THE COUNTY TOWN. (fn. 24)
It is not possible in a
history of Warwick to diverge far into the realm of
county government; yet it was as the shire town that
Warwick achieved much of its prominence. It probably had this function from the early 10th century,
when the county was created, (fn. 25) and both before the
Conquest and in 1086 the profits from the pleas of the
shire were part of the combined royal farm from the
borough and the county. (fn. 26) Warwick became the regular stopping place for the justices in eyre in the
county from the beginning of the 13th century,
though in 1232, 1236, and 1240 they sat only at
Coventry, and not at both places, as was more usual. (fn. 27)
At the beginning of the 13th century a gaol and a
county hall of pleas - sometimes called the common
hall (fn. 28) - were built at Warwick and both were used
throughout the Middle Ages, (fn. 29) both by the justices
in eyre and on the occasional visits of the king's
bench, such as in 1326, 1334, and 1352. (fn. 30) Warwick
was, of course, the normal meeting-place of the
county sessions of the peace. (fn. 31)
During the 16th and 17th centuries the justices of
assize on the midland circuit continued to sit at
Warwick, either just before, or just after, the sessions
at Coventry, with few exceptions. (fn. 32) Regular sessions
were suspended, for example, from 1642 for four
years, though commissions of gaol delivery were
issued in 1644 and 1645, (fn. 33) and the Lent sessions of
1667 for Coventry and the county were both held at
Coventry. (fn. 34) The Summer sessions of 1689 were held
at Coventry and Warwick on the same day. (fn. 35)
These two divisions remained until 1843 when
Warwickshire was re-divided, the justices of assize
sitting at Coventry having jurisdiction over the city,
and also over the Atherstone and Coleshill divisions
of Hemlingford Hundred, and the Risby and Rugby
divisions of Knighton Hundred. (fn. 36) Those at Warwick
retained jurisdiction over the rest of the county.
From the Winter sessions of 1859 civil cases from
Warwick division could be heard at Birmingham, (fn. 37)
a move unpopular with the town council at Warwick. (fn. 38) In 1884 the county was again reorganized
into two new divisions, respectively named Warwick
and Birmingham. (fn. 39)
The growth of county government in Warwick as
elsewhere during the 17th century through the
quarter sessions gave Warwick an increasing importance as the administrative centre for the county. (fn. 40)
More responsibilities were given to the justices from
the end of the 18th century, (fn. 41) culminating in their
appointment as the police authority for the county
after 1856. (fn. 42) Among the first additions to the county
buildings in Warwick were the police offices, erected
in 1882-3, (fn. 43) The establishment of the Warwickshire
County Council in 1888 (fn. 44) separated the administrative and judicial functions of the justices of the
peace, and created the need for permanent central
administrative offices. The clerk of the peace and the
Education Office used parts of the gaol, then largely
occupied by the militia, (fn. 45) but the increased activities
of the county council, particularly after the Local
Government Act, 1929, necessitated further accommodation. This was provided by the reconstruction
of the old gaol in Northgate and Barrack Streets in
1932 (fn. 46) and the use of other houses in Northgate
Street, which form a closely-knit administrative
sector in the town.
The present complex of county buildings comprises the Shire Hall, the former county gaol and
house of correction, and the nearby Judges' Lodgings. The history of the gaol at Warwick begins in
1200. The site was then bought from Hugh de Loges
and a substantial sum spent upon construction. (fn. 47) It
was not the first common gaol in Warwickshire, for
those at Kineton and Kenilworth had preceded it. (fn. 48)
The works at Warwick continued into 1201, when
a wicket and two louvers were provided, (fn. 49) and in
1203 a plot of ground was purchased in front of the
building 'to hold the pleas of the gaol'. (fn. 50) The plot is
by much the earliest recorded site of any county hall
of pleas or sessions house.
Further works, though less expensive ones than
those of 1200-3, were done in 1210-14, (fn. 51) and in 1220
the gaol began to be delivered by 'four knights' (fn. 52) -
one of the very first gaols, so far as the records show,
to which that procedure was applied. Further
repairs were ordered in 1235, (fn. 53) 1249, (fn. 54) and 1271. (fn. 55)
There are grounds for thinking that between 1229
and 1233 the gaol was not in use, for within that
period it was not delivered. Kenilworth gaol was
used instead, though Warwick was sometimes the
place of delivery. (fn. 56)
From c. 1260 until c. 1280 the gaol was sometimes
used for housing Leicestershire prisoners, although
there was at that time a gaol in Leicester. About
1285, however, Leicester gaol was abandoned and
for the next fifteen years or so Warwick served both
counties. Then a new gaol was built in Leicester,
and Warwick was relieved. (fn. 57)
In 1320 repairs to the gaol and the hall of pleas
were ordered, (fn. 58) after the sheriff had made representations about their ruinous state. (fn. 59) They do not
seem to have been carried out until 1325 at the
earliest, when an enquiry showed that there were
still serious defects in both buildings. (fn. 60) Further
repairs, apparently to the gaol alone, took place in
1336-7. (fn. 61) Nevertheless the buildings were still in a
sad plight in 1344, when dilapidations were estimated at as much as £60, (fn. 62) and in 1376-7 the gaol
hall was said to be ruinous. (fn. 63) Accounts surviving for
the period 1421-64, (fn. 64) however, imply regular
maintenance, and in the years 1452-9 repairs were
carried out each year. Maintenance was also careful
in the period 1532-71 (fn. 65) and in the years 1541-56
some work was done regularly, almost every alternate
year.
Gaol and gaol hall appear to have formed a single
structure, the two parts being separated by a party
wall. (fn. 66) They were built of stone and roofed with
tiles, brought in 1449 and 1452-4 from Berkswell. (fn. 67)
In 1344 a room for jurors existed in the hall. The
gaol proper contained a 'pit', presumably for suspect
felons, and a separated room for prisoners held for
trespass. (fn. 68) Later there are references to the 'chamber'
(1434-5) (fn. 69) or 'house' (1449) supra prisonar'. (fn. 70) It
seems as though this 'chamber' stood above the pit,
which, with its stone-lined sides, (fn. 71) was wholly or
partly underground. The hall was on a different
level from the 'chamber', for a flight of stone steps
was built in 1462 to connect the two. (fn. 72) In 1449
either the hall or the gaol contained a scaccarium,
with benches in it. (fn. 73) In 1541-2 a new floor was
constructed 'over half the hall', with a 'gallery for
men to stand in', and the walls of the hall were
lime-washed. (fn. 74)
Both gaol and hall stood from the outset in the
eastern suburb (fn. 75) and probably in Gaolhall Lane
(now Gerrard Street), a street so named in Henry
VII's reign (fn. 76) and marked on Hollar's plan of 1654. (fn. 77)
This being so, it is curious to find it sometimes
stated or implied that the gaol was in the castle. (fn. 78)
Thus the enquiry of 1325 (fn. 79) was entrusted not to the
sheriff but to the constable, in 1367 and 1368 commissions were issued to deliver the castle gaol, (fn. 80) a
financial document of 1449 expressly places the gaol
within the castle, (fn. 81) and in 1497, 1501, 1502, and
1507 (fn. 82) further commissions, similar to those of 1367
and 1368, were issued for the delivery of the castle
gaol. In some of these instances the scribe may have
fallen into error. It may, however, be that the castle
was indeed sometimes in use either as the sole or an
additional prison. Certainly a purpose-built prison
existed in the base of Caesar's Tower. For a part if
not for the whole of the period 1497-1507 the castle
was in the Crown's hands, (fn. 83) and possibly at this
time the true gaol and the castle were used concurrently. Certainly in 1501, 1502, 1507, and 1508,
years in which the delivery of the castle gaol was
ordered, commissions were also issued to deliver, in
the conventional phrase, the 'gaol of Warwick'. (fn. 84)
Whatever all this may mean it seems reasonably
clear that by 1590 the castle was being used as a gaol.
It was stated in 1601 that a building that was
obviously the castle had been 'a common gaol these
ten or twelve years', (fn. 85) and it so remained until it was
granted by the Crown to Greville in 1604. (fn. 86) The
castle had escheated to the Crown on the death of
Ambrose Dudley in 1590 (fn. 87) and could have served
as a prison from that time, which agrees well with
the assertion of 1601.
The castle, however, was not used for long, for by
1625 the gaoler had converted his own house into a
prison. It was then apparently repaired out of a
county rate. It long remained in bad condition, but
does not seem to have housed many prisoners in
the early years of the century. Later on it was
crowded with dissenters; in 1661, for example,
George Fox reported that 140 Quakers were confined there. (fn. 88) Jonathan Cooke, gentleman, keeper of
the gaol by Easter 1663, (fn. 89) used his house in High
Pavement as the gaol, and returned 12 hearths for
tax in that year. (fn. 90) It was returned in 1670 with 18
hearths by John Hipsley, and again in 1671, 1673,
and 1674. (fn. 91)
The medieval gaol hall was abandoned earlier than
the gaol. After 1541-2 there are no references to its
repair and it seems that by 1571 a building called
'the Shire Hall' was being used instead. This lay in
Northgate Street on or near the site of the Shire
Hall of today. (fn. 92) It had been called 'the Steward's
Place' since at least 1479-80, and is known later to
have been the official residence of successive
manorial stewards. (fn. 93) This building the burgesses
asked the Crown and the Earls of Warwick and
Leicester in 1571 (fn. 94) to convey to them in exchange
for the Guild Hall. In 1576 their petition was
granted, (fn. 95) on condition that the justices and sheriff
could keep their sessions there. (fn. 96) In 1590 it came
into the hands of the Crown as part of the castle. (fn. 97)
In 1595 the Crown let it to the corporation, along
with St. Peter's Chapel and the Cross House for 40
years. (fn. 98) In 1600 the Crown granted the freehold to
Richard Dawes and Thomas Wagstaffe. (fn. 99) They, in
turn, in the same year, sold it to William Spicer who
sold it to the corporation. (fn. 1) The corporation kept it
until 1676. Here the election of the bailiff took place
in 1573, 1574 and 1581; and here commissioners of
enquiry into charges against the corporation held
their sessions in 1583. (fn. 2) Some of the burgesses then
considered it too public to be convenient. After
transfer to the burgesses in 1576 it seems to have
been rebuilt, for it was described as 'lately builded'
in 1581. (fn. 3) Not until after about 1590 did the burgesses
use it as their common hall for regular meetings of
the corporation, (fn. 4) but the condition of grant in 1576
indicates its regular use for assizes and quarter
sessions. It was furnished for this purpose, for by
1583 there was a bench, a bar, and a 'cheker',
within which the clerk of the court could sit and lay
out his books on a long table. (fn. 5) The parliamentary
election for the borough was held there in 1620. (fn. 6)
The Warwick house of correction is first mentioned
in 1625, when the quarter sessions records begin.
Until the erection of a special building late in the
century, it seems that the county rented a house to
be used for this purpose. From at least 1676 the
house used was in Wallditch, adjoining the site of
the new building. (fn. 7)
In 1676 the county assumed full responsibility for
the upkeep of all three buildings, Shire Hall, gaol,
and house of correction. The corporation conveyed
the Shire Hall to trustees for the county and a house
and land in Northgate Street and Wallditch (later
Bridewell Lane, now Barrack Street) were bought
for the erection of a new gaol and house of correction.
Some adjoining property was also acquired, including a house which was probably the existing house
of correction. Work on the rebuilding of the Shire
Hall began almost at once, under the supervision of
William Hurlbut (fn. 8) who may have been the architect
for all these buildings. The work appears to have
been almost complete by 1686 and the house of
correction was ready for occupation in 1687, but
repairs were necessary during the following few
years, especially at the Shire Hall. The Shire Hall
escaped the fire of 1694 with only minor damage;
the house of correction and the gaol were destroyed,
but within two years they had been rebuilt. In 1705
the buildings were described as lying on the west
side of Northgate Street, the house of correction
being the most northerly and the Shire Hall the
most southerly. The known expenditure on the
buildings between 1675 and 1705 was over £2,800,
and constant attention was given to their repair
during the earlier 18th century. (fn. 9)
The most illuminating description of any of these
buildings is that given in a report on the management of the gaol in 1719. There were then eight
chambers let to prisoners for rent ('the master's
side'), and a women's ward and various chambers
and garrets which were occupied rent-free by
debtors ('the common side'); a debtors' hall and a
dungeon hall were also mentioned. (fn. 10)
The first major alteration to the buildings of
1675-1705 came with the erection of a new Shire
Hall in 1753-58. (fn. 11) Rebuilding had been agreed
upon in 1749 and the Market Hall was taken over
while work was in progress. A private Act was
obtained in 1757 to provide for meeting the expense
of the new building. The design was by Sanderson
Miller, the amateur architect, the surveyors and
builders being William and David Hiorn of Warwick; (fn. 12) they used local sandstone quarried near the
Butts. The facade of the building has since been
re-faced but little altered and only slight interior
reconstruction took place until 1864 when accommodation for officials and witnesses was added on
ground at the rear. (fn. 13)
Urgent repairs were necessary to the gaol and
house of correction in 1758, but it was not until after
the visit of John Howard in 1776 that large-scale
reconstruction was decided upon. Howard found
that the building then housed 57 prisoners. Debtors
and male felons had one courtyard, with a day room
and a 'close, damp and offensive' dungeon as a night
room, while female felons had a separate courtyard,
with one day and two night rooms; a second dungeon
housed the condemned. Later in 1776 the house of
correction was presented by the justices as inadequate,
and in 1777 they similarly presented the gaol; in the
latter year they obtained an Act which authorized both
to be rebuilt and considerable reconstruction was in
fact carried out during the next 20 years. (fn. 14)
Between 1779 and 1783 the gaol was much
enlarged by Thomas Johnson, the Warwick architect; the facade which remains is considered
'remarkable as one of the earliest attempts to adapt
Greek Doric to the purposes of an English public
building'. (fn. 15) A new house of correction was next
built, designed and executed by Henry Couchman,
between 1784 and 1787. Couchman then fitted up
parts of the old house to enlarge the gaol and began
extensions to the gaol in 1790. (fn. 16) Hornton, Grafton,
and Warwick stone was used, some of the last being
taken from the site itself. The present Barrack Street
frontage was completed in 1793 but further work
was done in 1796-8. The total cost of Couchman's
work between 1784 and 1798 was nearly £21,400. (fn. 17)
Constant repairs and alterations were necessary
after 1798, one notable step being a plan for the
separation of boys from men in the gaol in 1808.
This had not been implemented when Neild visited
the prison. (fn. 18) The dungeon commented upon by
Howard ceased to be used in 1797, though deserters
were still occasionally house there. (fn. 19) At that time the
gaol had a large room, 27 lodging rooms, and a
courtyard for master's side debtors; 3 rooms, a
dayroom and a courtyard for common side debtors;
2 rooms and a courtyard for female debtors; 2 rooms,
a courtyard and 103 cells for male felons; a room, a
courtyard, an infirmary and 4 cells for female felons;
together with a chapel, 2 work-rooms, and a condemned cell. Neild reported that all the rooms were
clean and in good condition. (fn. 20)
The buildings were abandoned in 1860 (fn. 21) in favour
of a new prison at the Cape which had much increased accommodation: in 1865 there were 2 yards,
4 dayrooms, and 309 cells for criminals; and 4 yards,
5 dayrooms, and 43 sleeping rooms for debtors. (fn. 22)
The Cape prison was used until c. 1915, but after
1884 only for the Warwick Division of the county. (fn. 23)
Most of it was demolished in 1933 and houses have
been built on the site. (fn. 24) It was decided in 1861 to use
the site of the gaol and the house of correction for
barracks for the 1st Regiment of the Warwickshire
Militia and for cells for prisoners awaiting trial at
the Shire Hall. Work on the demolition of the old
and the erection of the new buildings began in 1862,
but little alteration was made to the existing
frontages. (fn. 25)
Most of the premises were used for the militia for
many years. In 1905 they were leased to the government and in 1914-18 were used as an army record
office. The War Office finally gave up the buildings
in 1930, but in the previous year the foundation
stone for new county council offices on the site had
already been laid; these were opened in 1932. The
outer walls of the old buildings were retained, the
original frontages to Northgate Street and Barrack
Street again being little altered. At the same time
new accommodation for those attending courts in
the Shire Hall was provided in place of some of the
rooms added in 1864. (fn. 26) Extensions completed in
1966 provided new accommodation including committee rooms and office space, with a new main
entrance from the Market Square. (fn. 27) The house
known as Abbotsford was at the same time restored
and incorporated into the new structure. Alterations
and additions were also made to the council's
offices occupying the Georgian houses on the east
side of Northgate Street. The Judges' Lodgings, to
the south of the Shire Hall, which is used as a
residence for judges on circuit, by justices, and by
the county council, was built at the cost of £8,000
in 1814-16 by Henry Hakewill. (fn. 28)
The public buildings on the west side of Northgate
Street begin with the Judges' Lodgings at the south
end. Set back from the road, this house has an
ashlar facade with a rusticated lower story and angle
pilasters above; the central porch is flanked by Ionic
columns. Extensions to the south were built in 1955
and 1963. (fn. 29) Next comes the Shire Hall. The building
of 1753-58 was completely re-faced with Hollington
stone in 1948. It has a nine-bay front consisting of
one tall story above a rusticated plinth. The three
central bays project slightly and have attached
Corinthian columns surmounted by an entablature
and pediment; the Warwickshire coat of arms in the
tympanum was carved in 1948. The central roundheaded entrance is flanked by niches. The remainder
of the front has a pedimented window to each bay.
The bays are divided by flat Corinthian pilasters
with double pilasters at the angles. The entablature
is continuous across the whole facade and in all the
bays there are carved swags between the capitals.
The interior of the front range comprises a large
stone-faced room with a coffered ceiling, pilasters,
columns, and a frieze with garlands. Behind are two
octagonal courtrooms with freestanding Corinthian
columns; one room has an ornamental ceiling and an
octagonal lantern. The west side of the street is
completed by the long two-storied front of the
former gaol, (fn. 30) built in 1779-83 with additions at the
northern end of 1790-93. The main facade, which
is of the same height as the Shire Hall but more
severe in style, is of ashlar with a modern plinth of
Hornton stone. The central three of the eleven bays
project slightly and are crowned by a pediment. The
three arches which lead through the centre of the
range were inserted in 1862. Along the whole facade
massive unfluted columns of the Greek Doric order
support an entablature with a triglyph frieze. The
Northgate Street front was adapted as part of new
buildings for the county council in 1930-32.
Extensions facing the Market Place, completed in
1966, were the work of G. R. Barnsley (county
architect, 1957-9). (fn. 31)