BUILDINGS (fn. 1)
Religious Houses and Schools (fn. 2)
THE BENEDICTINE PRIORY OF ST. MARY. (fn. 3) The early history of the priory buildings is
one of frequent disturbance. The first church,
consecrated in 1043, is known to have been richly
adorned, but to have been plundered by Bishop
Robert de Limesey c. 1100. At the same time
he is said to have destroyed the monks' houses
and carried away building material. (fn. 4) In 1143
the priory was turned into a fortress by Robert
Marmion, and the monks were temporarily dispossessed. (fn. 5) Fifty years later they were again ejected
during the episcopate of Hugh de Nonant (1188-98).
De Nonant is alleged to have torn down the monastic
buildings to their foundations while lodgings for his
newly-created canons were erected in their place. (fn. 6)
At this time the church was said to be unfinished, (fn. 7)
and there is other scanty evidence that rebuilding
was in progress in the late 12th century. A prior's
seal, identified as that of Moyses (1183-9), showed a
large cruciform building with a west porch flanked
by towers, a tall central tower, and smaller towers
above the aisles or transepts; this may have been a
representation, real or imaginary, of the cathedral
church. (fn. 8) In 1188 there is mention of 'Master Reynold
the mason', evidently a person of importance who at
one time owned houses on priory land outside the
cemetery wall. In 1224-5, when this site was granted
to the bishop for the erection of a palace, Reynold is
referred to as the priory's 'late mason'. (fn. 9) No structural remains of a 12th-century church have so far
been identified although carved capitals and other
stones of the period have come to light. It is likely
that when prosperity returned to the priory after the
middle of the 13th century a new start was made both
on the church and on the monastic buildings. The
existing remains of the west front are of this date, (fn. 10)
suggesting either that the nave was then rebuilt, or
that the impoverished state of the priory had
delayed completion of the Norman church. By
1291 there was a chapel of St. Clement attached to
the cathedral, juxta porticum; (fn. 11) various other altars
and chapels are mentioned at different times,
including a Rood Chapel and a Lady Chapel. (fn. 12)
Contributions to the fabric were being made in the
earlier 14th century and in 1409 there is reference to
one of the altars in the 'new work', (fn. 13) perhaps indicating additions at the east end of the church. It is
evident from recent excavations that most of the
conventual buildings were either built or rebuilt in
the 14th and 15th centuries; (fn. 14) those mentioned in
various documents include cloisters, chapter house,
prior's and other chambers, refectory, infirmary,
grammar school, and guest house. There were also
the usual domestic buildings, an outer court, a
porter's lodge, and a mill on the River Sherbourne. (fn. 15)
In 1404 the so-called unlearned Parliament met
in 'a great chamber in the priory', while the
Parliament of 1459 was held in the chapter house. (fn. 16)
In 1462 the corporation agreed to divert the city wall
so that it should no longer divide the priory's pools
near the river from the precincts. (fn. 17) The priory was
surrendered in 1539 and wholesale destruction
followed.
The precincts occupied a site extending from the
churchyards of St. Michael and Holy Trinity on the
south to the Sherbourne on the north, and from
beyond the modern Priory Street on the east to what
is now Trinity Street on the west. The church stood
on the southern and highest part of the site, parallel
to and just north of the present Priory Row. Hill
Top, the narrow lane which runs downhill from
Priory Row towards the river, crosses the site where
the transepts and central tower once stood. Owing to
the sloping ground the floor of the church was about
12 ft. below Priory Row, while the cloisters and
other monastic buildings occupied a series of
terraces at still lower levels. Of the fragmentary
remains which survived the Dissolution almost
nothing is left above ground. No systematic
excavation of the site took place until 1965 and
attempts to reconstruct the layout of the buildings
have hitherto been based on chance discoveries,
many of them inadequately recorded.
The most substantial remains of the church so far
uncovered lie at its west end. During the preparations
for the rebuilding of the Blue Coat School in 1856
the base of the west wall, standing to a height of
about 6 ft., was excavated and left exposed. (fn. 18) At
each end of the wall are the bases of square towers,
projecting beyond the aisles in the form of small
transepts, the total length of the west front being
something over 130 ft. An eye-witness at the time
of the excavation described traces of a west porch
outside the central doorway, paved with tiles and
having jamb shafts of red and white stone in
alternate courses. (fn. 19) Attached to the inner face of the
west wall are the bases of the respond piers of the
nave arcades and, beyond them, those of the arches
which divided the aisles from the transeptal towers.
These piers have moulded shafts with double-roll
bases and are of later-13th-century character. There
are remains of spiral stairways in the angle turrets of
both projecting towers. The north tower had been
left standing to a considerable height when the
church was demolished, and in the 17th century was
converted into a house. (fn. 20) A drawing of c. 1800 shows,
in spite of deteriorated stonework, that the remaining
external features were also of 13th-century date. At
the second stage of the tower there were polygonal
angle turrets with attached shafts, and a single-light
window is visible below three bays of trefoil-headed
arcading. (fn. 21) In 1856 the tower was partly demolished
and the remainder was re-faced and incorporated in
the Bluecoat School building. (fn. 22)

Figure 8:
Benedictine priory of St. Mary
These excavations established the western extremity of the church, its floor level, and the
width of its nave and aisles. The next discovery
eastwards was that of two pier bases of the south
nave arcade below No. 7 Priory Row; these are no
longer visible but their position was recorded by
T. F. Tickner in 1909. (fn. 23) In 1959 excavations in the
garden of No. 8 Priory Row revealed floor tiles and
part of what was thought to be the north-west pier
of the central tower, still standing to a height of
about 10 ft. (fn. 24) To the east of Hill Top, the evidence
is more confused. Masonry in the wall of No. 9
Priory Row, abutting on Hill Top, was long thought
to belong to the east wall of the south transept. (fn. 25) It is
now considered that this may not be in situ, but was
built of re-used material. The same is probably true
of the remains in the cellars of Nos. 9 and 10 Priory
Row. (fn. 26) In 1825 underpinning operations at No. 9
were said to have revealed part of the south wall of
the church, but its exact position does not appear to
have been recorded. (fn. 27)
While excavations for the new Coventry cathedral
were in progress in 1955, the northern half of what
is presumed to have been the east end of the medieval church was uncovered. The remains included
the bases of two small polygonal apses with boldly
projecting buttresses. (fn. 28) Their position suggests that
the east end may have consisted of at least three such
radiating apses. Partly on the evidence of re-used
stones in the foundations, one of which was carved
with 14th-century ornament, (fn. 29) it is thought that the
work is likely to be of the 15th century - a date
generally considered too late for any form of chevet.
It is possible that a 15th-century chancel, or a Lady
Chapel to the east of it, had a three-sided termination, (fn. 30) and that polygonal chapels or sacristies
projected beyond it. Alternatively radiating chapels
may have been added to an existing Norman apse,
as was done about a century earlier at Tewkesbury. (fn. 31)
Another discovery in 1955, to the west of the
northernmost apse, was a length of wall running east
and west. This wall, which has now disappeared,
contained the sloping sill of a large window in which
were incorporated mullion bases with mouldings of
Perpendicular character. (fn. 32)
The general picture is of a large cruciform
cathedral with a central tower, shallow transepts, and
a polygonal east end, built at several different periods
and having a total length of about 425 ft. It would
thus be comparable in size to the cathedrals of
Gloucester, Worcester, and Norwich. The arrangement of the west front with its transeptal towers was
similar to that at Wells. In addition to the west
doorway, remains of which exist, there appears to
have been an important entrance from Holy Trinity
churchyard. (fn. 33) Owing to the sloping site there were
almost certainly crypts below the north side of the
church.
Destruction of the cathedral after 1539 was fairly
complete, although it has sometimes been stated
that, for a time, the central tower was left standing. (fn. 34)
The only evidence for this suggestion appears to be a
sketch of Coventry made in the 1570s by the herald,
William Smith. (fn. 35) This shows a fifth church tower in
addition to the four which can be seen today. The
extra tower could, however, be that of the Whitefriars church, still standing until about 1574; (fn. 36)
alternatively Smith may have included the northwest tower of the cathedral, known to have survived
and perhaps of greater height in his time. In any case
the drawing may never have been accurate and it is
now difficult to identify the features shown, or even
to establish from which aspect the view was taken.
The cathedral site, with other priory land, came
into the hands of the city in 1574-5. (fn. 37) The ruins
were continuously used as a source of building stone
but it was not until the middle of the 17th century
that much clearance or levelling took place. In 1655
John Bryan, Vicar of Holy Trinity, obtained a grant
in fee farm of the western part of the site, including
the remains of both western towers. Bryan had
already converted the south-west tower, 'faced with
new stonework', into a gatehouse, built himself a
new dwelling, and laid out gardens; the north-west
tower was also made habitable. To the east of Bryan's
property stood two 'pillars of stone', on one of which
was a cistern forming part of the city's water supply. (fn. 38)
These pillars, which the corporation was careful to
reserve for its own use, may well have been the
remains of the piers supporting the central tower of
the cathedral. (fn. 39) It is also possible that Hill Top, not
shown on Speed's map of Coventry (1610),
originated as a track used by those carting away
stone and attending to the waterworks. By the 19th
century the north side of Priory Row was built up
with houses except for an area east of the Blue Coat
School which had been consecrated as a new burial
ground for Holy Trinity in 1776. (fn. 40)
A few outlying buildings attached to the priory
survived the Dissolution. Remains of the bishops'
palace, incorporated in 'a mean house' at the northeast corner of St. Michael's churchyard, disappeared
with the construction of Priory Street in 1856-7. (fn. 41)
A stone arch which is thought to have belonged to
the main gate of the priory was in existence until
1704. (fn. 42) It stood on a site now covered by Trinity
Street, probably giving access to an enclosed forecourt outside the west front of the medieval cathedral.
A surviving length of wall containing a pointed
doorway, attached to the base of the north-west
tower, may have formed part of this enclosure. The
priory guest house stood further north, at the former
junction of Ironmonger Row and Palmer Lane. (fn. 43)
This building was demolished in 1820 and views of
it show a timber-framed structure of three stories
which may have been built in the late 13th or early
14th century. The upper floors had deep jetties,
supported on curved brackets, and there were
remains of several mullioned windows with cusped
heads to their lights. (fn. 44) Vaulted cellars below the
guest house survived as part of the Pilgrim public
house until the construction of Trinity Street c.
1935. (fn. 45) The priory mill, 'denuded of all its ancient
features', stood at the lower end of New Buildings
until 1847-8, (fn. 46) while New Buildings itself, constructed in 1645, covered the site of the priory dyehouse. (fn. 47)
Before the archaeological excavations of 1965
almost nothing was known about the layout of the
monastic buildings immediately north of the priory
church. The area was covered by the gardens of
houses in Priory Row, by partly demolished
industrial buildings in Hill Top, and by recent
buildings connected with the modern cathedral.
Several chance discoveries of earlier date cannot
now be precisely located. These included part of the
precinct wall, found to the south-east of New
Buildings in 1849, and a vault or crypt nearby, found
in 1856. (fn. 48) In 1858 and 1883 three column bases,
assumed at one time to have belonged to the cloister,
were discovered on the west side of Hill Top. (fn. 49) On
the opposite side of the road, and at right angles to it,
a 50-ft. length of medieval walling was visible
until the later 19th century. It contained several
pointed openings and what was thought to be a
triple window surmounted by a relieving arch;
above this the lower parts of two stone windows had
been incorporated in a timber-framed outbuilding. (fn. 50)
Further south discoveries were made in 1856 during
the installation of a sewer in Hill Top; these included
stone coffins, 'masses of foundations here and there
crossing the line of the excavations', and a doorway
10 ft. below ground level from which a newel stair
led downwards. (fn. 51) It was in this same area that piledriving operations in 1965 revealed indications of a
stone-vaulted building. As a consequence of this
discovery archaeological excavations were put in
hand under the joint auspices of the Ministry of
Public Building and Works and the Herbert Art
Gallery and Museum. Results obtained before the
end of 1966 enabled a plan to be prepared, showing
much of the monastic layout to the north of the
medieval cathedral. (fn. 52) Identification of buildings was
suggested by the known arrangement of other
Benedictine houses, notably that at Canterbury; it is
evident, however, that the plan at Coventry was
partly governed by the steeply sloping site which
made impracticable the building of any long range
on a north-south axis.
Immediately north of the cathedral nave, and
about 5 ft. 6 ins. below it, lay the cloister, with a
cellarium along its west side. The cloister garth was
about 80 ft. square, surrounded by alleys 10 ft. wide.
Here the mortar bedding for floor tiles, and a few
of the tiles themselves, were found. In the centre of
the east alley the jambs and threshold of a doorway
into the chapter house were in position, one of the
jambs retaining the bases of attached shafts. The
chapter house, standing clear of the north transept of
the church, was about 64 ft. long with an apsidal or
polygonal east end. On the inner face of the south
wall at this end were stone seats, and many fragments
of painted glass were found nearby. A structure
north of the chapter house was identified as the
undercroft of the dorter, probably square in plan;
it was here that the column bases discovered in 1858
and 1883 belonged. On the east side of Hill Top,
where pile-driving for a modern refectory extension
had revealed the springing of a stone vault, a building
was found with its floor level over 12 ft. below that
of the chapter house. It was four bays long from
north to south by two bays wide and had an eastward
extension, giving it an L-shaped plan. The base of a
central column was in position and several of the
vaulting ribs lay where they had fallen. The newel
stair recorded in 1856 appears to have been at the
south-west corner of this building and the 50 ft.
length of walling with the so-called triple window
formed part of its north wall. It is suggested that this
structure formed a vaulted undercroft to the farmery
of the priory. Between it and the east end of the
church a number of stone coffins and earth graves
indicated the site of the monastic cemetery. (fn. 53)
Excavations in the northern part of the site in 1966
revealed the frater undercroft along the north side
of the cloister, with, linked to it by a pentice or
passage, a structurally independent kitchen measuring about 30 ft. by 23 ft. The site of the kitchen court
was crossed by a stone-built drain and this area
produced hundreds of coarse-ware sherds and
animal bones. Also discovered was the position of
the rere-dorter which lay north-east of the dorter.
In general no work was found during the excavations
to which a date earlier than the 14th century could
be definitely ascribed. In some cases solid rock
formed the wall foundations, suggesting that, if
earlier structures had existed, a complete clearance
was made before rebuilding.
THE CARTHUSIAN PRIORY OF ST. ANNE. (fn. 54)
The Coventry Charterhouse, founded in
1381-2, occupied 14 a. of land at Shortley, the site
being south-east of the town and outside its walls.
The property lay immediately south of Burstall or
Bisseley Mill, (fn. 55) and was bounded on the west by the
River Sherbourne. The foundation stone of the
church was laid at the east end of the choir by
Richard II in 1385. Already seven cells for the monks
had been given by various benefactors, the first
being situated on the east side of the cloister next to
the chapter house. Soon afterwards the number of
cells was increased to eleven, but some years elapsed
before the monks could occupy their new quarters.
The establishment in its completed state would have
included accommodation for lay brothers and
servants as well as the usual service buildings. At
Coventry twelve schoolboys were also housed on the
premises. At least part of the site was surrounded by
a high stone wall, much of which is still standing; in
1506 Thomas Bond bequeathed £20 towards the
wall. (fn. 56) The only surviving building, which was
converted into a private house after the Dissolution,
probably dates from the early 15th century. When
the priory was dissolved the property contained 7½ a.
of woodland, presumably at its southern end.
Quantities of stone were removed from the site in
1542. (fn. 57)
In spite of many changes of ownership (fn. 58) the site
retained its identity and is still (1965) largely open
ground. In the 19th and 20th centuries, however,
the course of the river was straightened along the
western boundary. (fn. 59) The approach is from the west,
where a drive from the present London road crosses
the Sherbourne by a bridge which was rebuilt in
1955. (fn. 60) The earlier bridge had two semi-circular
stone arches and dated at least from the 16th
century. North of the bridge a small timber-framed
cottage, now demolished, had a stone base which
W. G. Fretton suggested was part of the original
porters' lodge. (fn. 61) From this point the boundary wall,
of red sandstone masonry and about 12 ft. high,
skirts the northern end of the site. Immediately to
the north stood the former Bisseley Mill. In this part
of the wall is a medieval doorway and also the
remains of a garderobe, built out on corbels over a
former bend of the river. (fn. 62) The wall continues about
three-quarters of the way along the eastern boundary
of the site, where a substantial section is of grey
stone, probably from Whitley. From the garden
behind the house two other walls, one of which is
certainly medieval, join it at right angles.
The existing house, incorporating the only
surviving priory building, stands about 100 yds.
east of the bridge. The position of the other monastic
buildings can only be conjectured, but it is generally
thought that the church stood to the north-east of
this range and at right angles to it. (fn. 63) The essential
feature of the layout of all Carthusian houses was
the great cloister, round which the monks lived in
individual cells, cut off from the world and from
one another. At Mount Grace (Yorks.), where the
most complete remains of an English Charterhouse
survive, the cells were four-roomed structures of two
stories, each standing in its own walled garden about
45 ft. square. The only access to the cells was from
the cloister alley where each had a doorway and a
service hatch. (fn. 64) Similar layouts have been revealed
by recent excavation at the London Charterhouse
and at Hinton Priory (Som.). (fn. 65) At Coventry, where
the establishment was comparatively small, we know
that there were eleven cells - five on the east side of
the cloister, four on the south side, and two 'in the
west corner'. (fn. 66) The position of the great cloister has
been much discussed, Fretton suggesting that it lay
between the house and the river where foundations
of walls indicated the presence of an enclosed
court. (fn. 67) Sir William Wyley, who owned the property
for fifty years, favoured a site to the north of the
church, (fn. 68) while Thomas Sharp believed that it was
south of the church, covering the level rectangular
garden to the east of the present house. He stated
that the ruins of a cell on the south side of the garden
were in existence until c. 1800 and that human
remains and a stone coffin had been found below the
lawn, indicating the use of the cloister garth as a
monks' cemetery. (fn. 69) The recorded layout of the eleven
cells also supports Sharp's view. None is mentioned
on the north side of the cloister, where, to judge by
the arrangement at other Carthusian houses, there
would have been a range of buildings, including the
chapter house and the sacristy, between the cloister
alley and the church. The existing base of a medieval
wall to the north of the lawn may represent the
south wall of such a range. The west side of the
cloister, where only two cells are mentioned, would
have been partly occupied by the surviving building.
There is, moreover, a weather-mould at the
appropriate height along the east wall of this
building, suggesting the presence of a cloister alley.
In the late 18th century it was recorded that a
garden wall contained 'the marks of many small
doors, the entrances into the cells'; (fn. 70) it is not known,
however, to which wall this refers.
The existing early-15th-century range is mainly
of local stone ashlar and is about 60 ft. long by 28 ft.
wide. There is no stone wall above first-floor level
at its north end where a timber-framed addition is
of 16th-century date. The roof has been replaced, but
its original carved tie-beams are in position and
some of the stone corbels which supported its archbraces have survived. The internal arrangement has
been confused by the insertion of many later floors
and partitions, but from the first the range was
divided into two by a stone cross-wall. The larger
and more northerly section, which is about 40 ft.
long, may have been single-storied or alternatively
have consisted of a low ground floor and a tall
upper chamber, open to the roof. It was entered by
a doorway, now blocked, in what is thought to have
been the east cloister alley; above this are traces of
two tall pointed windows. The upper part of the
internal dividing wall was covered by a magnificent
painting, applied directly to the stone surface,
depicting the crucifixion. (fn. 71) Only the lower half of the
painting survives below an inserted floor, and what
remains is interrupted by later openings cut through
the wall. An inscription beneath it appears to
commemorate the completion of the house under
William Soland (or Sowysland), who was prior
during the period 1411-17. (fn. 72) Flanking the central
crucifix there are traces of large seated figures near
each end of the wall and, to a smaller scale at the
base of the cross, are angels, a centurion, and a
soldier. Another small figure carrying a book has
been variously identified as the Virgin, St. Anne, or
St. John the Baptist. To the south of the dividing
wall the building has always been of two stories, the
upper and lower rooms being connected by a stone
newel stair in the thickness of the east wall; beside
the stair is a chimney with an original moulded
fireplace on the first floor. The upper room had at
least one large window facing west, the jamb of which
survives. To the south of the ground floor room,
divided from it by a stone wall pierced by a small
doorway, is a passage running from east to west
across the building. This has original entrances at
both ends and another small doorway leading south. (fn. 73)
Beyond the passage the range comes to an end, but
there are indications that it formerly extended
further; here a garden wall, which continues the
line of the east front, contains various blocked
openings and is of medieval origin.
On the west side of the range two low projecting
wings, partly timber-framed, were in existence until
the middle of the 19th century. (fn. 74) There is evidence
that at least the north wing, or a structure on its
site, formed part of the priory buildings. (fn. 75) It is
possible that the two wings enclosed a 'little cloister',
a known feature of other Carthusian houses. (fn. 76) If so,
the cross passage at the south end of the existing
range would have connected the two cloisters. To the
north-west of the house, near the entrance bridge,
there may have been an irregularly-shaped outer
court where the lay brothers and servants were
accommodated.
Any identification of the rooms in the existing
range can only be tentative without more knowledge
of the general layout. If, as has been supposed, the
building lay along the west side of the great cloister,
its southern end with the newel stair, fireplace, and
access from the cross passage, may have been the
prior's cell. It is possible that the large room to the
north of it containing the wall-painting was the
monks' frater or refectory. The suggestion, made
elsewhere, that it was a guest hall (fn. 77) seems unlikely
if it communicated with the great cloister where the
monks carried on their lives in strict seclusion.
Many alterations took place when the building
was converted in the 16th century, including the
insertion of at least one extra floor as well as partitions and chimneys. One first-floor partition carries
a 16th-century wall painting of fine quality, executed
in black and white. (fn. 78) The design includes the figure
of a warrior and much early Renaissance decorative
detail. The arms of Sampson Baker (d. 1584) may
be contemporary or a slightly later addition. The
corresponding partition on the floor above also has
16th-century painted decoration and another shield
of arms, those of the Clinton family, has been
superimposed on the medieval wall painting. Alterations were again made in the 18th century, when the
house was given sash windows and Georgian doorways. (fn. 79) A stable block is also of this date.
The brothers John and Francis Wyley, who
acquired the property in 1848, converted the building
into two dwellings. They demolished the west wings
and built extensions at the south-west corner of the
house. Sir William Wyley was responsible for further
alterations, and in 1889 he discovered the medieval
painting behind 16th-century panelling. (fn. 80) He also
built a Gothic summerhouse on the east side of the
garden. At his death in 1940 the house was bequeathed to the city and until 1957 was occupied
as an old people's home. (fn. 81) In 1965 most of it was
empty while the grounds and outbuildings were in
use by the parks and cemeteries department of the
city council.
THE FRANCISCAN FRIARY, OR GREYFRIARS.
(fn. 82)
Little is known about the buildings of
the house of the Franciscans or Greyfriars apart
from its 14th-century church, the central tower of
which has survived. In 1234 the friars were using
timber from Kenilworth for shingles to cover the
roof of what was presumably their first church,
which may itself have been of wood. Late in the
13th century Roger and Cecily de Montalt were
buried near the great altar in the centre of the choir.
The area of the precincts was enlarged in 1289; the
site lay south of the town and, at the time of the
Dissolution, was bounded on the south-west by the
city wall, on the north-west by Warwick Lane, on
the east by Greyfriars Lane, and on the south-east
by Cheylesmore Park. In the 14th century there
was a gate in the park wall for the use of sick friars.
The stone church, which survived until the Dissolution, was probably started c. 1359 when the friars
received permission to take stone for their buildings
from a quarry in Cheylesmore Park; this grant was
confirmed in 1378. Members of the Hastings family
of Allesley had earlier built a chapel on the north
side of the church in which several generations were
buried from 1305 onwards and where the glass in
the windows contained their arms. (fn. 83) They may also
have contributed to other building work. Throughout the life of the establishment benefactions were
received from important citizens of Coventry, many
of whom were buried in the church or precincts. (fn. 84)

Figure 9:
CONJETURAL PLAN OF GREYFRIARS CHURCH BY WILLIAM READER, 1829
The size and shape of the church can be partly
reconstructed from the surviving work at the
crossing, from a document quoted by W. G. Fretton
and thought to give the measurements of the building
before its demolition, and from excavations on the
site in 1829. The discovery of human remains in
1829 suggested that the graveyard lay to the north of
the church and the cloister to the south. At that time
William Reader prepared a conjectural plan of the
church which in many respects agrees with the 16thcentury measurements. (fn. 85) It shows a cruciform
building about 250 ft. long, having an aisled nave
and an unaisled chancel of about equal length. There
were short transepts, which may have served as
porches, each with a chapel attached to its east wall.
The arrangement at the crossing was unusual. The
area below the central tower was rectangular, being
shorter from east to west than from north to south,
so that the chancel projected westwards into the
crossing. It is thought that the nave altar stood
against the western tower arch and that the base of
the tower served as a passage between the transepts.
This plan emphasizes the size and importance of the
chancel, used only by the friars, and its separation
from the more public parts of the church such as the
nave and aisles. When the tower was built its
rectangular base was reduced to a square by the
insertion of secondary north and south arches inside
those leading to the transepts. Corbelled arches
across the angles of the square completed the
support of the slender octagonal tower.
A chapel dedicated to St. Anne was mentioned in
1518, and a Rood Chapel was built in the churchyard
in 1520; the latter was enlarged in 1522. There was
also a chapel of St. Nicholas which Fretton has
identified with the Hastings chapel, thought to have
lain east of the north transept. It is not possible on
the existing evidence, however, to determine the
exact position of the various chapels.
The house was dissolved in 1542 and the buildings, apart from the church tower, were quickly
demolished. It had previously been reported that the
church roof was of very good timber and was
covered with lead, but that the timber of the
housing, which was roofed with tiles, was 'stark
nought'. (fn. 86) Except for some of the building material,
including the stone and 'other stuff' belonging to the
chapter house and vestry, the property was granted
to the city after the Dissolution. (fn. 87) The land subsequently changed hands many times, but the corporation retained the tower and kept it in reasonable
repair. The fact that its top was blown down in 1551
and 'new built' in 1608 (fn. 88) makes it possible that this
was the embattled octagonal tower without a spire
shown in William Smith's sketch of Coventry made
in the 1570s. (fn. 89) Repairs to the spire were again
necessary in the 17th and 18th centuries. The land
around the steeple, used for many years as an
orchard, began to be developed for building about
1820 when Union Street was cut across it. Part of
the site was bought for a new church and the existing
tower was presented to it by the city. (fn. 90) Christ
Church was built in 1830-1, covering approximately
the area of the medieval nave, the base of the tower
serving as its chancel. After the church had been
gutted by fire during an air raid in 1940 the ruins
were demolished, but once again the tower survived. (fn. 91)
As it stands today, the structure of the octagonal
tower remains substantially as it was built in the
14th century. Its outward appearance, however, has
been altered by a complete re-facing with Bath stone
in 1831; other work of the same date hides much of
the base. The four supporting piers with their
moulded arches are still in position while above them
the original red sandstone of the walls can be seen.
At a higher level there is an internal arcaded gallery
which formerly communicated with the roof spaces
of the medieval church; the lines of the old roofs,
reaching to the string course below the belfry
windows, were visible before the tower was refaced. (fn. 92) At the belfry stage there are tall two-light
windows on the cardinal faces of the octagon and
blind windows on the diagonal faces; all have
pointed heads and tracery of mid-14th-century
character below a continuous hood-moulding. The
design of the parapet, pierced with quatrefoils and
surmounted by pinnacles, does not appear to be
medieval. (fn. 93) The total height is 211 ft., of which more
than half is taken up by the octagonal spire. The walls
are exceptionally thick, making this the strongest, as
well as the earliest, of Coventry's surviving medieval
towers. (fn. 94)
THE CARMELITE PRIORY, OR WHITEFRIARS.
(fn. 95) At its foundation in 1342 the Whitefriars house occupied a site of 10 a. on the southeastern outskirts of Coventry, small additions being
made to the property in 1344, 1352, and 1413. The
western approach was from Much Park Street, where
there was an outer gate, and from there a way (later
part of Whitefriars Lane) led eastwards to the
conventual buildings. (fn. 96) Immediately south of the
buildings the road from London entered the town
by way of Much Park Street, and it was at that
point that New Gate was erected at some date between 1355 and 1367. (fn. 97) The city wall was laid out to
inclose the Whitefriars property to the south and
east, the friars being required to contribute to its
construction and maintenance. Near New Gate
they already had a chapel containing an image of
the Virgin, and offerings received here, particularly from travellers on the London road, were one
of their main sources of revenue. The chapel,
which became known as the 'Lady Tower', was
reconstructed as part of the city wall and given a
bridge across the outer ditch. The prior was
allowed a postern in the southern stretch of wall,
and at the point where this turned north towards
Gosford Gate there was a large circular tower. (fn. 98)
Just outside it lay the River Sherbourne and Whitefriars Mill. The conventual buildings were disposed
round a large cloister, to the north of which stood the
church, dedicated to St. Mary. In 1384 there was a
bequest of £300 for the enlargement of the friars'
church, and in 1413-14 a piece of land was left 'for
the enlargement of their habitation'. The city annals
record that 'the new work' at the Whitefriars fell in
1446. (fn. 99) Thomas Bond left 20 marks in 1506 towards
the completion of the cloister.
The house was surrendered in 1538 and five years
later the site of the church, of which the friars had
never held the freehold, came into the hands of the
corporation. At about the same time the remainder
of the property was acquired by John Hales who
had earlier taken a fancy to its situation and wished
to have a dwelling-house there for his own use. Some
of the buildings were demolished but Hales retained
and extended the range along the east side of the
former cloister. This he called Hales Place. In the
choir of the former church he set up a school, using
the choir stalls as seats for the boys, but in 1556-7
the corporation claimed possession of the building,
ostensibly with the object of making it into a parish
church. The boys' seats were therefore removed to
the former St. John's Hospital, another of Hales's
properties, and the school was continued there. (fn. 1)
The Whitefriars church, however, remained unused,
and in 1572 it was taken down and the materials
were sold. In 1573 a 'great bell' was disposed of, and
the church tower is said to have fallen in 1574. (fn. 2)
Hales Place remained in the family until 1717
when it was sold to pay the debts left by Sir
Christopher Hales. In 1642 the house had been
damaged during the bombardment of New Gate by
the king's forces. (fn. 3) Having changed hands several
times during the 18th century, the property was
bought in 1801 by the newly-constituted directors
of the poor for conversion into a workhouse. (fn. 4) It
seems to have been at this period, before any alterations were made, that the appearance of the buildings
was recorded by a number of artists and engravers. (fn. 5)
The workhouse was opened in 1804 and much
extended during the later 19th and 20th centuries.
Apart from the substantial range along the east
side of the former cloister, the only medieval
structure still in existence is the outer gateway to the
friary. This is incorporated in a row of later buildings
on the east side of Much Park Street, where it gives
access to part of Whitefriars Lane. The front and
back walls, about 3 ft. thick, are of stone, each
pierced by a wide four-centred arch. The passage
between them formerly had timber-framed side
walls, but is now partly rebuilt in brick. The arch
on the street front was flanked by small pointed
openings which were used in the 19th century as
doorways to the two tenements into which the
building had been converted. (fn. 6) The doorways were
later altered and the windows are also modern
insertions. In 1965 the gatehouse was in use as a
small pottery works.
The former cloister, lying 200 yds. south-east of
the outer gate, was about 100 ft. square. Its east side
was bounded by the existing range which has short
projecting wings at each end; these wings represent
all that is left of the two-storied buildings which
inclosed the cloister to the north and south. Along
the west side there may have been no buildings other
than the cloister alley itself. At the south-west angle
was a gatehouse, which gave access to the south
alley. (fn. 7) The remains of this building were damaged
by bombing in 1940 and the site is now covered by a
road embankment. Nineteenth-century drawings
show a square vaulted structure with parts of an
upper story, arched openings to east and west, and
three niches above the outer arch; by this time the
external ground level had risen nearly to the springing of the arches. (fn. 8)
The church stood to the north of the cloister,
projecting well beyond it both to east and west.
Recent excavation of the site has shown that it was
a cruciform building about 303 ft. long, with an
aisled nave of nine bays and an unaisled chancel of
six bays. The transepts were of shallow projection,
the south transept adjoining the north cloister alley
and perhaps communicating with it. There are
indications that the central tower, originally shorter
from east to west than from north to south, (fn. 9) was
later rebuilt on a square plan. The reference to 'new
work' in 1446 and the character of some of the
worked stones found on the site suggest that at least
part of the church was of 15th-century date.
The existing east range, of local stone ashlar, is a
two-storied building about 150 ft. long. On the
ground floor it is divided longitudinally, the western
half consisting of a stone-vaulted cloister, 12 ft.
wide and of eleven bays. The stonework is of
elaborate design and exceptionally fine workmanship.
The bays are divided externally by buttresses and
each bay has a three-light opening to the cloister
garth, the lights being separated by twin shafts and
having trefoiled ogee heads. In two of the bays the
divisions have been removed to form doorway
openings beneath segmental arches; this alteration
and the raising of the ground level by about 3 ft.
may have been the work of John Hales. Internally
there is blind arcading between the lights and above
the arcade is a string course from which the vaulting
ribs spring. At the north end of the cloister a window
replaces an original external doorway; at the south
end are two pointed doorways, one leading by a
rising flight of steps to a door in the south gable-end
of the range, the other to what appears to have been
a newel stair to the upper floor. The surviving cloister
bays in the north and south wings, one in the former
and two in the latter, contain the remains of blocked
three-light openings similar to those in the east
cloister. In the south wing a third bay is entered from
the cloister garth by a pointed doorway with a
moulded and enriched arch of three orders. Thomas
Sharp suggested that this had been removed from
elsewhere by John Hales. He also thought, from the
position of ancient walls which have now disappeared, that the monastic buildings originally
extended further southwards, beyond the south
wing. (fn. 10)
Behind the cloister in the east range are two long
vaulted rooms, plainer in style than the cloister,
lit by pointed 14th-century windows. Between
them is what is thought to have been the westernmost bay of the chapter house. In its complete
form the chapter house evidently projected
eastwards from the back wall of the range, but this
projection has been cut back and the wall built up
with masonry. An imposing archway, from which
part of the tracery and a supporting column have
been removed, gave entrance to the chapter house
from the central bay of the cloister. Flanking the
arch are two narrow passages leading north and
south to the vaulted rooms.
The whole upper floor of the range was undivided
by structural walls and is thought to have been the
friars' dormitory. Many alterations were made here
by Hales in the 16th century, particularly to the
windows. On the east side and in the end walls,
however, a number of single-light transomed
windows with ogee heads have survived, some having
one straight and one splayed jamb. To explain this
curious feature it has been suggested that the
dormitory was originally divided into cubicles by
wooden partitions which were placed in line with
the straight jambs, the splays on the opposite jambs
giving extra light to the individual cells. (fn. 11) The
arrangement at each end of the range, where there are
two such windows flanking a much taller pointed
one of three lights, also suggests the existence of
lateral cells with a central aisle between them. The
tracery of the central windows, of early Perpendicular character, is said to date from the 19th
century, but a drawing of c. 1800 shows the window
at the north end of the building to be of similar
design; the south window had been partly blocked,
but possibly not destroyed, by Hales. (fn. 12) At the northeast angle of the range an external stone staircase,
consisting of two flights with a half-landing between
them, was demolished in the later 19th century; this
may have provided access from the dormitory to the
choir of the church. An external stair in the northeast corner of the cloister, also destroyed, may not
have been of medieval origin. (fn. 13)
When John Hales converted the property in the
mid 16th century the former cloister garth became a
forecourt to the house. The court was entered by a
gateway in its north wall, said to have carried the
arms of the Hales family; (fn. 14) this wall was built
across the site of the south transept of the church. (fn. 15)
To complete his house Hales extended the medieval
range at its south end and his successors may have
made further additions. By the 18th century these
buildings, which were partly timber-framed, inclosed
a small courtyard. (fn. 16) Sixteenth-century alterations to
the medieval block included the construction of
new gable-ends to the truncated north and south
ranges, as well as the insertion of partitions, fireplaces, staircases, and many new windows. The
whole roof appears to have been replaced at this
time. The central part of the former dormitory was
converted into a long upper room with a coved
plaster ceiling, an oriel window facing west, a large
fireplace opposite, and a panelled screen across its
south end. (fn. 17) Early views of the east side of the
building show a projecting wing, now demolished,
near its north end. (fn. 18) This wing, which had a stone
base, late Perpendicular windows, and a timberframed upper story, is said to have been built by
Hales and to have contained a chapel. (fn. 19) There is,
however, an earlier doorway leading from the former
dormitory at the same level as the upper floor of the
wing, and it is possible that some pre-Dissolution
structure had occupied the same position.
When the property was acquired for a workhouse,
the buildings were evidently in a dilapidated condition. In the late 18th century they had been occupied
by 'a number of poor families', (fn. 20) perhaps the 'jersey
combers and weavers' mentioned by Fretton. (fn. 21) In
1801-4 the directors of the poor erected a new block
facing what is now Gulson Road - a three-storied
red brick building of eleven bays with a hipped slate
roof and a central pedimented doorway. In the
medieval range the former cloister was glazed and
used as a dining room for the inmates. (fn. 22) The upper
floor was divided longitudinally by a brick wall and
various new partitions and fireplaces were inserted.
At the same time the four central bays of the main
roof appear to have been strengthened by the
addition of tie-beams to the trusses; (fn. 23) these trusses
had carried the coved ceiling inserted by Hales
and were probably of the arch-braced collar-beam
type. Elsewhere queen-post tie-beam trusses have
survived, as well as some of the curved wind-braces
of the 16th-century roof. In the later 19th century
the medieval range was restored (fn. 24) and several new
traceried windows were introduced. The timberframed buildings round the south courtyard were
gradually replaced: in 1843 by a west block with
'Tudor' window-glazing, and in 1863 by several
blocks in red and blue brick. (fn. 25) By the Second World
War the institution had been greatly extended and
covered a large area.
After severe bomb damage in 1940, parts of the
old workhouse were occupied as a hostel by the
Salvation Army and later the medieval range was
used for storage by the Herbert Art Gallery and
Museum. In 1965-6 it was in process of restoration
by the city architecture and planning department
with the help of a grant from the Historic Buildings
Council. The work included the lowering of the
ground floor to its original level and the removal of
all partitions in the former dormitory so that it
could be used as a museum gallery. There was
much restoration of stonework and timber, but
wherever possible medieval and 16th-century
features were preserved. (fn. 26) Meanwhile a traffic
roundabout on the new Inner Ring Road had
impinged on the former cloister garth, and a projected high-level road was designed to pass over the
site of the church. Excavation of the church site
was therefore carried out between 1961 and 1964,
the work being jointly sponsored by the Ministry of
Public Building and Works and the Herbert Art
Gallery and Museum. (fn. 27)
HOSPITAL OF ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST.
(fn. 28) The only surviving building of St. John's Hospital
stands at the junction of Hales Street and Bishop
Street and represents the remains of its 14th-century
church. Some years after the dissolution of the
hospital in 1545 it became the Free Grammar
School.
The hospital precincts were bounded on the west
by Bishop Street and its continuation St. John's
Bridges (later Burges) and appear to have extended
as far east as Swanswell Pool. (fn. 29) During excavations
in 1794 piers belonging to what was probably the
first church on the site, dating from the foundation
of the hospital in the third quarter of the 12th
century, were discovered at a considerable depth
below the floor level of the present building. (fn. 30) Part
of one of these piers was preserved for many years
outside the east window. (fn. 31) It has been suggested that
the difference in level between the 12th- and 14thcentury churches may be accounted for by the
increased height of the street when fords across
the two rivers were replaced by bridges. (fn. 32) Little is
known about the layout of the buildings within the
precincts but W. G. Fretton believed that there was
a quadrangle immediately south of the church. (fn. 33)
An infirmary existed inter pontes in 1385, (fn. 34) and in
1410-11 the infirmary is described as being opposite
and a little to the south of the junction of Well Street
and St. John's Bridges. (fn. 35) There is also reference to a
hall on the south side of St. John's Hospital with
three tenements between it and the river. (fn. 36) Hales
Street, constructed in 1848, would now cover the
site of any such buildings, but some part of them
may have survived until 1794 in the library wing of
the Free Grammar School. (fn. 37) The discovery of
human bones to the north and east of the church
may indicate the position of the burial ground. The
master's lodging, later occupied by the headmaster
of the school, also stood north-east of the church. (fn. 38)
The nomination of a bed in the hospital in 1444
specifies its position as 'in a part of the church . . .
on the west side near the door and near the buttery
there'. (fn. 39) This implies that some of the sick or infirm
were accommodated in the body of the church, and
it is probable that the chancel only, perhaps enclosed
by a wooden screen, was used for sacred purposes. (fn. 40)
In 1522 the hospital maintained thirty beds for poor
people and the establishment consisted of a master,
three priests, three clerks, and five sisters. (fn. 41)
The surviving architectural features of the church
suggest that it was built shortly before the middle of
the 14th century. The material is local red sandstone, much decayed externally except where
renewal or re-facing has taken place. In its original
form the building consisted of an unaisled chancel
of two bays, an aisled nave, and a north-west tower.
The south aisle has disappeared, and about 10 ft.
was cut off from the west end of the nave and from
the tower during road widening in the late 18th
century. Internal alterations, including a further
raising of the floor level, date from the 16th-century
conversion to a schoolroom. (fn. 42) The nave and chancel
are structurally undivided; the continuous trussedrafter roof, which has 'scissor' bracing above the
collars, (fn. 43) is hidden by a barrel-shaped ceiling of 16thcentury plaster. The chancel windows have finelymoulded jambs, obliterated externally by the
weather, and tracery of c. 1330. There is a blocked
doorway at the 14th-century level on the north side
of the chancel and there is said to be a piscina,
concealed by flooring, in the south wall. (fn. 44) The arches
of the nave arcades, each of two bays, are still in
position, although the openings have been filled with
masonry and the capitals cut away; the two arches
leading to the demolished south aisle are visible
externally from Hales Street. The east bay of the
north aisle has been identified with a chapel
dedicated to St. Katherine, in existence at least by
1343. (fn. 45) It has a 14th-century east window, a 15th-century north window, and an arch of two orders
dividing it from the narrower west bay of the aisle.
Beyond the west bay another arch gives access to the
base of the tower, now reduced to less than half its
original length from east to west; the tower formerly
contained a 14th-century west window. The west
wall of the shortened nave is of 19th-century date,
but it is known that the earlier west end had projecting buttresses and a central doorway surmounted by
a large Perpendicular window. (fn. 46)
After the dissolution of the hospital the property
was granted to John Hales, who, it was later alleged,
converted into ready money the lead of the church,
the bells, and the 'houses within the precincts'. (fn. 47)
Probably the demolition of the south aisle and of the
upper stages of the tower took place at this period.
Shortly afterwards the church was occupied by the
Free Grammar School. (fn. 48)
HOSPITAL OF SPON.
(fn. 49)
This 12th-century
foundation, first a leper hospital dedicated to St.
Leonard and afterwards known as the chapel of St.
Mary Magdalen, (fn. 50) was said in 1410-11 to stand at
the far end of Spon Street ad finem ville, (fn. 51) and its
site was thought in the 19th century to be near the
junction of Allesley Old Road and Hearsall Lane. (fn. 52)
Having come into the possession of the Crown at the
Dissolution the chapel was granted in 1554 to
Ambrose Gilbarde and Richard Allynton, (fn. 53) and
later formed part of the Holy Trinity Church
Estate. (fn. 54) Its last remnant, used as a barn, gave its
name to Chapel Fields and survived until c. 1800. (fn. 55)
A drawing of about this date shows it as a stone
building with a thatched roof; its only visible
ancient features are some buttresses and a very small
single-light window. (fn. 56) Carved heads, one of which is
illustrated, are said to have been preserved when the
barn was demolished. (fn. 57)
BABLAKE OR BOND'S HOSPITAL.
(fn. 58) The older part of Bond's Hospital dates from the early
16th century when it was founded under the will of
Thomas Bond (d. 1506) to accommodate ten almsmen. It was a long two-storied range, forming the
north side of the quadrangle of the pre-Reformation
College of Bablake. (fn. 59) The building is said to have
been the subject of an 'entire reconstruction' in
1832-4, (fn. 60) but it is evident that the original shape
was retained, that parts of the ancient structure
survived, and that many of the carved timbers were
re-used or copied. (fn. 61) The range is largely constructed
of close-studded timber-framing with some modern
brickwork, but the lower part of the east end,
abutting on Hill Street, is of stone ashlar. The
principal gable-ends have carved barge-boards,
bressummers, and oriel windows, and there are
smaller gabled oriels on the south front. In general,
however, the timber-work is less ornate than at
Ford's Hospital. (fn. 62)
The central part of the range originally contained
ten rooms for the almsmen with access corridors
along the back. The rooms were later subdivided as
the number of resident almsmen increased, reaching
a maximum of 20 in the 19th century. (fn. 63) The
fenestration of the south front before the rebuilding
of 1832-4 suggests that the lower rooms may have
been in the form of cubicles, with a long clerestory
window above the partitions and individual windows
below. There was a cross-passage to the east of the
men's rooms and probably also one near the west
end. (fn. 64) At each end of the range were larger rooms
on both floors, but subsequent alterations have made
it impossible to know how the original accommodation was arranged; this included a chapel, a priests'
chamber, a room for a woman to attend the almsmen, and presumably a kitchen. (fn. 65) The large bay at
the west end has been completely rebuilt and carries
the date 1834; its front projects slightly and has a
large and a small gabled oriel side by side, apparently
copied from the original elevation. (fn. 66) At the east end
the upper room is lit by an oriel window in the large
timber-framed gable which faces Hill Street. There
are indications that this room once had an open roof
and painted decoration to the ceiling. The lower
room, now the smoking room, may formerly have
been the kitchen; behind it was a small projecting
wing reaching to the point where the city wall, which
ran behind the hospital, originally joined Hill Street
Gate. (fn. 67)
After the dissolution of the chantries the use of
the chapel was apparently discontinued and at some
period the priest was replaced by a master. Alterations to the building took place in 1746 when the
master's house was repaired and the kitchen became
known as the hall. (fn. 68) In 1752 seats for the almsmen
and a desk for the master were installed in the lower
corridor so that prayers could be read there. (fn. 69) The
back wing appears to have been extended in 1816
when an addition at the Hill Street end was said
to be opposite the footpath which later became
Bond Street. (fn. 70)
Part of the building was ruinous in 1832, when its
reconstruction was put in hand under the direction
of Thomas Rickman and H. W. Hutchinson. (fn. 71) The
scheme provided for rebuilding the west end and a
rearrangement of the men's rooms in the central
block. Alterations to the south front included new
windows and the replacement of Georgian doorways
by the present ones of Tudor design. (fn. 72) The chimneys
were surmounted by tall decorative pots which were
damaged by bombing in 1941 and subsequently
removed. The street front was re-faced and the
back wing again extended by the same architects in
1846-7. (fn. 73) This end of the building now (1965)
contains the smoking room, matron's quarters, and
domestic offices. In the central block are rooms for
fifteen almsmen, and three bathrooms. At the west
end there is a prayer-room on the ground floor with
a board-room above it. The board-room was provided in 1834 for the feoffees of the estate and the
Church Charity trustees; (fn. 74) it still contains carved
chairs of the 17th and 18th centuries and portraits
of Thomas Bond and John Hales.
FORD'S OR GREYFRIARS' HOSPITAL.
(fn. 75) William Ford, by will of 1509, endowed an almshouse to be built beside the Greyfriars Gate for five
men and one woman. The building was erected by
Ford's executor, William Pisford the elder, who
increased the endowment. Pisford's will of 1517
provided for six men and their wives, as well as a
chantry priest who was to have a chamber in the
almshouse and use of the chapel there. In 1529
William Wigston (a co-executor of the sons of
William Pisford) signed with others a tripartite deed
under which feoffees were first appointed. (fn. 76) An
inscription on the walls of the building recorded this
last date, which has sometimes wrongly been given
as that of the foundation and erection of the
hospital. (fn. 77) Wigston laid down that five houses were
to be occupied by married couples and the sixth by
a nurse to look after them. (fn. 78) At least by 1800 the
charity was confined to women, of whom as many
as seventeen were resident in the later 19th century. (fn. 79)
The almshouses are timber-framed and of two
stories, built round a narrow court which is entered
from the street by a passage through the ground
floor of the front range. The oldest part of the present
building, presumably dating from the second decade
of the 16th century, consists of this front range and
the two ranges flanking the courtyard. The former
contains the matron's quarters to the north of the
central passage, and a room thought to have been the
chapel directly above it. The paved courtyard, which
is 39 ft. long by 12 ft. wide, has four of the original
almshouses opening from it, two on each side.
These dwellings formerly consisted of two rooms,
one above the other, (fn. 80) but various internal alterations
have been made necessary by the changing numbers
and needs of the occupants. The structure at the far
end of the courtyard, through which a passage leads
to the garden, is also timber-framed, but is plainer
in style than the rest of the building. It may have
been added either in 1529 or in the 17th century,
when the number of inmates was increased by two
couples. One of its upper rooms was formerly a
meeting-place for the feoffees. An extension of the
back range, projecting obliquely into the garden, has
now been demolished; in the 19th century it
contained extra living rooms, pump and washhouses, and coal storage. (fn. 81) In the early 19th century
the trustees of Cow Lane Baptist chapel were paying
6d. a year for permission to use the hospital as a
right of way. (fn. 82)
In spite of its small scale, Ford's Hospital has
always been considered one of the most perfect
examples of timber-framed architecture in the
country. It has been well maintained over the years
and has suffered little external alteration. (fn. 83) The
timbering is close-studded throughout, the studs on
the street front and in the courtyard carrying
miniature carved buttresses with moulded bases,
off-sets, and pinnacles. The doorways have fourcentred heads with carved spandrels, and the
tracery in the window-lights includes no less than
fifteen different designs. (fn. 84) The street front is
symmetrical, the central doorway being flanked by
nine-light mullioned windows, while the upper story
has three gabled oriels with carved bressummers,
barge boards, and finials. There is great variety in
the carving both here and on the small gables at
each end of the courtyard. The upper stories of the
building are jettied, the deep overhangs being coved
and moulded. In the courtyard the eaves have a
similar treatment, while at intermediate levels the
window-sills form continuous, heavily-moulded
strings. This, with the carved studs, gives an effect
of great richness in a confined space. Oak seats have
survived in the four corners of the court, the rainwater heads there are dated 1784, and there was
formerly a clock of the same date on one of the end
windows. (fn. 85)
In the air raid of 14-15 November 1940 the north
side of the building received a direct hit and eight
women were killed. (fn. 86) Between 1951 and 1953 the
damaged part was rebuilt, largely with original
timbers, and the whole structure was thoroughly
restored. The front range had formerly been flanked
by other timber-framed buildings, but the house on
the south side was taken down before the Second
World War. The building to the north was now
demolished, stone walls were built along the street
frontage, and additional windows were inserted in
the side walls of the almshouses. The enlarged
garden was laid out in 1953 and has since been
voluntarily maintained by Rootes Horticultural
Society. (fn. 87) In 1965 there was accommodation in the
almshouse for seven women and a matron.
THE COLLEGE OF BABLAKE.
(fn. 88) The collegiate buildings lay immediately north of what is now the parish church of St. John the Baptist. The
original parcel of land at Bablake, granted in 1344
for the erection of the collegiate chapel, is thought
to have lain with its long axis north and south, giving
frontages to Hill Street of 117 ft. and to Fleet
(formerly Spon) Street of 40 ft. If, as has been
supposed, the chancel of the present church
represents the position of the first chapel, the earliest
accommodation for priests would have stood along
the Hill Street frontage, occupying the northern
half of the site. (fn. 89) Foundation walls of structures
adjoining the chapel on this side were recorded by
W. G. Fretton in 1875. (fn. 90) The buildings probably
included a hermitage, mentioned in 1362, but not
subsequently. (fn. 91) It is likely that the whole site of the
college had been acquired by the last decade of the
14th century, when the line of the city wall was
apparently laid out to inclose it. (fn. 92) The complete
property would thus have been bounded on the
west and north by the city wall, on the east by Hill
Street, and on the south by Fleet Street. Part of the
wall forming the western boundary is still standing.
By 1548, when the college was dissolved, the
buildings appear to have formed a complete
quadrangle north of the church, (fn. 93) which itself had
been enlarged to its present size. The north range,
built c. 1506 and still standing, consisted of Bond's
or Bablake Hospital. (fn. 94) The east side was occupied
by the building which, in a different form, was later
occupied as Bablake School. (fn. 95) The south range, now
gone, probably contained the wardens' chambers, a
school-house, and the main assembly hall. (fn. 96) A hall
of St. John at Bablake is mentioned as early as 1364
and such a hall existed throughout the life of the
college. (fn. 97) Its structure may even have survived as
the so-called 'dirge hall' until the 19th century. In
1461 there is a reference to a gate in Hill Street,
surmounted by turrets. (fn. 98) Fretton believed that this
stood between the church and the south range where,
in the 19th century, 'an obscure narrow thoroughfare' entered the former precincts from Hill Street. (fn. 99)
Little is known about the range on the west side of
the quadrangle except for the suggestion that priests'
chambers stood there. (fn. 1) Other accommodation
mentioned in the 15th century included a porch
between hall and church, a parlour, a great gate, a
long room, a kitchen, a wax chamber, and a latrine. (fn. 2)
In 1545, three years before the dissolution, the
priests, then nine in number, were said to occupy
separate chambers in the precincts. (fn. 3) It may be
assumed that all these buildings were of stone or
timber, or a combination of the two, and that there
were alterations and rebuilding during the 200-year
life of the college.

Figure 10:
Site of Bablake College in the mid 19th century
After the site had passed into the hands of the
city in 1548 (fn. 4) the buildings, with the exception of
Bond's Hospital, appear to have stood derelict. In
1560 part of the east range was remodelled or rebuilt
to accommodate a boys' hospital, later Bablake
School. (fn. 5) In the 1570s 'the Dirge Hall at Bablake,
the wardens' chambers, the priests' chambers on
the west side, and the schoolhouse were all laid out
together, repaired, and some part rebuilt, to make
a house of correction, commonly called Bridewell'. (fn. 6)
The Bridewell, which survived for more than 250
years, seems at first to have occupied the south range
of the quadrangle and probably part of the west
range also. The Dirge Hall was used at times by the
Bridewell and at times for other purposes. (fn. 7) By the
early 19th century most of the west range had been
demolished. (fn. 8)
Great changes occurred on the Bablake site
between 1831 and 1834. (fn. 9) The south range, including
the Bridewell, was pulled down and most of the land
bought by St. John's parish for the enlargement of
the churchyard. The materials of 'the old house
called the Dirge Hall' were sold for £118. (fn. 10) New
buildings for Bablake School, including a master's
house, were erected on the west side of the quadrangle
on land 'formerly used as a master's garden' and
extending 'at the south end over a small piece of
ground on which part of the old Bridewell stood'. (fn. 11)
At the same time Bond's Hospital and the old school
were restored, the gateway between them was
rebuilt, and the stone conduit in the quadrangle,
placed there in 1613, was removed. (fn. 12)
In the late 19th century the school buildings on the
west side were demolished and replaced by singlestoried offices. (fn. 13) Apart from this there have been no
major changes on the site since 1834.
FREE GRAMMAR SCHOOL OR KING HENRY VIII SCHOOL.
(fn. 14)
The school, maintained
for a few years by John Hales in the former Whitefriars church, had probably moved to St. John's
Hospital by 1557. (fn. 15) The seats used by the boys,
originally monastic choir-stalls, were brought to the
hospital church (fn. 16) which was then fitted up as a
schoolroom. The interior has been little altered
since that time. The 49 carved oak stalls, of 15thcentury date, are arranged on a platform round the
north, east, and south sides of the former chancel
and along the north wall of the former nave. The
misericords originally attached to the seats have
been removed. (fn. 17) The stalls are not of uniform design
and, as the establishment at the Whitefriars never
exceeded eighteen, some must have come from
other dismantled churches in the city. Two angle
stalls have diagonal arm-rests and perhaps were
originally placed at the western angles of some
monastic or collegiate choir; (fn. 18) these and several
others have slots for the upright members of a
canopy. Oak desks, placed in front of the seats, are
carved with cusped panels and have poppyhead
finials; the woodwork, here as elsewhere, is much
worn and defaced by the penknives of generations of
schoolboys.
At the conversion of the building the floor level
was raised about 4 ft., the lower parts of the windows
were walled up, the roof was given a barrel-shaped
plaster ceiling, and the arches of the former nave
arcades were blocked with masonry. (fn. 19) The street
front of the church appears to have been little
altered; a view of c. 1793 shows the lower stages of
the north-west tower surmounted by timber-framed
gables and a bell cupola, while the west doorway of
the nave forms the school entrance below an original
Perpendicular window. (fn. 20) The chapel at the east end
of the north aisle was, at some period, made into a
separate classroom. (fn. 21) By 1572 the house north-east
of the school, originally occupied by the master of
the hospital, was taken over by the headmaster, and
another house in the grounds was allotted to the
usher. The master's house, demolished in the late
19th century, had by that time acquired Georgian
external features, but may well have incorporated
a medieval timber-framed structure. (fn. 22)
In 1601 a library was established at the school,
housed in a wing which fronted on the street on the
south side of the main building. Its lower story,
which was of stone and contained blocked pointed
windows, may have formed part of the original
hospital. At the junction of the wing with the school
was a pointed doorway, which had presumably given
access to the former south aisle of the church. The
timber-framed upper story of the library, with its
continuous mullioned window and central oriel, is
more likely to have dated from 1602. The same is
true of 'a large and ponderous staircase' which
formerly existed between the library and the school. (fn. 23)
In 1794 the widening of St. John's Bridges (now
Bishop Street and Burges) resulted in the demolition
of the library wing, and by 1801 the west wall of the
school had been rebuilt further back. (fn. 24) The new
front had an embattled gable flanked by turrets and
pinnacles and incorporated a curious mixture of
pseudo-Gothic features. (fn. 25) These were violently
abused by a contemporary critic, who described
them as 'bloated excrescences' and 'purloinings of
modern architectural patchwork'. (fn. 26) A tablet on the
old front, which carried a Latin inscription commemorating the foundation of the school, was broken
and never replaced. (fn. 27) A large bracket supporting a
clock, probably one renewed in 1690, (fn. 28) also disappeared during these alterations.
The construction of Hales Street in 1848 brought
about further changes. All the school property to the
south of the main building was cut off and the
usher's house was demolished. Before this time the
grounds were said to be 'a picturesque spot, studded
with tall elms and gigantic chestnut trees'. (fn. 29) In 1852
the west front of the school was reconstructed in its
present and more orthodox Gothic form. A chimney
was also added on the south side, blocking a 16thcentury window. (fn. 30)
The school having moved to a new site in Warwick
Road in 1885, the old building was put up for sale
and W. G. Fretton launched an appeal for its
preservation. It was bought by public subscription,
vested in trustees, and given to Holy Trinity parish
for use as a church hall. (fn. 31) Fourteen carved misericords were removed from the stalls and taken to the
new school, twenty having previously gone to Holy
Trinity Church. (fn. 32) Early in the 20th century a twostoried addition was made on the north side of the
old building for parish purposes, and at some period
the tracery was renewed in the east window and its
sill was lowered to the original level. In the air raid
of 8 April 1941 the building was damaged by blast.
It remained in poor condition until 1962 when a
restoration was put in hand under the direction of
C. R. Redgrave and L. A. Clarke. Funds were made
available by the Historic Buildings Council, the
Pilgrim Trust, the city corporation, and public
subscription. (fn. 33) By 1965 the structure had been
repaired, the tracery of several windows had been
renewed externally, and a new doorway had been
inserted on the south side of the building.
The new buildings of the school, now known as
King Henry VIII School, stand at the junction of
Warwick Road and Spencer Road. The original
range, dating from 1885, was designed by Edward
Burgess, and was built of red brick with stone
dressings in the Tudor style. Various extensions were
made between 1889 and 1936. During the air raid
of 8 April 1941 the school caught fire and several of
its buildings were destroyed by high explosive.
Among the losses were three of the misericords from
the old school which were hanging on the walls of
the library. (fn. 34) The gutted building was restored by
1950 and later extended.
BABLAKE SCHOOL.
(fn. 35)
The old building of
Bablake School stands on the west side of Hill Street,
forming the east range of the quadrangle which,
before 1547, had belonged to the College of Bablake. (fn. 36)
The school was founded as a boys' hospital in 1560, (fn. 37)
but the structure may well incorporate parts of a
late medieval range which had formerly been in use
by the college. The existing building is about 80 ft.
long by 20 ft. wide and is largely timber-framed. An
open single-storied hall in the centre is flanked by
two-storied end blocks, each of two bays, the whole
being under one continuous roof. Along the west
side, facing the quadrangle, is a timber-framed
cloister of two stories; this originally had 23 bays
but is now interrupted by a 19th-century wing at the
south end. (fn. 38) The lower arcade has four-centred
arches, while those to the gallery above are subdivided and have trefoil heads; all the woodwork
has been much restored, brick buttresses have been
added, and the projecting porch has been rebuilt.
The pointed doorway in the lower cloister is probably
the original one, giving access to a former crosspassage immediately south of the hall. Internally
the two-bay hall is divided by a massive open truss,
having a cambered tie-beam supported by deep
arched braces. (fn. 39) The hall roof, which has curved
wind-braces below the purlins, appears to be of the
same date as the truss. On the west side the roof is
carried down over the upper cloister, suggesting that
this also was part of the original structure. On the
east side, however, there have clearly been alterations. The vertical post supporting the truss stands
clear of the outside wall and a narrow first-floor
gallery has been inserted between them; on the
ground floor the post has been cut away. Above the
gallery the tie-beam of the truss projects to the
outside wall and carries the eaves of the main roof.
This arrangement suggests that the truss and roof
may originally have belonged to a building of the
'wealden' or recessed hall type, of which there were
many examples in Coventry in the 15th century. (fn. 40)
The street front, however, shows no sign of this
form of construction and the whole east wall may
have been rebuilt, giving a wider hall, in 1560. The
ground floor of the street front is of stone ashlar
with a slight projection in the centre. The continuous
upper story, of close-studded timber-framing, is
jettied at first-floor level, the ends of the joists being
concealed by a moulded bressummer. The mullioned
windows may date from 1560, but the dormers above
are probably late-17th-century insertions.
At its foundation the hospital was primarily a
boarding establishment for 21 poor boys and a
nurse, and at one time the teaching took place in
the Dirge Hall. (fn. 41) Later the ground floor room to the
north of the hall was used as a schoolroom. (fn. 42) In 1681
the structure was found to be in poor condition (fn. 43)
and improvements were apparently put in hand. In
the hall there is a large inserted chimney with an
open fireplace, the lintel of which carries the date
1681 and the name of Edward Owen, mayor. The
hall staircase and gallery balustrades, with their ballcapped newels and twisted balusters, may have been
inserted at this time.
In 1832-3, on the reorganization of the school to
include day boys, a new school building and a
master's house were erected on the opposite side
of the quadrangle. (fn. 44) The architects, as for other
work on the site at this time, were probably Rickman
and Hutchinson and the new work was said to be
'of a character in keeping with the ancient building'. (fn. 45)
The old school was altered and restored for use as a
boarding house, the former schoolroom becoming
a dining hall. (fn. 46) The carved oak chimney-piece in this
room is dated 1629 and formerly belonged to the
Bridgemans' house in Little Park Street, demolished
in 1817. (fn. 47) Later in the 19th century a small projecting
wing was added to the west front of the old school.
Shortly after the removal of Bablake School to
Coundon Road in 1890, the buildings on the west
side of the quadrangle were demolished. In 1898
offices for the Bablake School Foundation were
erected on part of the site; this building is now used
by the Bablake Old Boys' Association. The old
school became a parish room for St. John's Church
and later, before the Second World War, a museum
for the Coventry Guild. (fn. 48) It is now (1965) occupied
as offices for the General Municipal Charities and
the governors of Bablake School.