early modern
The details which follow are presented as closely as possible to how they appear in the Lowestoft Settlement and Apprenticeship Book: Suffolk Archives, Ipswich - 01/13/1/3. But, it has not been possible to replicate completely an identical layout of the document. Original spelling has been maintained and use made of square brackets to provide extra information and clarify matters where needed. Mauve-coloured highlighting is intended to make the individual years and other dates immediately visible.
The largest administrative task by far to demand both the attention and the time of the parochial authorities in Lowestoft during the Early Modern period was relief of the poor – a weighty responsibility placed upon English parishes by the formative Poor Law Act of 1601. And the fortunate survival of Overseers of the Poor account books for the period 1656-1712 (Suffolk Archives, Ipswich - 01/13/1/1&2) reveals much about the implementation of this legislation.
Added: 26 January, 2025
The first almshouses in Lowestoft were provided by John Manyngham, the parish vicar from 1457-78. The exact year of institution is not known, but they were located on the north side of Fair Lane (now Dove Street) near its junction with West Lane (now Jubilee Way). And they seem to have remained in operation, in some form – undoubtedly with alterations made – into the final quarter of the 19th century, when White’s Directory of Suffolk (1874), p.
Added: 19 January, 2025
For centuries, the use of alms boxes in parish churches throughout the whole of England was a means of collecting sums of money for charitable purposes – particularly the relief of poverty where it was known or seen to exist. During the 16th century, as a result of general cost inflation (aggravated by Henry VIII’s mindless extravagance and debasement of the coinage, to say nothing of the social and economic problems caused by the Dissolution of the Monasteries), the alleviation of financial distress in the lower levels of society became more and more of a challenge.
Added: 1 January, 2025
Nos. 5 -25 High Street
Nos. 26-33 are part of an overall sequence of town properties (1-271, in all) showing their transfer, as recorded in the manor court minute books.
They relate specifically to what once occupied the land later taken up by Nos. 5-25 High Street.
Extracted in this form from The Town of Lowestoft c. 1720-25: People and Property in a Pre-Industrial Coastal Community (Lowestoft Heritage Workshop Centre, 2019).
Added: 4 December, 2024
(North of Mariners Street)
- Moving from North to South.
- Occupying former agricultural land and of freehold tenure.
- All properties fronting the High Street.
East end of the North Field
1. John Burgis - house, garden & adjoining arable enclosure (seven-eighths of an acre).
2. Agnes Eastgate - two houses & adjoining garden (half-acre).
Church Way interposing (now St. Margaret’s Road)
3. Thomas Bury - house, curtilage & garden (one acre).
Added: 3 December, 2024
(Parish Register Entries)
The register entries below are presented in as close a way as possible to the original handwritten ones
Photo opposite - The interior of St. Margaret’s Church in 1786 - historic repository of the Lowestoft parish registers - captured by Richard Powles (1763-1807). This ink-and-wash study is to be found in Isaac Gillingwater’s ‘Drawings Illustrative of the History of Lowestoft, Mutford and Lothingland’ (Suffolk Archives, Ipswich - ref. no.193/2/1).
In 1662, an Act of Settlement for the Better Relief of the Poor was passed by Parliament – a measure soon to become known as the Act of Settlement and Removal, as it aimed at restricting the movement of people from the parishes where they were living in a state of poverty into ones (nearby or further removed) where they believed that they would be better off.
Added: 4 November, 2024
Hearth Tax, as a means of raising money for The Crown, was introduced into England following the Restoration of the Monarchy under Charles II in 1660. It functioned on the principle of being a wealth tax, in that the number of fire-places in a house was taken as indicating the affluence of the occupant. The greater the number of rooms heated, the richer that householder was assumed to be – either as owner or renter.
Added: 14 October, 2024
So-called “Ship Money” had its roots in Late Medieval times, when coastal towns and counties in England were periodically called upon to supply vessels to the Crown for use in naval warfare during times of conflict – mainly with the French. After having suspended Parliament in 1629, following a series of disputes, and not reconvening it again until 1640, Charles I had to find ways of creating revenue other than the rents yielded by the Royal Estate.
Added: 8 October, 2024