ECONOMY AND SOCIETY, 1662-1762
By 1700 Chester was on the verge of losing its
dominance as a regional economic hub, as nearby
towns, especially in south Lancashire, began to specialize in trade or manufacturing in a manner which suited
neither Chester's traditions nor its position. Even so its
markets and fairs remained important and well
attended, (fn. 21) and it developed a diverse economy based
mainly upon consumption and services offered to an
extensive hinterland. In comparison with Liverpool, its
main rival as a trading port, it had poor commun
ications. Only the London road was turnpiked before
1750, (fn. 1) and links with the hinterland were relatively
bad. Salt from central Cheshire, for instance, was from
1721 carried on the newly opened Weaver navigation,
bypassing Chester altogether. (fn. 2) Road access to the
expanding Flintshire coal and lead mines was difficult,
and their production was usually loaded at the ports
along the north-east coast of Wales, nominally outports of Chester. (fn. 3)
Maritime Trade
The revival of the city's overseas commerce after 1660
was hampered by wars and privateering, and it was
never large even in the best years. In 1700, for example,
there were only 10 outward international sailings and
20 inward. The export of tanned calfskins to France
and Spain continued on a much reduced scale, with
many interruptions. Instead, lead exports expanded
markedly during the 1690s, when nearly 1,800 tons,
two thirds of it ore and the rest pig lead smelted in
Flintshire, was shipped to the Low Countries, with
smaller quantities to Spain, Portugal, and France.
Exports rose again after the peace of 1713, mainly of
pig lead to France, and after 1740 Portugal, with totals
sometimes reaching 2,300 tons a year. (fn. 4) Miscellaneous
cargoes were also shipped to French, Iberian, and
Mediterranean ports. (fn. 5)
Imports of French wine were displaced in the later
17th century and the earlier 18th by Spanish and
especially Portuguese products, which arrived with
cargoes of fresh and dried fruits, especially oranges
and raisins. The quantities of wine were small in
comparison with those at other provincial ports.
Other imports from the Mediterranean included
modest volumes of almonds, anchovies, and skins. (fn. 6)
Sugar must also have been imported, since by 1715 a
Liverpool merchant had a refinery at Chester. (fn. 7) Iron
imports from Spain were replaced by supplies from the
Baltic, along with flax, hemp, timber, and other naval
stores, a sizeable trade by 1695 which continued
throughout the earlier 18th century, sometimes
through Holland. (fn. 8) Even by 1700 Chester had thus
been eclipsed as a port for foreign trade, and what
remained was mainly dependent on lead exports. Only
a very few Chester ships went further afield, for
instance in the 1720s to South Carolina for rice, tar,
and pitch. In the mid 1750s and the 1770s one or two
Chester merchants were in the African slave trade,
mostly in partnership with Liverpool men. (fn. 9)
Coastal traffic, in contrast, doubled in both volume
and shipments between 1660 and 1700, and although
stagnant for much of the earlier 18th century was
beginning to expand again from 1750. (fn. 10) Trade increased with all Chester's main partners (Liverpool,
London, and the south-western ports), and mainly
involved coal, lead, and cheese. In the earlier 18th
century there was also some re-export of silk, sugar,
and other luxuries. (fn. 11) Of the staples, only cheese passed
through the city. Ships carrying cheese, coal, and lead
frequently returned in ballast. (fn. 12)
The trade in coal grew to between 1,000 and 1,400
chaldrons a year by 1700, mainly to Lancashire, Wales,
and London, but then fell in the early 18th century and
did not recover until the 1750s. (fn. 13) Lead shipments grew
from the 1690s because of the London Lead Company's operations in Flintshire, from 1,400-1,800 tons
a year to a peak of over 5,700 tons in the later 1720s, of
which four fifths went to London. By the early 1760s
the total had fallen back to no more than 3,500 tons a
year, of which Liverpool took the largest share. The
tonnage of cheese carried, mainly to London, doubled
between 1664 and 1676 and exceeded 1,000 tons in
1683 before dwindling rapidly because of French
privateering after 1689. (fn. 14) From the 1710s, with the
renewal of peace, the trade grew enormously under
London cheesemongers who used local cheese factors
to collect from all over the Cheshire plain and neighbouring counties. About 1730 there were supposedly
20 ships making three round trips each and carrying
over 5,500 tons a year, though no more than 1,500
tons a year was ever registered through the port
records. (fn. 15) In the 1750s there were also some shipments
from Chester of wheat, timber, (fn. 1) and cannon made at a
foundry near Wrexham. (fn. 2) Imports from London and
Liverpool comprised sugar, tobacco, and other colonial
products, while ships from Wales delivered wheat,
barley, fish, lead, and large quantities of slates
(445,000 in 1689, for example). (fn. 3)
The expansion of Chester's Irish trade from the
1650s to the early 1670s was followed after 1680 by
five slack decades during which the number of sailings
fell below those from Liverpool and Whitehaven
(Cumb.). (fn. 4) Even then, however, Ireland was much the
city's most important overseas trading partner: in the
1710s, for example, of 150-200 ships cleared for overseas voyages each year only 20-30 were for other
destinations. (fn. 5) Exports from Chester were led by
Welsh coal, shipped largely in Chester vessels, which
amounted in 1699, for example, to as much as 7,800
chaldrons. Other exports included limited quantities
of lead and iron, clothing, woollen cloth from Yorkshire and Lancashire (the latter 'cottons'), cheese and
other foodstuffs, hops, and supplies for the English
military expeditions. (fn. 6) The main import from Ireland
was at first livestock. Government legislation began to
interfere with the trade in the earlier 1660s by
imposing duties on imported live cattle, followed in
1667 by a total ban. Smuggling flourished, and when
the Act temporarily lapsed in 1679 the trade resumed
on a large scale: in 1680 more than 12,700 head of
cattle and over 41,000 sheep were imported. The ban
was reimposed in 1681, forcing Chester's leather
industry into a greater dependence on imported
Irish skins and hides, which numbered 3,000 or
more a year c. 1705 but became fewer in the later
1710s and did not grow again until the 1750s. (fn. 7)
In the later 17th century the city's trade with Ireland
also included small-scale imports of wool, woollen
cloth, linen yarn, and linen cloth. (fn. 8) Quantities of the
last remained small at first despite the reduction of the
city's tolls between 1707 and 1710, (fn. 9) since Irish linen
merchants preferred to ship through Liverpool. (fn. 10) The
linen trade grew from the mid 1730s. Some Irish yarn
was imported, but much more cloth, which doubled in
quantity between 1744 and 1755 to almost 1 million
yards, and trebled again by 1761. Most came directly
from Ireland, some by Liverpool. All the importers did
extensive business at Chester's Michaelmas fair, (fn. 11)
which required a succession of ever-larger linen
halls. (fn. 12) Most of those involved in the linen trade were
outsiders present only during the fairs, and even in the
1730s and 1740s there were probably fewer than 15
resident linendrapers. (fn. 13)
From the 1660s the royal yachts, provided by the
Royal Navy for the lord lieutenant of Ireland, plied
between Dublin and the Dee anchorages, carrying
officials, dispatches, and money for troops, but also
taking ordinary passengers by arrangement. At first
they used Dawpool (in Thurstaston) but by the 1680s
had transferred to Parkgate, where from 1686 a regular
packet boat service for passengers developed. (fn. 14) Parkgate remained the main port for Ireland until the first
improvements to the London-Holyhead road in the
1760s. (fn. 15) As a result, many travellers passed through
Chester, including the lords lieutenant of Ireland, (fn. 16)
John Wesley, (fn. 17) Handel, who attempted to rehearse
Messiah in Chester on his way to its first Dublin
performance, (fn. 18) and Irish casual labourers. (fn. 19)
In Chester two anchorages were accessible to smaller
vessels after 1660: the quay and warehouses across the
Roodee from the Watergate, and the anchorage near
the Dee Bridge and old cheese warehouse. Shipbuilding
was also well established on the Roodee. Thirty ships
were owned at Chester in 1672, and at least 25
(totalling 1,925 tons) in 1701, though not all were
locally built. The industry seems to have expanded
during the 1690s, when the company of Drawers of
Dee complained that a new shipyard would encroach
on the ground where they hung their fishing nets. The
number of roperies on the Roodee had also grown by
the 1690s. (fn. 20) Ships continued to be built on the Dee in
the earlier 18th century, many intended for traders
elsewhere, (fn. 1) and a few shipwrights and ship's carpenters
were freemen of the city. (fn. 2)
All traffic, however, was hindered by navigational
hazards in the Dee, which despite repeated efforts from
the 1660s were not removed until Nathaniel Kinderley's new cut along the Welsh shore was opened in
1737. (fn. 3) The reopening of the Dee did not halt Chester's
relative decline as a port. About 1701 its shipowners
had only 25 vessels, and in the early 1710s the total
tonnage, no more than 3,400, was less than half that
owned at Liverpool. By the 1730s it had fallen to
c. 1,650 tons, barely a tenth of Liverpool's total, and
in the late 1750s Chester's 1,000-1,400 tons was
scarcely a twentieth of Liverpool's fleet. (fn. 4) The tonnage
of all Chester's foreign and Irish trade, which in the
1710s had reached at least 9,500 tons both inward and
outward, seldom exceeded 6,000 tons each way from
the 1730s to the 1750s. (fn. 5)
Occupations and Economic Regulation
In the later 17th century the Assembly still insisted
that traders and craftsmen take up the freedom of the
city before working there. (fn. 6) Between 1660 and 1699 at
least 1,930 new freemen were admitted, an annual
average exceeding 48. Chester's occupational structure
was probably changing. (fn. 7) The proportion of new freemen in the wholesale and distributive trades fell from
24 per cent in the period 1660-74 to less than 20 per
cent between 1675 and 1699, the manual crafts
remained steady at about 46 per cent, and the service
trades increased from 30 to 36 per cent. Markedly
more professional men were being enfranchised.
Occupations meeting basic needs for catering, clothing
and textiles, and building amounted to about a third
of all identifiable admissions: the leather crafts, with
tanneries in Foregate Street and between St. John's
church and the river, remained buoyant, (fn. 8) and there
was steady growth in the building industry, metalworking, victualling, and the clothing and textile
trades until the later 1670s. In 1679, however, the
Tailors' company obstructed applications for admission, and in 1691 renewed its opposition on the
grounds that trade was poor. Feltmaking attracted
fewer new freemen and attempts to revive cloth
production were a failure. (fn. 9)
The corporation waived the rules for enfranchisement for a few men with desirable skills, including
those of cooper, confectioner, distiller, soap boiler,
musical instrument maker, watchmaker, upholsterer,
periwig maker, button maker, tinplate worker, and
sugar refiner. (fn. 10) Such admissions became more
common in the 1690s, when a tobacco cutter, a silk
weaver, a flax dresser, watchmakers, a sievemaker, a
linen printer, a brassfounder, a forge smith, and a
needlemaker were admitted under a new scale of fees,
and several mariners and an inkhorn turner were
enfranchised gratis. (fn. 11) Occupations in the city became
much more diverse in consequence, but the corporation's policy was not always welcome to the guilds, and
it overruled opposition to discretionary admissions
from the Innholders, the Smiths and Pewterers, the
Joiners and Carvers, and others. (fn. 12)
The basic urban trades remained numerically important after 1700: (fn. 13) of c. 1,000 resident craftsmen and
tradesmen polled in 1732 and 1747, almost a sixth
supplied food and drink, another sixth were engaged in
construction, and almost a fifth in the clothing trades.
There were well over 50 tailors, (fn. 14) but only a few silk
weavers or dyers and barely 20 woollen weavers; the
fulling mill on the Dee was converted after 1725 for
making paper and snuff. (fn. 15) Fifty or more men specialized in making felt hats. Among the distributive trades
the most numerous were chandlers and ironmongers.
From the late 17th century several workshops made
clay tobacco pipes, (fn. 16) a trade supporting c. 25 workmen
by the 1730s. The Pembertons, who by 1700 had a
ropewalk under the city's western walls, were still in
business c. 1760, (fn. 17) and another ropemaker was established from 1733 close to the Water Tower. (fn. 18) Chester's
largest specialism, occupying possibly a fifth of its
skilled workers, remained leather and its products,
using skins produced locally or imported from Ireland
and the Mediterranean. (fn. 19) Besides tanners and curriers,
there were c. 25 wet glovers, making leather gloves
mainly in workshops between the river and the south western walls. (fn. 1) Most numerous were the shoemakers,
for whom a few corkcutters produced heels.
The guild system, involving active regulation by
individual companies and the attempted exclusion of
unfree interlopers, continued well into the 18th century; (fn. 2) until c. 1730 the city authorities were closely
concerned with guild affairs, trying to settle internal
differences and to ensure the correct enrolment of
apprenticeship indentures, though the magistrates'
attempts to regulate wages seem to have ended well
before 1700. (fn. 3) Prolonged demarcation disputes from
the 1660s to the 1690s among craftsmen in the
building industry, especially joiners and carpenters,
perhaps resulted from its expansion. (fn. 4) The corporation
several times prevented the formation of new guilds,
placing six masons in the Carpenters' company c. 1691,
and forbidding new guilds for both pewterers and
plasterers, the latter in 1705. (fn. 5) The Tanners' company
was the most active in defence of its members' interests
after 1700. (fn. 6) In the 1710s, in concert with tanners'
guilds in London and elsewhere, it campaigned against
new taxes on leather and sought to restrict the export
of oak bark to Irish competitors. (fn. 7) The Butchers,
presumably to limit numbers, doubled their entry
charge for 'foreigners' to £20 in the 1730s, and
required any member taking an apprentice also to
pay £20. (fn. 8) About 1750 they still tried to enforce a
traditional closing time for butchers' stalls in the
shambles. (fn. 9)
Numbers of guild members were falling sharply by
1740 as the guilds turned themselves into social clubs, (fn. 10)
and in most trades fewer men took up the freedom
from the 1730s, except when elections were imminent:
in 1732 qualified resident applicants accounted for
almost three quarters of c. 600 freemen admitted in
the three months before a mayoral election. (fn. 11)
Shopping
The city's fairs declined during the later 17th century
then revived after 1700, partly through the growing
trade in Irish linen, and partly through horse dealing,
which drew purchasers from a wide area. (fn. 12) A flourishing trade in saddle, pack, and draught animals also
developed in Chester's markets, and focused on the
inns because innkeepers bought horses either for resale
or for hiring to travellers. (fn. 13) By the later 17th century
Chester had largely overcome competition from smaller markets in the region, and as late as 1677 the
corporation successfully opposed a proposed market
and fair at Neston. (fn. 14) Chester's role as the main regional
market was enhanced by the expansion of livestock
farming in the county, especially in the production of
cheese, which was marketed by local cheese factors and
sent through the port or overland to cheesemongers in
London and elsewhere. (fn. 15) By 1700 the city was publicizing its markets and fairs in national and local
newspapers. (fn. 16)
The city played an important part in the distribution
of wine and especially groceries, including luxury
foodstuffs imported from abroad through London or
increasingly Liverpool. (fn. 17) There were, however, sporadic
difficulties over the ways ordinary victuals were produced and sold. In the 1670s the tightly regulated
bakers renewed their campaign to exclude country
bakers from the markets. (fn. 18) The corporation was still
trying to enforce the assize of bread c. 1710, and in
1736 reaffirmed the right of country bakers to sell in
the markets at prices set by itself. (fn. 19) During the 1690s
the Butchers' company tried to monopolize the
cheaper standings at the new flesh shambles and
seized meat sold by country butchers, (fn. 20) though by
the 1720s the country butchers' right to trade was
established. (fn. 21) The Fishmongers' company, too, complained about sales by unfree interlopers during the
1670s. (fn. 22)
From the 1670s Chester's development as a shopping centre led to frequent applications for leases of
plots of land for building, and of shops and chambers
in the Rows. (fn. 23) Imports of luxuries and a great variety of
other goods from London stimulated both wholesaling
and retailing, and well stocked shops began to attract
more gentry, professionals, and wealthier country
people. By 1700 the central shopping area was thus
becoming more clearly defined, with the beginnings of
the later separation of high-class retailers and more
workaday shops in distinct areas of the city. (fn. 1) In
particular Eastgate Street in the earlier 18th century
was increasingly given over to high-class shops, though
some older methods of retailing persisted: as late as the
1760s London milliners hired premises in the street
during the fairs to put their goods on view. (fn. 2)
To accommodate visitors on business or pleasure, and
especially those travelling between England and Ireland,
there were many inns, mostly clustered in the main
central streets and Foregate Street. In 1686 the city's
682 guest beds and stabling for 871 horses far exceeded
the figures for any other place in the North-West. (fn. 3)
The importance of the city's role within the region was
emphasized in other ways, for example by the existence
of regular coach services to London, (fn. 4) by its continuing
status as a head port for customs administration, based
on the customs house in Watergate Street, (fn. 5) and by the
assay office set up permanently in 1700. (fn. 6)
Social Conditions
In the mid 1660s Chester had 1,666 households which
paid tax on 4,273 hearths, (fn. 7) a low average of 2.5 hearths
a household. Two fifths of the households (671 in
number) were exempt because of poverty and in all
almost half (781 households) had only one or no
hearth. The most modest houses, those with no more
than two hearths, accounted for some two thirds of the
city's dwellings and accommodated not only the very
poor but also many labourers and humbler craftsmen,
especially in the textile and leather industries. About a
sixth of householders had three or four hearths, among
them many master craftsmen, shopkeepers, butchers,
bakers, small-scale dealers, and clergy. Those with five
or six hearths included cathedral clergy, merchants,
drapers, and medical men. Householders taxed on
seven, eight, or nine hearths comprised aldermen, Sir
Peter Pindar, Bt. (the collector of customs in the port),
a goldsmith, the subdean Dr. William Bispham, and
several merchants and ironmongers. Occupiers with 10
or 11 hearths included the former recorder John
Ratcliffe and Sir Richard Grosvenor. Among householders with 12 or 13 hearths were the diocesan
chancellor John Wainwright and the castle governor
Sir Geoffrey Shakerley. Lady Calveley (Mary, widow of
Sir Hugh Calveley of Lea) (fn. 8) and Lady Kilmorey (Eleanor, widow of Robert Needham, Viscount Kilmorey) (fn. 9)
each had 16 hearths and the bishop's palace 17, as did
two inns. The two largest establishments in the city,
with 20 and 33 hearths, were also inns. Some five per
cent of families were headed by armigerous or professional people, but the town houses of the gentry were
still mostly modest, as many of them containing only
two, three, or four hearths as had thirteen or more.
There was some social segregation: many of the poorer
sort dwelt in the outer wards, the cathedral clergy
around the precinct, tanners mainly in St. Giles's
ward, and exchequer officials, lawyers, and gentry in
Bridge Street and Watergate Street.
In the later 17th century the Assembly was often
anxious lest vagrants be attracted to Chester and add to
the numbers of its poor. In the 1660s it ordered the
constables to make monthly reports on 'undersettlers'
to the magistrates, (fn. 10) but thereafter left the aldermen,
sitting as J.P.s in the inner Pentice, to deal with
vagrants and supervise the regular relief provided by
parish officers. In the 1690s the magistrates occasionally made supplementary payments, for instance to
shipwrecked seamen and indigent travellers with
passes. (fn. 11) The able-bodied poor were sent to the house
of correction, which caused the authorities many
difficulties. There was already dissatisfaction with the
master, John Barker, in 1660 when the Weavers'
company claimed that it could put more poor people
to work than the 60 whom he employed. The Assembly
eventually removed him in 1670. (fn. 12) In 1675 a weaver
and a woolcomber came from Norwich to employ the
poor in a new manufactory, with unknown success,
and the objective of providing work and correction
together was still being pursued in 1698, in a scheme to
set the poor to work in silk weaving. (fn. 13)
Until the new house of industry was opened in 1759
the poor were maintained by their own parishes, some
of which founded poorhouses, including St. John's
c. 1730 and St. Oswald's by 1750. (fn. 14) The law of
settlement was, however, handled centrally for the
whole city by the magistrates sitting in the inner
Pentice, with individual settlement rights formally
certified by quarter sessions to the relevant parish. (fn. 15)
By the 1740s the city also paid centrally for the removal
of vagrants, sometimes through the master of the house
of correction. (fn. 1)
Public poor relief was augmented after 1660 by new
privately endowed charities, several of which used John
Vernon's of 1617 as a model. They were mainly under
corporation control and provided bread, clothing,
shelter, or assistance, but in the main only for freemen
and their families. The endowments virtually dried up
after 1700 and even bequests for parochial charities
diminished after 1720. Members of the wealthiest
nonconformist congregation, the Presbyterians, had
their own charities. (fn. 2) Pensions and places in the corporation's almshouses were granted according to lists
drawn up for the Assembly, (fn. 3) and by the 1750s potential
almsmen were paying for their names to be included. (fn. 4)
Newer types of charitable giving were exemplified by
the foundation of the Blue Coat schools for boys
(1700) and girls (1720), (fn. 5) and by Peter Cotton's bequest
in 1716 of £100 for medical relief for the poor and £50
for the distribution of devotional books in rotation
among the poor of each parish. (fn. 6)
Chester as a County Resort
The cultural life of Chester in the century after the
Restoration reflected its growing importance as a social
centre for the gentry of the surrounding area and as a
place where many leisured families resided. One sign
was the very early establishment of freemasonry: the
'Society' of which Randle Holme III (1627-1700) was a
member c. 1673 was evidently one of the first permanent lodges in England. At that date he was the only
gentleman involved, his 25 companions being mostly
well-off employers, notably in the building trades. By
1725 the city had three separate lodges, more than in
any other provincial town, who met at the Sun, Spread
Eagle, and Castle and Falcon inns. Membership had
shifted decisively towards country gentlemen, members
of the urban élite, and army officers from the garrison.
The master of the Sun lodge, Colonel Francis Columbine, was the first Provincial Grand Master in the
country. (fn. 7)
Initially there was little increase in cultural interests
or literary habits, though enough business for stationers and perhaps bookbinding and basic printing. (fn. 8)
In 1668 Peter Bodvile claimed to have the only
bookshop in the city, but there were certainly
others by 1685, when John Minshull and his son
had a stock valued at £1,000. (fn. 9) Randle Holme III
maintained the family tradition as a deputy herald
and heraldic painter and was probably involved in
printing and publishing, notably his own large-scale
but uncompleted Academy of Armory. His son, Randle
Holme IV (1659-1707), continued the heraldic work
and was responsible for supplementing, arranging, and
partly indexing the antiquarian and genealogical collections made by his forebears. The collections were
dispersed after his death, but some 270 volumes were
bought by Edward Harley, earl of Oxford, and thus
passed with the Harleian manuscripts into national
ownership in 1753. (fn. 10) The main scholarly writers in
Chester were clergymen: Dean James Arderne as a
controversialist; Bishop John Pearson in theology and
patristics; and the Presbyterian minister Matthew
Henry on hymns, catechism, prayer, and biblical studies. Henry's brother-in-law John Tylston (1663-99), a
nonconformist physician who spent some time in
Chester, published on medical experiments, while the
eminent mathematician John Wilkins was bishop of
Chester 1668-72 and the astronomer Edmund Halley
was deputy comptroller of the Chester mint during its
brief existence 1696-8. (fn. 11)
In the earlier 18th century there were usually at
least two booksellers, handling the scholarly libraries
of deceased local clergy and gentlemen. (fn. 12) From the
early 1710s one or two worked their own presses,
producing mostly sermons and other religious and
educational works. One also began to print books in
Welsh. (fn. 13) William Cooke started a local newspaper in
1721, rivalled from 1732 and then driven out of
business by another, later the Chester Courant,
founded by Roger Adams (d. 1741) and continued
by his widow Elizabeth and her successors into the late
18th century. (fn. 14)
After 1660 Chester silversmiths found a good local
demand for their work, (fn. 1) but painters were few. In
1671-2 the royal arms and pictures of Justice and
Prudence were drawn for the portmote court by
Elnathan Rowlandson, apparently a local man, (fn. 2) and
about 1715 a miniature painter planned to move from
Liverpool to Chester, where there were no competitors. (fn. 3) Campanology flourished among a select group of
gentry, following the foundation in 1686 of the Gentlemen Bellringers of St. John's by Mayor Edward Oulton
and others. (fn. 4) In the field of orthodox music, there was a
musical instrument maker in Chester by 1670, the
tradition of religious music was revived at the cathedral
from 1660 under Dean Henry Bridgeman, and the four
city waits, a paid ensemble with their own livery,
performed at public celebrations and civic ceremonies. (fn. 5)
In reaction to the rigours of the Interregnum the
traditional civic ceremonies enjoyed a brief revival after
1660 before succumbing to a fear of disorder and the
growth of a new puritanical spirit. The Christmas
watch and the Midsummer show were both in effect
abandoned in 1678. (fn. 6) Less elaborate forms of ceremonial continued, such as civic processions to church
services and occasional beatings of the bounds. (fn. 7) Public
rejoicing, with bellringing, pageantry, and drinking,
accompanied the arrival of a new charter, news of
military victories, and the foundation of the Chester
mint. (fn. 8) The Assembly also marked the reception of
William III and the arrival of notables such as Bishop
Cartwright, a Secretary of State, and the lords lieutenant and lords justice of Ireland. (fn. 9)
All those entertainments attracted people from elsewhere. Visitors were also drawn by cathedral services,
diocesan administration, county parliamentary elections, the palatinate law courts, the fairs, markets,
shops, inns, and alehouses, (fn. 10) and increasingly by the
specialized services offered by teachers of writing and
dancing, physicians and surgeons, vintners, watchmakers, cabinetmakers, tobacconists, and many
others. (fn. 11) From the 1690s, for example, several surgeons
and usually two or three physicians practised in the
city. (fn. 12) Chester was more and more a magnet for
country gentry. Mayors gave venison feasts where
country gentlemen sat down with prominent citizens,
and many private occasions of wining, dining, and
merrymaking allowed the mingling of lawyers, cathedral dignitaries, civic families, county figures, and urban
gentry. (fn. 13) After the abolition of the Midsummer show
the greatest annual attraction was the horse races held
on St. George's Day, which were closely supervised by
the Assembly. (fn. 14) Other outdoor amenities included
archery and bowls, promenading on the city walls (as
enjoyed by Ralph Thoresby and Celia Fiennes), and
gardens in the open spaces on the west side of the
city. (fn. 15)
All those attractions were enhanced in the earlier
18th century. The walls were increasingly used for
recreation by visitors and residents alike after the city
had them repaired and flagged from 1707. They
became a favoured promenade, for example, of the
deputy diocesan registrar Henry Prescott in his declining years. (fn. 16) By the 1720s the city had over 20 inns and
public houses, where Prescott and his friends met for
convivial purposes either as members of clubs or
informally. (fn. 17) Leading establishments included the
White Talbot in Eastgate Street, extensively rebuilt
from the 1710s by its owners, the Talbot dukes and
earls of Shrewsbury, (fn. 18) the ancient Blossoms in Foregate
Street, rebuilt c. 1718, (fn. 19) and the White Bear in Bridge
Street, rebuilt c. 1747. (fn. 20) In the 1740s there were almost
60 public houses and at least as many licensed beersellers. (fn. 21)
From c. 1700 the newly built Exchange had on its
ground floor a coffee house, where newsletters and
gazettes from London were available, (fn. 22) and there was
another on Castle Lane by 1708, perhaps that later
called the Countess. (fn. 1) In the 1750s there was another
coffee house at the Red Dog, on Eastgate Street. (fn. 2) From
the 1710s the city's two or three dancing masters staged
public balls once a year, usually at Christmas, in the
common hall at the Exchange, either with or without
official permission. (fn. 3) By the mid 1740s Booth Mansion
north of Watergate Street also accommodated assembly rooms, which as 'Mr. Eaton's Great Room' gave
space in the 1750s for such diversions as rope dancing,
fire eating, and a learned dog. It closed in 1758. (fn. 4) By
1710 a public cold bath was open at Boughton. (fn. 5)
Chester's principal attractions for outsiders were the
races and the fairs, especially the Midsummer fair,
where entertainments were put on by the 1710s. (fn. 6)
Some county gentry also came in for the assize sessions
held in spring and autumn and from 1760 the theatrical season extended into the period of the assizes. (fn. 7)
Chester in 1660 had few public services, (fn. 8) but from
the 1680s the corporation took more interest in the
city's sanitary condition and appearance, perhaps
aware of their importance to residents and visitors
alike. Detailed arrangements were made for disposing
of rubbish and cleaning the Rows and main streets, (fn. 9) the
city pavior was instructed to keep pavements in good
repair, and citizens were required to hang lights at their
doors. (fn. 10)
The pace of civic improvement picked up in the
1690s with improvements to the water supply (fn. 11) and the
start of work on the Exchange, an intentionally handsome building, coherently designed. (fn. 12) For some time
the Assembly had been controlling encroachments on
the main streets, in an attempt to secure even, uniform
frontages, especially in the Rows. (fn. 13) Street repair and
cleaning had long been the responsibility of householders. In 1712 the macebearer was made liable for
streets alongside the city's own property, (fn. 14) and by the
late 1720s the grand juries responsible for enforcing all
such duties increasingly expected the city's treasurers
to do the repairs. (fn. 15) About 1760 a foot passage was
made at the Northgate, partly to save children from
being run over. (fn. 16) As well as the city streets and the
carriageways of the roads approaching Chester, (fn. 17) the
corporation maintained the Cop, planned in 1706 and
completed in 1710, an embankment which protected
the Roodee from flooding. (fn. 18) Better measures for fire
protection were taken in 1709, (fn. 19) and street lamps were
provided at the Exchange and the Pentice in 1708. (fn. 20)
Such official measures to improve the environment and
the face of the city were, like the earlier traditional
ceremonies and observances, a means of promoting a
sense of civic dignity and pride, and giving Chester an
aspect in keeping with its standing as a cathedral city
and county capital.