Liberty of Norton Folgate

For the Madness album, see The Liberty of Norton Folgate.
Norton Folgate

Norton Folgate in 1681
Area
  1901 8 acres (0.032 km2)
Population
  1801 1,752
  1851 1,771
  1901 1,663
Density
  1901 208/acre
History
  Abolished 1900 (liberty)
1921 (civil parish)
  Succeeded by Metropolitan Borough of Shoreditch
Metropolitan Borough of Stepney
Status Liberty (until 1900)
Extra-parochial area (until 1858)
Civil parish (1858—1921)
  HQ Norton Folgate Street (c.1544-1744)
White Lion Street (1744-1901)
Looking south along Norton Folgate street in 2005. 30 St Mary Axe and Tower 42 can be seen in the background.

Norton Folgate was a liberty within the metropolitan area of London, England, located between the Bishopsgate ward of the City of London to the south, the parish of St Leonard, Shoreditch to the north and the parish of Spitalfields to the east. It was grouped into the Whitechapel District in 1855 and, following boundary changes in the 1990s, its former area is now divided between the City of London and the London Borough of Tower Hamlets.[1]

Toponymy

The name is recorded circa 1110 as Nortune and means 'north farmstead'. It is formed from the Old English 'north' and 'tūn', with the affix 'Folgate' perhaps derived from the manorial family name Foliot. This is possibly referring to Gilbert Foliot, Bishop of London or Richard Foliot, a canon of St Paul's Cathedral.[2] An alternative explanation found in The National Gazetteer from 1868 describes Folgate as derived "from the Saxon word Foldweg, a highway, in allusion to the old Roman Road (Ermine Street) which passed through this place."[3] It is remembered in the street of Norton Folgate and the 2009 album by the band Madness, called The Liberty of Norton Folgate

History

Its origin was as the area of land occupied by the inner precinct of the Priory and Hospital of St Mary Spital. This was dissolved during the Reformation, but the land, reverting to the Crown, retained its status as an extra-parochial liberty. Within the 8.7 acres (35,000 m2) of the former liberty are Folgate Street (formerly White Lyon Yard or White Lion Street), Spital Square, Elder Street, Fleur de Lis Street and Blossom Street.

Maps from the 18th Century indicate that an area of land lying west of Bishopsgate was also a part of Norton Folgate but this area was probably part of the broader Manor and not part of the liberty itself. This territory was originally quite extensive stretching from what is now Worship Street (then called Hog Lane) in a narrow corridor that ran parallel to Bishopsgate as far south as where Liverpool Street Station is today. However, by the 19th Century this had been reduced to just a small plot between Primrose Street and Worship Street. It has been suggested that Norton Folgate can be identified with the nine acres which the canons of St. Paul's held at Bishopsgate (ad portam Episcopi) in the time of Domesday Survey and had held similarly in the time of King Edward the Confessor.[4]

In the 18th century there were breweries in Hog Lane and in White Lion Street, their products including porter.[5] Norton Folgate was also later the site of the Gas Light and Coke Company, the works, also known as the 'Curtain Road Works', were established from about 1812, when the Company received a contract to light Bishopsgate and supply the surrounding area with gas. The site obtained was cramped, and riddled with springs. The Company was applying novel chemistry (devised by Fredrick Winsor) on an industrial scale, and these factors resulted in the Company paying substantial fines for non-delivery. The site was in operation from about 1820 to 1871, when the new works at Beckton took over supply for much of London. The site was then used as a coal siding - for coaling trains at Broad Street and Liverpool Street. Latterly it was used as a yard for taxis, before redevelopment in about 2000.[6]

It is noted as the sometime residence of the playwright Christopher Marlowe. The theatrical association continued, with the construction in 1837 of the City of London Theatre, here, by the architect Samuel Beazley. The theatre specialised in "domestic" and temperance drama, and closed in 1868. Performances included The Pickwick Papers between March and April 1837; and Nicholas Nickelby in November and December 1838.[7]

The liberty existed until October 1900,[8] although it continued to have nominal existence as a civil parish until 1921. However, the area to the west of Bishopsgate was removed and became part of parish and borough of Shoreditch, from 1965 forming part of the London Borough of Hackney.[9] Since a revision of boundaries in the 1990s this area is now part of the City of London. The remaining parish to the east of Bishopsgate formed part of the Metropolitan Borough of Stepney until it was abolished in 1921, absorbed by the parish of Spitalfields.[10]

In 2008, in opposition to a plan to demolish the trendy Light Bar (built as a power station for the Great Eastern Railway)[11] in order to build an office block, local activists claimed that documents in the council archives showed that the abolition of the Liberty of Norton Folgate in 1900 was technically invalid and that it still existed.[12]

Government

A Victorian street plan c.1900
Plaque on Norton Folgate Almshouses listing ten trustees in 1860

In 1732 the Parish Clerks of Shoreditch said that "All the Affairs of the Liberty are managed by the Ancients, who are in the Nature of a Vestry".[8] These "ancients" or "ancient inhabitants" may have originally been clerics but after the reformation were probably established landowners. Later records indicate that these "ancient inhabitants" took turns to occupy various offices including:

The ten "ancient inhabitants" were obliged to fill these offices unless they paid a fine excusing themselves. The Ancient Inhabitants appear to have replaced their numbers through co-opting residents of the Liberty. After a Local Act these ancient offices were replaced by a more democratic Board of Trustees who administered the Liberty from the Court House located in the centre of Norton Folgate Street (now called Norton Folgate). These twenty trustees were responsible for establishing and maintaining civic amenities such as sewerage, lighting and the maintenance of pavements. In 1743 the ancient Court House was pulled down and the courts of the manor were later held in a building on the north side of White Lion Street (later No. 1 Folgate Street) leased by the inhabitants and overseers of the liberty from 1744 onwards. This building was also used for meetings of the trustees until 1900, it was demolished in the 1960s.

In 1855 the liberty became part of the Whitechapel District. In 1897 the trustees contemplated agitating, together with the neighbouring Liberty of the Old Artillery Ground, for inclusion in the City of London, but did not do so. In 1900 the liberty became merged in the Metropolitan Borough of Stepney and the last meeting of the trustees took place on 24 October of that year. The last Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Liberty was William Chillingworth.[13]

Population and area

The liberty of Norton Folgate covered 8 acres (32,375 m2). The population as recorded in the Census was:

Liberty of Norton Folgate 1801-1901

Year[14] 1801 1811 1821 1831 1841 1851 1861 1871 1881 1891 1901 2001
Population 1,752 1,7161,896 1,918 1,674 1,771 1,873 1,550 1,528 1,449 1,663 212

See also

References

  1. "The City and London Borough Boundaries Order 1993".
  2. Mills, D. (2000). Oxford Dictionary of London Place Names. Oxford.
  3. GenUK Middlesex, Norton Folgate
  4. F.H.W.Sheppard, The Manor and Liberty of Norton Folgate, Survey of London: volume 27: Spitalfields and Mile End New Town (1957), pp. 15-20.
  5. London Trade Directories; F. H. W. Sheppard op. cit.
  6. Hackney History Volume 7
  7. Theatres in Victorian London accessed on 21 Dec 2006
  8. 1 2 'The Manor and Liberty of Norton Folgate', Survey of London: volume 27: Spitalfields and Mile End New Town (1957), pp. 15-20.
  9. Thomas, C., Sloane, B., and Phillpotts, C. (1997) Excavations at the Priory and Hospital of St Mary Spital, London. Museum of London.
  10. F A Youngs, Guide to the Administrative Units of England, Vol. I, 1979
  11. JE Connor, "The Great Eastern Light", 2000, p.12
  12. Norton Folgate Raises Flag and Declares 'UDI'
  13. Minute Book of the Liberty of Norton Folgate (at Bancroft Public Records Library), 24.10.1900
  14. Statistical Abstract for London, 1901 (Vol. IV) - Census tables for Liberty of Norton Folgate.

External links

Coordinates: 51°31′16″N 0°04′44″W / 51.5211°N 0.0788°W / 51.5211; -0.0788

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