their social function. But, as with guild and parish, none provided
community for all Londoners at all times and places. To repeat, eating
and drinking are class- and gender-based activities: where, with whom,
even when you ate were determined by your status. Inns and taverns
were expensive and exclusive, attracting an upper, middling, and in the
case of taverns, mostly male clientele. Membership in clubs was restricted
188 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
to elite men. Alehouses attracted a lower class and more localized clien-
tele of both sexes. Coffeehouses are sometimes said to have been more
democratic than say, taverns, but their customer base tended to divide
across occupational lines and probably excluded the poorest Londoners
and most women. In other words, if Londoners sought companionship
at such establishments, they did so selectively, along class, gender, neigh-
borhood, and occupational lines. At board or bar, at least, London echoed
the hierarchical and sometimes divisive world of the village.
Inns
Early modern London inns operated like today’s full-service hotels, offer-
ing accommodation, stabling, food, drink, even entertainment in the form
of occasional plays in their open courtyards. There were about 200 of
them in the metropolis by the 1730s. Many were very old. Some began life
as bishop’s or abbot’s palaces that changed hands at the Reformation: in
the Strand, the abbot of Glastonbury’s house became the Dolphin; that of
Lewes, the Walnut Tree; that of Peterborough, the Bell. Before the arrival
of the railways, inns were London’s transportation hubs, located at the
termini of major roads and stage lines into the countryside. For exam-
ple, in the eighteenth century, the Bath and Bristol coaches to the west
started and ended at the Chequer, Charing Cross. This is perhaps one
reason that Samuel Johnson thought “the full tide of human existence is at
Charing-cross.”23 Other western passengers boarded or alighted at inns
along the Strand, Fleet Street, or Holborn. Passengers for the northwest
and midlands started off at inns in Aldersgate; those for the north and
east at inns in Bishopsgate like the Bull, with thirty-three hearths; or the
Dolphin, which served East Anglia. Inns congregating around Borough
High Street, Southwark like the George (still in operation today) and the
Tabard, linked to the Dover Road and accommodated passengers for
the south and east. Innkeepers were prosperous businessmen, and by the
1750s many had diversified, investing in their own stage coach lines; in
the nineteenth century, railroads would expand on the concept, building
massive hotels attached to their termini. As all this implies, inns were sig-
nificant structures, rising two, three, or four stories. Often, they presented
a plain, narrow front to the street. It was beyond that, in their galleried
courtyards, that coaches stopped, passengers alighted, horses were taken
to stables, and entertainments could be staged (see Illustration 5.2). The
ground floor would have a tavern and shops as well, forming a smaller
version of the Royal or New Exchanges.
The Public Sphere and Popular Culture 189
Taverns mainly provided wine: until the eighteenth century the most
popular were claret (from the French clairet), a pale red wine from France,
and sack (from the Spanish secco), a dry white wine from Spain. Following
the passage of high tariffs on French wine in 1678 and the Methuen Treaty
with Portugal in 1703, malaga, sherry, and port became the preferred drinks
of the upper classes. Like inns, taverns were substantial structures, usually
operating primarily on the upper floor of a large house, often with shops
or a spacious barroom on the ground floor. Taverns offered additional
services, including food and rooms for accommodation or for meetings.
Indeed, their multiplicity of rooms – the Pope’s Head just off Lombard
Street had fifteen – meant that, once the potboy or drawer brought the
drinks, patrons could have some privacy. This was crucial to anyone with
an assignation to make or a plot to hatch. Both Pepys and Boswell engaged
with women, in the latter case prostitutes, in tavern rooms. The wits of
Charles II’s court found seclusion, unavailable at Whitehall, at Locket’s,
Charing Cross, the Rose in Russell Street, or the Cock in Bow Street.
During the Exclusion Crisis, the King’s Head Tavern, on the corner of
Fleet Street and Chancery Lane, hosted the meetings of the Whig Green
Ribbon Club: one wonders if the tavern were chosen ironically, given its
name. The plans for the Rye House Plot, to assassinate Charles II and
his brother the Duke of York, were hatched in the back rooms of taverns
like the Angel near the Royal Exchange, or the Five Bells in the Strand.
On a lighter note, oyster girls sold their wares and musicians performed
in taverns. Thus, on March 27, 1661, after dinner at the Dolphin Tavern,
Tower Street, Pepys recalled:
a great deal of mirth. And there stayed till 11 a-clock at night. And
in our mirth, I sang and sometimes fiddled (there being a noise of
fiddlers there) and at last we fell to dancing – the first time that ever I
did in my life – which I did wonder to see myself to do.24
things you call for, the welcomer you are. . . . No, Sir; there is nothing
which has yet been contrived by man, by which so much happiness is
produced as by a good tavern or inn.25
one could supply one’s own food – say, meat bought at Smithfield or a fish
bought at Billingsgate – to be cooked at the local tavern. In the eighteenth
century, steak- or chophouses were popular: Boswell particularly liked
Clifton’s near the Temple and Dolly’s near St. Paul’s in Paternoster Row.
On December 15, 1762 Johnson’s biographer “had a large, fat beefsteak”
at Dolly’s and then attended a cock fight in St. James’s Park.26
Alehouses like the Cock in the Strand operated on a far less grand
scale than taverns or ordinaries, providing just beer and ale, period. In
1722 porter, a strong, dark, bitter beer, was introduced and soon became
Londoners’ preferred potable. These drinks, often flavored with sugar,
spices, or cherries, were staples in London because the water was not
entirely safe to drink. Indeed, because ale can be brewed easily at home,
in theory, anyone could open his or her place of residence to the public
as an alehouse, hence the contemporary term public house, shortened
by the end of the eighteenth century to pub. As this implies, alehouses
tended to be smaller and more ad hoc than taverns: there were many of
them (some 6,000 by the 1730s), but they tended to have much shorter
histories than the great Cheapside or Strand establishments, coming and
going at the whim of their owners. They also attracted a localized clientele:
unlike inns and taverns, alehouses looked not outward but inward, to the
neighborhood. The cheap price of beer and ale, a penny a pint, 2 or 3
pence for a quart, meant that they attracted a more casual, lower-class
clientele, which tended to drive away their betters.
In fact, there were many reasons for the upper classes to shun ale-
houses, especially during the first half of the period. The very clientele
of the alehouse – undiluted, unsupervised, and lower class – was, within
the context of the Great Chain of Being, dangerous. Alehouses brought
crowds of such people together and allowed them to engage in unregu-
lated, unmonitored speech. The government feared treasonous speech,
the established Church worried about heresy and the mixing of the sexes,
and both were uneasy about the emboldening effect of alcohol. Worse,
as Thomas Dekker indicated in his plays, alehouses were thought to be
the familiar haunts and crucial points of exchange for thieves and fences,
pimps and prostitutes. Respectable contemporaries shuddered at the mis-
chief supposedly planned or undertaken there. According to William
Vaughn, “here breed conspiracies, combinations, common conjurations,
detractions, defamations.”27 The government of Edward VI ordered JPs
to require alehouses to take out licenses. That effort was renewed in the
The Public Sphere and Popular Culture 193
a penny. Dead drunk for twopence. Clean straw for nothing.” The result
was the Gin Craze of the 1730s and 1740s. Between 1727 and 1735, gin sales
rose from 3.5 to 6.5 million gallons, and by 1739 there were more than
8,000 spirit-houses in London. The death rate also rose: gin addiction
helped make the 1740s the deadliest decade of our period. In 1751, William
Hogarth satirized the effects of gin in his two prints Gin Lane and Beer
Street. On Beer Street (see Illustration 5.3) everyone is happy and healthy;
business prospers, apart from the pawnshop and coffin maker; babies are
about to be made. Clearly, the alehouse had lost its stigma. In contrast, on
Gin Lane (see Illustration 5.4) everyone is sickly and near death; only the
pawnshop and coffin maker prosper, while, in a fundamental violation of
human nature, a gin-besotted mother neglects her child.
Coffeehouses
By the 1650s, London’s economic reach produced a new institution,
cheaper than the tavern and more respectable than the alehouse, where its
male inhabitants could congregate: the coffeehouse. Coffee was introduced
to England by Levant merchants in the mid-seventeenth century. It is
therefore surprising that the first recorded coffeehouse in England was
established well inland, at Oxford, in 1650. Its proprietor, one Jacob,
moved to London two years later and set up what some claim was the
first such metropolitan establishment at Holborn. Others credit Pasqua
Rosée (fl. 1651–1656), an immigrant from Smyrna, Turkey, who opened
the Smyrna coffeehouse (not to be confused with a later establishment of
the same name in Pall Mall) in St. Michael’s Alley, Cornhill in 1652. Rosée,
with a good Londoner’s entrepreneurial sense, promoted the exotic new
beverage in a handbill as a health drink, effective against headaches, dropsy,
gout, scurvy, miscarriages in pregnant women, “the spleen, hypocondriack
winds, or the like.” He was more accurate in asserting that coffee “will
prevent drowsiness and make one fit for business.”29 Perhaps because
the drink was much stronger then, with a heavy narcotic effect, it was an
immediate hit. By 1663 there were eighty-two coffeehouses in London, all
of which paid one shilling a year for their licenses. By 1739 their number
exceeded 550. Coffeehouses not only provided Turkish coffee and London
newspapers, but also tea from China, chocolate from the West Indies, and
tobacco from Virginia – the nascent British commercial empire brought to
your table. Above all, like the other institutions described in this chapter,
The Public Sphere and Popular Culture 195
Clubs
The increasing specialization of coffeehouses and the abandonment of
long tables for booths suggests that Londoners were willing to trade
conviviality and diversity for privacy and association based on similar
interests. Eventually, many of London’s most famous coffeehouses went
the way of Lloyd’s: linked to one particular interest, perhaps increasingly
uncomfortable with a diverse clientele that might include pickpockets
and con men, they evolved into exclusive clubs. By the mid-eighteenth
century, for example, White’s Chocolate House became an aristocratic
gambling club whose members included every prime minister from Sir
Robert Walpole to Sir Robert Peel (1788–1850); powerful men continue
to wager there in the twenty-first century. The Cocoa Tree and the
198 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
St. James’s also became exclusive. There were middle- and lower-class
clubs too, which explains why Johnson’s famous definition is so broad:
“an assembly of good fellows, meeting under certain conditions.”
Both livery companies and religious fraternities might be seen as
medieval clubs, but it was the genius of early modern Londoners to
divorce most such assemblies from work and religion. Early in the seven-
teenth century, Ben Jonson organized a literary society, the Apollo Club,
that met at the Devil Tavern, Fleet Street. The impulse for mutual soci-
ety seems to have grown acute from the end of the seventeenth century
as the court declined and the Reformation eliminated avenues of socia-
bility; by the early eighteenth century London had some 2,000 clubs.
Many early clubs were political: parliamentary tavern clubs during the
1640s; the Rota, which met at the end of the Protectorate at Miles’s Coffee
House, Westminster; or the Green Ribbon Club, which helped coordi-
nate Whig propaganda during the Exclusion Crisis. The Royal Society
started life as an informal scientific club at Oxford. Chartered by Charles
II in 1663, and assembling mostly at Gresham College near Bishopsgate,
its meetings brought together some of the most eminent scientists of the
day (Boyle [1627–1691], Halley [1656–1742], Hooke [1635–1703], New-
ton [1642–1727], Wren [1632–1723], et al.) with gentlemen amateurs like
Dryden, Evelyn, and Pepys. Under Queen Anne, the Tories had sev-
eral clubs: the October Club (after October ale, associated with country
values), which met at the Bell Tavern, Westminster; the March Club,
more radical than the October; and the Scriblerians, a literary society that
included Arbuthnot, Gay, Pope, Swift, and Thomas Parnell (1679–1718).
Arbuthnot was a physician to Queen Anne and an accomplished satirist;
the club met for occasional dinners in his lodgings at St. James’s and
Windsor, an example of the transition from court society to club society.
Encouraged by Lord Treasurer Oxford and held to the highest literary
standards by Swift, the Scriblerians produced some of the best politi-
cal satire of the early eighteenth century. Half a century later, beginning
in 1764, Samuel Johnson founded the nonpartisan “Club” that met at
the Turk’s Head Tavern, Gerrard St. and included many of the leading
cultural figures of the day: Boswell, the naturalist Sir Joseph Banks (1743–
1820), the politicians Edmund Burke (1730–1797) and Charles James Fox
(1749–1806), the actor Garrick, the poet Oliver Goldsmith (?1728–1774),
the painter Reynolds, the playwright Sheridan, and the political economist
Adam Smith (1723–1790).
The Public Sphere and Popular Culture 199
by the early eighteenth century the public sphere was too well established –
in the tavern, in the coffeehouse, in print – for the government to have any
chance of suppressing its secret adjuncts. Clubs continue to play a major
if controversial role in London life today. The controversy derives not
from their secrecy, but their exclusivity, as the oldest and most prestigious
have, true to their origin, tended to remain bastions of upper-class male
privilege. Their association with establishment values indicates that they
have come full circle from the days when they were considered dangerous
precisely because they were open to the discontented.
Pleasure Gardens
There was one more type of watering hole, specific to London, that
provided entertainment, conviviality, and a necessary form of privacy
throughout the period: the pleasure garden. Already, in our 1550 visit to
Southwark, we noted one of the first, Paris Garden. This was replaced
around 1660, but farther south along the riverbank, by the New Spring
Garden, later known as Vauxhall Gardens (see Illustration 5.6). Vauxhall
would persist, in one form or another, to 1859. It was the “New” Spring
Garden because there had been a Spring Gardens between Charing Cross
and St. James’s Park that operated as “the usual rendezvous for ladies
and gallants”36 from the late sixteenth century to the Restoration. To
confuse matters further, from 1702 to the mid-1760s there was also a New
Spring Garden in Stepney to the east. Londoners could also patronize
Marylebone Gardens north of the city from 1650 to 1778, and Ranelagh
Gardens near Chelsea to the west from 1742 to 1803. To this we might add
the Folly, a river pleasure barge moored in the middle of the Thames from
the 1660s to 1720. It was visited by Pepys and rather more controversially
by Mary II, for by the 1690s it was degenerating into a floating brothel.
Madame Tussaud’s had an eighteenth-century predecessor in Fleet Street
at Mrs. Salmon’s Waxworks, patronized by Hogarth and Boswell. Finally,
the outskirts of the city were dotted with smaller pleasure gardens, tea
gardens, beer gardens, bowling alleys, and natural wells, to which the
middle and working classes could stroll of an evening.
What, exactly, was a pleasure garden? A pleasure garden was an early
modern version of an amusement park – for adults. Patrons could saunter
along meandering walks behind high hedges, stroll beautifully manicured
gardens, retreat to secluded booths where they could order dinner and
drinks, gamble, listen to the latest music, and as twilight descended, be
202 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
being directed by sight of bills upon the walls, [I] did go to Shooe
Lane to see a Cocke-fighting at a new pit there – a sport I was never
at in my life. But Lord, to see the strange variety of people, from
Parliament-man (by name Wildes, that was Deputy-governor of the
Tower when Robinson was Lord Mayor) to the poorest prentices,
bakers, brewers, butchers, draymen, and what not; and all these fellows
one with another in swearing, cursing, and betting. I soon had enough
of it. . . . 42
The Public Sphere and Popular Culture 205
The sex trade may have given Londoners pleasure and income, but like
so much of urban life, it had its winners and losers.
The Public Sphere and Popular Culture 209
held there from May 1 to 15. Thus, the London summer was bracketed
by May Fair and St. Bartholomew’s Fair, until the former was suppressed
in 1764. Finally, throughout the period, Londoners gathered to watch
the parades of papier-mâché giants, dragons, and green men of the lord
mayor’s pageant on October 29. There is evidence that the lord mayor’s
show grew more elaborate and assertive of the City’s rights just as the
Midsummer Watch and other popular liturgical feasts were abolished.
London’s popular calendar therefore was a nostalgic refusal to let go of
the old civic, church, and country traditions.
In contrast, the upper-class London calendar revolved around but one
season – the season (see Chapters 3 and 4). The elite celebrated some
of the same days (e.g., Valentine’s Day, Easter, Christmas) as ordinary
Londoners, but as part of a different ordering of the year: the court and
artistic season, the law terms at Westminster, and the meetings of Parlia-
ment, all of which usually began in the autumn. In the seventeenth century
the government promoted a new, patriotic, and Protestant calendar to
which all could subscribe. Its red-letter dates were January 30, the Feast
of the Royal Martyr Charles I; May 29, King Charles II’s birthday and the
anniversary of his Restoration; November 5, Gunpowder Treason Day;
and November 17, the anniversary of the death of the Catholic Bloody
Mary and accession of the Protestant Elizabeth. In addition, building on
the tradition of Elizabeth’s Accession Day tilts, it became the custom
under the Stuarts to celebrate the reigning monarch’s birth, accession,
and coronation days. On all of these occasions, sermons were delivered,
processions were made, church bells were rung, bonfires were lit, houses
were illuminated, and sometimes effigies of unpopular figures were burned
in mass demonstrations (see Chapters 3 and 7).
Perhaps because these celebrations were imposed from above, there
were drawbacks to this calendar as a means of unifying the nation. For
starters, the patriotic year split into a Tory spring and a Whig autumn;
that is, those who tended to commemorate the execution of Charles I and
Restoration of his son were likely to oppose those who would “Remember,
remember the 5th of November!” and the accession of Elizabeth. The for-
mer were anti-Puritan and so Tory holidays, the latter anti-Catholic and so
Whig ones. The Whigs made much of the November anniversaries during
the Exclusion Crisis (see Chapter 7), and the Tories never failed to throw
January 30 in Puritan faces. Moreover, Whigs and Tories celebrated the
current monarch’s anniversary days more or less enthusiastically depend-
ing on whether they were in power. Thus, early in Anne’s reign, when the
214 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
playhouse full of porters and barmaids was hardly getting the work of the
city done, and idle journeymen and apprentices took money out of the
pockets of their masters. Moreover, these activities taught apprentices bad
habits and made the poor poorer by separating them from their money.
Fourth, City officials also worried about the health effects of large crowds
gathered at playhouses and small ones gathered at brothels; indeed, fear of
venereal disease from the patronage of brothels and prostitutes, and what
to do about it if contracted, is a recurrent theme among correspondents of
the second century of our period. Finally, the authorities feared that any
activity drawing large crowds bred crime and civil disturbance. After all,
the period from 1603 to 1642 saw rioting on twenty-four Shrove Tuesdays
and eight May Days. But as we shall see (Chapter 7), large-scale riots were
just as often provoked by accidents in the streets: after all, London was
always a crowd.
What could the authorities do about activities of which they disap-
proved? There were several tiers of authority regulating entertainment in
London: the central government at Westminster, the Church in Convo-
cation, and the lord mayor and aldermen at the Guildhall made the law.
The Central Criminal Court at the Old Bailey; the Court of Aldermen and
governors of Bridewell in the City; Middlesex and Surrey assizes, quarter
sessions and JPs; Westminster burgesses; and the consistory and archdea-
con’s courts of London, Middlesex, and Winchester (for the southern sub-
urbs) adjudicated it. The City marshals, constables, and churchwardens
of individual parishes enforced it. Just as this book opens, the reformist
Protestant administrations of Thomas Cromwell, the Duke of Somer-
set, and the Earl of Northumberland tried to do something about public
licentiousness. In 1553 Northumberland’s government banned brothels
and free-standing bowling alleys and tried to limit social drinking. The
statute of that year limited bowling to inns and private homes and set the
number of taverns in London at no more than forty. In 1556, the gover-
nors of Bridewell were given broad powers to search and seize brothel
keepers, prostitutes, lewd and idle persons, and vagrants. They met as a
court and were empowered to hand down summary justice, usually a term
of incarceration in Bridewell or at least a whipping within prison walls.
Under Elizabeth I, as we have seen, theaters were strictly regulated and
theater companies required a royal or noble patron, or their players were
regarded as vagrants subject to arrest. Felonies were handled at the Old
Bailey (see Chapter 6), whereas bastardy, bigamy, and incest were handled
by Church courts. Another way of regulating unsavory activities was to
216 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
require licenses. After the royal proclamation of January 19, 1619, taverns
and alehouses were to be licensed by the Vintners’ Company. Owners had
to pay a recognizance of £10 and provide two sureties (today we would
call them cosigners) who themselves entered bonds of £5 apiece.
Unfortunately, the authorities might not agree on which pastimes were
criminal or how far to go to eradicate them: as we saw in Chapter 4, under
Queen Elizabeth and James I the court regulated but also encouraged stage
plays, although the civic authorities detested them. We also noted earlier
how campaigns against bawdy houses ran aground on the interests of their
aristocratic landlords. Bridewell’s charter might have given it sweeping
powers, but they were never backed by statute, and some resented the
attempt at social control by its Puritan directors. In 1618, while Puritan
authorities across the nation were trying to crack down on bowling greens
and stage plays, and the City was clearing the streets of vagrants, whore-
mongers, and lewd women, James I issued the Book of Sports, a directory
of approved Sunday pastimes that included May games and maypoles,
Morris and other forms of dancing, leaping and vaulting, and other tra-
ditional pastimes that conservatives and High Church Anglicans thought
harmless. It banned only bowling and bear and bull baiting. In so doing,
and again when Charles I reissued the book in 1633, the Stuarts drew a line
in the sand over which forms of popular culture were acceptable. Puritan
magistrates pursuing the reformation of manners found themselves on the
other side of that line. This lack of ruling class unity meant that everything
depended on the scruples of your local JP, constable, or churchwarden.
In London, the first attempted reformation of manners therefore largely
failed. We have already noted the thriving Elizabethan, Jacobean, and
Restoration public theater. In 1616 London boasted thirty-one authorized
bowling alleys, fourteen tennis courts, and forty gaming houses; who
knows how many more operated under the radar? Two years later it had
at least 5 or 6 theaters and 400 taverns, ten times the number allowed by
the 1553 statute. During the Puritan regime of Oliver Cromwell, dancing,
provocative fashions, and Christmas celebrations were banned but came
back again with a vengeance at the Restoration.
From 1660, most of the legislation restricting entertainment and festival
(as opposed to printing) was repealed or ignored, leading to an explosion of
both, taken advantage of by the likes of Samuel Pepys. The 1690s, however,
saw the renewed dislocations of war, economic depression, an upsurge of
poverty, and clerical complaints about the “licentiousness of the times”:
all led to a revived reformation of manners movement. This time it was
The Public Sphere and Popular Culture 217
supported by Queen Mary II and later Queen Anne, as well as both High
and Low Church clergy and justices. In general, the movement concen-
trated on spreading the gospel and stifling profanity, immorality, and the
lasciviousness of the stage. In particular, the Society for the Reformation
of Manners, founded in 1691, declared war on what it considered to be the
most objectionable aspects of metropolitan culture. Members patrolled the
streets identifying Sabbath breakers, blasphemers, drunkards, and pros-
titutes, encouraged constables to apprehend them (prosecuting between
200 and 900 prostitutes alone a year), and published lists of offenders
known as the “Black Rolls.” Clergymen like Jeremy Collier (1650–1726)
railed from the pulpit and press against the licentiousness of the theater.
The theater reformers succeeded for a time, as the Lord Chamberlain’s
Office cracked down on the comedy of manners, stifling the work of play-
wrights like William Congreve and George Farquahar (c. 1677–1707). But
none of these movements succeeded in eliminating maypoles or brothels,
especially from London. Rather, local London communities seem to have
resented manners informers as busybodies. After 1725, prosecutions by
the Society declined sharply.
Why did reform fail? The obvious reason is that it is impossible to stop
great masses of people from doing what they like. We know this from the
testimony of upper-class participants like Pepys and Boswell, but it was
“the rabble” that kept the doors open and often attacked arresting officers.
In a world that stressed hierarchy and control, it was perhaps inevitable that
many would persist in pastimes that allowed them freedom, relaxation,
and enjoyment. But proscription and regulation also failed because of
structural factors specific to early modern London. First, it was too big to
control given the part-time nature of metropolitan law enforcement. City
constables and parish officers were overwhelmed by the task: they had
to seek out offenders and look out for such establishments on their own
time. There were simply too many venues, too many offenders, and too
few officers. Moreover, if enforcement was less than strict, it was in part
because the would-be enforcers often had a vested interest in keeping the
taverns and brothels open. Just as the medieval Church derived handsome
profits from such establishments on their land, so did the aristocrats and
courtiers who succeeded them as London’s landlords. For example, when
Covent Garden declined into an assemblage of brothels, bagnios, and
Turkish baths in the middle of the eighteenth century, its rents flowed
just as freely into the pockets of the Duke of Bedford as had those paid by
more respectable tenants a century earlier. On a lower social level, JPs and
218 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
219
220 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
salvation in the next. Indeed, the prayers of poor people were thought
to be especially efficacious, which is one reason that they were popular
guests at Catholic funerals: in return for their prayers, the deceased often
bequeathed them gifts of food, gloves, or other alms, or if wealthy enough,
endowed whole monasteries and almshouses. These acts of posthumous
charity were intended to relieve the benefactor’s soul of time in Purgatory.
This helps to explain why London had so many religious foundations.
Prior to the Reformation, the metropolis boasted a network of monasteries,
priories, hospitals, and guilds that provided assistance to the poor and the
sick, including St. Bartholomew’s in Smithfield; St. James’s, Westminster
(a leper hospital that was the predecessor of St. James’s Palace); St. Kather-
ine’s east of the Tower; St. Mary Bethlehem (Bedlam, for the mentally
ill) and St. Mary Spital, both north of Bishopsgate; and St. Thomas’s in
Southwark.
By the sixteenth century, many of these institutions seem to have been
in a state of decline, but it was the Reformation that delivered the coup
de grâce. One of the major tenets of the new Protestant theology was the
elimination of Purgatory and therefore the idea of praying for the souls of
the dead; behind this was the idea that no human being could ever merit
salvation through anything he or she did, including the performance of
charity and other good works. This did not mean that the English people
stopped being charitable: indeed, historians now realize that private char-
ity to schools and almshouses continued unabated throughout the period.
In London it rose 54% in real terms by the end of Elizabeth’s reign, raising
twice as much money as the Poor Rate in the 1590s. A century later, the
charity school movement endowed 132 educational institutions for Lon-
don’s poor by 1734. But Protestantism did remove the theological under-
pinnings from older endowed institutions like monasteries, chantries,
hospitals, and schools, helping to justify three waves of royal confiscation
in 1536, 1539, and 1547/48. These measures fundamentally altered both
landowning and charitable patterns in London, replacing Church land-
lords with the Crown and later their nobles and favorites, while eliminating
the chief providers of social services to the city’s populace.
Just as the Reformation swept away the Church’s social safety net, the
problem of poverty was growing worse. As we have seen, the principal
reason for this was demographic. The population of England was already
expanding before this book begins, from about 2.3 million souls in 1500,
to 3 million in 1550, and then 5.2 million in 1650. In a modern economy,
a rising population is a stimulus for demand and therefore economic
The People on the Margins 221
growth. But the Tudor economy was not flexible enough to absorb the
added numbers: land was not being cleared fast enough, the cloth industry
stagnated, and there were no other industries of a sufficient scale to absorb
the added labor. As a result, more and more workers competed for too
few jobs on farms or in towns, too many renters for too few cottages, and
too many mouths for too little food. So England’s demographic expansion
produced a decline in real wages between 1550 and 1650 as the labor market
flooded and landlords raised rents and prices on food. Admittedly, the
average annual rate of inflation of prices was low by modern standards,
between 0.05 and 2% a year. But since most workers’ wages were not rising
at all, even such minimal inflation meant a relentless, inexorable decline
in real wages. The result, exacerbated by mid-Tudor recoinages and wars
that raised taxes and hurt trade, was a slow-going disaster for those with
modest incomes such as husbandmen, cottagers, and laborers. A series
of bad harvests such as occurred in the mid-1590s could force them first
to go into debt, then to sell their land and become cottagers, and finally
to “break” (i.e., go broke) entirely and join the ranks of landless laborers.
It has been estimated that at the end of the Tudor period something like
10% to 20% of the general population could not meet their expenses out
of their income.
For many, the next step was to hit the London road in search of work.
They often failed to find it, not least because of the stagnant wool trade.
In any case, whether tramping through the City gates or congregating on
its street corners, the new poor were highly visible and deeply disturbing
to those unused to seeing so many masterless men and women. Recall
that by 1600 nearly 6,000 new faces were appearing on the streets of
London every year. Starting in the mid-sixteenth century, official records
betray ever-greater alarm at the rising tide of humanity. Parish vestries
complained to the City authorities, and City authorities complained to the
king. For example, after the confiscations of 1538/39, the lord mayor and
aldermen petitioned Henry VIII about the loss of monasteries and hospi-
tals, leaving “the poor, sick, blind, aged and impotent persons . . . lying
in the street, offending every clean person passing by with their filthy
and nasty savours.”1 The plight of abandoned children, increasingly com-
mon in a city full of migrants and young people forbidden to marry, was
especially heartrending: in 1587 John Hawes lamented how the “manye
lytle prettie children, boyes and gyrles, doe wander up and downe in the
stretes, loyter in Powles [St. Paul’s], and lye under hedges and stalles
in the nights.”2 Poignant as these stories were, even Tudor officials
222 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
recognized that they were anecdotal evidence. At the dawn of the Age
of Reason they also tried to get a handle on the problem – and provide
compelling evidence of their plight to the Crown – by counting the poor.
A survey of poverty in 1552 found 2,100 City residents in need of relief:
300 orphans, 600 sick or elderly, 350 “poor men overburdened with
theire children,” 650 “decayed householders,” and 200 vagrants without
employment. The problem would get worse. A 1595 survey, in the middle
of four years of high food prices, listed 4,014 City householders as need-
ing relief. Three years later one contemporary bewailed “the poor and
miserable people within this city who for want of food and like do daily
perish.”3
Shocking as this testimony might seem, these numbers represent only
a small percentage of the metropolis, which by 1600 amounted to about
200,000 souls. Admittedly, the size of the problem also depends on how
one defines poverty or more specifically, whom one categorizes as “poor.”
London authorities spent much time labeling people as vagrants, prosti-
tutes, or lewd people – but this might tell us more about their worldview and
their need to fit people into it than about the lives of those so labeled. Ian
Archer, extrapolating from the surveys of a few Elizabethan parishes, sug-
gests that perhaps 14% of the metropolitan population was poor, defined
as the working poor who needed only an occasional handout to keep going
and the destitute reliant on parish relief. Other historians have looked at
tax records, because the working poor were often made to pay at reduced
rates and the destitute were absolved of payment altogether. Broken down
by district or parish, these records make clear that poverty rates varied
across the metropolis. For example, the 1664 Hearth Tax returns indicate
that most City residents (i.e., within the twenty-six wards) could pay some
tax, but in some western suburbs nearly a quarter could not do so. In
outlying suburbs to the north like Aldgate, Shoreditch, and Shadwell,
those unable to pay amounted to 50%, in eastern Whitechapel, 70%.
Clearly, the problem of poverty looks very different depending on
where in London one looks. Even these averages obscure the fact that
poverty often existed cheek by jowl with wealth. This makes perfect
sense: out-of-house servants lived near their masters, and beggars targeted
the rich. We have already noted the colonies of thieves and beggars in
Westminster (see Chapter 1). As soon as Covent Garden was built in the
1630s there were complaints of nearby slums; as the rich moved west, the
slums moved with them. We would expect 18.6% of the householders
of Southwark to need occasional relief and 7.4% to be utterly destitute
The People on the Margins 223
In fact, Cholmondeley had liked his life there; it was only on his return
to London after a period at sea that his lot turned sour “and often, even
in severe weather, [he] has been obliged to lie in the streets.”7 The
sight that this conjures up will be familiar to any modern urban dweller,
but Cholmondeley’s story further reminds us that, in the early modern
period, poverty was often simply a consequence of old age, that is, of
having outlived one’s ability to do hard physical labor.
Imagine being poor. Imagine being compelled to leave your home in
the village, taking to the roads and arriving in London, bereft of means
and relatives, circa 1600. Imagine that you cannot afford even one night in
a fine inn; in its absence, you will have to forgo the postal and employment
services that might have kept you in contact with your old world and
helped you to make your way in your new one. How could you “make
shift” to live? For poor, unskilled laborers of both genders, menial service
was probably the most common choice; the trick was to catch a gentleman
or a prosperous tradesman when he needed a porter, a chambermaid,
or a cook. If a man, you might head for St. Paul’s, to that column in
the nave famous as a hiring point for potential masters and servants, or
to the nearest street corner to hire yourself out for construction work
because there always seemed to be new building in London. Poor women,
if they had a dwelling, took in lodgers, washing, spinning, or sewing,
set themselves to wet-nurse, or took in children from the parish. If you
lacked lodging, you might go door to door offering ad-hoc cleaning as
a charwoman. You might apply to be a barmaid or be taken up by a
mother midnight. Others hawked fish or fruit or chapbooks or toys on the
streets, told fortunes, or entertained as street musicians and ballad singers.
Children became linkboys, shoeblacks, or chimney sweeps. Londoners
associated street people with crime, conning, and loose living. Thus John
Reeve stopped on a pleasant spring evening in 1722 “to hear the ballad
singers in St. Paul’s Church Yard between 9 and 10 at night” – and had
the wig box stolen from under his arm.8 The authorities thought fishwives
an especial problem, so they faced incessant hounding.
If you found accommodation, it might not be very sheltering. Lon-
don grew so fast that buildings were thrown up or subdivided hurriedly,
which explains their unfortunate tendency to collapse. When cheap hous-
ing stayed up, it was crowded. A 1582 survey of St. Margaret Westminster,
in the very shadow of the court, found for example that the Catherine
Wheel, possibly a former inn in Tothill Street, had been divided into sev-
enteen tenements with a total of fifty-three lodgers. A 1637 survey found a
The People on the Margins 225
ten-room tenement in Silver Street near the wall occupied by “10 several
families, diverse of which also had lodgers”; another house in riverside
All-Hallow-the-Less contained eleven married couples, seven widows,
and eight unmarrieds.9 The worst districts were all beyond London’s
ancient wall. Circa 1600, these included, going clockwise, Gray’s Inn
Road to Bunhill Fields, Clerkenwell, Shoreditch, and East Smithfield to
the north; St. Katherine’s, Wapping, and Stepney to the east; Rotherhithe
to the south and east; and upper Westminster and St. Giles’s to the west.
To offer a more specific example, in the mid-seventeenth century, the
parish of St. Botolph Aldgate, just northeast of the wall, filled up with
tenements built five and six stories high along narrow alleys and sunless
courts, like Red Lyon Alley, with twenty or thirty units crammed in, all at
a rent of between £1 and £3 a year. By the eighteenth century, the areas
around Holborn and St. Giles’s to the northwest, Spitalfields to the north-
east, and the docklands of the East End had the highest concentrations of
poor slums.
If all else failed, you could beg. The practice had been outlawed by
statute in 1601, yet beggars were everywhere in early modern London.
Strangely, not everyone seems to have noticed them. Samuel Pepys, for all
his interest in street life, hardly ever mentions being accosted by beggars.
The following passage from the Diary is nevertheless helpful. It reminds
us that there was no age of entry to being poor, that the category included
many working poor, that a gentleman such as Pepys could command
the assistance of nearly any poor Londoner, albeit probably for a small
fee, and finally, that poor people “made shift” by means of an ingenious
underground economy:
So homewards and took up a boy that had a lanthorn, that was picking
up of rags, and got him to light me home. And had great discourse
with him how he could get sometimes three or four bushels of rags
in a day, and got 3d. [pence] a bushel for them. And many other
discourses, what and how many ways there are for poor children to
get their livings honestly.10
In fact, there was an entire market, Rag Fair in Smithfield, to facilitate this
makeshift economy.
Male beggars most commonly chose their stations at busy street
corners, the doors of churches and palaces, and the stiles that formed
the entrances to squares like Covent Garden. Women, the majority of
London beggars, tended to go door to door (see Illustration 6.1). Many,
226 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
a handout, any one particular object of charity was the most worthy. In
fact, the poor themselves seem to have imbibed the distinction between
deserving and undeserving; the following passage tells us a little of their
culture and worldview.
“You see,” said I, “this poor old man. We shall not dispute whether
his conduct has been good. But you see him ragged, hungry, and
cold; and surely I did right in trying to relieve a fellow-creature in
such circumstances.” I then stole away slowly from them.14
Civic Remedies
Not everyone was as sympathetic as Boswell. The early modern period
largely predates the modern understanding of economics, and so almost
nobody grasped the connections among population, demand, and unem-
ployment. Rather, those who made policy assumed that, apart from the
lame, the sick, children, or the elderly, any able-bodied poor man could
work if he wanted to do so. Those who did not work were obviously
shirkers – or worse. Thus, when the government of Henry VIII attempted
to take some responsibility for the poor who could no longer go to monas-
teries, the first Poor Law of 1536 distinguished between the “deserving”
or “impotent” poor, that is, those unable to work as noted previously,
for which relief was to be supplied by voluntary subscriptions, and the
228 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
These initiatives were as much about saving the soul as saving the
body. The poor were to be improved as well as fed, corrected as well
as preserved. This explains why some contemporaries called Bridewell a
hospital; others called it a prison. Most inmates knew what to call it. Stays
in Bridewell might involve whipping and hard manual labor, but they were
rarely long, usually lasting three days to a week. In the workhouse, families
were broken up, husbands separated from wives, parents from children.
Infants were sent into the country to be wet-nursed. A parliamentary
commission of 1767 inspired by the philanthropist Jonas Hanway (1712–
1786) found that only 7% of workhouse infants survived three years, and
those who did were often sold into apprenticeships. Their masters viewed
them as cheap labor and put them to hard, menial work as chimney sweeps,
or hawking milk or fruit on the streets, making stockings, or domestic
service. Teen-aged and adult males might be drafted into the army or
navy. Alternatively, from 1618 homeless boys and girls and adult vagrants,
thieves, and troublemakers might be transported to the American colonies.
Officially, these arrangements were voluntary, but the pressure to agree
was great; refusal might mean continued incarceration. In 1638, Geffray
Mynshul (1594–1668) described Bridewell as “a grave to bury men alive”
and “a little world of woe.”17 Indeed, poor conditions, an intensification of
those in the slums, made protracted workhouse stays deadly. At the end of
our period, Hanway called the workhouse for St. Giles-in-the-Fields and
St. George Bloomsbury “the greatest sink of mortality in these kingdoms,
if not on the face of the whole earth.”18
The practical goal of institutions like Bridewell was thus threefold: first,
to give the poor a usable skill; second, to get them to pay for their own relief;
and, third, to make the experience of going to the workhouse so unpleas-
ant that no one would want to resort to it. Neither the workhouse nor the
larger poor relief system of which it was a part ever produced the desired
result. Rather, the number of poor people and the expense of relieving
them continued to rise. Taxpayers grumbled, and those who adminis-
tered the Poor Law generally served their year without much enthusiasm.
Since their accounts were audited by no authority higher than the vestry of
which they were a part, dishonesty and corruption could flourish, as was
discovered at St. Martin-in-the-Fields in 1714. Funds earmarked for relief
might be spent on beer for the churchwardens and overseers; the dead
might be added to the lists and their relief funds pocketed; friends might be
given lucrative contracts. Above all, the whole system encouraged vestry
officials and ratepayers to see the poor as a problem, an expense to be
232 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
cut. Some parish officials did everything they could to drive the poor
away, using the Act of Settlement and Removals as an excuse to reduce
their tax rolls. Others were more lax, even welcoming and generous to the
unfortunate, but their generosity could not eradicate poverty.
If the Poor Law’s combination of carrots and sticks was often cruel
and inefficient, it still represents one of the first attempts to provide gov-
ernment relief since Roman times. Its recognition that the nation as a
whole had a responsibility to care for its least fortunate members, and that
local government should be the state-mandated vehicle for that care, was
remarkably advanced for its time, far ahead of anything on the continent.
Most of the evidence uncovered by historians about the Poor Law suggests
that it operated, like welfare does today, not to create a permanent under-
class, but to tide people over who genuinely wanted to work. Most people
who came on the poor rolls eventually went off, although they might come
back when older or during breaks in seasonal employment. Hypocritical,
inconsistent, and inadequate as the Poor Law may seem to modern eyes,
it probably did sustain people through a crisis, and it might even have
given some poor Londoners a stake in their parish by promising some
minimal relief from their neighbors. Still, it is hard to see how London’s
patchwork of guild and parish communities could have kept up with the
influx and outflow of new residents, or how the residents themselves could
have provided much neighborliness beyond basic relief. Here, among the
homeless and unwanted poor, is where urban anomie may have reigned.
the wall, harassing officials, ripping notices of vagrancy laws from walls,
and roving about in gangs. In the later wars, French privateers disrupted
seaborne trade. The 1690s in particular saw very hard times thanks to
the Nine Years’ War, bad harvests, cloth depressions, and a necessary
recoinage in 1695 that wiped out many people’s savings. After 1700,
despite overall prosperity, ordinary people still lived hand to mouth and
faced almost certain poverty as they aged. In London, where opportunity
was greatest and wages highest, so were prices: it has been estimated that
a working family required £54 10 shillings 4 pence per annum to subsist
in 1734. A skilled craftsman might earn £3 a week (£156 per annum) in
the eighteenth century, but an unskilled laborer was more likely to make
10 shillings a week (just £26 per annum), and many unskilled jobs paid
even less. Some contemporary commentators feared that the London poor
had become a permanent underclass. Rather than seek to eliminate them,
they worried about their morals (the Reformation of Manners movement),
their health and hygiene, their excessive drinking, and their treatment of
children.
Take health, for example. As we have seen, the 1720s saw the rise
of cheap gin, far more potent than ale and beer, as Hogarth’s famous
prints illustrate. The resulting Gin Craze killed thousands into the 1740s.
Bad food and water killed perhaps more. Even in the 1750s, Londoners
were prone to fevers and agues that often devastated the poor population.
Most health care was dispensed within families. What if you became ill and
had no family to nurse you? If your condition was temporary, or chronic
but not life threatening, you could turn to your livery company or parish.
The latter might use Poor Law funds to pay for a nurse, probably an elderly
woman herself in need of some relief. Those without even this resource
or requiring specialized care could seek admission to one of London’s
hospitals. As initially established in the Middle Ages, most of these insti-
tutions looked after the poor, orphans, and travelers as well as the sick. As
we have seen, however, the Reformation had eliminated all but the four
largest London hospitals: St. Bartholomew’s, St. Thomas’s, Christ’s, and
Bedlam, to which was later added the Savoy. Once refounded, they spe-
cialized, the first two for the physically ill, the third for children, the fourth
for the mentally ill, and the last for the homeless and wounded soldiers.
The implied degree of coordination notwithstanding, London’s hos-
pital network was for the most part overwhelmed by the magnitude of these
problems. St. Bartholomew’s bed count was supposed to be 120, but hit
180 by 1588; St. Thomas’s had a capacity of 100, but rose to 140 by 1561.
234 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
By 1634 it was 240 in summer, 280 in winter. St. Bart’s’ first physician,
Dr. Roderigo Lopez (c. 1517–1594), was appointed in 1568 at £2 a year,
with a house and garden. He was skillful in gunshot wounds and advice
on diet and purging, but was hanged, drawn, and quartered in 1594 on the
charge of having tried to poison Queen Elizabeth. Far more distinguished
was the career of the celebrated William Harvey (1578–1657), who was
chief physician from 1609 to 1633. St. Thomas’s got its first physician,
Henry Bull (d. 1577), in 1566 at £13 6 shillings 8 pence. Both of these older
hospitals also had three surgeons apiece. In contrast, St. George’s Hospi-
tal, Knightsbridge, a later foundation, housed 250 patients, ministered to
by 6 physicians, 3 surgeons, and 20 nurses in 1745.
How good was the medical care dispensed in these institutions? After
all, bringing sick people together in an age before antibiotics might seem to
make them vectors of disease rather than of cure. Still, even in our period
the staffs of these foundations understood some basic principles of good
health: they grew herbs for the hospital tables and emphasized fresh air.
St. Bart’s had medical students on site by 1662 and in 1722 the physicians
and surgeons petitioned for a dissecting room and hot and cold baths for
the patients. The aforementioned St. George’s Hospital was founded in
1733 near Hyde Park Corner specifically so that patients might enjoy the
benefits of fresh air:
. . . which in the general opinion of the physicians would be more
effectual than physick in the cure of many distempers, especially such
as mainly affect the poor, who live in close and confined places within
these great cities.19
As in Bridewell, and particularly after the Reformation, there was a strong
moral dimension to health care: patients were required to attend chapel
services or they would not be fed. Although St. Thomas’s had long treated
the poor prostitutes who worked in the Bankside stews, in 1561 the new
Protestant regime turned away unmarried pregnant women on the grounds
that the hospital now existed for the care “of honest persons and not
of harlottes.”20 Sometimes it is difficult to separate moral rules from
hygienic ones: from 1752 St. Thomas’s regulations forbade the admission
of incurable patients or those with infectious diseases, readmission of any
patient for the same disease, or the accommodation of more than one
patient per bed. They also specified that inmates could be expelled for
suspicious talk, entering wards set aside for the opposite sex, or contracting
matrimony. This last reminds us that one of the goals of the London
The People on the Margins 235
charitable system was to avoid the production of more people who would
have to be added to its rolls.
Of early modern London’s major hospitals, Bethlehem, shortened in
London speech to “Bethlem” or “Bedlam,” is easily the most infamous.
Founded as a priory in 1247 just outside of Bishopsgate, there was an
attached hospital by the mid-fourteenth century. We know that lunatics
were treated there within a generation, and this continued to be Bed-
lam’s function when bought by the City in 1547. Robert Hooke designed
a beautiful new building for the hospital in 1675/76 in Moorfields, to
which London’s artistic community also contributed. For example, at the
entrance stood two statues by Caius Gabriel Cibber (1630–1700), Madness
and Melancholy, both modeled on inmates. In part because of the art, but
mostly because inmates were chained in cells along galleries like animals
in a zoo, Bedlam became one of the must-see attractions of early modern
London. It was only after our period that the inmates ceased to be put on
display, and treatment became more humane.
Christ’s, dependent on rates levied on the parishes, took care of 550 to
650 orphans at a time in the late Elizabethan period. Children of freemen
received preferential treatment, but 10% of the population were foundlings.
Christ’s provided an elementary education and sent some inmates off to
grammar school; some received vocational training; others were made
apprentices. Conditions were not ideal: by 1564 Christ’s had admitted
1,916 children, of which 733 had died.
Finally, the Savoy operated like a modern homeless shelter, taking in
those without a roof for the night, but it was mismanaged and became
associated with corruption and crime. In 1581 Recorder Fleetwood called
it the “chief nurserie of evil men.”21 The Savoy was frequently confiscated
by the government to treat wounded soldiers.
Astonishingly, these six (including Bridewell) were left to serve the
ever-growing metropolis until the early eighteenth century. After 1700
there was an expansion of private charity and a boom in hospital build-
ing inspired by Enlightenment ideals and paid for by the wealth from
the Commercial and Financial Revolutions. All of the existing hospitals
saw significant renovation, and prosperous merchants and professionals
contributed to the establishment of new facilities. St. Bart’s was rebuilt
over the period from 1730 to 1759 according to designs by James Gibbs
(1682–1754). The London artistic community got involved: in particular,
William Hogarth served as a governor and painted the Good Samaritan
and The Pool of Bethesda, still in the hospital’s possession. Toward the
236 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
Living from 1720 in maritime Rotherhithe, walking into the City for busi-
ness, Coram was appalled at the sight of infants abandoned to the streets
in the greatest city in the British Empire. Technically, these children were
not orphans and had little chance of being accepted to the overburdened
Christ’s Hospital. Resolving to save them but getting nowhere with Par-
liament or the municipal authorities, Coram tried the court, specifically
the wives of great peers who might have charitable impulses, plenty of free
time, and influence (if not control) over their husbands’ pocketbooks. It
took him seventeen years, but he eventually persuaded twenty-one ladies
“of Nobility and Distinction” and their husbands to petition George II to
grant a royal charter for the Foundling Hospital. Said to be the world’s
first incorporated charity, Coram’s brainchild opened in some houses in
Hatton Garden in 1741 before moving to a permanent site of fifty-six acres
beyond London’s congestion in Lambe’s Conduit Fields, north of the
Russell properties.
Almost immediately, the hospital was flooded with demands for places
from all across Britain, necessitating some system of selection. In 1742 the
directors decreed that on arrival with their children, mothers would pick
a ball out of a leather bag. A white ball meant admission for their child;
a black ball, rejection; and a red ball, a place on a waiting list should an
“admitted” child be turned away as diseased on medical examination.
A contemporary print gives some idea of the anguish involved for all
concerned: the “unlucky” mothers and children who had been rejected,
and the “lucky” ones who were to be separated (see Illustration 6.2). The
mothers were required to provide tokens, often a coin split into halves,
to be redeemed if the child were ever to be claimed back. The Foundling
Hospital Trust still owns many of these tokens, a mute yet poignant
testimony to the sacrifice made by these mothers.
Once accepted, children were sent out to wet nurses in the countryside
until the ages of four or five. They were then returned to the London
facility, separated by gender, and trained in crafts intended to provide
useful employment in the world beyond Lambe’s Conduit Fields. At the
age of fourteen, the boys took up apprenticeships arranged by the directors,
and then most entered the armed forces. Girls trained to be lady’s maids.
The blind children sang in the hospital choir for Sunday services. By 1756,
1,384 children had been admitted. Although 724 (52%) subsequently died,
this was a far better survival rate than the parochial alternative. Encouraged
by these results, Parliament voted an additional £10,000 in that year so
that the hospital could take in all comers. Over the next four years, 15,000
238 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
children were admitted, but the hospital was overwhelmed and two-thirds
of them died. This led to the restoration of selection. Despite the best of
intentions, however, mortality in the Foundling Hospital ran at more than
30% in its best eighteenth-century years.
Like all charitable organizations, the Foundling Hospital was in con-
stant need of support. One fund-raising strategy took advantage of elite
Londoners’ desire for sociability by holding ladies’ breakfasts; on one
occasion, more than 1,000 attended. William Hogarth and his wife Jane
(c. 1709–1789), with no biological offspring, took in foster children and
dedicated themselves to the work of the hospital. Hogarth painted Coram’s
portrait and came up with a scheme to promote art and benefit the hospital.
He encouraged his fellow artists in the St. Martin’s Academy to join him in
donating portraits to the Governor’s Room, turning it into a showcase for
their work. Hogarth, Sir Joshua Reynolds, and Thomas Gainsborough
were among the contributors. The idea was that members of the upper
class would be drawn in to see the art but would also encounter the chil-
dren and the good work of the hospital, thus further encouraging their
generosity. This led eventually to an annual exhibition at a time when
artists had few public outlets for their work, which, in turn, evolved into
the Royal Academy of Arts, founded in 1768. George Frideric Handel also
patronized the Foundling Hospital, writing a Founding Hospital anthem,
donating an organ for the chapel, and mounting periodic performances of
his Messiah for its benefit. After 1749, annual performances at Eastertime
became a tradition, and at his death Handel bequeathed an autographed
fair copy of the piece to the hospital.
The enthusiasm of some of the greatest artists of the eighteenth century
for the Foundling Hospital speaks not only to Coram’s vision or even
Enlightenment ideals of public philanthropy but also reminds us that,
despite its size, early modern London had a remarkable ability to bring
together the best and the brightest in common endeavor. Admittedly,
Coram’s brainchild could house only a few hundred children at a time and
so barely made a dent in the problem of infanticide and abandonment,
let alone London’s poverty in general. But as part of a series of reforms
culminating in the 1767 Act for Keeping Children Alive (7 Geo. III, c. 39),
it can be credited with helping to lower London’s infant mortality rate.
Nor should we discount its symbolic importance, because the Foundling
Hospital represents the eighteenth-century London mind-set at its best:
enlightened, charitable, corporate, and cultured. Still, Londoners also had
The People on the Margins 239
their own security at heart, because poverty was thought to lead inevitably
to crime.
The resultant feelings of shock, horror, and pity, but also perhaps fatalistic
indifference, are familiar to any modern urban dweller. As we have seen,
Johnson urged his fellow Londoners to “Prepare for Death, if here at Night
you roam/And sign your Will before you sup from Home,” but clearly
even “home” could be a dangerous place. No wonder that, for much of
our period, Londoners thought their city a virtual combat zone.
But was it? The obvious place to start to measure the impact of crime
on a city and its citizens is by calculating its rate against the size of its
population over time. The records of London’s criminal courts resist the
computation of a simple crime rate, however. Setting aside for the moment
the bewildering array of courts (e.g., Old Bailey, Westminster, Middlesex,
and Surrey sessions) and jurisdictions noted in the previous chapter, we
still find a problem of documentation. It is true that we possess nearly
complete records of indictments, but not every accused criminal was
indicted (see later discussion). For purposes of calculating a crime rate,
it would be far more useful to have a complete series of depositions and
examinations, the statements given by accusers, accused, and witnesses
240 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
Old Bailey was handling 500 to 600 cases of property crime a year from
1725 to 1750, the county of Sussex was dealing with 30, a discrepancy that
cannot be explained by differences in record keeping alone.
Property crimes appeared most frequently on Old Bailey calendars
and generated the most attention in contemporary sources. Unlike the
village, where food was the commodity most likely to be filched, London’s
commercial activity and concentration of wealth provided motive and
opportunity for crimes against all sorts of property, edible and inedible:
food, drink, money, cloth, clothes, household goods, watches, jewelry,
and so forth. Daniel Defoe’s novel Moll Flanders, grounded in his keen
observations of city life, sometimes reads like a how-to manual, as his
heroine recounts in detail her life as a thief: “Our principal Trade was
watching Shop-Keepers’ Compters [counters], and Slipping off any kind
of Goods we could see carelessly laid any where, and we made several
good Bargains as we call’d them at this Work.”26 The open-air nature of
most London shops and stalls made shop-lifting easy: thus in Leadenhall
Market in 1668, Samuel Pepys “did see a woman ketched, that had stolen
a shoulder of mutton off of a butcher’s stall, and carrying it wrapped up
in a cloth in a basket.”27 London’s congestion gave ample opportunity
to pick pocket, waylay, or con an innocent citizen. Like a city dweller of
today, Pepys was fatalistic when in 1663 his wife, Elizabeth, experienced
the equivalent of a modern urban smash and grab:
So home, and there find my wife come home and seeming to cry; for
bringing home in a coach her new Ferrandin waistecoat, in Cheapside
a man asked her whether that was the way to the tower, and while
she was answering him, another on the other side snatched away her
bundle out of her lap, and could not be recovered – but ran away with
it – which vexes me cruelly, but it cannot be helped.28
Theft was far more common than assault, but murder captured the
public imagination. Foreign visitors thought the English especially hot-
headed, and the evidence of indictments and other court records indicates
that when Londoners did kill each other, they did so spontaneously, in
the heat of an argument after a few drinks, rather than in cold blood after
careful planning. Pepys records several instances of ad-lib violence. One
example from 1660, borne of frustration over a London traffic jam, reads
like a seventeenth-century version of road rage: “In King-streete, there
being a great stop of coaches, there was a falling-out between a drayman
and my Lord Chesterfield’s coachman, and one of his footmen killed.”29
242 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
One of the most popular plays of the late sixteenth century, the anonymous
Arden of Feversham (1592), dramatizes the infamous true story of the mur-
der of a prosperous London merchant. Petty criminals figure prominently
in Shakespeare’s plays, often as the henchmen for ambitious men contem-
plating crimes against the state. As we have seen, Middleton and Dekker’s
The Roaring Girl (1610) brought to the stage the legendary pickpocket
Mary Frith, better known as Moll Cutpurse. Dekker hit this theme again
in his best-selling pamphlet guides to London’s underworld of 1608, The
Belman of London and Lanthorne and Candle-Light. For those who could
neither read nor attend a play, crude woodcuts depicted notorious crimes
and gave warning of the dangers of listening to con men – yet another
example of the press taking on the role that parents and friends might play
in the village.
The volume of material on crime grew after the Restoration and
exploded with the end of Licensing in 1695. In particular, beginning
in the 1670s and with official blessing from 1678, the Proceedings of the
Old Bailey (also known as Sessions Papers) were printed for public con-
sumption. On top of this, the bookstores of London were flooded with
breathless popular accounts of the adventures of legendary city criminals,
often based on their own testimony as recorded by the ordinary (chaplain)
of Newgate just before their hanging. Grub Street stoked popular fears by
churning out an endless stream of sensationalist newspaper reports (e.g.,
that of the Thorn murder) and crime literature, including compendia such
as A Complete Collection of Remarkable Tryals of the Most Notorious Male-
factors (1718–1721) and Captain Alexander Smith’s (fl. 1714 to 1726) History
of the Lives of the Most Noted Highway-men, Foot-pads, House-Breakers,
Shoplifters and Cheats (1714). The most famous of these collections, the
first Newgate Calendar, did not appear until 1774, but it recorded crimes
going back to 1700.
No wonder that prominent London criminals, like the thief and escape
artist Jack Sheppard (1702–1724), the highwayman Dick Turpin (1705–
1739), or the thief-taker Jonathan Wild (1683–1725), became national
celebrities and folk heroes. Sheppard was a model for the antihero,
Macheath, in John Gay’s fabulously popular The Beggar’s Opera (1728).
Macheath is, of course, the original for the Berthold Brecht (1898–1956)–
Kurt Weill (1900–1960) and later artists’ Mack the Knife, and so Sheppard
is still being sung in one form or another. Turpin was portrayed in ballads,
novels, stage, and film, including more recently the egregious Carry On
Dick! (1974). Wild was later immortalized in a novel by Fielding and was
244 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
one of the models for the character Peachum in The Beggar’s Opera (see
later discussion). The reputed “boss” of the London criminal underworld
in the first quarter of the eighteenth century, Wild himself took advantage
of the new medium of the regular newspaper to advertise his services in
recovering stolen goods – which had been filched by his own gang! Yet
another implication of the rise of a free press was that Londoners knew
more and more about crime as the period wore on. Bombarded as they
were, like the modern viewer of cable news, by an endless flood of infor-
mation from plays, novels, and newspaper stories like that of Sir Charles
Thorn’s grisly end, it is not to be wondered that readers feared that crime
was increasing. The evidence for that increase as bewailed by the author
of Hanging not Punishment Enough?: “our Sessions-Papers Monthly and
the Publick News daily.”31
born to a life of crime, having entered the world in Newgate Prison, where
her mother was incarcerated. But she too becomes a criminal only later
in life, after having been widowed out of a comfortable existence. Her
example reminds us that women were particularly vulnerable in the early
modern economy, which may explain why they formed one-third of all
those accused of property crime. The implication that most criminals were
driven to it through necessity or bad company may help to explain why the
public, including those who faced many of the same trials and temptations
in London, was often surprisingly sympathetic to offenders.
Those temptations were popularly associated with particular times
and places. As we have seen, prior to the development of reliable street
lighting, Londoners thought the night to have been particularly unsafe:
“Prepare for Death if here at Night you roam.” They also knew, from
reading the newspaper, that the most crowded resorts were the most
dangerous. Dryden and Johnson warned about London’s streets, but you
could have your pocket picked in the king’s own chapel. Other “popular”
places to lose a pocketbook or a watch were St. Paul’s, the “Change”
(Royal Exchange), the playhouses, the parks, Bartholomew Fair, and of
course, any house of drink or ill-repute, where prostitutes were notorious
for supplementing their clients’ fees with some of their belongings. As
seen in Chapter 5, London newspapers are littered with ads advertising
watches lost on the steps of such and such a church, while one was exiting
the theater or walking in St. James’s Park.
Perhaps another reason for the perception of a crime wave in the first
half of the eighteenth century is that Londoners were not only more aware
of crime, but also of a wider variety of crimes than before. Between 1550 and
1650, they would have heard from their pastor, or read in newsletters or
the Bills of Mortality, about treasons, murders, and thefts. Neighborhood
rumor would have publicized rape, debt (treated like a crime in early
modern law), and the need to beware of con men and prostitutes. After
the Civil Wars, however, innovative cons and transgressions, associated
with the modern age, began to appear. In particular, the Commercial
and Financial Revolutions necessitated new kinds of communication and
paper, instruments of credit, and so forth. This led to the possibility of
forgery and embezzlement, yet another reason that stock-jobbers were
held in such low regard.
London’s criminals could be very resourceful in taking advantage of
new opportunities for crime and the new media as a tool for enhancing their
take. This implies a high degree of planning, which in turn brings us to
246 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
Liberties like Alsatia, off Fleet Street, were thought to be safe havens for
criminal society; in 1601 Sir Stephen Soame (c. 1544–1619) attacked them
in Parliament as “the very sink of sin, the nurcery of a naughty and lewd
people, the harbour of rogues, theeves and beggars, and maintainers of
idle persons; for when our shops and houses be robbed, thither they fly for
relief and sanctuary.”34 Some evidence for this assertion is provided by the
fact that, where we know locations, almost 55% of the petty criminals sent
to Bridewell from 1604 to 1658 were caught in the two Farringdon wards
surrounding Fleet Street. Early in the seventeenth century, Richardson’s
alehouse in St. Mary-at-Hill, the Blue Boar, Thames Street, and assorted
The People on the Margins 247
imprisonment, his jailors made more than £200 by showing him off to
visitors (including the ever-inquisitive Daniel Defoe) and he was sketched
several times by Sir James Thornhill, the king’s serjeant painter. His
execution took place before a vast crowd on November 16, 1724; two
weeks later, a play about him opened in Drury Lane.
Blake was thought to have been reared in the criminal life by Wild
himself before joining Sheppard in highway robbery in 1724. When Wild
informed Blueskin, in prison, that he would not lift a finger to help him,
his former charge slit his throat, but Wild survived. In both cases, Wild’s
role in their hangings was viewed as an act of the most cynical betrayal:
Londoners expected honor among thieves. In February 1725, in response
to public pressure, Wild was finally arrested on eleven counts, including
having “form’d a kind of Corporation of Thieves” and of having “often
sold human blood, by procuring false Evidence.”40 Convicted in May,
Wild’s courage deserted him. He avoided the traditional final religious
service in Newgate Chapel, fearing insult from fellow thieves whom he
had betrayed, and attempted suicide the night before his hanging by
swallowing a massive dose of laudanum, which served only to make him
violently ill. As a result, his procession to Tyburn and subsequent hanging
was anything but the bravura performance that might have been expected.
Wild was stoned in both senses of the word, gave no scaffold speech, and
was dispatched with a minimum of ceremony.
As should be obvious, Londoners handled metropolitan life by telling
stories about it. Despite his whimpering end, Wild’s story seemed to
capture for contemporaries the depths of their society’s corruption. The
conniving jailor Peachum in John Gay’s “Newgate pastoral,” The Beggar’s
Opera (1728), is clearly modeled, in part, on Wild. Henry Fielding’s satire,
The Life of Jonathan Wild the Great (1743), equates his protagonist’s
amoral and treacherous behavior with “greatness.” In both, Wild is con-
flated with the prime minister, Sir Robert Walpole, to make the point that
the world of Westminster politics was no less corrupt than that of Lon-
don’s infamous prison. Each work can be connected with long-standing
London genres: Gay’s with city drama, Fielding’s with Elizabethan satire,
both of which harp on trickery and false appearances in London. What
is new here is that both draw an explicit parallel between the organized
corruption of London’s criminal underworld and what many saw as the
political corruption at the very top of the Walpole regime, which relied
on a patronage spoils system, bribes for MPs, and extensive propaganda
to maintain its ascendancy (see Introduction). The very first song in the
The People on the Margins 251
play is a salvo against the corruption and duplicity of the times, flout-
ing community, and taking the professional specialization we noted in
coffeehouses and Mr. Spectator’s cronies to vicious extremes:
Through all the Employments of Life
Each Neighbour abuses his Brother;
Whore and Rogue they call Husband and Wife:
All Professions be-rogue one another:
The Priest calls the Lawyer a Cheat,
The Lawyer be-knaves the Divine:
And the Statesman, because he’s so great,
Thinks his Trade as honest as mine.
Like the Elizabethan satirists and Puritan preachers a century earlier, both
works argue that in London’s perverted moral system, white is black, and
black, white.
The Beggar’s Opera was the hit of the 1728 theater season. When it
premiered at Lincoln’s Inn Fields, the prime minister was in the audience,
and famously and seemingly good-humoredly laughed at the last line of
the following song:
When you censure the Age
Be cautious and sage,
Lest the Courtiers offended should be:
If you mention Vice or Bribe,
’Tis so pat to all the Tribe;
Each cries – That was levell’d at me.
London legend has it that Walpole stood up in the theater and loudly
repeated the last line, making the audience roar at his ability to take a joke.
But his government refused a license for Gay’s sequel, Polly, in 1729.
see the crowd bunched up before, say, Temple Bar. Suddenly, you are
jostled. Reaching down for your pocket watch, you find it gone. Looking
up, you can just make out a head in the crowd moving up Fleet Street
rather more briskly than the others. Today, you might pull out your
mobile phone to call the police, but in early modern London, not only are
there no mobile phones; there are no police. There were two reasons for
this. First, professional police forces cost money, and Londoners, already
grumbling under the Poor Rates, were in no mood to see their taxes raised.
Perhaps more important, however, is that professional police forces, like
standing armies, were seen as instruments of state coercion and therefore
dangerous to freedom. Contemporaries knew that absolute monarchs like
Louis XIV had secret police to spy on opponents, stifle religious dissent
(read Protestantism), and seize the property of their subjects. Thus, after
our period, the Daily Universal Register, the progenitor of The Times,
thundered that its readers “would rather lose their money to an English
thief, than their liberty to a Lieutenant de Police.”41 As a result, London had
no professional constabulary until the establishment of the Metropolitan
Police, at the instigation of Sir Robert Peel (1788–1850), in 1829. In the
meantime, Sir Charles Thorn’s fate notwithstanding, neither the English
ruling class nor the English people were ready to sell “the rights of an
Englishman” for a little security.
Rather, during the early modern period, London’s citizens policed
themselves under the supervision of the local JP. Thus, the first recourse
for the crime victim was to “raise the hue and cry” by yelling the time-
honored but today utterly ineffectual “Stop! Thief!” In those days the point
of this ejaculation was not, of course, to actually persuade the miscreant
to come to a halt, but to alert one’s fellow perambulators. If you were
fortunate, some of them would take off after the thief: others would know
where to find the local constable. Thus, policing the streets was very much
a community matter, and there was a great deal of room for maneuver before
the law became involved. If there were no fatalities, the victim could choose
whether to report the crime to the constable. Sometimes, the crowd in
the street acted as arbitrators between the parties. Even in London, good
neighbors tried to work things out without resorting to the law, and a
crowd could put pressure on one side or another. Alternatively, a passing
gentleman like Boswell might intervene. If the crime was egregious, the
crowd might set matters to rights on their own by what was sometimes
called “the justice of the streets,” or, more accurately, “the rage of the
The People on the Margins 253
abusing the time, coming very late to the watch, sitting down in some
common place of watching, wherein some falleth on sleep by reason
254 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
In fact, court records indicate that in the early seventeenth century most
constables were respectable citizens drawn from the top third of the tax
roles. Increasingly, however, busy freemen sent substitutes, usually the
old and unemployable. A century later, wealthy wards like Cornhill still
called on solid citizens (i.e., shopkeepers, linen drapers), but poor outer
wards were less well served. Absenteeism seems to have been a problem.
In the 1720s César de Saussure saw no evidence of a night watch, “either
on foot or on horseback as in Paris, to prevent murder and robbery” apart
from the bellman or crier:
The only watchman you see is a man in every street carrying a stick
and a lantern, who, every time the clock strikes, calls out the hour
and state of the weather. The first time this man goes his rounds, he
pushes the doors of the shops and houses with his stick to ascertain
whether they are properly fastened, and if they are not he warns the
proprietor.43
detection: “I went thro’ into Bartholomew Close, and then turn’d round
to another Passage that goes into Long-lane, so away into Charterhouse-
Yard and out into St. John’s-street, then crossing into Smithfield, went
down Chick-lane and into Field-lane to Holbourn-bridge, when mixing
with the Crowd of People usually passing there, it was not possible to
have been found out.”44 At the same time, she could not count on staying
unrecognized for long, because any street crime would be witnessed by
scores of people. Thus Moll moves from district to district and keeps her
place of residence secret even from her fellow thieves in an attempt to
avoid running into the same people twice. It is a tribute to London’s vast
size and anonymity that these moves are rarely more than half a mile, yet
with each one, she assumes a new identity.
Given the difficulties facing the authorities in keeping an eye on it all,
Londoners were encouraged to police themselves in yet another way. As
we have seen, privacy was hard to come by in the London street, and guilds,
parishes, and other authorities paid people to watch each other. Early in
the seventeenth century these informers began to evolve into thief-takers,
usually thieves themselves, who, in hopes of saving their necks and/or
obtaining a reward, informed on other thieves. By the late seventeenth
century the City itself increasingly offered rewards to private – and none
too respectable – operators like Jonathan Wild, for apprehending criminals
and recovering stolen goods. Indeed, thief-takers soon received statutory
legitimacy: from 1693 the reward for apprehending a highwayman was
£40. This was subsequently extended to coiners, counterfeitors, burglars,
and housebreakers.
Thief-takers, inhabiting the hazy margins between the law and the law-
less, solicited their rewards by taking out ads for “found” goods, or offering
to find “lost” ones. Some hinted at their illicit connections quite brazenly.
Take this example from the thief-taker Jack Bonner (fl. 1690–1710):
This is to give notice that those who have sustained any loss at Stur-
bridge Fair last, by Pick Pockets or Shop lifts: If they please to apply
to John Bonner in Shorts Gardens, they may receive information and
assistance therein; also Ladies and others who lose their watches at
Churches, and other Assemblies, may be served by him as aforesaid,
to his utmost power, if desired by the right Owner, he being paid for
his Labour and Expences.45
Londoners seem to have welcomed the chance to recover their prop-
erty and were only too happy to turn to the services of newspapers and
256 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
expresses the appropriate “terror of mind” after she commits her first
theft: “why, I shall be taken next time and be carry’d to Newgate and be
Try’d for my Life!’ and with that I cry’d again a long time, and I am sure,
as poor as I was, if I had durst for fear, I would certainly have carried the
things back again.”46
The cultivation of such fear, the presumed deterrent effect of capital
punishment, only begins to explain a series of remarkable facts that have
puzzled historians of English law and crime ever since. First, the num-
ber of capital offenses, that is, crimes for which one could be hanged,
expanded enormously in England during the second half of our period.
Between 1688 and 1820, Parliament raised the number of capital felonies
from around 50 to more than 200. In particular, during the hard times
of the late seventeenth century, increasing attention was paid to crimes
against property: highway robbery, shoplifting, burglary and housebreak-
ing, forgery, clipping and counterfeiting coins. Much of the new legislation
stipulated hanging for new offenses like forging of documents, but other
new laws raised the stakes to death even for petty theft, shoplifting, or
pocket-picking of goods of even very small value. For example, from 1691
receiving stolen goods became a felony (3 & 4 Wm. III & Mary II, c.9);
in 1699 it became a capital crime to shoplift goods worth more than 5
shillings, a quarter of a pound sterling (10 & 12 Wm. III, c. 23); in 1713,
stealing goods worth more than 40 shillings (£2) from a house became a
hanging offense (12 Anne, c. 7).
Traditionally, this tightening of the law has been interpreted as an
attempt to deter crime by instilling fear. Indeed, the notices of hangings
printed in London newspapers were pretty fearful:
London, Dec. 19. The Sessions at the Old Baily did not end till
Monday last; and it has not been known for many Years, that so
many Persons receiv’d Sentence of Death at one time, there being
then condemn’d 23 Persons, being 6 Women, and 17 Men, two of
which are Richard Keele, and William Lowther, for the late Notorious
Riot and Murder of Edward Perry, the late Turnkey at Clerkenwell-
Bridewell; 7 for Burglary, 5 for Shop-lifting, 4 upon the late Statute
for Entring of Houses, and Stealing Goods above the value of 40s.
[shillings] and the rest for several Capital Offences.47
Perhaps the most remarkable thing about this sad roll call is that it is
reported as being unusually long. Although the number of criminal statutes
for which an English man or women could be hanged quadrupled in the
The People on the Margins 259
eighteenth century, the full extent of the law was rarely applied. Overall,
about one-half of those indicted for capital crimes were convicted, but
only a fraction of those were put to death. Indeed, the latest research
indicates that the number of hangings declined steadily in England as a
whole, and London in particular, both absolutely and per capita, from
1550 to 1750. About 150 felons were executed annually in London in the
early seventeenth century; this fell after the Civil Wars to 25 a year in the
late seventeenth century, then to about 6 a year from 1701 to 1750, before
rising again to 25 a year in the 1760s. These numbers are horrific, but
they represent a smaller bloodbath than we might expect from a ruling
class bent on terrorizing the mob. In fact, Beattie has found evidence of
numerous experiments by Parliament, judges, and JPs to come up with
effective intermediate noncapital punishments: transportation, military
service, committal to Bridewell, and so forth. Why would a nation so fearful
of crime pass what has been called the bloodiest criminal code in Europe,
and then choose to enforce it so sparingly? Part of the answer might lie in
the tension between national policy and local sentiment: contemporaries
observed that juries hated to convict on these draconian laws, and most
Londoners would probably have agreed with “the simple cuntryman and
woman . . . [who] are of opynyon that they wold not procure a mans death
for all the goods yn the world.”48
In the 1970s and 1980s, several historians of the law such as Douglas
Hay and Peter Linebaugh offered another answer. They argued that the
eighteenth-century legal system’s split personality – draconian laws; flexi-
ble, even merciful outcomes – was actually a coldly calculated ruling-class
conspiracy to intimidate the lower orders using a kind of theater of power
that emphasized the law’s majesty, justice, and mercy. If so, then the first
act of the play was set at Newgate Prison. Newgate might not have been
exactly majestic, but as one contemporary wrote of the new, post-Fire
building: “the sumptuousness of the outside but aggravated the misery of
the wretches within.” First, with a capacity of 150, Newgate was always
overcrowded, averaging 228 prisoners during the sample period from
May 1696 to December 1699. According to the London Encyclopaedia,
“the wretches within” also encountered the following: “The water sup-
ply was quite inadequate, the ventilation almost non-existent, the stench
appalling; and during the frequent outbreaks of gaol-fever, a virulent form
of typhoid [sic.], the fumes bore the germs of the disease into every cell of
the prison.” A well-heeled prisoner could alleviate his misery by paying
the notoriously corrupt keeper for better accommodation, and for more
260 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
and better food. But for those with no money, there was the Stone Hold,
which one prisoner described as: “a terrible stinking dark and dismal
place situate underground into which no daylight can come. It was paved
with stone; the prisoners had no beds and lay on the pavement whereby
they endured great misery and hardship.” Even the poorest inmate had
to pay the keeper for food, water, candles, and liquor, as well as other
optional sums to be released from his irons or to come near a coal fire
in winter. People passing by all of London’s prisons and compters were
accosted by the sights, sounds, and smells of prisoners at the grates of their
underground holds begging “Bread and meat for the poor prisoners.” No
wonder that Fielding called Newgate a “prototype of hell.” If Hay and
Linebaugh are correct, it was intended to be so, a psychological weapon
in the class war that raged in early modern England, its reputation spread
abroad by the numerous pamphlets for sale at London bookstalls retelling
the experience as told to the Newgate ordinary.49
The law achieved its greatest level of majestic intimidation at trial.
London’s felony trials took place at the Old Bailey, originally a nondescript
Tudor appendage to Newgate. Named for a nearby street, the courthouse
burned down in 1666 and was rebuilt in 1673 in a “fair and stately”50
Palladian style. The Justice Hall was built with one wall open to the
elements to increase fresh air and prevent its officers from contracting
the “gaol fever” that infested Newgate. This side of the hall opened
onto the Sessions House Yard, where attorneys, clients, witnesses, and
spectators gathered in a sort of amphitheater; indeed, foreign visitors were
impressed with the openness of the proceedings, in contrast to much
continental practice. Unfortunately, this made trials more raucous and
easily disrupted by spectators who were thought to intimidate juries. It
was even alleged that criminals gathered here to anticipate prosecution and
defense strategies. When the court was remodeled in 1737 it was enclosed
again, resulting in proceedings that were more decorous but also more
deadly. The typhus outbreak of 1750 killed 60 people, including the lord
mayor and two judges.
Cases were tried in clumps, and individual trials rarely took more than
a half hour, allowing an average of 15 to 20 a day circa 1700. The accused
stood in the dock facing the witness box, while on the opposite side of
the room sat the judge, elevated on a dais – a clear sign of his superiority
(see Illustration 6.3). The judge, wearing scarlet robes and a full-bottomed
white wig, was a human embodiment of the majesty of the state. If anyone
missed the point, he sat under the royal arms. Because it was the victim
The People on the Margins 261
who prosecuted, making his or her case before the court, lawyers were a
rarity; when present they wore black robes and shorter wigs. Jurors sat in
boxes to the right or left of the accused until 1737, when they were united
in a box to his right. For the accused and possibly for jurors and spectators
in the Sessions House Yard, the impressive architecture, unusual dress,
arcane legal terms, and even the upper-crust accents of the officers of the
court must have seemed alien, even godlike. They would have served to
emphasize their distance from those officers – and the officers from normal
human concerns generally.
The trial process placed the defendant, already hungry and dirty from
living in Newgate, at a disadvantage. For example, while the prosecutor
could hire a lawyer, prior to the mid-1730s the defendant was not entitled
to counsel and was allowed to call witnesses only at the judge’s discretion.
Trials were carried on in a technical legal language that must have seemed
baffling to novices, although sharp characters like Wild probably picked
up its salient points quickly enough. Before the trial began, the accused
entered a plea to the charge. The clerk then read the charge, and the
victim-prosecutor stated his or her case. Witnesses were called; then the
accused made his or her case. In the absence of lawyers, the judge and the
defendant performed the cross-examination. There was no presumption
of innocence; defendants were expected to disprove the case against them.
Before the case finally went to the jury, the judge gave a summation in
which he was likely to indicate his own view and give instructions on the
law’s fine points, all in measured tones, no doubt.
Still, the jury’s hands were not tied. Composed mostly of moder-
ately prosperous shopkeepers and small tradesmen, they might acquit
the accused on the evidence, or even their own feelings of neighborli-
ness. According to Professor Beattie, Old Bailey juries acquitted about
45% of defendants in property crimes from 1660 to 1689, and 31% from
1689 to 1713. They also might render a partial verdict, for example, of
manslaughter instead of murder, or by declaring a shoplifting or burglary
simple theft, which carried no capital penalty, or by devaluing goods to
render the crime a misdemeanor. Even if found guilty, all was not lost for
the accused. A female defendant might “plead her belly,” that is, claim
pregnancy, as Moll’s mother did. This gave her a reprieve until the birth
of her child, or until she was exposed as a fraud. Many felons escaped via
benefit of clergy. This was an ancient custom dating back to the Middle
Ages, during which clergy could not be punished by civil courts. To
prove that he was a cleric, the accused was asked to read, because during
262 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
the Middle Ages few non-clerics could do so. Although literacy increased
steadily throughout the early modern period, this loophole remained on
the books, so that anyone who could read selected portions of Psalm
51, popularly known as the “neck verse,” literally saved his or her neck!
A defendant could only resort to benefit of clergy once, however, and
anyone who had escaped punishment in this way would be branded on
the thumb, or, later, transported to the colonies. Finally, toward the end
of the period judges had increasing discretion to sentence a convicted
felon to transportation or military service. But if a judge decided in favor
of death, the theatrical spectacle of the courtroom rose to a fever pitch.
After donning white gloves and the black cap of judgment, he might then
give a long speech, expounding on the age and wisdom of the law, the
enormity of the crime, the threat to the social order, and the sad necessity
of capital punishment. The sentence always concluded, ritually, with the
same words, which served to cement his superhuman persona: “and may
the Lord have mercy upon thy soul!”
The many opportunities for defendants to escape punishment and the
judge’s care to defend the law’s fairness remind us that the system would
not have worked if it was perceived to be unjust. That is, the law was
promoted to the English people as impartial, applying equally to everyone.
It is certainly true that English law did not, generally, differentiate offenses
and punishments by social rank, as did some contemporary continental
law. But eighteenth-century commentators went further, arguing that the
law was applied more or less equally to all in practice, thus making equal
access to the law part of the “rights of an Englishman.” They made much
of the case of Laurence, Earl Ferrers (1720–1760), hanged at Tyburn
in 1760 for murdering his servant. On the other hand, they tended to
omit numerous counter-instances, such as that of Charles, Lord Mohun
(?1675–1712), who committed several murders without suffering capital
punishment.
Mohun’s example supports the argument that the notion of the law’s
fairness and impartiality was a sham, part of the propaganda designed to
keep the lower orders in their place. First, a poor man or woman might
very well have been forced into crime by poverty, stealing to put food
into his or her children’s mouths. Second, the world of the law and the
courtroom were probably far more alien and threatening to an ordinary
person than they were to his or her social superiors: the elite spent a great
deal of time at litigation and so tended to be familiar with courts. Many
elite men would have picked up some knowledge of the law at the Inns of
The People on the Margins 263
Court or while serving as a sheriff or JP. Finally and above all, the law was
an expensive proposition to a poor man, even more so to a poor woman.
Admittedly, neither rich nor poor defendants were allowed counsel in a
felony trial, but one can be sure that, in practice, any peer or gentleman
accused of a capital crime would have pulled in any marker, given out any
bribe, enlisted any friend he had in high places to derail his prosecution.
Jonathan Wild’s career of corruption was sensational not perhaps because
of the level of malfeasance it exposed, but because its protagonist was so
common.
For the wretch condemned to death at trial all hope was not yet lost,
because, as we have seen, mercy might be bestowed by the judge at
sentencing: about 35% of those convicted of property crimes in London
from 1663 to 1689 were given noncapital sentences. The king might also,
at the recommendation of the judge or the recorder of London, issue a
pardon at any point before a sentence of death was carried out: in the
eighteenth century 50% to 60% of those so sentenced, many of them
first-time offenders, were reprieved. As this implies, discretion, commu-
nity feeling, and an awareness of individual circumstances were part of
how the law was carried out: victims prosecuted, JPs indicted, and juries
convicted as much on the reputation and circumstances of the accused as
they did on the evidence. Old or violent offenders suffered the ultimate
penalty; new ones tended to be reprieved. For some historians, mercy,
circumspection, and discretion represent the third element of the law
intended to restrain the power of the masses; that is, the cold calculation
that it would be unwise to hang every criminal found guilty, because that
might lead to a worse reaction on the part of the populace. In other words,
it was important for the drama to kill just the right number of offend-
ers and no more. The alternative would have been counterproductive: a
level of slaughter likely to produce a rebellion or revolution in reaction.
In this interpretation, the real point of it all was not so much to actually
exercise mercy as to avoid “overdoing it” and so to enhance the god-
like perception of the ruling elite by making clear that, like the Supreme
Being, they had the power to condemn or reprieve, damn or save. After
all, which act made the king or his magistrate seem more godlike: to exe-
cute the prisoner or to reprieve him at the last moment? Other historians
are skeptical, not only because there is no hard evidence of a conscious
upper-class conspiracy but also because the victims of crime and the juries
that decided guilt or innocence were most commonly ordinary Londoners
themselves.
264 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
Perhaps the theater of the law was at its most raucous, shocking, and
difficult to interpret as it reached the final act. Those to be hanged were
taken back to Newgate to live out their last few days or weeks in the
Condemned Hold, perhaps the worst part of the prison. Although the
prisoners were theoretically segregated by gender, a female might still try
to make a connection with a male inmate to “plead her belly” and be
reprieved for a few months. Throughout their final stay, the ordinary (the
chaplain) of Newgate worked on them to repent – and to dictate their
adventures to him for future sale. These accounts, on sale from every
London bookseller and street pedlar, like the infamous conditions of the
Condemned Hold itself, were part of the theater of the law, intended to
deter those who would follow the crooked trade.
There were about eight execution days a year. Always a Monday, what
came to be known as a “hanging match” began with a chapel service at
which the condemned sat next to their own coffins. In a perverse take on
the marriage ceremony,
He that is to be hang’d . . . first takes Care to get himself shav’d,
and handsomely drest, either in Mourning or in the Dress of a
Bride-groom; . . . Sometimes the Girls dress in White, with great Silk
Scarves, and carry Baskets full of Flowers and Oranges, scattering
these Favours all the Way they go.51
Lord Ferrers actually wore his satin wedding suit with silver embroi-
dery. A particularly popular male might be handed a bouquet of nosegays
by the prostitutes gathered in front of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre,
across the street from the prison. After chapel the procession of carts set
off, carrying the condemned, tied two by two, and their coffins. They
were accompanied by the ordinary (still preaching repentance), officers
of the court, constables, javelin men on foot, and, if trouble was antici-
pated, mounted troops. For two hours this party made its way through
the streets of London, from the prison, down Snow Hill to Holborn
Bridge onto Holborn, east to Broad Street, St. Giles, then along Oxford
Street to the northeast corner of Hyde Park, close to where Marble Arch
stands now, but which, in those days, was the site of Tyburn Tree. The
procession stopped periodically at taverns along the route, and always at
St. Giles-in-the-Fields, so that the condemned might be fortified with
drink. The three-mile route was lined with crowds who turned out to
see the condemned, to cheer antiheroes like Sheppard or jeer recognized
villains like Wild.
The People on the Margins 265
themselves full of liquor and mock at those who are repentant.”52 The only
unacceptable choice was Wild’s: he simply gave up and so failed to put on
a show. The suspense mounted, because a royal pardon could come at any
time.
If no fast rider approached, the hangings proceeded, yielding the most
grotesque scene of all. Hanging is at best an inexact science: the condemned
now stood on a large cart under the gallows. The gallows were simply a
triangular wood frame from which were suspended the nooses through
which their heads were slipped by the hangman. At a signal, he shooed the
horses, which pulled the cart, leaving the condemned to fall. The result
was an agonizing death by asphyxiation, hastened – if the prisoner had
friends – by their rushing the scaffold and pulling down on his or her body
so as to snap the neck and have done with it. They might then have to fight
off the agents of medical schools that wanted the bodies for dissection.
Others jostled to touch the corpses because of an ancient folk belief that
such contact could cure disease. The clothes of the hanged belonged to
the hangman, who might engage in a brisk trade under the gallows, selling
them to loved ones or bargain hunters. Still others made quick cash by
carrying the bodies to friends and relatives waiting with coaches and carts
to carry them away.
De Saussure found “the noise and confusion unbelievable,” but what
are we to make of it all? Why would an establishment that normally
feared crowds and a civic authority that had little use for staged drama
encourage such a show? What was being said, by whom, to whom, and
to what effect? At first glance, it would seem that the entire production
fulfilled efficiently the needs of the ruling elite by making an example of a
relatively small number of criminals before the largest possible audience
of ordinary Londoners. On one level, the authorities would seem to have
been soliciting the same kind of approval for their actions that a Tudor
might do at a royal entry. By doing so, they could claim that the law
remained an expression of shared values, enforced by the community. On
another level, the lurid spectacle could be seen as just retribution, a ritual
settling of scores, a poetically apt response to the shock horror theater of
the Thorn murder that set things right again. As with Tudor displays of
power, however, it was also clearly meant to overawe as much as to heal,
to deter terror by inducing it in would-be offenders. Certainly the whole
Tyburn ritual shocks and fascinates modern observers and has been used
on Web sites arguing against the death penalty.
The People on the Margins 267
But if these rituals were intended to convey the majesty, fairness, and
mercy of the law or strike terror into the hearts of the populace, how do
we account for the fact that crime continued? Perhaps the most significant
part of Moll’s frenzied meditation on the consequences of her criminal
acts, quoted earlier, is its end: “but that went off after a while.”53 She
then persists in her trade. Robert Shoemaker, studying misdemeanors,
has detected a lack of respect for the law and its officers among ordinary
people in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. Indeed, if the
public execution of felons was intended to frighten and intimidate, how
do we account for the party atmosphere of the procession to Tyburn? Is
not the mob saying something back to the ruling elite? What do we make
of the apparent theatrical push back by the prisoners themselves, and their
discourse with the crowd? It would appear that if capital punishment in
London was a play written by the ruling class, the audience of London
groundlings saw no reason why they could not cheer and jeer at will,
turning the production into a dialogue in which they too could have
their say.
The popular rituals that grew up around hangings continued a
medieval tradition of misrule, inversion, and mocking of forces (e.g., death,
disease, the law) that were normally beyond people’s control. There may
have been a certain amount of fatalism in this, but also perhaps resistance.
The Tyburn crowd seems to be saying to the upper classes that they
do not entirely accept, or accept only provisionally, their dominion over
them. Rather than bow down to the awesome power of the law, they treat
the serious business of a hanging like a party. On a more basic level, the
crowd might be said to be reminding the elite, by their very presence, of
their latent power: after all, they far outnumbered their betters and they
could easily turn into a mob, threatening elite control and, in special cir-
cumstances, manipulating or diverting it. In the next chapter, we spend
more time with the London crowd.
7. Riot and Rebellion
L ondon liked to portray itself as a loyal, royal city, but also as the
bastion of English liberties. It was that second description that
worried the authorities. Quite simply, there were too many Londoners to
control, and the city’s wealth, size, location, and administrative importance
ensured that it played a decisive role in the rise or fall of rulers and dynasties.
No wonder that both the court at Whitehall and the Corporation at the
Guildhall took alarm at even the hint of riot, let alone rebellion. The last
chapter addressed how the authorities tried to maintain order, and how
they reacted when individual Londoners violated that order. In particular,
we noted the difficulties facing metropolitan governors who lacked a police
force or any of the modern technology of surveillance or law enforcement.
The regime was even more vulnerable to disorder when Londoners acted
en masse, because the state had no standing army until the Civil Wars of
the 1640s. From 1660 to 1685 the army was small and barely able to cope
with localized rebellion; thereafter it was mostly away fighting continental
wars and so unavailable for domestic security. In any case, Englishmen
and women hated standing armies for the same reasons that they hated
urban police forces: they were expensive and a threat to liberty.
Instead, during the reign of Henry VIII, London established a militia,
the trained bands, which was easily the most formidable military force in
England before 1650. Trained by the Artillery Company on the Artillery
Ground just north of the ancient wall, they numbered at least 4,000
under Elizabeth I and expanded to 10,000 during the Civil Wars. The
nine wartime regiments of trained bands distinguished themselves in the
defense of London at Turnham Green in 1642 and the relief of Gloucester
in 1643. But these amateur soldiers, shopkeepers, and tradesmen in their
268
Riot and Rebellion 269
day jobs could not be relied on to fire at fellow Londoners. Indeed, the
active enlistment of ordinary Londoners in their own policing as soldiers,
constables, and watchmen seems to have promoted a sense of identification
with, and ownership of, law and custom that ironically encouraged some
of them to riot.
Riot
Historians are fascinated by riots. It is easy to see why. On the most obvi-
ous level, crowd action, public demonstration, riot, and their protracted
cousin, rebellion, were the most dramatic spectacles that early modern
London had to offer short of the Great Fire. They had the potential to
gather more Londoners in one place than perhaps any other type of occa-
sion, and for that reason alone they inspired a cold terror in the hearts
of London’s rulers, both civic and national. Of course, that fear stemmed
first from the violence against people and property to which the crowd
could turn. But on a deeper level, riot and rebellion would seem to rep-
resent a prima facie breakdown of the social order, threatening it, even
on those occasions when their participants claimed to be defending it,
by enacting, if only temporarily, mob rule, which is the very antithesis
of the Great Chain of Being. Mass demonstrations thus threatened the
chain by their very existence; riots exposed its tensions; and rebellions
broke it. Indeed, crowd action may be the one situation in which Lon-
don’s classes clashed overtly, in which the cold war between social groups
became hot.
This brings us to a deeper reason for historians to fixate on riots.
On the face of it, riot would seem to be an economical word for people
running amok in a moment of collective hysteria, committing random and
indiscriminate havoc as the spirit moves them. This was sometimes the
case: take the behavior of London’s apprentices. There were some 30,000
apprentices in the city in 1600, roughly 15% of the population, most of them
single young men with time on their hands. Attracted to radical religion
and jealous of their rights, following the tradition of the hue and cry, called
out by shouts of “’Prentices and clubs!” or “Shovels and spades!,” appren-
tices were frequently at the head of political and religious demonstrations
(see discussion later). But they also engaged in tumults that had nothing
do with principled challenges to authority. Thus, in July 1599 the lord
mayor bewailed “troops” of “riotous and unruly apprentices” armed with
270 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
“long staves and other weapons” who hung about near Hackney on sum-
mer evenings,
setting men’s corn growing in the fields on fire, breaking down glass
windows and signs hanging at men’s doors, thrusting down of bricks
with their staves from the tops of brick walls, pulling up of gates and
stiles, breaking into orchards and stealing of fruits, beating of Her
Majesty’s watches, and diverse other rebellious parts.
Such pranks have led one historian to conclude that “the disorderly
behaviour of young men in sixteenth-century London was hardly ever
organized or purposeful, at least not consciously.”1
Beginning in the 1950s and ’60s, historians such as George Rudé
and E. P. Thompson began to argue that most riots were organized and
purposeful, and that in fact they served as a form of communication from
those at the bottom of the social scale to those at the top. Londoners who
had no vote and no institutional outlet for their views could as a last resort
demonstrate to call on those in authority to remember their paternalistic
obligations to their inferiors, and thus to preserve the traditional social
and economic order generally. Trained in the custom of communal law
enforcement, London rioters tended to believe that they had a right to riot
and that when they did so they were engaging in the legitimate enforcement
of community standards and their ancient right of petition for redress of
grievances. In keeping with this, London rioters usually had specific
objectives, which they articulated in a variety of ways, and were often
careful to limit violence to specific targets. Thus, when ordinary – and
ordinarily anonymous – Londoners rioted, marching en masse toward
some specific goal, they provided clues to their mental universes. Often,
in the course of airing their grievances, they spelled out their theory of
order, their sense of their rights, and their views on church and state, both
vocally and in the rituals and symbols with which they rioted. It is true
that rebellions were even more likely to produce statements of grievances
and rituals of resistance, but these were almost always written up by elite
rebel leaders. Riots are perhaps more interesting to historians because
they had the potential to be the only time that ordinary people publicly
acted in great numbers, of their own accord, to express their views. They
therefore provide yet another kind of theater, this one largely popular, as
dramatic and moving as that of the law, which may tell us a great deal about
how rank-and-file early modern Londoners conceived of their world and
situation in it.
Riot and Rebellion 271
But historians have also taught us to be careful of the fact that riot-
ers deployed symbols and engaged in rituals, elected captains, marched
behind colors, attacked some places and not others, and above all pro-
duced cogent statements of grievance. All of this tells us that riots were not
entirely spontaneous. Like rebellions, they could be inspired, even manip-
ulated by elite politicians for their own purposes. Even when they were not
directed from above, rioters in London and elsewhere acted within long-
standing traditions of how to behave in a proper riot. Indeed, so acting
was thought to be one of the requirements to get their grievances heard,
and heard they often were. Arguably the most interesting discovery of the
recent historiography concerns the elite response to early modern riots.
Perhaps because they were outnumbered; perhaps because there was no
standing army and the trained bands were an ineffective tool against their
own neighbors; perhaps because, as good paternalists, they saw the riot-
ers’ point of view, judges, JPs, and other authorities rarely suppressed or
punished them forcefully. Rather they often seem to have tacitly assented
to a right to riot by listening to and even redressing the rioters’ grievances.
In most cases they limited punishment to a few ringleaders, if anyone,
and sometimes chastised those against whom the rioters were grieving.
In short, the theater of riot, like the theater of the law, was interactive
between actors and audience. Like the law, it had time-honored rules and
traditions for those on both sides of the social divide. Its study can tell us
much about how London worked.
What qualifies as a riot, exactly? The Riot Act of 1715 (1 Geo. I, c. 5)
famously (and tautologically) defined a riot as any assemblage of twelve
people “unlawfully, riotously, and tumultuously assembled together.”
Anciently, however, even three or more people engaged in such activity
– say, shouting at an unpopular constable – could be deemed a riot if the
authorities so decided. This loose definition gave them and subsequent
historians tremendous leeway in declaring what was a riot and what was
not. Along these lines, they might be tempted to call those three people,
and certainly those twelve, “a crowd” or, more pejoratively, “a mob.” The
word mob arrived in the English language as a term of upper-class derision
during the political turmoil of the 1680s (see below) and was short for the
Latin mobile vulgaris, that is, “the people on the move.” Any reader who
has paid attention to this book knows what feelings of unease “the people
on the move” would cause in the hearts of civic authorities.
Londoners had many reasons for rioting in the early modern period,
and historians have been tempted to divide riots up accordingly. There
272 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
were riots over harsh or scandalous words and behavior (especially sexual
behavior); economic riots over the price of bread, working conditions,
unpaid wages, or in defense of native products; xenophobic or religious
riots, often led by apprentices, against some national, ethnic, or religious
group; calendar riots associated with particular festivals and times of year,
also popular with apprentices; and finally political demonstrations that
could shade into or be part of a larger rebellion. Most riots had multiple
causes, straddling categories: thus the Evil May Day Riots of 1517 exploited
a calendar festival to attack foreigners, whereas the Sacheverell Riots of
1710 had political, religious, and economic roots.
Before examining various types of riot in detail, it might be worth
asking just how often Londoners rioted. In an important article published
in 1987, Robert Shoemaker compared the total number of recognizances
and indictments for riot at Middlesex Quarter Sessions (thus excluding
the City and portions of Southwark) during the period from 1663 to 1721
to figures from the early seventeenth century.2 He found that while the
population of Middlesex quadrupled between 1614 and 1720, the number
of prosecutions for riot multiplied by twenty times, from less than 10 a year
to nearly 200. Of course, it is possible that these figures are inflated by
increased reportage: as the passage of the Riot Act indicates, the national
and civic authorities grew less tolerant of riot as the period wore on and
so probably defined more disturbances and demonstrations as riots than
before. But given that something so dramatic as a riot was unlikely to
go completely unnoticed, Professor Shoemaker’s upward trend seems
convincing.
Who started riots in London? Who joined? Who watched? Who
attempted to stop them? Tim Harris found no evidence of upper-class
manipulation for the Bawdy House Riots of 1668, but the Exclusion Crisis
demonstrations from 1679 to 1681, both addressed later, were clearly
orchestrated by the Whig and later the Tory elite. In both the May Day
Riots of 1517 and the Sacheverell Riots of 1710, inflammatory sermons
increased tension and gave the impression that the established Church was,
in effect, pro-riot. There is also some eyewitness testimony of the presence
of Tory gentlemen along the sidelines in 1710 and of planning at the Rose
and Crown tavern. Years later the Duke of Newcastle not only approved
but also claimed to have led the Whig mug-house rioters of 1715: “I love
a mob. I headed a mob once myself. We owe the Hanoverian Succession
to a mob.”3 But Nicholas Rogers has discounted upper-class influence
for these riots, arguing that although Whig and Tory crowds from 1714
to 1716 certainly embraced the party struggle, these demonstrations were
Riot and Rebellion 273
Constables with them, to keep Her Majesty’s Peace,”4 and claimed the
support of the lord treasurer and Privy Council. In fact, many of the
enclosers were well-connected members of these parishes as well, but in
the end the authorities listened to the wider community: an inquest in
December found for the protesters. The following year, Parliament for-
bade enclosures within three miles of London. In this case, the parish
community asserted itself and in the short term won.
Economic Riots
Economic disagreements and transgressions might also provoke distur-
bances of the peace, as when shop or tavern keepers haggled with a patron
over a price, a bill, or a transaction gone bad. Shoemaker cites two women,
possibly dissatisfied customers, who were accused of “making a riot” in
1719 by driving other patrons away from a market stall. A scab worker
might be ridden, on a rail or in a wheelbarrow, in an urban skimmington
as a warning to his fellows. If riot were a form of communication and a
weapon in the arsenal of ordinary people, it was a blunt weapon, some-
times expressing no more than class resentments, as when apprentices and
gentlemen’s servants clashed around the Inns of Court in the 1580s.
In the early modern period, just as there were no trade unions in the
modern sense of the word, there was no orderly picketing. Instead, indus-
trial action tended to degenerate into riot, often involving workers ruining
products with which they were competing or attacking new machinery or
techniques designed to cut labor costs. Thus in August 1675, the weavers
of London – wearing Leveller green – broke machine looms that threat-
ened to reduce their workforce. Even this violence was targeted and often
aimed to persuade a higher authority to fulfill its customary responsi-
bilities. In 1595, Huguenot weavers were attacked because they flouted
guild rules by introducing a new, less labor-intensive, type of loom, and
sold door to door. There may have been a xenophobic aspect to these
demonstrations, but we should recall that the alien weavers could not have
276 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
Bread or other food riots were rare in early modern London because
the developing food distribution system was fairly efficient and because
City authorities watched the price of bread carefully. In the country, such
riots often began with women, who were of course especially concerned
with the business of putting food on the table, but in the City it might be
apprentice boys or servant girls as well as fishwives. In each case, their
anger was usually directed against middlemen such as grain sellers, corn
factors, and millers. Still, these demonstrations tended to be nonviolent,
often involving taking the grain, but leaving whatever sums the rioters
thought a fair price. In a show of paternal concern and traditional gender
attitudes, the City authorities were reluctant to prosecute women trying
to feed their families.
The one serious wave of food rioting in London occurred during the
hard years of the mid-1590s. The economy had long been disrupted by
war with Spain and high taxes. In 1593 the metropolis was wracked by
a deadly plague epidemic, followed by four years of bad harvests and
high prices. The price of flour rose 290% between 1593 and 1597; that
of food in general rose 46% while real wages fell 23%. The disturbances
began in February 1595 with larger than usual Shrove Tuesday riots. In
June, a group of apprentices sent to purchase fish at Billingsgate found
it all gone. On June 12 and 13, riots broke out over the price of fish and
butter. Apprentices spread throughout the city, some taking fish, butter,
and eggs, although leaving what they considered to be a fair price. The
situation turned ugly on June 29, when a mob of some 1,000 apprentices
marched up Tower Hill, determined to seize weapons and “to robbe,
steale, pill and spoile the welthy and well disposed inhabitaunts of the
saide cytye, and to take the sword of authorytye from the magistrats and
governours lawfully aucthorised.” Perhaps with this end in view they built
a scaffold facing the house of the unpopular lord mayor, Sir John Spencer
(d. 1610).8 This was the high point of the crisis, however. Just one more
food riot took place in October at the corner of Milk and Cheapside,
without the revolutionary overtones. The City reacted with firmness: the
watch was doubled, provost marshals were appointed and given summary
powers of execution, and apprentices and journeymen were confined to
their masters’ homes on Sundays and holidays. Marshal law was imposed
for a year, and five apprentice ring-leaders were sentenced to be hanged,
drawn, and quartered. But the City also got the message: the next year the
authorities began to distribute free bread. Historians still debate whether
these events indicate a city on the verge of anarchy or an isolated incident.
278 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
In the words of Ian Archer, “the social fabric was highly flammable, but it
failed to ignite.”9
The wars of the seventeenth century saw occasional demonstrations
by soldiers, sailors, or their wives demanding their pay from government
officials. There were thirteen such disturbances between 1626 and 1640,
and they became common again in the mid-1660s. At the height of the
Second Dutch War (1664–1668), the Crown found itself running out of
money and unable to supply wages, food, or even proper clothing to
thousands of seamen who had been pressed into service. Samuel Pepys,
besieged in the courtyard of the Navy Office by angry sailors and their
wives as clerk of the acts of the Navy, expostulated with some of his fellow
officers about “the sad state of our times. And the horrid shame brought on
the King’s service by the just clamours of the poor seamen.”10 Once again,
those in charge agreed that the “just clamours” of protestors indicated a
real grievance, but in this case the Restoration regime was too poor and
corrupt to do much to satisfy it.
Xenophobic Riots
Early modern Londoners have been accused of hating foreigners: certainly
the London stage was full of effeminate Frenchmen and gauche Dutchmen,
yet as we have seen, throughout the period great numbers of migrants and
refugees from abroad found a home and often built a fortune there. Still,
in a city in which the labor market was continually flooded by newcom-
ers, economic grievances were often linked to resentment of migrants,
especially from foreign lands. The classic example of an anti-alien demon-
stration, one that haunted respectable citizens’ imaginations for decades,
took place before the period covered by this book. In the Evil May Day
Riot of 1517, hundreds of apprentices, possibly inspired by an anti-alien
Paul’s Cross sermon by one Dr. Beal or Bell, stormed Newgate and other
prisons and St. Martin-le-Grand, a liberty popular with resident aliens
north of St. Paul’s. Although no one was killed, 278 rioters were arrested.
The intervention of Katherine of Aragon saved all but fourteen, and May
Day was suppressed for years to come, but Parliament also passed statutes
limiting the trading rights of aliens.
Violence against foreigners increased after the Reformation as London
took in refugees from the wars of religion. We have already seen that the
arrival of Huguenot workers from the 1560s through the 1590s led, even
if indirectly, to resentment and riot. Foreigners continued to be targets
Riot and Rebellion 279
Calendar Riots
Annually, at the lord mayor’s show on October 29, Londoners joined
in the street festivities by throwing fireworks and dead cats and dogs,
breaking windows, and exacting fees from passing carriages. But the most
famous recurrent example of a London calendar festival gotten out of hand
traditionally occurred on Shrove Tuesday. From the Jacobean period into
the 1670s young men, usually apprentices, attacked the brothels and play-
houses concentrated in London’s suburbs. Tim Harris, their historian,
counted twenty-four such riots in the period from 1606 to 1641. Such
demonstrations could be highly ritualized, the rioters destroying spe-
cific properties but not generally assaulting persons. They could also be
quite large in scale: the 1617 Shrove Tuesday disturbances occurred in
three separate locations (Lincoln’s Inn Fields, Finsbury Fields, and Wap-
ping), with at times several thousand rioters, many of them apprentices.
280 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
Political Riots
Londoners had always felt free to demonstrate their political feelings
in public. When Katherine of Aragon processed through the streets of
London to contest her divorce case at Blackfriars in 1529, the crowd
cheered her on; when her replacement wife, Anne Boleyn, was processed
through London for her coronation in 1533, the populace was noticeably
indifferent. As this indicates, Londoners could make a point with numbers
and gestures without resorting to outright riot. For example, crowds
gathered to show their support at the executions of the popular Dukes
of Buckingham (b. 1478) in 1521 and Somerset in 1552. In the latter case,
they dipped their handkerchiefs in his blood, and their coldness toward
his ministerial rival, the Duke of Northumberland, presaged their failure
to support him and his nominee, Queen Jane, at the change of reign in
1553 (see below). Some Londoners showed similar support for the Marian
martyrs and many years later again soaked their handkerchiefs in Protestant
blood – that of the Puritan controversialists William Prynne (1600–1669),
John Bastwick (?1595–1654), and Henry Burton (1578–1648) – at their ritual
Riot and Rebellion 281
mutilations in 1637 (see below). In 1703, they threw flowers at Daniel Defoe,
when he was sentenced to the pillory for satirizing Anglican (High Church)
attitudes to Dissenters (Puritans). Sometimes, a large crowd spoke volumes
by its very presence, as when several thousand gathered in Westminster
Palace Yard in 1601 to force Parliament to discuss monopolies.
The London crowd was not consistent because it was not monolithic:
groups with differing agendas could form mobs and put pressure on the
government. Ordinary Londoners could change their minds. We have seen
their alfresco enthusiasm for Elizabeth I, but that did not stop them from
protesting her possible French marriage in 1579. When Prince Charles and
the Duke of Buckingham considered a Spanish-Catholic match from 1621
to 1623, Londoners wrote libels on the Spanish ambassador, apprentices
abused him, bonfires appeared in the streets, and the crowd cheered the
duo after the marriage was finally thwarted in 1623. But in the period from
1626 to 1628, after Buckingham persuaded Charles as king to engage in
ultimately unsuccessful wars with Spain and France, poorly paid sailors
marched on Whitehall for their pay while civilians wrote libels against the
Duke, lit bonfires in support of the Petition of Right (1628), assaulted and
murdered his astrologer, John Lambe (1545/46–1628), and cheered Buck-
ingham’s assassin, John Felton (d. 1628), as he was taken to the Tower.
While some of these actions suggest a militantly Protestant worldview,
Londoners’ support for Mary and those she burned, their protests against
a Spanish match but also against a badly bungled Spanish war remind us
once again that London crowds were never entirely predictable.
These were demonstrations and sometimes riots – not acts of rebellion
intended to alter drastically the regime or constitution. Londoners had
learned to be careful about disloyalty: they did not do more for Somerset in
1552, nor did they rise against Mary I’s marriage in 1554 or for the allegedly
popular Earl of Essex in 1601 (see below). In the middle of the seventeenth
century, however, Londoners began to engage in mass demonstrations
that would precipitate rebellion and revolution. To understand why, we
have to address London’s role in “England’s Troubles” from the 1550s on.
the authorities to treat riots as isolated incidents; that is, until the Gordon
Riots of 1780, individual public demonstrations in London were generally
not viewed as a symptom of a much larger problem, or a threat to the
fundamental social order. Rebellion was different. As we learned in the
Introduction, as London went, so went the nation. Admittedly, it was an
open question whether London was truly governable at all, but it could
not be ignored. The city’s sheer size and wealth; its central role in the
dissemination of information; its strategic significance as gateway to the
Thames valley and mother to thousands of potential soldiers; and its
status as the capital meant that London had to figure in the calculations
of anyone plotting to seize or hold the government of England before,
during, or after our period. Put simply, a successful rebel had to enlist
Londoners in his cause. The failure to do so explains the collapse of the
Peasants’ Revolt of 1381, and Wyatt’s, Essex’s, and Venner’s Rebellions
in 1554, 1601, and 1661, respectively (see later discussion). But the City
opened its gates to Jack Cade in 1450; Edward, Duke of York in 1461;
Henry, Earl of Richmond in 1485; and William of Orange in 1688. The
last three became kings. Even in the seventeenth century, as the British
Isles were wracked by Civil Wars on a pan-archipelagic scale, London was
the key to the three kingdoms.
All of the rebellions against the Tudors in the previous list failed, not
least because they retained London. Having come to power as a result of
civil war and rebellion, their guiding principle was to eliminate all possibil-
ity of a repetition by increasing their own authority and popularity while
containing noble power. For the most part, they succeeded, especially in
London, where they maintained good relations with the civic authorities.
Moreover, Edward VI’s Protestant religious settlement was far more popu-
lar in the metropolis than in the remote parts of the country to the west and
north. When, therefore, in the spring of 1553, his health began to fail and he
and the Duke of Northumberland attempted to divert the succession away
from his Catholic elder sister, Mary, to a Protestant relative, Lady Jane
Grey, they probably expected London to follow. Upon Edward’s death
on July 6, the Privy Council in London duly proclaimed Jane queen. But
London stayed aloof, eventually rising for Mary. Jane’s army disintegrated,
the conspirators were imprisoned, and after some months delay, executed.
Once again, London went and the nation followed.
London and the nation rallied to Mary I, despite her half-Spanish
lineage and Catholic faith, because she was the daughter of Henry VIII.
She thought that God, however, and not her people had placed her on
Riot and Rebellion 283
starters, as we have seen, she knew how to charm a city crowd (see Chap-
ter 3). Her chief ministers, William Cecil, Lord Burghley, and Robert
Cecil, afterward Earl of Salisbury, cultivated good relations with the City,
while her Privy Council worked closely with civic authorities to guaran-
tee the food supply, suppress disorder, and arrange loans. The queen’s
willingness to turn a blind eye to her privateers’ attacks on the Spanish
Empire was good for business, and if she was not the sort of reforming
Protestant that many London Puritans would have liked, she was cer-
tainly no Catholic. Sometimes there was friction: in the 1580s other cities
complained of London’s privileges, and this decade saw the first royal
proclamation against new building. But it was only at the end of the reign
that her popularity began to wane, as the war with Spain (1585–1604) and
rebellion in Ireland (1594–1603) dragged on, necessitating continued high
taxes in the midst of inflation and poor harvests. We have already seen that
these conditions helped to produce sporadic riots in London and threat-
ening crowds at Westminster. Because Elizabeth remained unmarried and
childless, yet unwilling to name an heir, there was much speculation about
the succession.
In early 1601, Robert Devereaux, Earl of Essex (1565–1601), hoping to
be kingmaker, attempted to force the issue. On the afternoon of February
7, a group of his supporters sponsored a performance at the Globe Theater
of Shakespeare’s Richard II – which is, of course, about deposing kings.
When on the 8th the lord chief justice and three other Privy Councillors
arrived at Essex House, the Strand to investigate, Essex detained them in
his library. Banking on his popularity in the City, he marched into it with
about 300 retainers, shouting:
For the Queen! For the Queen!
The crown of England is sold to the Spaniard!
A Plot is laid for my Life!
In fact, no one seems to have cared. Instead of raising the trained bands
on his behalf, the sheriff called for the lord mayor, who trapped Essex by
closing Ludgate. The Earl was arrested and executed within the month.
London could still depose a king, as we shall see, but it did not back
losers. When Queen Elizabeth finally died in March 1603, she was suc-
ceeded, peacefully, by James VI of Scotland (reigned there 1568–1625),
who reigned in England and Ireland as James I. It could be said that the
smooth accession of the Stuarts was the greatest of the Tudors’ many
achievements.
Riot and Rebellion 285
Histories of the British Isles under the Stuarts (1603–1714) cannot avoid
the fact that arguably the most dramatic event in British History – the Civil
Wars of the mid-seventeenth century – happened on their watch. Histories
of London are not immune, because as we shall see, the metropolis played
a crucial role in bringing those wars to fruition, ensuring that Parliament
won them, but then ensuring that the Stuarts won the peace. In the words
of one anonymous pamphlet:
If . . . posterity shall ask . . . who would have pulled the crown from the
King’s head, taken the government off the hinges, dissolved Monarchy,
enslaved the laws, and ruined their country; say ’twas the proud,
unthankful, schismatical, rebellious, bloody City of London.14
Historians used to have no trouble explaining this connection: the British
Civil Wars were about the English, Scots, and Irish seeking freedom
from Stuart absolutism. London, as the freest place in the British Isles,
was bound to spark and support that fight. Unfortunately for this simple
interpretation, we now know that nobody in the British Isles necessarily
wanted to rebel against the king, let alone depose him. Rather, they wanted
the Stuarts to rule as Protestants and within the laws. The authorities in
London were especially tied to the monarchy. As we have seen, London’s
rich City elite, headed by the lord mayor and Court of Aldermen, depended
on royal charters to guarantee their own governmental authority as well
as the privileges of both livery and trading companies like the Merchant
Adventurers, East India, and Levant Companies. Many were Customs
farmers or major lenders to the Crown. Tudor and Stuart kings had equal
reason to appreciate London, because they depended on the City for
loans and for troops – about 10% of nearly every royal land force. As we
have also seen, kings and aldermen worried equally and constantly about
London’s potential for disorder: its size, high rates of disease and crime,
and religious diversity all threatened the Stuart ideal of order.
If the Stuarts had issues with London, many Londoners had issues
with the Stuarts. As we saw in Chapter 3, neither James I nor his son,
Charles I, had the Tudor common touch; both disliked going out among
their London subjects. On a more fundamental level, both had a very high
notion of their prerogative, and their clashes with Parliament tended to be
more prolonged and destructive than Elizabeth’s had been. During this
period, the Crown resorted to frequent prorogations and dismissals culmi-
nating in the Personal Rule of 1629 to 1640; extra-parliamentary taxation
such as the impositions (increased Customs rates) on imported goods,
286 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
forced loans, and the revival of old feudal taxes; and harsh legal action
against those who refused to cooperate, including attacks on London’s
privileges and individual merchants. The forced loans and impositions
were an especially sore spot with middling London merchants: the great
company merchants, in bed with the Crown, might look the other way, but
lesser figures, especially those trading with the American colonies, not only
condemned the impositions but also began to call for free trade, that is, an
end to the trading companies’ privileges. Perhaps more importantly, they
began to work with Puritan landowners in Parliament who feared what they
saw as absolutist and pro-Catholic policies. It did not help that the Stuarts
were spendthrifts, James spending money on his favorites, Charles on his
art collection at Whitehall. London’s Protestant mercantile community
would have preferred that their taxes be spent on an aggressive Protestant
foreign policy, including trade war and privateering against Spain in the
Thirty Years’ War (1618–1648). Instead, Stuart foreign policy was pacifist
until 1624. Indeed, in the waning years of James I’s life, the Duke of
Buckingham was working on a diplomatic marriage between Prince
Charles and the Catholic Spanish Infanta that was very unpopular in
the City. When those negotiations failed in 1623, Londoners rejoiced with
bell ringing and bonfires in the streets. Buckingham’s moment of popu-
larity evaporated when, over the next few years, he married Charles to
the equally Catholic French Princess Henrietta Maria, while bungling into
simultaneous wars with both Spain and France. A distrustful Parliament
and City Corporation underfunded the wars, and the government’s incom-
petence in fighting them left many Londoners wondering if the Stuarts
were secretly betraying their country to the Catholic powers.
As all of this suggests, religion was another area of tension between
many Londoners and the Crown. Most parish priests were nominated by
officials in the government or Church, and so were Anglican. But where
the vestry or parish could nominate its own clergyman, that parish was
often Puritan: for example, St. Anne Blackfriars, All Hallows Bread Street,
or St. Stephen Coleman Street. Coleman Street in particular had been a
hotbed of dissent since before the Reformation. The city was also stud-
ded with Puritan lectureships, namely, preaching positions sponsored by
wealthy Puritan merchants. Puritans existed at all social levels of London
society, including some aldermen, but they were especially strong among
the substantial merchants and small tradesmen, livery, and freemen of
Common Council and Common Hall. If the Stuart court looked askance
at them for their heterodoxy and social inferiority, they tended to see the
Riot and Rebellion 287
the ringleaders were arrested on March 24, the rioters stormed Finsbury
Gaol and the New Prison at Clerkenwell to free them. Perhaps the most
alarming aspect to these riots for the national and city elite were the riot-
ers’ slogans, which articulated grievances well beyond the proliferation
of brothels: “Down with the Red Coats;” that they (the rioters) “would
come and pull Whitehall down;” “[I]f the king did not give them liberty
of conscience, that May-day must be a bloody day;” and perhaps most
comprehensive and frightening of all, “[W]e have been servants, but we
will be masters now.”
But the regime of Charles II was seen not only as intolerant and
authoritarian; the disaster of the Dutch war had proved that it was corrupt
and incompetent as well. Many blamed the king’s Catholic sympathies and
the distractions of his virtual stable of mistresses. Anonymous pamphlets
from the London press caught the mood and undoubtedly fanned the
flames. One, The Poor-Whores petition. To the most splendid, illustrious,
serene and eminent lady of Pleasure, the Countess of Castelmayne, identifies
the king’s favorite (and Catholic) mistress as the patroness and chief
examplar of the “undone company of poor distressed whores, bawds,
pimps and panders,” and associates her with other Catholics at court.
There followed two satirical replies in which Castlemaine is made to
acknowledge her role as head whore and advocate of Popery at Whitehall.
Thus, London’s pamphleteers and rioting apprentices anticipated the
strategy of Gay and Fielding in linking sin in high places and low, equating
the corruption of the court, the advance of Popery, and the lack of toleration
for Dissenters with prostitution. The regime took the threat seriously
enough to prosecute fifteen of the ringleaders on charges of high treason
and levying war against the king. Yet, in keeping with tradition, just four
were hanged, drawn, and quartered.17
By the late 1670s, the issue of the succession loomed. Although Charles
II’s mistresses had produced over a dozen children, he had not managed
to conceive a legitimate heir with his legal consort, Catherine of Braganza.
That meant that the next in line for the throne was the king’s brother,
James, Duke of York – from 1672 a professed Roman Catholic. By this
time, Roman Catholicism was associated in the English mind with the
fires of Smithfield under Bloody Mary; the attempt of the Spanish Armada
under Elizabeth; the failed Gunpowder Plot under James I; the Irish Rebel-
lion under Charles I; the Great Fire under Charles II (see Chapter 8);
and absolutism, tyranny, and persecution in general. The royal fam-
ily’s sympathy for Catholics, pro-French foreign policy, and extravagance
Riot and Rebellion 297
the pope and assorted cardinals and Jesuits were burned in effigy to the
cheers of the masses. The Crown, feeling the pressure, began to harass
Catholics and ease the persecution of Dissenters. This resulted in full
meeting houses in the City, where Puritan clergymen urged their flocks to
take a stand against Popery. Charles II cultivated City leaders by attending
lord mayor’s feasts. But what the protestors and preachers really wanted
was the summoning of Parliament, because the king had refused to call it
from May 1679 to October 1680. As a result, the Whigs argued, the people
had no way of making their voices heard by the king. Whig London next
organized a massive petitioning campaign that was technically illegal, but
the mobile vulgaris could not be stopped.
The king could refuse the petitions coldly, but there was not much
he could do to restrain the City electorate. In 1679 the citizenry returned
Dissenting MPs like Thomas Pilkington (1628–1691) and Sir Thomas
Player (d. 1686) who were early advocates of Exclusion. In the July 1680
shrieval elections, Common Hall rejected “three persons of more mod-
erate tempers”18 in favor of two radical nonconformist parliamentarians,
Slingsby Bethel (1617–1697) and Henry Cornish (d. 1685), over royal
objections. The following year they elected Pilkington and the equally
radical Samuel Shute (d. 1685), to whom Charles II refused the customary
knighthood. These elections were crucial. First, they split the government
of London between a Tory lord mayor (Sir John Moore: lived 1620–1702)
and recorder (Sir George Jeffreys: lived 1645–1689) and two Whig sher-
iffs. Whereas some City officials thus promoted petitions for a Parliament
and Exclusion, others, like Jeffreys, attempted to thwart them: this led
Pilkington to call him “a common enemy of mankind.”19
More to the point, sheriffs impaneled juries: radical Whig sheriffs pre-
ferred radical Whig, and therefore Catholic-hating, jurors. As a result,
many Catholics went to the block unjustly in 1679 and 1680 for their
supposed role in the Popish Plot. In contrast, when in the summer of 1681
Charles II had Shaftesbury arrested on a charge of high treason, a Whig
jury quashed the prosecution with a verdict of ignoramus. Charles’s
response upped the ante: he ordered the lord mayor to suppress conventi-
cles and issued quo warranto proceedings against the City’s charter. Quo
warranto means “by what warrant?”; this amounted to the king’s demand
for the charter, which once surrendered he could change according to
his lights. London’s ancient privileges at stake, Sheriff Pilkington fought
the request vigorously: one Royalist observed “His tongue speaks naked
swords.”20 Pilkington organized a series of feasts in 1682 paying tribute
Riot and Rebellion 299
argue that all authority came from God and that it could be revoked only
by Him. Therefore, rebellion was never justified; instead, even a bad king
was to be endured patiently, obeyed passively, resisted not at all, because
as the Civil Wars proved, the alternative was far worse.
By 1682 the country was beginning to suspect that there was no Popish
Plot. Charles II played his cards well, flattering loyal City companies by
attending their banquets. A City constitutional crisis developed over the
next shrieval election. Pilkington and the Whigs claimed that Common
Hall had the right to elect both sheriffs, whereas Charles II and the
Tories claimed that it was the lord mayor’s customary right to name
one: conveniently for them, the current lord mayor, Sir John Moore,
was a Tory. The result was deadlocked meetings of Common Council
and Common Hall, and abortive elections in June, July, and September.
City government was paralyzed, “pulpits rattle[d] . . . like kettle drums,”21
and the streets buzzed with talk of rebellion when the king, exasperated,
threw Pilkington and Shute, whose job it was to organize the election,
into the Tower. Then, after a series of hotly disputed polls, in a move
of pure political muscle, Moore simply recognized two Tories, Dudley
North (1641–1691) and Peter Rich (?1630–1692), despite an obvious Whig
majority in the votes. This led Pilkington to attack Charles II to his face in
Council.
The Tory “victory” in the shrieval elections of 1682 turned the tide of
London politics. The City’s new, uniformly Tory administration steered
City loans into royal coffers. That, combined with increased Customs
revenues thanks to the Commercial Revolution and a secret subsidy from
Louis XIV, meant that Charles II had enough money – if he economized –
to rule without Parliament. To neutralize Shaftesbury’s London organi-
zation and its attendant Whig mob, the king convened his last, short-lived
Parliament in 1681 at Oxford, the most safely Royalist city in England.
Finally, in June 1683 the courts settled the quo warranto case in his favor,
declaring the City’s charter forfeit to the Crown. From this point, the lord
mayor and Court of Aldermen were royal appointees, Common Council
was effectively stripped of its powers, and the electorate was gerryman-
dered to produce a Tory majority. Pilkington and other Whig aldermen
were accused of scandalum magnatum (libeling peers of the realm) and
fined crushing amounts, although the Crown later relented. Whig party
leaders were reduced to half-hearted plotting. Thus, Charles II succeeded
where his father had failed, besting the City. For once the king, not his
capital, had won.
Riot and Rebellion 301
James resisted, his forces might have rallied, as did Mary Tudor’s over
a century before, and fought a pitched battle for control of the capital in
palace and park. Instead, the king folded, ordering his guards to stand
down and agreeing to be escorted by William’s guards to Rochester, on
the east coast. He departed the next day, the 18th, in a pouring rain and by
water so as to avoid the London crowds, “for they feared an insurrection
in behalfe of the king who was so joyfully received but the Sunday evening
before.”25 A few hours after James left London by barge headed east,
William entered by carriage from the west “to the loud acclamations
of a vast number of people of all sorts and ranks, the bells everywhere
ringing.”26 As William’s troops fanned out into the city, crowds, many of
them brandishing oranges on pikes, braved the rain to greet them, women
in Fleet Street shaking the Dutch soldiers by the hand and shouting
“welcome, welcome. God bless you, you come to redeeme our religion,
lawes, liberties, and lives. God reward you.”27 Clearly this was a different
set of Londoners from the one that had cheered James’s return a few days
before. All this time William courted the City administration by promising
a confirmation of its charter. The lord mayor and aldermen responded by
offering £200,000 for “carrying on the government.” After much debate,
closely followed by the crowds in Westminster Palace Yard, Parliament
asked the Prince and Princess of Orange to take the Crown as William III
and Mary II at Whitehall on February 13, 1689.
Like all Revolutions, this was a moment of possibility: the 1689 elec-
tions saw the return of a Whig lord mayor, sheriffs, MPs, and a majority of
Common Council. Restored Whig aldermen considered a radical undoing
not only of Charles II’s reforms, but of the City’s ancient constitutional
arrangements, proposing that from henceforward the lord mayor and sher-
iffs be elected by the freemen of Common Hall and the aldermen elected by
the freemen of their wards, a much wider franchise than heretofore. They
also proposed to enhance Common Council’s power vis-à-vis the Court of
Aldermen. In the spring of 1690, however, a Tory Parliament rejected the
new proposed City constitution. Soon after, Tories mounted a successful
takeover of Common Council, gaining strength among humble craftsmen
and shopkeepers in extramural and riverside wards who resented Dis-
senting influence and wartime taxation. No Whig alderman would want to
increase their authority. Rather, the once-radical and anti-Royalist Whig
oligarchy was now happy to keep the franchise narrow and concentrate on
supporting the Crown of William and Mary in return for lucrative finan-
cial deals and war contracts. Over the next twenty years, power shifted
304 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
back and forth, but from about 1707 the lord mayor, most of the aldermen
and many directors of companies tended to be Whig Dissenters, whereas
Common Council was dominated by Tories. Because the national gov-
ernment was also Whig from 1714 to 1760, Daniel Defoe could write in the
1720s of the “perfect good understanding between the Court and city.”28
Tories became the party of City opposition and democracy, representing
small shopkeepers and tradesmen who felt left out. In the words of its
historian, Gary De Krey, the City had become “a fractured society.”
Political Riots II
This shift explains perhaps the greatest overtly political riot of the period.
It occurred in 1710 over the prosecution of Rev. Henry Sacheverell, but
politics was one among many factors. As with Evil May Day, all of the
trouble began with a fiery sermon. Traditionally, English churches com-
memorated the four great anniversaries of the Stuart political calendar –
Royal Martyr Day on January 30, Restoration Day on May 29, Gunpow-
der Treason Day on November 5, and Queen Elizabeth’s Accession on
November 17 – with services that included a sermon tailored for the occa-
sion. That is, these sermons tended to be highly political and partisan.
The November 5 sermon for 1709 took place after six and a half years of
a bitter and expensive war against France, Britain’s second in defense of
the Glorious Revolution since 1688, the War of the Spanish Succession.
The military conflict had mostly gone well for the British, with the Duke
of Marlborough winning decisive victories against the French at Blenheim
(1704), Ramillies (1706), and Oudenarde (1708), but Allied forces had
been defeated in Spain at Almanza (1707) and Brihuega (1710). Moreover,
the raids of French privateers were taking a toll on English trade. Whereas
the Whig government, associated with the toleration of Dissenters at home
and support for the Germans and Dutch abroad, was determined to fight
on until Louis XIV was completely defeated, Tories wondered why, given
Marlborough’s victories, the war dragged on. Some accused the London
financial community – rich financiers and prosperous government con-
tractors, mostly Dissenters and Whigs – of prolonging it for the profits.
Londoners also complained about an influx of war refugees, the Poor
Palatines, who were perceived as taking advantage of Whig government
handouts and taking work away from native Englishmen. Thus, the moti-
vation for the riots combined elements of calendar ritual, xenophobia,
religious difference, and political and economic grievances.
Riot and Rebellion 305
It was in this climate that a fiery Tory preacher, Dr. Henry Sacheverell,
preached an incendiary sermon on November 5, 1709 on the text “the perils
of false brethren” (2 Cor. xi. 26). Although his subject was ostensibly the
anniversary of the Catholic attempt to blow up the king and Parliament in
1605, he connected these events with William III’s landing at Torbay on the
same date in 1688, the ensuing Revolution, and the current Whig regime
in England. In fact, the sermon was an explicit attack on the Revolution
of 1688/89 and, by extension, the whole course of English history over
the last twenty years. Sacheverell decried the current ministry, Whigs,
Low Church Anglicans, and the toleration of occasionally conforming
Dissenters in government and finance, all of whom he called “this Brood of
Vipers. . . . Miscreants, Begot in Rebellion, Born in Sedition, and Nurs’d
up in Faction.”29 The message might have been old, but the medium
was new: this rant was printed, reaching 100,000 copies and sparking a
partisan religious debate carried on in 600 additional titles within a year.
In December, the Whig government decided to prosecute Sacheverell on
a charge of seditious libel.
The trial took place during a hard winter, when food prices were high
and London trade depressed. On the evening of its third day, March 1, 1710,
rioting broke out in the West End. Encouraged by Tory gentlemen with
cash, a mob of between 2,000 and 5,000 Londoners armed with swords
and clubs, crying “High Church and Dr. Sacheverell,” attacked the houses
of prominent Whigs and the Dissenting meeting houses where they wor-
shiped: six of the latter were destroyed. They also threatened the Bank
of England in Grocers’ Hall. These were specific targets, and there was
an element of organization and ritual to the attacks. Indeed, as so often
in the past, many rioters were acting under the impression that they were
defending traditional values: the Anglican Church, a poor persecuted cler-
gyman, and Queen Anne herself, who was widely believed to be sick of the
war and her Whig government. Perhaps they were not wrong: although
the Whigs pursued the ringleaders aggressively, when the government
fell later in the year the new Tory administration reversed some of the
sentences.
In fact, the Sacheverell riots were only the first of many demonstra-
tions by partisan London crowds over the next decade. During Anne’s final
years, Whig and Tory mobs found ample excuse to take to the streets on
political anniversaries (e.g.,Gunpowder Treason; Elizabeth’s accession);
royal birthdays (e.g., Anne’s, William’s, the Hanoverians, the exiled Stu-
arts), and legislative victories or defeats (e.g., the Commercial Treaty
306 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
and the Peace, both in 1713). The death of the English, Anglican, and
Tory-leaning Queen Anne on August 1, 1714, and the accession of the
German, Lutheran, and Whig-inclined George I according to the terms
of the Act of Settlement (1701) was a watershed in English history. This
accession dashed the hopes of the Jacobite wing of the Tory party and
initiated a half-century of Whig dominance of the central government (see
Introduction). But no one could have known that in 1714: the new regime
had not yet established itself; France remained powerful; the Pretender
might yet invade; and Tories could hope that, failing another restoration,
if they played their cards right, the Hanoverians might give them office.
In this climate, neither Whig nor Tory crowds were willing to concede
the streets of London to the other side. Their historian, Nicholas Rogers,
has found little evidence of upper-class manipulation of rioters in this
period; rather, by this time, the London crowd was proficient at deploying
the signs and symbols of political allegiance on its own. First, each side
exploited xenophobia: George I was a foreigner, and the Pretender was a
pensioner of a foreign government. Second, demonstrations tended to be
staged on anniversaries favorable to each side: for Whigs, the new king’s
birthday on May 28, his accession day on August 1, and Gunpowder
Treason on November 5. Tories celebrated Anne’s birthday on February
6, her coronation day on April 23, Restoration Day on May 29, and
the Pretender’s Birthday on June 10. As noted when we discussed the
political calendar (in Chapter 5), apart from George I’s birthday, Tories
thus owned the streets in the spring and Whigs in the autumn. Both sides
employed slogans (“God Bless the Queen and Church”; “No Presbyterian
Government”; “No Jacobites; No Wooden Shoes”); they carried pictures,
made toasts, lit bonfires, burned figures in effigy, and demanded the
illumination of houses. Whig mobs (or “Mugs”) organized in large-scale
alehouses, known as mug houses because regular customers had their
own beer mugs. Mobs of Tories, or “Jacks” (for Jacobite), responded by
attacking the mug houses. The most famous such attack was the wrecking
of Read’s Mug House, Salisbury Court, in the summer of 1716, which
resulted in five hangings. Tory-Jacobite crowds persisted throughout the
early Hanoverian period, cheering the Jacobite rebels of 1715 to their
executions.
It was in the midst of this “war for the streets” that a Whig Parlia-
ment passed the Riot Act (1715). As we have seen, the Riot Act famously
declared that any twelve people unlawfully assembled constituted a riot.
It further enacted that it was a felony, not excusable by benefit of clergy, to
Riot and Rebellion 307
after our period. As we have seen, weavers and other workers broke
machines and attacked competitors throughout the 1760s. London crowds
were active in the “Wilkes and Liberty” agitation of 1768/69 and produced
“The greatest outburst of civil disorder in modern British history”30 in the
anti-Catholic Gordon Riots of 1780. Ten thousand troops were called out
and fired on the rioters; 285 were killed; 450 were arrested; 59 sentenced
to death; and 26 actually did hang – far more than for any riot in our
period. In their wake, the public cavalcade of the condemned to Tyburn
was done away with in 1783. Clearly, the Gordon Riots marked the end of
elite tolerance for riot. Nevertheless, Londoners marched for Reform in
the early 1830s, for a National Charter in the 1840s, for women’s suffrage
in the 1910s, and against nuclear weapons in the 1960s. They rioted in the
East End in the 1930s, Brixton in the 1980s, and across Greater London
in 2011. They gave the Thatcher government its final push via the Poll
Tax Riots of 1990. Still, if the Crown has sometimes lost London, early
modern City authorities, for all their fears, never really did so. This is just
as well, for riot and even rebellion were not to be the greatest challenges
facing their city.
8. Plague and Fire
309
310 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
The statistical impulse is a modern one, but these figures are not entirely
reliable. As Samuel Pepys noted, the poor were underreported, and Dis-
senters often lived outside the parish structure in a variety of ways. For
example, Quakers would not toll a bell for the dead. Later, at the height
of the epidemic, parish clerks tried to avoid mass panic by reporting
plague deaths as being from “dropsy” or French pox, griping of the guts,
Plague and Fire 311
“frighted,” or lethargy. Thus, the clerk at St. Olave Hart Street admitted
to Pepys that “there died nine this week though I have returned only six.”2
In any case, the diarist knew that something was amiss by early June:
This day, much against my Will, I did in Drury-lane see two or three
houses marked with a red cross upon the doors, and “Lord have
mercy upon us” writ there – which was a sad sight to me, being the
first of that kind that to my remembrance I ever saw. It put me into
an ill conception of myself and my smell, so that I was forced to
buy some roll-tobacco to smell to and chaw – which took away the
apprehension.3
People who remembered the epidemics of 1636 and 1647 began to remove
their families from London. What were they so afraid of?
It is generally agreed, although not without dissent, that from 1347
through the 1720s Europe was subjected to repeated visitations of the
same disease. Although medieval Europeans called it “the Black Death”
(not the “Black Plague” as careless students sometimes do), by the seven-
teenth century they referred to it simply as “the plague.” There are two
types of plague, bubonic and pneumonic, both caused by enterobacteria.
Pneumonic plague, passed through the air, is the less common. Bubonic
plague is contracted from the bite of a flea carried on the European black
rat (Rattus rattus); the fleas carry Yersinia pestis, the bacteria responsible
for the infection. Most contemporaries missed this connection completely,
leading to a great many mistaken strategies to combat the disease, such as
the setting of fires to purge the air of supposed plague “effluvia.”
One of the most frightening aspects of the plague was its suddenness.
If a person were breathed on or bitten, symptoms appeared in 3 to 7 days,
but their onset could be abrupt. You could be fine one minute, dying the
next, as happened to Samuel Pepys’s coachman on June 17, 1665:
1499/1500 (when 20,000 died), 1517–1521, 1531, and 1535. The worst early
modern visitations are recorded (or, more likely, under-recorded) here:
So, when was the Great Plague? In absolute terms, 1665 killed more people,
a devastating 56,000 or more than 12% of London’s population. If one
includes the suburbs and outlying areas, the estimate rises to between
70,000 and 100,000. As a percentage of the city’s population, however,
1348/49 was far worse, killing 33%. The years 1563, 1603, and 1625 were
also bad: in each case London lost one-tenth to one-fifth of its people within
a few short months. The worst months were in the summer: in contrast to
modern urban dwellers, who tend to dread winter, early modern people
hated summer because disease seemed to thrive in the warmer months. By
July 1665, 1,000 were dying per week. The previous weekly record had
been set in 1603, when 2,795 died in one week, but in the third week of
September 1665, the Bills of Mortality report 8,297 dead, and the French
ambassador thought the real figure was 14,000.
It is worth pausing to reflect on the fact that between 1563 and 1665,
on average every 25 years or so, London saw about a tenth or more of its
population simply wiped out. What was the impact of these successive
disasters? Demographically and economically, plague epidemics had little
long-term significance: London continued to grow through them; indeed,
one wonders how the metropolis would have coped if these people had
not died. In the short term, the loss was devastating at every level. That
summer, Samuel Pepys faithfully recorded the rising death toll as well as
his own personal losses: August 8 “ . . . And poor Will that used to sell
us ale at the Hall-door – his wife and three children dead, all I think in a
day.”8 By mid-August, the city streets were deserted, and London began
to take on the atmosphere of a city abandoned, as in a postapocalyptic
science fiction epic:
But Lord, how sad a sight it is to see the streets empty of people, and
very few upon the Change – jealous of every door that one sees shut
314 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
up, lest it should be the plague – and about us, two shops in three, if
not more, generally shut up.9
the streets naked and delirious, foaming at the mouth. One contemporary
hinted at the psychological, governmental, and social fallout:
Death is now become so familiar and the people so insensible of
danger, that they look upon such as provide for the public safety as
tyrants and oppressors; whilst neither the richer sort will be brought
to contribute, nor the meaner to submit, though to their own apparent
good and preservation.15
London’s responsibility to its inhabitants did not end with death.
The City hired servants abandoned by their masters to drive the notorious
“dead carts.” There was perhaps no more melancholy sight in the diseased
metropolis than the stacks of bodies being trundled through otherwise
empty streets, grass growing through cobblestones, dead animals littering
the roadway. The stench of rot, mingled with the soot and smoke from
the perpetually burning “purging” fires, must have made London seem
like the antechamber to hell. The carts carried the dead out to mass graves
or “plague pits” just beyond the City walls. Because of the sheer volume
of corpses, bodies were stacked nearly up to the surface, then covered
over with a few inches of dirt and quicklime by shifts of gravediggers who
worked around the clock, drinking profusely to get through their work.
By late summer, the cart drivers and gravediggers themselves began to
be infected: “Some died at the reins of their carts which, stacked with
corpses, moved on aimlessly at the whim of the horses.”16 As Pepys noted
on August 22, 1665, even this last City service began to be neglected:
I went away and walked to Greenwich, in my way seeing a coffin
with a dead body therein, dead of the plague, lying in an open close
belonging to Coome farme, which was carried out last night and the
parish hath not appointed anybody to bury it – but only set a watch
there day and night, that nobody should go thither or come thence,
which is a most cruel thing – this disease making us more cruel to one
another then we are [to] dogs.17
Still, some Londoners continued to attend the funerals of loved ones in
violation of the City Plague Orders.
The greatest impact of London’s plague epidemics may have been
psychological. Perhaps the first reaction to the plague was alarm at the news
of death, still distant: “30 [April 1665] . . . Great fears of the Sickenesse
here in the City, it being said that two or three houses are already shut up.
God preserve us all.”18 Then came the dreadful first encounter with the
Plague and Fire 317
red-crossed doors and uncertainty about your own health, hence Pepys’s
worry about his “smell,” quoted earlier. Soon you would be affected by
the deaths of your neighbors, as Pepys was by that of “poor Will . . . his
wife and three children.” In 1665, Samuel Pepys experienced two more
psychological effects of the plague, a sense of isolation as the city became
a ghost town, as well as widespread obsession with the fundamental fact
of relentless death:
But Lord, how empty the streets are, and melancholy, so many poor
sick people in the streets, full of sores, and so many sad stories over-
heard as I walk, everybody talking of this dead, and that man sick, and
so many in this place, and so many in that. And they tell me that in
Westminster there is never a physitian, and but one apothecary left,
all being dead – but that there are great hopes of a great decrease this
week. God send it.19
Of course, he was an eyewitness to much grief as well: “But in the street
did overtake and almost run upon two women, crying and carrying a
man’s Coffin between them: I suppose the husband of one of them, which
methinks is a sad thing.”20 Dr. Thomas Lodge (1558–1625), writing at the
time of the 1603 epidemic, worried about the utter despair and isolation
of patients in pest houses.
Some reactions might strike us as perverse but are all too familiar from
modern disasters. For example, wild rumors flew of people infecting each
other deliberately, “And in spite to well people, would breathe in the faces
(out of their windows) of well people going by.”21 Others fell into a fatalistic
despair of eat, drink, and be merry, or busied themselves by looting
abandoned shops or waylaying passersby. Some became disoriented: “But
now, how few people I see, and those walking like people that had taken
leave of the world.”22 Perhaps finally came resignation:
Thence to the office; and after writing letters, home to draw over anew
my Will, which I had bound myself by oath to despatch by tomorrow
night, the town growing so unhealthy that a man cannot depend upon
living two days to an end.23
Sixty years later, Daniel Defoe, who was a small boy during the 1665 epi-
demic, captured all of these reactions in one of the greatest psychological
novels in the English language, Journal of the Plague Year (1722).
None of this is to imply that all Londoners suffered equally. In 1563
the City was still fairly compact, and it was the center parishes that had
318 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
the highest rates of mortality. But as London expanded, it was the out
parishes that did worse in 1665, especially to the south and northeast.
Why? These were the areas where newcomers and the poor settled; as a
result, they were already overcrowded and unhealthy. Those who lived
in the better areas might not have been present to fall ill, because the rich
could, as we saw in the case of the court, get away. But as the summer
epidemic raged on, country towns began to lock their gates against London
refugees; some were met by thrown stones and manure. The best survival
rates were among the 10,000 Londoners who moved to boats on the
river. Among those who did not take to the roads or river, Boghurst and
Hodges; the Duke of Albemarle, delegated by the king to watch things
while he was gone; Lord Mayor Lawrence and his fellow aldermen; and
Pepys himself stayed at their posts and in their various ways kept the city
running.
London did not get a reprieve until late autumn 1665: casualties fell
by half in the last week of September, and to 900 by the last week of
November. Plague deaths continued into the spring of 1666, and the
stench remained in the city for weeks. Still, Londoners began to drift back
and reclaim their boarded-up properties. The city sprang again to life with
remarkable quickness. Writing in January 1666, Samuel Pepys found it
. . . a delightful thing . . . to see the town so full of people again, as
now it is, and shops begin to open, though in many places, seven or
eight together, and more, all shut; but yet the town is full compared
with what it used to be – I mean the City-end, for Covent Gu[a]rden
and Westminster are yet very empty of people, no Court nor gentry
being there.24
The court finally returned on February 1 to the peal of church bells. With
it came the elite and a revival of business for local merchants.
The 1665/66 visitation was the last major plague epidemic in London’s
history. There was to be one more significant scare in 1720–1722, when
an outbreak in Marseille threw the metropolis into a panic. The plague
regulations were debated again, and Defoe wrote the Journal of the Plague
Year as part of that debate. The quarantine of French trade worked,
however, and London’s Dreadful Visitation did not return. Why not?
Contemporaries thought that the fire of 1666 “burned it out,” but this is
nonsense. Later, historians argued that the brown rat (Rattus norvegicus)
drove out the black rat (Rattus rattus), but this did not happen until
the eighteenth century. It is possible that the rats themselves acquired
Plague and Fire 319
such fires as fallowed, I thought it far enough off, and so went to bed
again and to sleep.” At seven he rose and headed the short distance up
Tower Hill to get a view. What he saw appalled him: “So I . . . walked
to the Tower and there got up upon one of the high places . . . and there
I did see the houses at that end of the bridge all on fire, and an infinite
great fire on this and the other side the end of the bridge. . . . So down,
with my heart full of trouble.”27 At first, people stood their ground and
tried to put out the flames, but by mid-morning they were starting to give
up on their houses in favor of trying to save their belongings. Pepys saw
“Everybody endeavouring to remove their goods, and flinging into the
River or bringing them into lighters that lay off. Poor people staying in
their houses as long as till the very fire touched them, and then running into
boats or clambering from one pair of stair by the water-side to another.”
Some shipped their possessions across the river or deposited them with
goldsmiths, who had secure vaults. Others took their belongings to the
crypt of St. Paul’s, which was thought safe because it was made of stone.
West End cart loaders and drivers turned up, offering to transport goods
for exorbitant fees. On Saturday, a cart cost a few shillings to rent in
London; on Monday, £40.
Having satisfied himself of the seriousness of the situation, Pepys shot
off to Whitehall to break the news to the sovereign. He found Charles II in
his closet at chapel “where people came about me and I did give them an
account dismayed them all.” Recall that the king and court had been much
criticized for fleeing the plague; they were determined not to make the same
mistake twice. Charles ordered Pepys to tell the lord mayor to begin pulling
down houses, and the duke volunteered soldiers to help. Pepys tried to
return by coach but found the streets clogged with carts and refugees:
“every creature coming away loaden with goods to save – and here and
there sick people carried away in beds. Extraordinary good goods carried
in carts and on backs.” We might wonder about Londoners’ obsession
with their goods, but it becomes more understandable if we recall that the
household was the basic unit of economic production, and that insurance
companies in the modern sense did not yet exist. Families were trying to
save the tools and materials essential to their livelihoods. To lose your
home and its contents was to lose everything with appalling finality.
Alighting near St. Paul’s, Pepys found Bludworth at Canning Street
“like a man spent, with a handkercher about his neck . . . like a fainting
woman,” whining “Lord, what can I do? I am spent! People will not obey
me. I have been pull[ing] down houses. But the fire overtakes us faster
322 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
then we can do it.”28 When later that afternoon the king arrived at the
scene by barge and found few houses had been pulled down, he ordered
in the Coldstream Guards to do it. According to the Earl of Clarendon
(1609–1674), over the next few days he and his brother stepped into the
leadership vacuum:
The King and Duke, . . . rode from one place to another, and put
themselves into great dangers among the burning and falling houses,
to give advice and direction what was to be done, underwent as much
fatigue as the meanest, and had as little sleep or rest; and the faces of
all men appeared ghastly and in the highest confusion.
Henry Griffith has the royal brothers “handling the water in buckets when
they stood up to the ankles in water and playing the engine [pumps] for
many hours together.”29 Whatever the truth of these encomia, it is clear
that the king and duke did what leaders are supposed to do in a crisis: they
showed firmness and resolve, gave direction, and stood their ground while
others fled. The duke organized command posts headed by courtiers who
gave orders to constables and soldiers. Able-bodied men were dragooned
into teams to pull down houses. Thus, the governmental reaction to the
fire stood in contrast to that toward the plague: this time it was the court
that rose to the occasion while the City stood paralyzed.
By the afternoon of the 2nd, a firestorm developed, created by the high
winds and chimney effect, as the heat rose in the narrow areas between
buildings. In the evening, Pepys and his friends secured a boat to get close,
coming “So near the fire as we could for smoke; and all over the Thames,
with one’s face in the wind, you were almost burned with a shower of
Firedrops.” So they abandoned this vantage point for an alehouse on the
south bank from which they
saw the fire grow; and as it grow darker, appeared more and more,
and in Corners and upon steeples and between churches and houses,
as far as we could see up the hill of the City, in a most horrid malicious
bloody flame . . . till . . . we saw the fire as only one entire arch of fire
from this to the other side of the bridge, and in a bow up the hill, for
an arch of above a mile long. It made me weep to see it.
End; later he would bury his wine and a large Parmesan cheese in his back
garden.30
On Monday, September 3, the flames pushed outward, north, west,
and south. To the south they were stopped by the river but threatened
to cross London Bridge. To the north, the Royal Exchange, the General
Letter Office in Threadneedle Street, and London’s great shopping district
in Cheapside – the very heart of the City – went up, the latter “with such
a dazzling light and burning heat and roaring noise by the fall of so many
houses together that was very amazing.”31 At this point John Evelyn came
to town and saw
. . . the whole Citty in dreadfull flames neere the Water side; & had
now consumed all the houses from the bridge all Thames Streete, &
up-wards towards Cheape side, down to the three Cranes. . . .
That evening, he found himself among vast crowds trying to make their
way out of the City on barges or through the gates that acted as massive
bottlenecks. Imagine the panic and frustration of being in that crowd, the
air thick with smoke, the heat of the fire at your back, the wind blowing
sparks everywhere, the “crying out & lamentation” of despair in your ears.
At one point the magistrates actually ordered the gates shut to persuade
people to return and fight the fire. Londoners were not to be contained,
and the order was rescinded the next day. Evelyn followed the crowd to
open fields beyond the wall “which for many miles were strewed with
moveables of all sorts, & Tents erecting to shelter both people & what
goods they could get away. O, the miserable & calamitous speectacle!”32
By this time, London was lethargic, demoralized, fearful – and paranoid.
It is a characteristic human reaction that few could conceive of such
an epic disaster as having begun with a baker’s error. Rumors spread of
foul play: remember that in 1666 England was at war with the Dutch, the
Restoration was new, and the Civil Wars were a recent memory. Every-
body was afraid of somebody: Anglicans feared Dissenters and Catholics,
Dissenters feared Catholics even more, and Catholics feared everybody.
Because the high winds carried sparks, houses seemingly far away from
the fire would combust, which led to rumors of Dutch or French spies
throwing fireballs. In particular, French shops – normally quite popular –
and French nationals were openly attacked in the streets. A Westminster
schoolboy, William Taswell, remembered seeing a Frenchman clubbed in
the head with an iron bar; his brother saw another torn almost limb from
limb. The Duke of York rode up and down with the Life Guards to rescue
324 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
foreigners and Catholics and take them into protective custody. By this
point the City government was out of commission, the lord mayor having
apparently fled.
Tuesday, September 4 saw the worst destruction. Fire consumed
Bridewell and the City’s grain stores, then leaped over firebreaks at the
Fleet River and Cheapside. The flames threatened St. Paul’s and the
Guildhall to the north, Whitehall Palace to the west, and the Tower of
London – with its gunpowder stores – to the east. To prevent disaster,
the Navy was ordered in the next day to save the Tower by bombarding
houses in Tower Street to form a firebreak. St. Paul’s received no such
reprieve. The cathedral never had a chance: although it was made of stone,
its crypt was stuffed with furniture and books from the nearby bookstalls,
its walls framed by wooden scaffolding from the recent renovations (see
Chapter 1). The lead roof started to melt, molten metal running down the
walls into the crypt. The sight, as recorded by John Evelyn, was hellish:
“the stones of Paules flew like granados, the Lead mealting downe the
streetes in a streame, & the very pavements of them glowing with fiery
rednesse, so as nor horse nor man was able to tread on them.”33 Although
no one could know it at that dark moment, the burning of St. Paul’s was
the crescendo of the Great Fire.
On Wednesday, September 5, Samuel Pepys awoke at 2 AM to cries
that the flames had reached All Hallows, Barking, at the end of his lane.
After securing his wife safely at Woolwich, he returned at 7 AM: “But
going to the fire, I find, by the blowing up of houses and the great help
given by the workmen out of the King’s yards, sent up by Sir W. Penn,
there is a good stop given to it, as well at Marke-lane end as ours – it
having only burned the Dyall of Barkeing Church, and part of the porch,
and was there quenched.”34 At Leadenhall, an alderman with a “hatful of
money” secured similar cooperation.35 The winds had died down, and
the firebreaks ordered by the king and duke began to work. Still, going up
the steeple of All Hallows to survey the damage, Pepys “saw the saddest
sight of desolation that I ever saw. Everywhere great fires. Oyle-cellars
and brimstone and other things burning.”36 The greatest conflagration in
London’s history was beginning to burn itself out, but that process would
take a very long time: eyewitnesses reported smoldering embers and hot
spots for months. Because the Fire began in Pudding Lane and ended at
Pye Corner, some wits opined that it was God’s punishment for the sin of
gluttony. More seriously, that afternoon, both Pepys and Evelyn witnessed
the refugees in Moorfields, fields adjacent to Southwark, and elsewhere
Plague and Fire 325
“as far as higate, & severall miles in Circle, Some under tents, others under
miserab[l]e Hutts and Hovells, without a rag, or any necessary utinsils,
bed or board . . . reduc’d to extreamest misery & poverty.”37 The king
also rode out to see them, promising provisions and reassurance that
there was no foreign plot. Still, the next few days saw continued panics as
Londoners expected the imminent arrival of French or Dutch armies. Just
the appearance of a Frenchman or Dutchman on the streets led to rioting,
which had to be suppressed by the Life Guards and trained bands.
Londoners could now begin to take the toll: 436 acres had burned;
13,200 houses, 87 parish churches, 44 livery halls, and nearly all of the old
City were destroyed (see Illustration 8.3). Among major public buildings
lost were the interior of the Guildhall, the Royal Exchange, Newgate,
the Old Bailey, the Custom House, and St. Paul’s Cathedral. The direct
financial cost was £10,000,000. There is evidence of very few deaths,
although, as with the plague, poor people and vagrants probably went
unreported, and the chances of their remains being found were few. After
all, the Great Fire was hot enough to melt imported steel at the docks,
suggesting temperatures between 1,200◦ F and 3,000◦ F. That would have
melted not only flesh, but bone as well. Teeth might survive, but poor
people of any age probably had few of those. Hundreds more might
have died that winter from poor nutrition and exposure. The Great Fire
rendered some 70,000 homeless out of a population of perhaps 460,000
(15%). Although some fled to the country or to America, others set up
shanties on the sites of their former homes, or camped out in tents on
Moorfields and other open spaces. Of course, all this came after losing
70,000 to 100,000 Londoners to disease just a year before.
In the aftermath of the Fire, the survivors sought scapegoats. Enter
Robert Hubert (c. 1640–1666), a French immigrant who confessed to
setting the fire in Pudding Lane. Although his story was riddled with
inconsistencies, he was hanged on September 28, 1666, making him the
ninth known victim of the Fire. Later, it was discovered that he had not
even set foot in London until September 4! Subsequently, a Parliamentary
commission assembled a vast amount of rumor and hearsay in favor of
a plot, but the Privy Council concluded, more judiciously, that the Fire
occurred by “the hand of God upon us, a great wind, and the season so
very dry.”38 Nevertheless, the idea that Catholics (i.e., the French, the
Jesuits) set the Fire would not go away. It fit current expectation and
national memory, which included the surprise St. Bartholomew’s Day
Massacre in Paris in 1572, the numerous failed plots under Elizabeth,
326 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
the failed Gunpowder Plot of 1605, and the Irish Rebellion of 1641, the
atrocities of which, exaggerated in the telling, still lived vividly in London
consciousness, kept alive by annual sermons. Basically, if there were a plot
against London, Catholics were the obvious suspects.
This notion would be enshrined in the Monument, designed by
Christopher Wren and erected 1671–1677 by Act of Parliament (18–19
Chas. II, c. 8) “in perpetual Remembrance” at the corner of what is now
Monument and Fish Streets (see Illustration 8.4).39 The Monument is
a Doric Column surmounted by flames of gilt bronze, standing 202 feet
tall, the exact distance from its base to the location of Farriner’s ill-fated
bakeshop. Daniel Defoe thought it “out does all the obelisks and pillars of
the ancients,” although he qualified that assertion with the doubt-inducing
phrase “at least that I have seen.”40 (One wonders how many such mon-
uments a Dissenting journalist from London had ever seen.) Ned Ward
claimed, more waggishly, that “it’s [sic] very height was the first thing
that ever occasioned wry Necks in England, by the Peoples staring at
the Top on’t.”41 Visitors can still climb the 311 steps to the top to get a
panoramic view of the city as James Boswell did in April 1763: he found
the building “most amazing” but the experience “horrid to find myself
so monstrous a way up in the air, so far above London and all its spires.
I durst not look round me.”42 Safely back on the ground, he may have
noticed the bas relief on the west side of the base depicting Charles and
James ordering the reconstruction of London by Architecture, Nature,
and Science. The other three sides contain inscriptions describing the
Fire, the reconstruction, and a list of mayors who supervised the erection
of the Monument. In 1681, at the height of the Exclusion Crisis, Whig
aldermen added a concluding line to the north panel “But Popish frenzy,
which wrought such horrors, is not yet quenched.” This later inspired the
following couplet from the Catholic Alexander Pope:
Where London’s column pointing at the skies,
Like a tall bully, lifts its head, and lies.43
The offending line, an embarrassing relic of ancient prejudice, was chiseled
out only on the eve of Catholic Emancipation in 1831.
The Act of Parliament that authorized the Monument also directed
the rebuilding of the city. Talk of rebuilding began almost immediately
after the flames died out, and within a week Wren had submitted a plan
(see Illustration 8.5), closely followed by John Evelyn (see Illustration
8.6), Richard Newcourt (c. 1610–1679), and Valentine Knight (fl. 1666),
Plague and Fire 327
brick building of two, three and four stories plus cellar and garret, as
specified in the statute. Within the ancient City walls, such houses had
to be crammed into narrow courts and alleyways, but in the developing
West End, speculators like Barbon and the Russells could lay them out
in squares, giving the court end of town something of the rational and
spacious character that Wren and Evelyn had envisioned for the City
(see Conclusion).
Perhaps the individual most associated with London’s physical resur-
rection is Christopher (from November 1673, Sir Christopher) Wren. He
was named to the Commission for Rebuilding and was given the task of
reconstructing one of the first big structures to go up, the new Custom
House by the river: the Crown could not do without London’s Customs
revenue, and the new building was completed by 1671. In May 1670, Wren
was put in charge of an office under the Commission for the Rebuilding of
Churches to replace the eighty-seven houses of worship destroyed in the
Great Fire. That office became a training ground for a new generation of
distinguished architects like Nicholas Hawksmoor (?1662–1736), William
Dickinson (c. 1671–1725), and above all the polymath Robert Hooke (1635–
1703). In a remarkable tour de force of energy, creativity, and sheer variety,
Wren and his associates supervised the design and rebuilding of about fifty
London churches. (The total is inexact because some churches needed
only to be repaired and others, like St. James Piccadilly, were entirely new
parishes.) If Wren were denied the chance to rationalize London with
a new street plan, his fifty new churches brought metropolitan church
architecture into the seventeenth century and in line with both the Refor-
mation and the Age of Reason. A good example can be seen at St. James
Piccadilly (see Illustration 8.7). Whereas Prayer Book services before the
Great Fire had been conducted in old, musty Gothic structures divided
into numerous add-on bays and alcoves, the congregation’s view of the
altar shadowed by hulking arches, blocked by massive columns, and often
still darkened by stained glass (see Chapter 1, St. Olave Hart Street),
Wren’s new churches featured wide-open spaces, clear sight lines, and
lots of light flooding in from windows set with clear glass. Upper galleries
provided more seating. In this setting, the pulpit and the Word became as
much a focus as the altar and the Eucharist. Admittedly, accommodation
had to be made for the odd lots on which these churches sat: many had
to follow the outlines of their medieval predecessors. St. Benet Fink was
polygonal with a dome; St. Martin Ludgate took the shape of a Greek
cross. Where Wren really showed his originality was in the spires he
Plague and Fire 329
designed for each church: no two are alike. Wren’s churches were mostly
completed by 1690, the spires added later, after the renewal of the Coal
Tax in 1697. They are among London’s glories. The loss of about half
of them to Nazi bombs and modern development is therefore as much a
tragedy, albeit a slower-going one, as was that of their predecessors over
four days in September 1666.
Wren’s greatest achievement was to rebuild London’s cathedral in a
style completely different from its predecessor, yet sufficiently magnificent
to resume its place in Londoners’ hearts. He had been consulted about
repairs to Old St. Paul’s before the Great Fire and had proposed replacing
the dilapidated tower with a dome just days before the cathedral burned
down. The Bishop of London still hoped to save the building, for much
of the choir remained standing. By July 1668, however, it became clear
that the old edifice was not salvageable because more of the choir had
collapsed, and so demolition began. At first Wren used gunpowder, but
the resultant explosions, coming so soon after the shock of plague, fire,
and war, traumatized the inhabitants of Ludgate Hill, and so he opted for
a battering ram.
Still, the project stalled waiting for rubble to be cleared, funding, and a
plan. The first proceeded slowly; the second arrived with an augmentation
of the Coal Tax voted in 1670 (3 shillings per ton, of which half would go
to the rebuilding of St. Paul’s). The third took seven years while Wren
submitted three models. The second, the “Great Model” was approved
by the king but rejected by the dean and chapter as too reminiscent
of continental Catholic Baroque, at which it is said Wren wept. The
king and clergy finally settled on the compromise “Warrant Design” of a
conventional cross, with a dome at the crux. Wren’s warrant of commission
included a fortunate loophole allowing him “to make some variations rather
ornamental than essential, as from time to time he should see proper.”44
During this period Wren was knighted and became official surveyor for the
reconstruction of the cathedral. In the summer of 1673, he went to the site
to mark the spot for the center of the dome. According to legend, he asked
a workman to fetch a stone from amid the sea of still uncleared rubble to
hold down his plans. The worker returned with a piece of masonry from
the old cathedral that had carved on it the Latin word “resurgam” – “I
shall rise.” Wren instantly decreed that this would be the motto of the
new cathedral; later he commissioned the distinguished sculptor Caius
Gabriel Cibber to carve this inscription beneath a phoenix rising from the
ashes over the south door.
330 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
St. Paul’s did rise, to more than 365 feet above the pavement, but
slowly, over the next 35 years (see Illustration 8.8). The nave finally
opened, amid great rejoicing, in 1697. Wren was nearly eighty when he
delegated his son to be lifted to the top of the dome by a crane to place
its capstone on October 26, 1708. He continued tinkering with the design
until his death in 1718, which came after contracting a cold on a walk
to inspect the cathedral. Thus St. Paul’s occupied England’s greatest
architect for most of his professional life. Although decorated by the most
notable artists of the day – Cibber, the history painter Sir James Thornhill
(whose scenes from the life of St. Paul adorn the interior of the dome),
the ironworker Jean Tijou ([fl. 1689–1711], gates to the chancel aisles), the
carver Grinling Gibbons (quire screens and choir stalls), and the sculptor
Francis Bird ([1667–1731], the statue of Queen Anne before the west front) –
the triumph is Wren’s. His grave can be found in the crypt, marked with
what is arguably the most apt epitaph ever penned in an age known for pith
and wit: “Lector, si monumentum requiris, circumspice”: “Reader, if you
require his monument, look about you.” In fact, St. Paul’s has assumed
the status of a national monument, and its stalwart neoclassical facade and
great dome have become enduring symbols of London.
Other buildings were thrown up much more quickly: by 1669, 8 livery
halls and 1,600 houses had been rebuilt; by 1672, Newgate, the Royal
Exchange, and nearly all of the housing was completed. In the end, some
streets were widened, and only about 8,000 of the destroyed 13,200 houses
were replaced, thus easing some of the City’s congestion. In 1724, Defoe
found much to commend in the fact that “the buildings of this great city
are chiefly of brick, as many ways found to be the safest, the cheapest, and
the most commodious of all other materials; by safe, I mean from fire.”
He went on to argue that “no where in the world is so good care taken to
quench fires as in London,” (1) because of the proximity of the river and a
system of pipes bringing it to hydrants all over the City; (2) the multitude of
“admirable engines,” that is, mobile pumps bought by individual parishes
to pour water onto the flames; and (3) the rise of insurance offices.45 In fact,
the Fire catalyzed the development of the insurance business: Nicholas
Barbon began to offer insurance by 1667, establishing a Fire Office in 1680.
Others followed soon after, the greatest being the Sun Fire Office (1710),
its descendant company still in business today. To reduce their liability,
the insurance companies actually maintained firemen. Eighteenth-century
London was still not fireproof, however: major fires broke out in Wapping
in 1716 and 1725, and in Exchange Alley (destroying Jonathan’s) in 1748.
Plague and Fire 331
Nor, as we have seen, were the city’s immediate trials over in 1666, because
the scourges of plague and fire were followed by the disasters of the Second
Dutch War (see Chapter 7).
And yet, London neither folded nor dropped to its knees in supplica-
tion of forgiveness. Londoners did not cave; they coped, rebuilding their
city to be far bigger and more opulent than before. During the last 90
years covered by this book, their metropolis doubled in size (again!) and
emerged as the greatest city in the Western world. Wren’s motto for St.
Paul’s might just as well serve for the city as a whole: resurgam. To some
extent, this was part of the Restoration rejection of the Puritan theocracy.
We would argue that the essential attributes of the Restoration period are
not perhaps reason and frivolity, but practicality and irrepressibility. Add
to these the essential attributes of Londoners, toughness and good humor.
These characteristics determined that, despite the devastating blows of
the 1660s, London would not be stopped. Like New York, Tokyo, or
Los Angeles today (all cities that have survived disasters), London was not
about to look back. Instead of waiting for the next catastrophe, Londoners,
as Daniel Defoe noted above, developed better fire-fighting methods and
insurance companies. Fire departments are at least as old as Rome, but
insurance companies are an essentially modern development, requiring a
modern mind-set: to purchase an insurance policy is to refuse to accept
“Acts of God” as irrevocable. Rather, policyholders pay their money so
that, in the event of disaster, they nevertheless can resume the upward
trajectory of their lives, rebuild them, or in the case of life insurance,
sustain their material worth beyond even death. Instead of risk and loss
being matters of personal honor and fortune, as was traditional, they are
shared, amortized, and minimized. Defoe caught the spirit of the rebuilt
city when he wrote, “and how much farther it may spread, who knows?
New squares, and new streets rising up every day to such a prodigy of
buildings, that nothing in the world does, or ever did, equal it, except
old Rome in Trajan’s time. . . . ”46 Let us revisit the streets of London,
this time as rebuilt and replenished after plague, fire, war, rebellion, and
revolution.
Conclusion: London in 1750
332
Conclusion: London in 1750 333
century.1 Looking past that dingy veneer, we might reflect on the aesthetic
contrast between Wren’s church and its predecessor: London in 1550 was
still emerging from the Middle Ages, a city gripped by the first flush of the
Reformation. The sober-sided angularity of Old St. Paul’s, a dilapidated
Gothic hulk, bereft of its spire after 1561 and stripped of its decorative
accoutrements, fit the jury-rigged Church emerging under the Tudors.
Wren’s sleek masterpiece suited an imperial city and a church that had
rejected Puritanical enthusiasm for a more reasoned and urbane faith.
The new St. Paul’s was everything that the rebuilt, modern city needed
in its parish church.
communities that service them and form the entry point for many immi-
grants: in order, east to west, they are Blackwall, Limehouse, Shadwell,
and Wapping on the north bank; Deptford, Rotherhithe (pronounced
Redriff), and Bermondsey on the south. In the nineteenth century, the
north bank communities would come to be known, collectively, as the
East End, with connotations of the most abject poverty and brutal crime.
South London’s reputation was little better, if more industrious. In 1750,
however, these neighborhoods were booming thanks to London’s domi-
nation of overseas trade and the growth of shipping and related industries.
Although their work was never easy, the watermen, lightermen, longshore-
men, coal heavers, porters, warehouse workers, shipbuilders, carpenters,
founders, smiths, sailmakers, victuallers, and of course, seamen who pop-
ulated both banks generally had plenty of it, and the result was busy and
prosperous, if by no means elegant.
As we get closer to the city, our noses, already assaulted by the smog,
become aware of the sewage. The Thames is still London’s open sewer.
The stench grows more nauseating the closer we get and is more pro-
nounced than it would have been in 1550 because of the expanding pop-
ulation. London had Commissioners of Sewers from 1427, but they con-
centrated on surface drainage, not the miles of cesspits on which London
rested. That is, by the mid-seventeenth century, while the poorest stretches
of London still relied on a bucket and the open street for waste disposal,
many houses had their own basement cesspits. Pepys records how, in
1660, his neighbor’s retaining wall collapsed, giving him an unpleasant
surprise: “going down into my cellar to look, I put my foot into a great
heap of turds, by which I find that Mr. Turner’s house of office is full and
comes into my cellar, which doth trouble me, but I will have it helped.”2
When your cesspit filled up and the stench became unbearable, you called
in the night-soil men, jocularly known as “goldfinders” – basically, guys
with shovels – to empty it. This was surely the dirtiest job in London.
They carted the waste into the country to sell as fertilizer, or deposited it
in laystalls down by the river, into which it usually was dumped.
Out of doors, there were no public lavatories, and if one were caught in
need, any dark corner down a courtyard or on the street would do. Thus,
Pepys records his wife stooping in the street to “do her business.” Add
to this the lack of refuse collection generally, and it is little wonder that as
late as 1741, John Brownlow, Lord Tyrconnell (1690–1754), thundered in
the House of Lords of “the streets of London, a city famous for wealth,
commerce, and plenty, and for every other kind of civility and politeness;
336 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
but which abounds with such heaps of filth, as a savage would look on
with amazement.”3 Although individual parishes appointed sweepers and
refuse collectors, the only truly effective street cleaning came when it
rained, producing a deluge of muck rolling down to the river, as recorded
by Jonathan Swift:
Sweepings from butchers’ stalls, dung, guts, and blood,
Drowned puppies, stinking sprats, all drenched in mud,
Dead cats, and turnip tops, come tumbling down the flood.4
No wonder that Londoners, famously, would not drink the water, relying
on ale, porter, and spirits instead. They still needed it for cooking, brewing,
washing, and manufacturing, however, the last three of which added their
own pollutants to the noxious mix.
So long as London’s population remained under a half a million, settled
only sparsely downriver, and got its water from northern springs instead
of from the Thames, the system remained relatively sanitary. But by 1750,
as we have seen, that population had exceeded half a million, the eastern
suburbs were thriving, and the metropolis had long outgrown the conduit
system, not least because as it expanded northward, natural springs and
wells were built over. As early as the reign of James I, newly formed
water companies began to pipe Thames water to outdoor fountains and
standpipes and into wealthy private homes. What was left of the conduit
system was gradually leased to the companies. The Chelsea Waterworks
Company, established in 1723, used a series of canals, sluices, and a
waterwheel to pump Thames water. By 1767 the company was pumping
1,750 tons of water daily into London homes, but there was no attempt
to purify that water. Later, Victorian Londoners were subject to several
deadly cholera epidemics; first, because overseas trade brought it from the
East Indies; second, because London’s population – around a million in
1801, 2.7 million in 1851 – began to overwhelm the river’s ability to absorb
its sewage. The problem would not be solved until the construction of a
modern underground sewer system by the Metropolitan Board of Works,
completed in 1875.
Map 4 for our route), parallel to the river, we are relieved to find it cobbled
and lit with oil lamps. If we choose, we can order a hackney coach or a
sedan chair, but being poor and inquisitive scholars, we walk, wending
our way through the tightly packed courts of the Tower Hamlets up to the
Tower itself, much as we would have done in 1550, but perhaps assisted
by a pocket map or guidebook, like William Stow’s Remarks on London
(1722), generated by London’s popular press. Because this area was left
untouched by the Great Fire, it contains several buildings that we might
recognize from that time, and it is certainly just as crowded, noisy, and
ramshackle as ever. As before, this is dockland, and the sounds of London’s
commerce are much the same as they were in Tudor times: the barking of
orders, the shouts of longshoremen, the whir and clack of block and tackle,
the satisfying ping of hammer on nail, and the common foreign voice –
French or Dutch, or now, African or West Indian – as all the world serves
in British merchant vessels. No wonder that Sir John Fielding thought “a
man would be apt to suspect himself in another country” walking through
London’s docklands.5
As we make our way up the back side of Tower Hill, the high walls and
four impressive turrets of the Tower loom over us. Our sense of foreboding
is appropriate, for in 1750 state prisoners are still held here. As recently
as 1747 the Tower had played host to the most prominent Jacobite rebels
of the ’45 prior to their trials and executions. The last public beheading
in British history took place here on April 9, 1747, when the 80-year-
old Jacobite conspirator Simon Fraser, Lord Lovat (1668–1747) met his
end before a large crowd on Tower Hill. Thereafter England’s growing
political stability and rising public distaste put an end to such spectacles.
Another sign of that stability becomes clear to us as we round the north side
of the Tower: it no longer anchors a continuous wall around the City as it
did in 1550. Although the wall was prepared for defense as recently as the
Civil Wars, by the mid-eighteenth century discrete sections were falling
to London’s building boom. The City gates, notorious choke points for
traffic, will be mostly demolished in the 1760s. Thus London’s Wall finally
fell, not at the hands of a foreign conqueror but before the commercial
needs of the City that it had once defended.
From the Tower we head west, descending Tower Street toward
Eastcheap and the City. This area was gutted by the Fire. Although there
are no remaining scars in 1750, there is plenty of evidence, for we begin to
encounter London’s new look. The streets of the old City remain a tangled
web of narrow, twisting lanes and sunless courts, relieved by occasional
338 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
for a teller’s window – with disastrous results for their finances! The year
after Defoe’s encomium was written, in 1725, the Bank issued its first notes
in fixed denominations of £20, £30, £40, £50, and £100. Frequently added
to and renovated after 1750, the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street looks
much different today.
Instead of retracing our 1550 route into Cheapside, we head east
back up Cornhill to Leadenhall Street, crossing Bishopsgate Street for
a moment to take note of two other bastions of London trade: on our
right, East India House and Africa House, headquarters of two of the most
powerful trading companies. In 1750, few Londoners were prepared to
confront the moral implications of their activities. Retracing our steps to
Bishopsgate, we head north to the gate itself. It would stand until 1760,
when its stones were cannibalized to reinforce London Bridge. To our left
we see another monument of Sir Thomas Gresham’s vision for his city, the
back garden of Gresham College, endowed to provide free annual lectures
in astronomy, divinity, geometry, law, medicine, music, and rhetoric to
his fellow Londoners. In 1750 this is the headquarters of the Royal Society,
chartered by Charles II in 1663 and the premiere example of London’s
ability to bring together men of genius. The Scottish tourist Rev. Robert
Kirk’s description from 1690 gives a flavor of the Society’s eclectic interests
during its first century:
. . . the Hall for containing the curious rarities is not large, but full of
varieties, above 2,000. Among which the main that I remarked and
remembered were 3 manacodiatas with plain bills, long wings and
tails, walking feet. I took a feather out of the wing of one of them and
out of the tail of the ostrich’s skin . . . A Hudson’s bay partridge . . . A
serpent of East India 7 yards in length, a small head and body as big as
my leg at the ankles. . . . The black and white pigritia [sloth], in shape
like a man, a big body and slender legs. . . . A crocodile. An embalmed
princely body above 3,000 years old. . . . The rattling serpent, the most
deadly. The star fish. A microscope. . . . A calf with two heads etc.
This is the best show in Christendom. The Society meets once a week
and have experiments and Latin and English lectures. Besides I saw the
Antelope like a goat, a small round body. An Unicorn horn, white and
wreathed, straight and small at top, hard as elephant’s tooth. It stuck 22
inches in a ship’s keel; ’tis 2 yards and a half long. A sea beast. A camel.7
Having digested the wonders of Bishopsgate, we turn left and follow
Wormwood Street west, which broadens out into London Wall. Along
340 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
The prison, rebuilt after the Fire, still flanks the street adjacent to the Old
Bailey. Accosted by the smells and hearing the cries of the poor prisoners
through a grate, we might pass them some bread or coins to purchase beer.
If this is a “hanging match” Monday, we encounter the crowds gathering
to cheer London’s next entries on the Bills of Mortality: the condemned.
We join the cavalcade west down Hart-Row Street and Snow Hill to
Holborn Bridge, where we break off, having already experienced the
sordid pleasures of a public hanging earlier, in Chapter 6. Instead, we
turn south down Fleet Market. This used to be the smelly Fleet Ditch,
which was boarded over by Act of Parliament in 1733 to provide space for
a meat market: thus, the area remains “fragrant.” In fact, reminded by the
clock tower in the center that it is midday, and by our stomachs that we
have not eaten, the opportune cry “One a penny, A slice, Hot” persuades
us to patronize a local character, James Sharp, the “Flying Pie Man”
(fl. 1750s).10 While munching our pie, we examine the many new shops
built under a covered walkway with skylights.
with lead, rising another 60 feet. This architectural trick allowed Wren
to achieve proportions pleasing to the eye both within and without the
cathedral. According to legend, while working on the paintings Thornhill
stood back to examine his work, coming dangerously close to the edge of
the scaffolding and a fatal plunge. His assistant, fearful that he might startle
Sir James if he called out a warning, instead did the one thing guaranteed
to get him to step forward: he began to smear the paint on the fresco that
Thornhill was assessing! It worked, and both Thornhill and the fresco
were saved.
Anxious to see the frescoes up close, we begin to climb an interior
stair, bounding up the 259 steps to the whispering gallery that rings the
dome 100 feet up: conversations can clearly be heard at the opposite side,
over 100 feet away. Not yet exhausted, we trudge another 99 steps up to
the Stone Gallery, giving a fine view of London; the more adventurous
plod another 152 steps higher to the Inner Golden Gallery at the top of
the dome; and finally, the most persistent slog a few more steps to the
Outer Golden Gallery at the top of the lantern. This is the highest point
in London; from it we can survey the whole of the metropolis. Below us
to the south, the bustling river, and if we look up, London Bridge and the
shallow development of the South Bank; to the east, the crowded square
mile of the City, the Tower, and the ribbon of communities growing along
the banks of the Thames; to the north, some development but beyond
it open fields; and finally, to the west, the congestion of Fleet Street
and the Strand. Beyond that, the ancient Gothic palaces of Westminster
contrast with the perfectly Georgian squares of the West End, bordered
by Hyde Park. Eighteenth-century people tended to not like heights, and
our precarious position becomes alarming on the hour when the giant bell
in the southwest tower, Old Tom, strikes with its earth-shaking bass note.
This bell also tolls the deaths of members of the royal family, Bishops of
London, Deans of St. Paul’s, and lord mayors who die in office.
St. Paul’s has continued to have a distinguished career as both a national
and a London church. It was the site of thanksgivings for military victories
under Queen Anne and in the Napoleonic wars, for royal weddings (most
famously that of Prince Charles [b. 1948] and Lady Diana Spenser [1961–
1997] in 1981), and for state funerals, such as that of Lord Nelson (1758–
1805) in 1806 and the Duke of Wellington (1769–1852) in 1852. Perhaps the
most iconic image of the cathedral, the one that cemented it in the public
imagination as a symbol of London itself, was a series of photographs taken
during the Blitz of 1940/41. While the Luftwaffe went after the East End
Conclusion: London in 1750 343
docks and did not specifically target St. Paul’s, its sheer size and proximity
to their intended target put it in danger. On several occasions bombs did
penetrate the roof, and once the crypt. But “Paul’s,” like London, survived,
the image of its dome standing stalwartly against the flames and smoke a
symbol of the resolve of the city and its inhabitants.
Exiting where we came in, we head down the west steps, catching
another view of commercial London, this one down Fleet Street and
the Strand. In 1750, Fleet Street’s criminal reputation had faded a bit,
and we are fairly safe in daytime. But it continued to be associated with
slightly shady activity, such as irregular and cheap Fleet marriages. In
the seventeenth century, poor clergymen incarcerated for debt in the Fleet
Prison (to our right) made a few shillings by marrying inmates, no questions
asked. Eventually, they were happy do so for visitors to the prison. By the
1690s they had set up clandestine “wedding houses” in the Fleet Liberty,
sometimes offering package deals with local innkeepers à l Reno or Las
Vegas today. The practice was outlawed in 1754 by Hardwicke’s Marriage
Act (26 Geo. II, c. 33). Fleet Street remained a center of publishing and the
press throughout the period and beyond. For example, Jacob Tonson, the
most important publisher of the Augustan Age, started his first bookshop
at the Fleet Street end of Chancery Lane in 1678. The Daily Courant,
the world’s first daily newspaper, began publication “next door to the
King’s Arms Tavern at Fleet-Bridge,” on March 11, 1702. As pointed out
in Chapter 1, the street’s name operates as shorthand for the London press
to this day.
Just off the street are innumerable little lanes and courts. Several of
them (e.g., Hind’s Court, Bolt Court, or Johnson’s Court) on our right
will lead us to Gough Square, a small development named for the London
mercantile family who owned it in the eighteenth century. On the western
side of the little square is a fine early eighteenth-century house, 17 Gough
Square, inhabited between 1746 and 1759 by one of the most famous Lon-
doners of the day, the writer Samuel Johnson. In the garret of this house,
Dr. Johnson and several assistants compiled the first comprehensive
dictionary of the English language (1755), which made him something of
a national hero and local monument. Downstairs, the convivial Johnson
entertained scores of writers and artists, including the painter Joshua
Reynolds and the music historian Charles Burney (1726–1814). If a dinner
invitation proves not to be forthcoming, we might encounter the great
man at any number of coffeehouses and taverns in the area because, like
all scholars, he required constant refreshment from his labors. Johnson’s
344 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
large frame, scrofulous face, and unkempt appearance renders him one of
London’s sights, and so we will know him when we see him.
Moving farther down Fleet Street we pass the church of St. Dunstan-in-
the-West, looking a little more run-down than it was in 1550. St. Dunstan’s
was one of the few churches in central London to survive the Fire, it is said
because the Dean of Westminster drafted the boys of Westminster School
to form a bucket brigade. In gratitude, the parishioners endowed a great
clock in 1671, which projects over the street. A few steps west bring us to the
official boundary between the City of London and Westminster: Temple
Bar. The old gatehouse survived the Fire, but in the 1670s it was redesigned
by Wren. It now consists of a large central arch over the street, with two
flanking arches for pedestrians, topped by a new gatehouse sporting stat-
ues of James I, Anne of Denmark, Charles I, and Charles II, and above
them, the obligatory heads of executed malefactors (see Illustration c.6).
The heads were a hit with tourists, who could rent sidewalk telescopes to
have a better view of them. In 1750 we might just catch site of the last such
traitorous head, that of Francis Towneley (1709–1746), a Jacobite rebel
executed in 1746. The heads looked down on horrendous traffic, which
Temple Bar’s elegant arches only made worse. As a result, it was taken
down in 1878. For a while it lay disassembled in a yard at Faringdon Road
until Sir Henry Bruce Meux (1856–1900) re-erected it, incongruously, in
Theobald’s Park north of the city in rural Hertfordshire. There it remained
until 2004 when it was erected once again in the churchyard of St. Paul’s
Cathedral, thus uniting Wren’s masterpiece with its larger brother.
After much jostling, we emerge from this bottleneck into the Strand.
Perhaps nowhere else is the contrast with 1550 so pronounced as here.
Before, the Strand was a muddy track with a few tradesmen’s shops on one
side and magnificent bishop’s palaces on the other. Now the commercial
side of the street thrives whereas only two of the great palaces survive,
Somerset House halfway down the street, and Northumberland House,
built circa 1605 for Henry Howard, Earl of Northampton (1540–1614),
at Charing Cross. York House has been subdivided as York Buildings,
housing one of London’s major concert halls as well as an important
waterworks. The rest is taken up with shop windows, gaudy wooden
signs, hawker’s calls, coffeehouses, taverns, houses, and above all, traffic.
Grosley in 1765 found the shops in Cheapside, Fleet Street, and the Strand
Amid all this commerce, indeed situated on islands right in the middle
of the Strand, and so no help either to traffic or business, we find two new
churches: St. Clement Danes, and an eighth of a mile farther, St. Mary-
le-Strand. Nobody knows why the parish of St. Clement’s was associated
with the Danes, although one tradition is that after Alfred drove the Vikings
out of London in the ninth century, those who had married Englishwomen
were allowed to settle between Westminster and Ludgate. The medieval
St. Clement Danes church survived the fire but was condemned as unsafe
in 1679, and so Wren designed a new church in the Baroque style, to
which an ornate steeple was added by James Gibbs. If this is a Sunday,
we might catch a glimpse of Dr. Johnson at his devotions in seat No. 18,
north gallery, because this was his preferred parish church.
Just a few hundred yards down the street we encounter the second
church in the road, St. Mary-le-Strand, designed by Gibbs and erected
from 1714 to 1717, the first of fifty churches that Queen Anne planned to
build to accommodate London’s growing population. In the end, only
about a dozen were completed, but Gibbs’s work on this charming church
launched his career. He had studied in Italy, and therefore the building
combines the influence of Wren with that of the Catholic Renaissance and
Baroque. If we time our visit just right, we might witness a remarkable
historical event. It was probably in this church, between September 17 and
22, 1750, that the Young Pretender, Charles Edward Stuart (1720–1788),
also know as Bonnie Prince Charlie, grandson of James II and Jacobite
heir apparent to the British thrones, on an incognito visit to London tried
to revive his flagging English support by being received into the Church of
England. Both St. Clement Danes and St. Mary-le-Strand exacerbated the
traffic situation in the Strand, and by the 1970s the traffic was striking back:
a combination of German bombs and the vibration of heavy London buses
and lorries had so weakened the spire of St. Mary’s that it was threatened
with demolition for safety’s sake. Donations poured in to save the steeple,
although not before demolition actually got under way. Today, these two
churches continue their stately progress in the Strand, like two advance
escorts in whose wake sails the larger vessel of St. Paul’s.
area north of the Strand had been filled in by the explosion of growth in
the West End (see Illustration c.7), beginning with the building of Covent
Garden in the 1630s. For example, just west of Covent Garden, up St.
Martin’s Lane, is the parish of St. Martin-in-the-Fields. In 1550 its name
described its situation, with a population of just 1,400, but this had risen
to 18,500 by 1640, to 69,000 by 1685, and to more than 100,000, now
split into a total of four parishes (St. Martin’s, St. Paul Covent Garden, St.
James Piccadilly, and St. Anne Soho) by the 1720s – larger than any other
city in Britain! This growth was part of the ongoing expansion of London’s
population in all directions beyond the lord mayor’s jurisdiction; by 1750,
only about one-quarter of the metropolitan population lived within the
old City.
As more squares were added to the West End, and more City tradesmen
moved into Covent Garden, it ceased to be at the cutting edge of fashion.
In fact, by 1750 London’s first swanky square had become rather seedy,
forming the southern tip of a swath running up through Drury Lane
dedicated to the pursuit of less respectable and even illicit pleasures. It
could be argued that Covent Garden began its decline from exclusivity
about 1656 with the establishment of the market. At first, Covent Garden
Market was a small-scale operation out of the gardens of Bedford House,
serving the residents of the square. But when the Fire dislocated markets
in central London, Covent Garden to the west became the most important
source of fruit, flowers, and herbs in the city. In 1678 one Adam Piggot
was granted a license to build twenty-two shops against the garden wall of
Bedford House on the south side of the square. Forty-eight more shops
were built early in the eighteenth century near the center, and these were
made into a permanent complex in 1748. Walking through the stalls, we see
not only London’s freshest fruit, but exotic produce from foreign lands –
dates, currants, oranges – unloaded directly from the river. Grosley found
the domestic produce better to look at than to taste, for London’s foul
atmosphere ruins anything grown nearby.
With the shops came coffeehouses and a theater. We stop in at the
Bedford, on the square under the piazza, hoping to see a literary celebrity.
At one time or another, this establishment was patronized by Boswell,
Fielding, Garrick, Pope, Sheridan, and Horace Walpole. It was convenient
for actors and writers because it stood just across the way from the Theater
Royal, Covent Garden, built in 1732 and managed by John Rich. The first
of three buildings on the site, it would burn down in 1808, its successor
in 1856. The third is today the home of the Royal Opera, Covent Garden.
Conclusion: London in 1750 347
(Nos. 55 and 57) and the French Embassy at Powis House on our right,
into the neighborhood known as Bloomsbury. Bloomsbury is bounded
by Holborn to the south, Gray’s Inn Lane to the East, Tottenham Court
Road to the west, and open fields to the north. As with the Bedford
Estate, Bloomsbury was acquired first by the Church, then confiscated
by the Crown. In the mid-sixteenth century its open fields were awarded
to Thomas Wriothesley (1505–1550), who became Earl of Southampton,
in 1547. It was his descendant, the fourth Earl (1608–1667), later lord
treasurer of England, who began to develop the manor. In 1657 he pulled
down the old manor house, built a London mansion called Southamp-
ton House, and then laid out Southampton Square around it. If Covent
Garden was the first London square, this one, renamed Bloomsbury in
the eighteenth century, was the first with Square in its title. In 1665 John
Evelyn caught the idea behind this housing arrangement when he called
it “a noble square or Piazza – a little towne.”14 Offered long leases of 42,
and later 60 or even 99 years, aristocratic tenants flocked to Bloomsbury.
Among its great houses, a little farther west down Great Russell Street, was
Montagu House, which burned down in 1686. Horace Walpole wrote of
the second Montagu House that “What it wants in grace and beauty is com-
pensated by the spaciousness and lofty magnificence of the apartments.”15
That was fortunate, for in 1755 the Montagu family, seeking more modest
accommodation, donated the house to the nation to be the first home of
the British Museum.
Prior to 1755, the closest thing to a British Library and Museum was
the royal library and art collection, spread around various royal palaces.
But scholars needed royal permission to examine the king’s books and
manuscripts; although the art collection was on display to courtiers, the
court was not exactly a “public” museum. The idea for the British Museum
arose thanks to the will of Sir Hans Sloane (1660–1753), one of London’s
leading physicians, a resident of Bloomsbury who had spent many years
and £50,000 amassing a collection of scientific books, manuscripts, and
specimens. At his death in 1753 he offered his collections to the nation
at the discount price of £20,000. At the same time, the Foundation Act
(23 Geo. II, c. 22) authorized the purchase of the Harleian Collection of
manuscripts collected by Robert Harley, Earl of Oxford; the Cottonian
Library assembled by Sir Robert Cotton (1571–1631); and the Royal Library
presented by George II. These four collections formed the nucleus of the
British Museum. Funds for purchase were raised by a public lottery, and
the museum opened its doors in 1759. In the beginning, those doors were
350 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
open only three hours a day by written application to the librarian. Even
then, only small groups were admitted for guided tours until well into the
nineteenth century. In future years the British Museum would acquire
such treasures as the Rosetta Stone (1801), the Elgin Marbles (1816), innu-
merable Egyptian mummies, botanical collections, state papers, diaries,
correspondence, newspapers, and works of literature, history, and sci-
ence. In the 1840s Montagu House was demolished in favor of the present
neoclassical building. In 1973 the British Library became a separate entity
and moved to its own building in 1997. Together, these two form one of
the world’s preeminent national collections, made available to ordinary
users of all nationalties.
Because all of this lay in the future in 1750, we inquisitive scholars
must move on, turning our attention to the development that made it
possible. During the seventeenth century, the Wriothesleys united in
marriage with the Russells, who renamed Southampton House “Bedford
House” in 1734, having abandoned the old Bedford House in the now
seedy Covent Garden in 1705/06. This alliance created a vast estate and
an unstoppable development combination. During the later eighteenth
century, the surrounding Bedford property filled up with fashionable and
exclusive squares centering on iron railed-in gardens and often named for
Russell titles: Russell Square, Bedford Square, and Tavistock Square. But
the Russells were not alone. If we continue west along Oxford Street (built
on the ancient Roman track to Oxford and the west), we encounter a parade
of regular squares named for the great aristocratic families that developed
them; together, they form the characteristic housing arrangement of the
West End. They were built east to west, and so the oldest come first. With
much of London still to cover, a few examples, in roughly chronological
order, will suffice.
First, to our left down Charles Street, comes Soho Square, named for a
hunting call from the time when this area was open fields. The square was
developed in the 1680s by Henry Jermyn, Earl of St. Albans (1605–1684),
another favored and opportunistic courtier, as King’s Square. It centers
on a delightful garden, described by Strype as “a very large and open
place, enclosed with a high Palisado Pale, the Square within neatly kept,
with Walks and Grass-plots, and in the midst is the Effigy of King Charles
the Second, neatly cut in Stone to the Life, standing on a Pedestal.”16 The
development was immediately fashionable, and by the 1690s it featured a
series of splendid aristocratic houses, Monmouth House, Carlisle House,
and Fauconberg House being the most notable. This was also a convenient
Conclusion: London in 1750 351
site for the diplomatic missions of Spain, Venice, Russia, and Sweden.
Only in the 1770s did the wealthiest clientele leave for newer fashionable
areas like Mayfair. By the nineteenth century the residents were largely
professional, and by the twenty-first, office blocks were surrounded by an
area long known for jazz clubs and sex shops.
Eighteenth-century Oxford Street further delights our senses with
the lovely groves at Marybone Place before, darting north along Prince’s
Street or Holles Street, we encounter Cavendish Square. This was begun
for the Harley family in 1717 as a Tory answer to Hanover Square (see
later discussion), popular with Whigs. But Cavendish Square was left
unfinished for much of the century, partly because of the South Sea
Bubble crash and partly because it was at first considered too far from
the court to be attractive to aristocrats. In 1721 the Oxford Market was
built nearby, specifically to cater to the residents, but this did nothing
for its exclusivity. Early in the eighteenth century the bluestocking and
promoter of vaccination Lady Mary Wortley Montagu lived here, and later
the painter George Romney (1734–1802). In 1736, A New Critical Review
of Public Buildings . . . in and about London and Westminster observed
that the square’s uncompleted state demonstrated “the folly of attempting
great things, before we are sure we can accomplish little ones.”17
We are now on the fringes of eighteenth-century London. Farther
to the north lie several little villages surrounded by open fields where
Tottenham Court Road turns into the toll road to Highgate. Perhaps
more intriguing, near the end of Mary-le-Bone Lane is Mary-le-Bone
(or Marybone) Gardens, opened here in 1650, just as development was
getting started in the West End, as a northern alternative to the south
bank pleasure gardens. Like them, it offered dog, cock, and prizefights,
bear- and bull-baiting, and bowling greens. The most famous boxer of the
early eighteenth century, James Figg (by 1700–1734), mounted exhibitions
here between “the most eminent professors, both male and female, of the
art of defense.”18 Although Pepys thought the gardens pretty, they came
to be associated with card sharps and their wealthy, aristocratic marks.
Mary-le-Bone Gardens was one of the fictional Macheath’s hangouts in
The Beggar’s Opera, and in real life the celebrated thief Dick Turpin
frequented them. In 1738, worried about the clientele and losing their
business, the management expanded the gardens but began to charge an
entrance fee of 6 pence. The next year a set of assembly rooms for balls
and teas was added. In 1750 we pay our sixpence and get to walk along
a grand promenade formed by trees that meet at the center, or we might
352 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
dart into an alcove with latticework for privacy and, between 6 PM and 10
PM, listen to the orchestra.
Resuming our exploration of Oxford Street, to our left down Little
Holles Street (named for the family of the Duke of Newcastle) is Hanover
Square, built soon after the Hanoverian accession by Richard Lumley,
Earl of Scarborough (1650–1721), as the first of three squares (Hanover,
Berkeley, and Grosvenor) that form the district of Mayfair. Mayfair is
today bounded by Oxford Street on the north, Regent Street on the east,
Piccadilly on the south, and Park Lane on the west, but in 1750 some of
these streets had not yet been laid out. Mayfair was so-called because it
was the site of a fair held during the first two weeks of May to herald the
beginning of summer. Aristocratic developers began building here in the
1660s, and the fair had to move from Haymarket to Great Brookfield. It was
suppressed altogether in 1764 after the aristocratic residents complained.
The greatest square in Mayfair, and indeed in the whole West End, is
Grosvenor Square (see Illustration c.9). In 1677, Sir Thomas Grosvenor
(1655–1700), a Cheshire baronet, acquired 500 acres in the West End
through a fortunate marriage to the twelve-year-old heiress Mary Davies
(1665–1730). Grosvenor Square was built between 1725 and 1731 to
an overall plan by the carpenter and master builder Thomas Barlow
(c. 1669–1730), not by the Grosvenors themselves, but by the holders at
long leases of fifty-five plots. From the first, the square was built on a grand
and luxurious scale, with houses up to £7,500 in value. The Grosvenor
family kept the rents high, partly to preserve the social prestige of the
square. One result was that, until the twentieth century, more than half
of the residents were titled nobility, including, in the eighteenth century,
prime and cabinet ministers. Another result was that the Grosvenors got
very rich: their annual rents in the 1780s from the square alone were £3,000
per annum. Approaching the square in 1750 from any direction, we are
struck by its vast size (roughly 200 feet by 150 feet), which gives it an
open-air feeling, and the magnificent, if stylistically variable, three- and
four-story houses, most of which would survive into the twenty-first cen-
tury. Residents spent vast sums on their upkeep and renovation, and some
of the greatest names in English building – Adam, Chambers, Soane,
Wyatville, and Wyatt, for example – worked here. In 1765 Sir Josiah
Wedgwood opened his first London showroom in Grosvenor Square.
Grosvenor Square never went into decline like Covent Garden or Soho.
One reason was its convenient location close to the court at St. James’s,
the Parliament at Westminster, and the parks. Second, the developers laid
Conclusion: London in 1750 353
out airy and rational streets with convenient stabling on the borders of the
nearby fields: in fact, we notice that the streets are filled with footmen and
grooms in livery, as well as other servants necessary to run an aristocratic
household. Eventually, Mayfair developed convenient markets for food
and shops for luxury items; by the 1720s, these spilled off onto Bond Street,
located between Hanover Square and Grosvenor Square. Londoners loved
then, as they do now, to window shop while strolling Bond Street. This
was also a convenient address for those who could not afford the more
fashionable squares, including at various times Jonathan Swift, William Pitt
the Elder, the novelist Lawrence Sterne (1713–1768), the historian Edward
Gibbon (1737–1794), James Boswell, Lord Nelson, and much later, his
lover Lady Hamilton (1765–1815). Finally, we are shocked at the number
of beggars who ask for our charity: like the shopkeepers, they follow
the money. This reminds us that while Addison and Johnson may have
thought of the city as many Londons, “An Aggregate of various Nations,
distinguished from each other by their respective Customs, Manners, and
Interests,”19 the truth is that Londoners roam, mix, and mingle, making it
possible to encounter men and women of all ranks, hear any cry, and have
one’s sympathy engaged or one’s pocket picked anywhere in the great
conurbation.
such as the execution of the king in 1649, the restoration of his son in 1660,
the Jacobite Rebellion in 1715, or the Gordon Riots in 1780.
The early Stuarts opened Hyde Park to the public, and it quickly
became a place of fashionable resort. In particular, the elite liked to parade
around “the Tour” or “the Ring.” This was an area at the western end
of the park containing two concentric carriage tracks, separating it from
Kensington Gardens. Anybody who thought themselves somebody in the
seventeenth century rode on horseback or in their coach to see and be
seen. Rival gentlemen sometimes raced their coaches: according to legend,
Oliver Cromwell almost lost his life when he was thrown during such a
contest. Pepys regarded attendance as a good career move, and Mrs. Pepys
insisted on appearing on May Day. For May Day 1663, the diarist bought
new gloves, put on his best clothes, and rented a horse, but he proved
unable to manage the animal and so missed his chance to impress the king.
By 1669, he was a rising man and could afford a coach of his own:
and thence to Hyde-park, the first time we were there this year, or
ever in our own coach – where with mighty pride rode up and down;
and many coaches there, and I thought our horses and coach as pretty
as any there, and observed so to be by others. Here stayed till night,
and so home. . . . 20
Antiquaries, the Linnean Society, the Chemical Society, and the Geolog-
ical Society.
Carrying on down Piccadilly we encounter on our right one of Wren’s
masterpieces, St. James Piccadilly, built as part of the St. Albans devel-
opment between 1676 and 1684. Designed to allow all 2,000 congregants
a clear view of the pulpit, its barrel vaulting yields acoustics that enable
them all to hear the sermon as well – a necessity in a Protestant church.
Grinling Gibbons carved the reredos, the organ casing, and the baptismal
font, which served the christenings of both William Pitt the Elder and the
poet William Blake (1757–1827). The organ, on which Blow and Purcell
played, started life in James II’s Catholic Chapel and was removed here
on the chapel’s demolition in 1691.
St. James Piccadilly was always one of the smartest churches in
London: it is the parish church of Lord Foppington in Vanbrugh’s The
Relapse, because “there’s much the best company!” The principal reason
for that is its proximity not only to the mansions of Piccadilly but also,
just to the south down York Street, our last square of the day, St. James’s
Square. Sitting at the heart of the St. Albans development and a few yards
north of the gates of St. James’s Palace, this was one of the first squares to
have been developed after the Restoration. For its first fifty years, it was,
with Soho Square, London’s most fashionable address, but by 1750 it had
yielded that position to the squares in Mayfair – another sign of the court’s
relative social decline. Still, this neighborhood was convenient for peers
with duties in the royal household, and as late as the 1720s six dukes and
seven earls lived there. Some idea of the political significance of the square
is that during the first half of the eighteenth century it was home to both
Ozinda’s Chocolate House (est. 1694), a leading Tory hangout, and the
St. James’s (est. 1705), which catered to Whigs. On entering the square we
note that, unlike those in say, Grosvenor Square, the houses themselves
are neat, red-brick structures, not particularly opulent. According to one
observer writing in 1776:
The area was also popular with ambassadors, but gradually it came to be
filled with aristocratic clubs and shops.
Conclusion: London in 1750 357
We emerge from the south side of St. James’s Square into Pall Mall, the
broad street that borders St. James’s Park. Pall Mall might be the only street
in London named after a game, similar to croquet, that was imported from
the continent and became very popular at the court of Charles II. It was
he who laid out the street, banning carriage and chair traffic in 1661. From
the first it was fashionable, which helps to explain why the king ensconced
Nell Gwyn here once she had moved up in the world. By the end of
the seventeenth century, as elsewhere in the West End, shopkeepers had
followed the aristocrats. It was at the bookshop of Robert Dosley, No. 52,
that the proprietor encouraged Samuel Johnson to compile his dictionary.
As this implies, the area was popular with artistic and literary figures:
Sterne, Gibbon, and the painter Thomas Gainsborough all lived here
at one time or another. They liked to visit popular local coffeehouses
like the Smyrna. Later in the eighteenth century, as some coffeehouses
began to limit their clientele by becoming clubs, many of them established
themselves in Pall Mall, such as Almack’s, Brookes’s, Boodle’s, the Carlton
Club, and the Macaroni Club.
From this point, our choice of route is easy. At the eastern end of
Pall Mall is the Haymarket, home of London’s largest theater; beyond it
is the Royal Mews. The Mews, or stables, are surrounded by run-down
shops and tenements. They will all be cleared away at the beginning of the
nineteenth century, to be replaced by Trafalgar Square and the National
Gallery. But in 1750, this is a hole in the center of west London. So,
instead, we double back west down Pall Mall to St. James’s Palace, whose
impressive Tudor gate is all covered with soot, rendering it old, ominous,
even forbidding in the context of so much eighteenth-century elegance
(see Illustration c.10). It stands in sharp contrast to Marlborough House
(1709–1711) next door, designed for the Duchess of Marlborough by Sir
Christopher Wren to be “strong plain and convenient.”23 St. James’s was
built by Henry VIII as a hunting lodge and served as the headquarters for
various ancillary members of the royal family until 1698, when Whitehall
burned down. From that point it became the official home of the British
monarch, as it remains to this day. Never very large, it was immediately
viewed as cramped and unsuitable: Queen Anne and her successors tried
to remodel it, but it was never big enough to house the entire court, and a
fire in 1809 reduced its size still further. Nor was it ever considered elegant
or grand: Daniel Defoe called it “mean,” and foreign visitors were shocked
that the most powerful monarch in Europe lived in such an unimpressive
structure. As we have seen, he or she tried to spend as much time away
358 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
Westminster
Crossing the park at dusk, we see the twin towers of Westminster Abbey
rise before us. Apart from those towers, erected in 1745 from designs by
Conclusion: London in 1750 359
open-air theaters were long gone by 1750, but Vauxhall Pleasure Garden
remains. Vauxhall, officially known as the New Spring Garden until 1785,
was the successor to the Paris Garden noted in Chapter 1, albeit farther
south along the bank. Because admission was free until 1732, up to that
date ordinary Londoners could, as they had 150 years earlier at the Rose
and Globe, enjoy its pleasures along with the elite:
the eighteenth century between the elite and respectable on one side and
the hoi polloi on the other.
Part of the reason for these improvements was the competition coming
from across the river at Chelsea: Ranelagh Gardens. Chelsea, just south
of Kensington, had long been a fashionable suburb: Tudor nobles had
palaces there, and Sir Thomas More was a famous inhabitant. Ranelagh
Gardens, which we can reach by barge, was laid out on the Ranelagh
estate in Chelsea in 1741/42. What Ranelagh had to distinguish it from
Vauxhall was a massive music rotunda, 150 feet in diameter, designed by
William Jones (d. 1757), to which “[E]verybody that loves eating, drinking,
staring, or crowding” was admitted for just 12 pence (see Illustration c.12).
Admission on fireworks nights was 5 shillings. As described by Tobias
Smollett in Humphry Clinker (1771), Ranelagh is
the enchanted palace of genius, adorned with the most exquisite
performances of painting, carving and gilding, enlightened with a
thousand golden lamps that emulate the noon-day sun; crowded with
the great, the rich, the gay, the happy and the fair; glittering with cloth
of gold, and silver lace, embroidery and precious stones.
Horace Walpole, writing in 1750, thought that “It has totally beat
Vauxhall.”27 But Vauxhall outlasted its rival: Ranelagh closed in 1803,
Vauxhall in 1859. In any case, after our exhausting day, and the two
centuries of London history preceding it, we seek repose and reflection.
of course, that the soot parts. We reflect that the city has grown mightily
since 1550 and has met untold challenges to its demographic, political,
social, and cultural health.
In fact, the period from 1550 to 1750 is unique in London’s history,
unlike the period immediately before or after. Before, London was the
greatest city in the kingdom, to be sure, but that kingdom was relatively
small and not of the first rank in Europe. Its capital was not unlike other
capitals, and indeed, although London was bigger, it was not fundamen-
tally different from other great commercial towns in England or Europe. It
was smaller than Venice, Naples, and Paris, in many ways a larger version
of York, Norwich, or Bristol. Above all, its culture and mind-set were
dominated, as they were in other European countries, by the Church and
the court, which had influence on the wider world to be sure, but not as
much as they would have liked. It is true that the court and government
were headquartered in London and the Church was, for the most part,
run from there. In big matters like rebellion, as London went, so went the
nation, but in smaller matters of politics and culture, London’s influence
was intermittent and precarious.
By 1750, all of that had changed. First and foremost, London grew, from
120,000 to 675,000 souls, becoming the greatest city in Europe. It grew in
physical extent to include all of the old City, Westminster, Southwark and
South London, and extended East and West Ends. For a while, the influx of
immigrants threatened to overwhelm the time-honored institutions of City
and company, county and parish. To many contemporaries, especially
before 1650, early modern London seemed a monster city, out of control,
on the brink of chaos or collapse. London appeared to cross that brink
with every major plague epidemic, culminating in the three hammer blows
of plague, fire, and war, from 1665 to 1667. Commerce ground to a halt,
and community disintegrated, but London survived, rebuilt, and grew
some more.
Over the course of the next century, metropolitan London grew eco-
nomically to become Europe’s busiest port; its freest, least restrictive
trading environment; its greatest banking center; and its most voracious
consumer and bountiful distributor of overseas imports and home-finished
goods. The wealth generated by London, by first the Commercial and then
the Financial Revolutions, won for Britain a series of world wars for empire.
These led in turn to the growth of the London-based central administra-
tion and the British military, their increasing efficiency, and the resultant
acquisition of valuable colonies linked to London by a worldwide network
364 London: A Social and Cultural History, 1550–1750
of shipping lanes. These brought sugar, tobacco, silks, spices, fruit, and
slaves to the capital for redistribution to Europe and the empire. London
became the center of a global web of communication, credit, and exchange,
hardly pausing to reflect how that web entangled and exploited foreign
lands and native peoples. The resulting wealth was also plowed into Lon-
don’s own development, in particular that of the West End, which led in
turn to more investment and consumption. Finally, all of this economic
activity surely helped to establish the demand and set the economic, social,
and cultural pace for the Industrial Revolution, which would in turn fund
Britain’s political and economic ascendancy into the twentieth century.
Throughout the period, and simultaneously with the economic devel-
opment noted earlier, politics and religion split London and the nation,
although the city leaned heavily Protestant. These fissures led to con-
stitutional upheaval and eventually to constitutional monarchy by way
of two revolutions, the world’s first modern political parties, a relatively
free political press, and the rise of public opinion as represented by its
readership: the London voter and the London crowd(s). In fact, most of
these dramatic events were headquartered in London. Nowhere was the
franchise wider than in London; nowhere did the opinion of ordinary
people matter more. The London press, freed from the most onerous
forms of censorship in 1695, was intimately connected with a growing
public sphere independent of Church and court, flourishing in the city’s
inns, taverns, alehouses, coffeehouses, clubs, and pleasure gardens. Old
verities like the Great Chain of Being, paternalism, and deference could
not survive intact in such a hothouse atmosphere. As this implies, Lon-
don pioneered many new forms of culture and entertainment and their
funding during our period: the court masque and the public masquerade
ball, the literary essay magazine, the public theater run by entrepreneurial
managers, the public concert hall, literary and musical publication by sub-
scription, and so forth. At the beginning of the seventeenth century, Inigo
Jones borrowed from Italy a new national architectural style – Palladian
neoclassical – that would be fused with the Baroque by Wren and his
students in London’s rebuilding. Jones also imported a new way to live
in the city for those who wanted privacy and elegance: the Italian piazza
became the London square.
All of these institutions, styles, and strategies had national, imperial,
and international implications. Amphibious aristocrats, gentle tourists,
colonial and foreign agents, newsletters, then newspapers, new carriage
routes, and better mails disseminated London thought and London
Conclusion: London in 1750 365
1: London in 1550
1. The following depends utterly on the wealth of information contained in B. Weinreb,
C. Hibbert, J. Keay, and J. Keay, The London Encyclopaedia, 3rd ed. (2008; hereafter,
LE), to which the authors wish to pay full acknowledgment. The words today and mod-
ern refer to conditions in the twenty-first century. All other present tense descriptions
are of London in 1550.
369
370 Notes to pages 35–64
concerned with the period after 1650, many of the phenomena it describes clearly
began in or applied to the previous century.
2. Quotes from P. Thorold, The London Rich: The Creation of a Great City from 1666 to
the Present (1999), p. 7; Royal Proclamation 7 July 1580, printed in Manley, London
in the Age of Shakespeare, p. 185.
3. Quoted in Inwood, p. 252.
4. Quoted in Thorold, p. 21.
5. J. Graunt, Observations on the Bills of Mortality (1662).
6. J. Lempriere, Universal Biography Containing a Copious Account, Critical and His-
torical, of the Life and Character, Labours and Actions of Eminent Persons, in all Ages
and Countries, Conditions and Professions (1810) II, sub “Heidegger, John James.”
7. P. Linebaugh, The London Hanged: Crime and Civil Society in the Eighteenth Century
(Cambridge, 1992), p. 70.
8. Quoted in Inwood, p. 204.
9. Sir William Cavendish (1590–1628), quoted in Manley, Literature and Culture,
p. 489.
10. John Evelyn, quoted in Manley, Literature and Culture, p. 488.
11. The Journal of John Harrower, An Indentured Servant in the Colony of Virginia, 1773–
1776, ed. E. M. Riley (Williamsburg, Virginia, 1963), p. 3, quoted in T. Hitchcock,
Down and Out in Eighteenth-Century London (2004), p. 23; and R. B. Shoemaker,
Persecution and Punishment: Petty Crime and the Law in Middlesex, c. 1660–1725
(Cambridge, 1991), p. 184.
12. R. Kirk, “London in 1689–90,” Transactions of the London and Middlesex Archaeo-
logical Society n.s. 6 (1927–31), p. 333.
13. Kirk, “London in 1689–90,” p. 335.
14. J. Boswell, Boswell’s London Journal, ed. F. A. Pottle (New York, 1950), p. 227.
15. D. Defoe, A Tour of England and Wales (Everyman, 1927) I, 43.
16. Spectator, No. 69: 19 May 1711.
17. Quoted in G. Williams and J. Ramsden, Ruling Britannia: A Political History of
Britain, 1688–1988 (1990), p. 32.
18. Quoted in G. Holmes, British Politics in the Age of Anne (1967), p. 177.
19. J. Swift, Examiner, No. 13: 2 Nov. 1710.
20. Spectator, No. 3: 3 Mar. 1711.
21. Quoted in Inwood, p. 328.
7. The Weekly Journal or Saturday Post, 7 May 1720, quoted in Linebaugh, London
Hanged, p. 20. See also Ward, Metropolitan Communities, pp. 125–43.
8. Quoted in Archer, Pursuit of Stability, p. 1, which this account follows closely.
9. Archer, Pursuit of Stability, p. 257.
10. PD VII, 415–16: 19 Dec. 1666.
11. PD II, 187–89: 30 Sept. 1661.
12. Quoted in T. Harris, “The Bawdy House Riots of 1668,” Historical Journal XXIX
(1986), p. 539. See also P. S. Seaver, “Apprentice Riots in Early Modern London” in
Violence, Politics and Gender in Early Modern England, ed. J. P. Ward (New York,
2008), pp. 17–39.
13. Quoted in The Oxford Book of Royal Anecdotes, ed. E. Longford (Oxford, 1989),
pp. 226–27.
14. A Letter from Mercurius Civicus to Mercurius Rusticus (1643), quoted in V. Pearl,
London and the Outbreak of the Puritan Revolution (Oxford, 1961), p. 1.
15. Quoted in Manley, Literature and Culture, p. 534.
16. ED III, 246: 29 May 1660.
17. All quotes from Harris, “Bawdy House Riots,” pp. 537, 538, 540, 541 on which this
account is based.
18. Quoted in J. Scott, England’s Troubles: Seventeenth-Century English Political Insta-
bility in European Context (Cambridge, 2000), p. 192.
19. Quoted in G. S. De Krey, “Sir Thomas Pilkington,” NDNB.
20. Quoted in De Krey, “Sir Thomas Pilkington,” NDNB.
21. Quoted in G. S. De Krey, London and the Restoration, 1659–1683 (Cambridge, 2005),
p. 258.
22. ED IV, 586–88: 8 June, 15 June 1688.
23. Dr Williams’ Library, London, Morrice MS Q, pp. 352, 359; App. 13, quoted in Scott,
England’s Troubles, p. 219.
24. T., Earl of Ailesbury, The Memoirs of Thomas, Earl of Ailesbury, Written by Himself
(1890), pp. 214–15.
25. Ailesbury Memoirs, p. 218.
26. Quoted in Scott, England’s Troubles, p. 221.
27. Quoted in R. Beddard, A Kingdom without a King: The Journal of the Provisional
Government in the Revolution of 1688 (Oxford, 1988), p. 61.
28. Defoe, Tour I, 338.
29. H. Sacheverell, The Perils of False Brethren in Church and State (1709).
30. According to The Oxford Companion to British History, ed. J. A. Cannon (1997),
p. 427.
8: Plague and Fire
1. Quoted in LE, p. 344.
2. Quoted in LE, p. 344, which this account follows closely.
3. PD VI, 120: 7 June 1665.
4. PD VI, 130–31: 17 June 1665.
5. Quoted in LE, p. 327.
6. W. Boghurst, Loimographia: An Account of the Great Plague in the Year 1665, ed.
F. F. Payne (1894; repr. 1979), pp. 30–31.
7. Taken from Table 7: Major Epidemics in London, 1563–1665 from P. Slack,
“Metropolitan Government in Crisis, the Response to the Plague” in Beier and Finlay,
378 Notes to pages 313–335
p. 62. Figures from 1563–1625 cover only the City and liberties; those for 1636 and
1665 include the out-parishes as well.
8. PD VI, 175–176: 31 July 1665; ibid., 186: Aug. 8, 1665.
9. PD VI, 192: 16 Aug. 1665.
10. PD VI, 210: 3 Sept. 1665.
11. PD VI, 164: 22 July 1665.
12. PD VI, 342: 31 Dec. 1665.
13. LE, p. 345.
14. Quoted in Slack, “Metropolitan Government in Crisis,” p. 74.
15. Quoted in Slack, “Metropolitan Government in Crisis,” p. 73.
16. LE, p. 345.
17. PD VI, 201: 22 Aug. 1665.
18. PD VI, 93: 30 Apr. 1665.
19. PD VI, 268: 16 Oct. 1665.
20. PD VI, 282: 29 Oct. 1665.
21. PD VII, 41: 12 Feb. 1666.
22. PD VI, 204–05: 28 Aug.1665.
23. PD VI, 187: 10 Aug. 1665.
24. PD VII, 3: 5 Jan. 1666.
25. J. Evelyn, A Character of England (1659), p. 9; Defoe, Tour I, 324–25.
26. Quoted in Inwood, p. 242.
27. PD VII, 267–68: 2 Sept. 1666.
28. Ibid., pp. 268–69.
29. All quoted in N. Hanson, The Great Fire of London: in That Apocalyptic Year, 1666
(Hoboken, New Jersey, 2001), p. 130.
30. PD VII, 271–72: 2 Sept. 1666.
31. Thomas Vincent, quoted in Inwood, p. 243.
32. ED III, 451–53: 3 Sept. 1666.
33. ED III, 454: 4 Sept. 1665.
34. PD VII, 276: 5 Sept. 1666.
35. Quoted in Inwood, p. 244.
36. PD VII, 276: 5 Sept. 1666.
37. ED III, 457: 5 Sept. 1666.
38. Quoted in W. G. Bell, The Great Fire of London (1923; repr. 1994), p. 208.
39. LE, p. 559.
40. Defoe, Tour I, 330.
41. Ward, London Spy III, 7.
42. Boswell’s London Journal, p. 232.
43. Quoted in LE, p. 559.
44. Quoted in LE, p. 809.
45. Defoe, Tour I, 349.
46. Defoe, Tour I, 314.
381
382 Further Reading
Merritt, J. F., The Social World of Early Modern Westminster: Abbey, Court and
Community 1525–1640 (Manchester, 2005).
Picard, L., Elizabeth’s London (2003).
. Restoration London (1997).
. Dr. Johnson’s London (2000).
Rappaport, S., “Social Structure and Mobility in Sixteenth-Century London,”
London Journal IX (1983), X (1984).
. Worlds Within Worlds: Structures of Life in Sixteenth-Century London
(Cambridge, 1989).
Rudé, G., Hanoverian London 1714–1808 (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1971).
London Maps
Print
The A to Z of Elizabethan London, comp. A. Prockter and R. Taylor (1979).
The A to Z of Restoration London, comp. J. Fisher and R. Cline (1992).
The A to Z of Georgian London (1982).
Barker, F. and Jackson, P., The History of London in Maps (1990).
Whitfield, P., London: a Life in Maps (2006).
Online
Agas Map of Elizabethan London: http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/subject.asp?subject=7&gid=63
http://www.collectbritain.co.uk/collections/crace/
http://www.londonancestor.com/maps/maps.htm
http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/
Bibliographies
http://www.rhs.ac.uk/bibl/bibwel.asp
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Wheatley and P. Cunningham, 3 vols. (1891).
Further Reading 383
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De Laune, T., The Present State of London (1681; rev. ed. 1690).
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Kirk, R., “London in 1689–90,” ed. D. Maclean, Transactions of the London and
Middlesex Archaeological Society ns 6 (1927–1931).
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of London and Westminster, and parts adjacent, for forty miles round
(1755).
Manningham, J., The Diary of John Manningham of the Middle Temple, ed.
J. Bruce (1868).
Pepys, S., The Diary of Samuel Pepys, ed. R. Latham and W. Matthews, 11 vols.
(Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1970–1983).
Saint, A. and Darley, G., The Chronicles of London (New York, 1994).
Seaver, P., Wallington’s World: A Puritan Artisan in Seventeenth-Century London
(Stanford, 1985).
Stow, J., A Survey of London: Reprinted from the Text of 1603, 2 vols. (Oxford,
1971).
Stow, W., Remarks on London (1722).
Swift, J., The Journal to Stella 1710–1713, ed. H. Williams, 2 vols. (Oxford,
1948).
Economic London
Beier, A. L., “Engine of Manufacture: The Trades of London” in London, 1500–
1700: The Making of the Metropolis, ed. A. L. Beier and R. Finlay (1986).
Brenner, R., Merchants and Revolution: Commercial Change, Political Conflict
and London’s Overseas Traders, 1550–1653 (Princeton, 1993).
Carswell, J., The South Sea Bubble (Stanford, 1960).
Dickson, P. G. M., The Financial Revolution in England: A Study in the Devel-
opment of Public Credit, 1688–1756 (1967).
Earle, P., The Making of the English Middle Class: Business, Society and Family
Life in London 1660–1730 (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1989).
Fisher, F. J., “The Development of London as a Centre of Conspicuous Con-
sumption in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries,” Transactions of the
Royal Historical Society, 4th series XXX (1948).
. “The Development of the London Food Market, 1540–1640” in Essays
in Economic History I, ed. E. M. Carus-Wilson (1954).
Further Reading 385
Rogers, N., “Resistance to Oligarchy: the City Opposition to Walpole and His
Successors, 1725–1747,” in London in the Age of Reform, ed. J. Stevenson
(Oxford, 1977).
Smith, H., Georgian Monarchy: Politics and Culture, 1714–1760 (Cambridge,
2006).
Smuts, R. M., Culture and Power in England 1585–1685 (1999).
Thurley, S., Whitehall Palace: An Architectural History of the Royal Apartments,
1240–1698 (New Haven, 1999).
. The Whitehall Palace Plan of 1670 (1998).
The Press
Atherton, I., “The Press and Popular Opinion” in A Companion to Stuart Britain,
ed. B. Coward (Oxford, 2003).
Berry, H., Gender, Society and Print Culture in Late-Stuart England: the Cultural
World of the Athenian Mercury (Aldershot, 2003).
Black, J., The English Press in the 18th Century (1987).
Ewald, W. B., The Newsmen of Queen Anne (Oxford, 1956).
Foot, M., The Pen and the Sword: Jonathan Swift and the Power of the Press
(1957).
Harris, M., London Newspapers in the Age of Walpole (1974).
. “The Management of the London Newspaper Press During the Eigh-
teenth Century,” Publishing History IV (1978).
Rogers, P., Grub Street: Studies in a Subculture (1972).
Further Reading 387
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and H. Shore (2003).
Warner, J., Craze: Gin and Debauchery in an Age of Reason (New York, 2002).
Burford, E. J., Wits, Wenchers and Wantons: London’s Low Life: Covent Garden
in the Eighteenth Century (1986).
Dabhoiwala, F., “The Pattern of Sexual Immorality in Seventeenth- and
Eighteenth-Century London” in Londinopolis: Essays in the Cultural and
Social History of Early Modern London, ed. P. Griffiths and M. S. R. Jenner
(Manchester, 2000).
Griffiths, P., “Overlapping Circles: Imagining Criminal Communities in London,
1545–1645” in Communities in Early Modern England: Networks, Place,
Rhetoric, ed. A. Shepard and P. Withington (Manchester, 2000).
Linebaugh, P., The London Hanged: Crime and Civil Society in the Eighteenth
Century (1992).
McMullen, J. L., The Canting Crew: London’s Criminal Underworld 1550–1700
(New Brunswick, New Jersey, 1984).
Rumbelow, D., The Triple Tree: Newgate, Tyburn and Old Bailey (1982).
Salgado, G., The Elizabethan Underworld (1977).
Shoemaker, R. B., “Reforming the City: the Reformation of Manners Campaign
in London, 1690–1738” in L. Davison, T. Hitchcock, T. Keirn, and R. B.
Shoemaker, eds., Stilling the Grumbling Hive: the Response to Social and
Economic Problems in England, 1689–1750 (New York, 1992).
. Prosecution and Punishment: Petty Crime and the Law in London and
Rural Middlesex, c. 1660–1725 (Cambridge, 1991).
Tales from the Hanging Court, ed. T. Hitchcock and R. B. Shoemaker (2006).
Riot and Rebellion
Brenner, R., “The Civil War Politics of London’s Merchant Community,” Past
and Present no. 58 (1973).
Harris, T., “The Bawdy House Riots of 1668,” Historical Journal XXIX (1986).
. London Crowds in the Reign of Charles II: Propaganda and Politics from
the Restoration Until the Exclusion Crisis (Cambridge, 1987).
Holmes, G. S., “The Sacheverell Riots: The Crowd and the Church in Early
Eighteenth Century London,” Past and Present no. 72 (1976).
Pearl, V., London and the Outbreak of the Puritan Revolution: City Government
and National Politics 1625–1643 (Oxford, 1961).
Rogers, N., “Aristocratic Clientage, Trade and Independency: Popular Politics
in Pre-Radical Westminster,” Past and Present no. 61 (1973).
. “Popular Disaffection in London During the Forty-five,” London Jour-
nal I (1975).
. “Popular Protest in Early Hanoverian London,” Past and Present no.
79 (1978).
Rudé, G., “The London Mob of the Eighteenth Century,” Historical Journal II
(1959).
390 Further Reading
. “‘Mother Gin’ and the London Riots of 1736,” The Guildhall Miscellany
X (1959).
. Wilkes and Liberty. A Social Study of 1763 to 1774 (Oxford, 1962).
Sachse, W. L., “The Mob and the Revolution of 1688,” Journal of British Studies
IV (1964).
Shoemaker, R. B., The London Mob: Violence and Disorder in Eighteenth-century
London (2004).
. “The London ‘Mob’ in the Early Eighteenth Century,” Journal of
British Studies XXVI (1987).
Smith, S. R., “Almost Revolutionaries: The London Apprentices During the
Civil War,” Huntington Library Quarterly XLII (1978–1979).
. “The London Apprentices as Seventeenth Century Adolescents,” Past
and Present no. 61 (1973).
London’s Religion
Brigden, S., London and the Reformation (Oxford, 1989).
Liu, T., Puritan London: A Study of Religion and Society in the City Parishes
(1994).
Seaver, P., The Puritan Lectureships: the Politics of Religious Dissent 1560–1662
(Stanford, 1970).
London Women
Gowing, L., “‘The Freedom of the Streets’: Women and Social Space, 1560–
1640” in Londinopolis: Essays in the Cultural and Social History of Early
Modern London, ed. P. Griffiths and M. S. R. Jenner (Manchester, 2000).
Further Reading 391
393
394 Index
The Cat and Fiddle, 199 Charles II, King, 25, 293
Catherine of Braganza, Queen, 111, 296 arts and, 149, 151–152
Catholic Chapel Royal, 113 corruption and incompetence of
Catholic Church, as patron of arts, 133–135 administration, 296
Catholicism, 23–24 issue of succession of, 296–297
Parliamentary opposition to, 296–297 mistresses, 296
providing for poor, 219–220 public appearances, 109–110
Catuvellauni, 12 renovations of Whitehall, 136
Cavaliers, 289 residence of court, 103
A Caveat for Common Cursitors (Harman), Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, 52
242 Charlotte, Queen, 358
Cavendish Square, 351 Charteris, Colonel Francis, 207
Caxton, William, 60 A Chaste Maid in Cheapside (Middleton),
Cecil, Robert. See Salisbury, Robert Cecil, 144
first Earl of Chaucer, Geoffrey, 60
Cecil, William. See Burghley, William, Cheapside, 47–49, 339–341
Lord Cheapside Cross, 49
censorship, press and, 133, 135, 147, Chelsea Waterworks Company, 336
167 Chiffinch, Thomas, 116
ceremonies Chiffinch, William, 116
lord mayor’s show, 122–123 Child, Sir Francis, 91
royal court, 107–109 Child and Co., 91
Chamber, 105–106 children
Chamberlaine, John, 47, 209–210 abandonment of, 221–222, 236–238
Chandos, James Brydges, Duke of, health care and, 232–239
155–156 mortality, 65
Chapel Royal, 134, 139, 148 Children of Paul’s, 139–140
chapels, of royal court, 112–113 Chillenden, Edmund, 195
Charing, 57 Chippendale, Thomas, 68
Charing Cross, 57, 345–346 Cholmondeley, Michael, 223–224, 226–227
charity, 220 Christmas, 211
Charity and Children Engaged in Christ’s Hospital, 230, 235
Navigation and Husbandry Church of England, 14, 23, 71
(Rysbrack), 348 arts and, 132–133
Charles, Prince of Wales, 342 function of, 4–5
Charles I, King, 24, 50, 281, 289 churches, 71
Civil Wars, 290–291 arts and, 132–135
execution of, 291 function of, 4–5
public appearances, 109 Churchill, John. See Marlborough, John
relations with London, 285–286, 289 Churchill, Duke of
visual arts, 137–138, 145 Churchill, Sarah. See Marlborough, Sarah
Westminster Hall, 61 Churchill, Duchess of
Whitehall Palace, 58 churchwardens, 127
Index 397
Cibber, Caius Gabriel, 235, 329, 340 Congreve, William, 151, 156, 217
circus, 204 constables, 252–254
City Election Act, 124 Conventical Act 1664, 294
A City Full of People: Men and Women of Cooper, Anthony Ashley, first Earl of
London 1650–1750 (Earle), 27 Shaftesbury. See Shaftesbury,
City of London 1550, 44–51 Anthony Ashley Cooper, first Earl of
civic government, 122–131 Copland, Robert, 242
Civil List Act, 104 Coram, Thomas, 236–237
civil service, 121 corantos, 165
Civil Wars (mid-seventeenth century), Cornish, Henry, 298
285, 289–290 Corporation Act 1661, 293
Clare, John Holles, second Earl of, 56, 137 Corporation of the Poor, 230
Clarendon, Edward Hyde, first Earl of, Corpus Christi celebrations, 210
322 Cotton, Sir Robert, 349
Clarendon Code, 148, 293 Cottonian Library, 349
Clark, Peter, 193 court. See royal court
Claudius I, emperor of Rome, 12 Court of Aldermen, 122, 124, 254
Clayton, Sir Robert, 236 Court of Burgesses, 128–129
Clayton, Thomas, 181 courtiers, 105
Clerkenwell, 146 Coutts and Co., 91
Clink Prison, 37 Covent Garden, 56–57, 66, 346–347
clothing, of Royal Court, 111–112 Coverdale, Miles, 49
clubs, 197–201 The Craftsman, 186
coaches, 40 Cranmer, Thomas, Archbishop, 43, 134
coal mining, 99 crime
Coal Tax, 329 capital offences, 257–260
Cockpit theater, 141 murder, 241–242
coffee, 194–197 organized, 246–248
coffeehouses, 194–197 property, 241
Cokayne, Sir William, 86, 123 rate, 239–241
Coleman Street, 47, 71, 286, 293 reportage by press, 242–243
Collier, Jeremy, 217 wave, 239–244
Commercial Revolution, 87–91, 232 criminals, 244–251
Commission for Rebuilding, 328 Cromwell, Oliver, 24, 61, 292
Commissioners of Sewers, 335 Cromwell, Richard, 292
Common Council, 124–125, 127, 303–304 Cromwell, Thomas, 37, 39
Dissenters in, 297 Cryes of London (Gibbons), 144
Puritan/parliamentary majority, 289 Cumberland, Francis Clifford, fourth Earl
shrieval elections, 1682, 300 of, 66
Common Hall, 125–127, 300 Cupid before Jupiter (Ricci), 355
A Complete Collection of Remarkable Curtain theater, 141
Tryals of the Most Notorious Custom House, 41
Male-factors, 243 Customs and Excise, 94
398 Index
Elizabeth I, Queen, 23–24, 107–108, 118 Fielding, Sir John, 208, 256, 337
art and, 136 Figg, James, 351
censorship and, 167 Financial Revolution, 91–98
portraiture of, 137 fires, 51, 294, 319–331
relations with London, 283–284 Fisher, John, Cardinal, 39
residence of court, 103 fishing, 205
employment agency, 76 fishmongers, 48
England, London in history of, 21–27 Fleet Ditch, 341
The English Dancing Master (Playford), Fleet Liberty, 343
146 Fleet Prison, 52, 343
The Englishman (magazine), 186 Fleet River, 40, 51–52
An Enquiry into the Causes of the Late Fleet Street, 51–55, 343–344
Increase of Robbers (Fielding), 256 Fleetwood, William, 246
Epicoene or the Silent Woman (Jonson), The Flying Post, 174
145 folk-moot, 14
Epiphany, 209 Folly, 201
Erskine, Thomas, first Baron Erskine, lord food and drink, 186–188
chancellor, 348 alehouses, 192–194
essay magazines, 179–186 clubs, 197–201
Essex, Robert Devereux, second Earl of, coffeehouses, 194–197
284 inns, 188–189
Etherege, Sir George, 106, 149 pleasure gardens, 201–203
Evelyn, John, 135, 148, 301, 323–324, 326 riots and, 277
Evil May Day Riot, 1517, 212, 272, 278 taverns, 189–192
Exclusion Crisis, 25, 272 football (soccer), 204
executions, 258–259, 263–267 foreigners, violence against, 278–279
Forman, Simon, 315
The Fable of the Bees, or, Private Vices, Fortune theater, 141
Pubic Benefits (Mandeville), 218 Foundation Act 1753, 349
Farquahar, George, 217 Foundling Hospital, 236, 236–239, 348
Farriner, Thomas, 320 Four Prentices of London (Heywood), 144
Farringon Ward Without, 51 Four Times of the Day (Hogarth), 347
Fawkes, Guy, 61–62 Fox, Charles James, 198
Feast of Saints Philip and James, 209 The Freeholder, 186
Feast of the Royal Martyr Charles I, 213 Freeman, Sir Ralph, 150
Felton, John, 281 Frith, Mary (Moll Cut-Purse), 144, 243
The Female Spectator (Haywood), 181 furniture-making, 68
The Female Tatler (Manley), 181
femes coverts, 6, 10 Gainsborough, Thomas, 153, 238
Ferrabosco, Alfonso, 69 gangs
Ferrers, Laurence, Earl, 262, 264 crime and, 246–248
Fielding, Henry, 197, 250, 256 Fleet Street, 53
400 Index
Howard of Effingham, Charles Howard, James II, King (formerly Duke of York), 25
second Baron; and first Earl of accession, 296
Nottingham, 143 arts and, 152
Howard, Henry, Earl of Northampton. See London’s disillusionment with, 294
Northampton, Henry Howard, Earl of public appearances, 109
Howard, Jean, 145 regulation of press, 170
Howard, Thomas, Earl of Arundel. See renovations of Whitehall, 136–137
Arundel, Thomas Howard, Earl of residence of court, 103
Howell, James, 50 Revolution of 1688–89 and, 301–303
Howell, Mary, 236 Jarman, Edward, 338
Hubert, Robert, 325 Jeffreys, Sir George, 298
Hudson’s Bay Company, 84 Jewish population, immigration and,
Huguenots, 69 69–70
Humfrey, Pelham, 112, 148, 149 jobbers, 92
Humphry Clinker (Smollett), 362 John, King, 18, 18–19
Hunsdon, Henry Carey, first Baron, 143 Johnson, Samuel, 1
husbandmen, 6 on achievements of Rome and London,
Hyde Park, 353–354 159
Hye Way to the Spyttal-House (Copland), The Club, 198
242 residence of, 343–344
“A Hymn to the Pillory” (Defoe), 172 taverns and, 188, 190–191
joint stock companies, 92
Iceni, revolt of, 12 Jolly, Sarah, 207
immigration, 65–70 Jonathan Wild Act 1718, 249
Industrial Revolution, 98–100 Jones, Inigo, 50, 56, 137, 138
Industry and Idleness (Hogarth), 80, 158, Jones, William, 362
244 Jonson, Ben, 60, 106, 138, 144–145, 198
information, dispensing of, before print, Journal of the Plague Year (Defoe), 158,
164–166 317
informers, rewards system and, 255–256 journeymen, 80
Inner Temple, 53–54 judges, 260–263
inns, 188–189 jurors, 261
Inns of Court, 140 Justice of the Peace, 252, 256–257
insurance, fire, 330
Ireton, Henry, 61 Katherine of Aragon, Queen, 280
Ken, Thomas, 148
Jacobites, 26, 127, 337 Kensington House, 354
Jacobsen, Theodore, 348 Kent, William, 120
James I, King (VI of Scotland), 118, 284 Key, Newton, 187
art and, 136 Killigrew, Thomas, 149, 150, 347
relations with London, 285–286 King’s Company, 150
renovations of Whitehall, 136–137 King’s Evil, 112
Index 403
St. Albans, Henry Jermyn, Earl of, 350 St. Valentine’s Day, 209, 211–212
St. Anne, Blackfriars, 286 Salisbury, Robert Cecil, first Earl of, 137,
St. Bartholomew the Great, 134 284
St. Bartholomew’s Day, 210–211, 213 Salisbury, Sally, 208
St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, 220, 230, Salisbury Court, 141
233–235 sanitation, 335–336
St. Cecilia, 211 Sault, Richard, 177
St. Clement Danes, 345 Saussure, César de, 195, 254, 265–266
St. Dunstan-in-the-West, 344 Savile, Henry, 149
St. George Bloomsbury, 231 Savoy Hospital, 230, 235
St. George’s Day, 210 Scapula, Ostorius, 12
St. George’s Hospital, 234, 236 Scarborough, Richard Lumley, Earl of,
St. Giles-in-the-Fields, 231, 310 352
St. James Piccadilly, 328, 356 scribal publication, 169
St. James’s Hospital, 220 Scriblerians, 198
St. James’s Palace, 59, 136–137, 197 scrofula, 112
St. James’s Park, 202–203, 357–358 seacoal, 99
St. James’s Square, 154 the season
St. John, Henry, 96, 186 aristocracy, 66–67
St. John-the-Baptist feast, 209 festive calendar, 213
St. Katherine’s Hospital, 41, 220 royal court, 106–107
St. Katherine’s Stairs, 40 Second Anglo-Dutch War, 278
St. Luke’s Hospital, 236 security of royal personages, 109–110
St. Martin-in-the-Fields, 230–231, 346 Sedley, Sir Charles, 149
St. Martin’s Lane, 137 Seething Lane, 43
St. Martin’s parish, 66 Sejanus, His Fall (Jonson), 106
St. Mary Bethlehem Hospital. See Bedlam Senegal Adventurers, 84–85
St. Mary le Bow, 48–49 Servandoni, Giovanni Nicolò, 155
St. Mary Overie (Southwark Cathedral), Servant’s Registry, 76
pp. 36, 174 service industry, newcomers to London,
St. Mary Spital Hospital, 220 74–76
St. Mary-le-Strand, 345 Seven Years’ War, 2, 26, 96
St. Michael’s Day, 210 1700: Scenes from London Life (Waller), 27
St. Olave Hart Street, 43–44, 134 sewage, 335–336
St. Olave Silver Street, 211 Seymour, Queen Jane, 56
St. Olave’s Day, 211 Shaftesbury, Anthony Ashley Cooper, first
St. Paul’s Cathedral, 14, 34, 49–51, 330, Earl of, 170, 297–298
341–343 Shakespeare, William, 54, 102, 132,
St. Saviour church. See St. Mary Overie 143–144, 147, 156, 243, 284
St. Stephen Coleman Street, 286 Sharp, John, 149, 341
St. Thomas’s Hospital, 220, 230, 233–234, Sheppard, Jack, 243, 249–250
236 Sheridan, Richard Brinsley, 197
410 Index