ECONOMIC HISTORY
The bay industry, well known for the quality of its products, was vulnerable in
the 18th century to disruption by wars, competition from rival manufacturers, and
the import of cotton cloth. Despite occasional revival the trade declined, and had
ceased by the end of the Georgian period. Diversification, however, and enterprise
by merchants, manufacturers, and shopkeepers, the growth of banking, insurance,
and legal facilities, improved communications, the intermittent presence of a
military garrison, and the attractions of the town's social life, enabled Colchester
to consolidate its role, already established by its markets, fairs, and port, as a centre
of commerce. The establishment of ironfoundries at the turn of the century enabled
it to recover some of its local importance in manufacturing. (fn. 23)
The Decline of the Bay Trade
In 1707 the Dutch governors of the bay corporation introduced bylaws which
stinted the production of bays and limited entry to the corporation to men who
had been apprenticed to baymakers, whereas formerly it had been open to freemen
who had served apprenticeship in any branch of the textile industry. Between 1707
and 1715 only 18 new men were admitted to the bay corporation, while c. 70 died
or left the trade, 4 of them through bankruptcy, so that in 1715 there were 57
baymakers and only 11 of their 27 apprentices were likely to succeed them. (fn. 24) To
reduce the cost of production, a new, lighter bay had been introduced that was
more suitable to some markets and could be woven more cheaply. Some baymakers
revived truck systems of payment and forced weavers to rent houses from them
and to pay 'rawboots' money, the bay hall fines collected by the Dutch corporation
for substandard products. By 1715, although the export of says, bays, serges, and
perpetuanas direct from Colchester to Rotterdam continued, the post-war rise in
exports of Colchester bays to Spain and Portugal through the London factors had
declined. (fn. 25) Contemporary observers attributed the decline of trade to the export
of British wool to France, the introduction of French manufactures into Spain,
and the import of calicoes. (fn. 26)
In 1715 the weavers' resentment erupted into violence to enforce redress of their
grievances. The Dutch bay governors capitulated after an armed mob had broken
open the gaol to release weavers arrested by the mayor, and had threatened to pull
down the bay hall and private houses. The Privy Council, responding belatedly to
the mayor's appeal for help, mediated between weavers and baymakers. It
reinforced anti-truck bylaws proposed by the Dutch bay governors and recommended other measures favourable to the weavers. (fn. 27) The weavers, threatened by
the cheap labour of an excessive number of apprentices and the increasing
employment of people not qualified as weavers by apprenticeship, demanded
restoration of their former freedom to become baymakers. Although the
baymakers and the London factors, who marketed Colchester bays, warned
against the over-production that free entry would cause, parliament in 1716
nullified the restrictive bylaw of 1707, and enabled anyone who had served an
apprenticeship in the woollen industry in Colchester to become a baymaker. (fn. 28)
During the next decade the baymakers had difficulty in maintaining their
corporation. Their rent of the bay hall was abated in 1716 because of bad trade
and two of their number were bankrupt by 1720. In the financial frenzy of that
year a speculative bubble for the more effectual making of Colchester bays was
floated, and the borough and workhouse corporations began a lawsuit to recover
from the Dutch bay governors arrears of rent and the 'rawboots' money paid by
the English, which should have been been passed to the mayor for distribution to
the poor. Trade improved after 1720, when plague halted French competition, but
such booms fuelled demands, made by rioting weavers in 1724, for higher wages
and led to over-production. (fn. 29) In 1727 optimism rose again at the prospect of access
to the Spanish market and the justices confirmed bylaws made by the weavers to
regulate their trade. (fn. 30)
In 1728 the Dutch bay governors dissolved their corporation, abandoning the
privileges granted to their refugee forebears. Two of those privileges, the right to
make bylaws and protection by the privy council from harassment, may have
seemed less secure after the events of 1715, and dissolution, made feasible by the
assimilation of the Dutch into the native population, had economic advantages for
the baymakers. Collectively they paid a 'foreign' fine, although many had acquired
the freedom of the borough. They bore the expense of renting the bay hall, where
they supervised the quality of bays produced by Dutch and English alike, and
collected the bay hall fines known as 'rawboots' money. (fn. 31)
Soon after the outbreak of war with Spain in 1740 two more baymakers, Thomas
Hills and William Sherman, were bankrupt. (fn. 32) After the war trade improved and
optimism rose, (fn. 33) but death and bankruptcy had reduced the number of baymakers
by 1749, when weavers complained that the few who remained took no apprentices,
and had prospered by reducing wages from 15s. 6d. to 12s. 6d. for a bay, which
took two weeks to weave. The weavers wanted to be paid by the bay or by the
week. (fn. 34) Compared with wages of nearly 9s. a week paid to Exeter serge weavers in
1750, the Colchester rate was low, but it helped the baymakers to capture overseas
markets from west country clothiers. (fn. 35) The fly shuttle, invented by John Kay in
1738 when he lived in Colchester and with which one weaver did the work of two,
was not named among the weavers' complaints. (fn. 36)
Portuguese prosperity in the 1750s increased the trade in bays, (fn. 37) and in the 1760s
there were 24 baymakers among voting, resident freemen. (fn. 38) Resistance to innovation, although occasionally menacing, was apparently short lived, (fn. 39) and Colchester
weavers had probably accepted the fly shuttle by 1760, when it was in general
use. (fn. 40) John Baker introduced a method, patented by him in 1769, of making striped
baize. Isaac Boggis's intention to introduce a roughing mill, to replace the hand
method of raising nap on the finished cloth, provoked a threat against him in 1762,
but several such mills had been installed by 1770 and in 1782 manufacturers from
Witney (Oxon.), seeking improved methods of roughing, adopted that of Colchester. (fn. 41) Although the industry received a few new men it seems to have suffered in
the general depression of the 1770s. (fn. 42) Three baymakers, James Robjent a former
mayor, Benjamin Smith a former chamberlain, and Bezaliel Blomfield the younger,
were bankrupt in 1772, (fn. 43) and John Baker, by will proved 1775, instructed his
executors not to carry on his business. (fn. 44)
In 1782 Colchester baymakers, seeking to limit French competition, joined in
opposition to the wool growers' petition to allow the export of British wool to
France. (fn. 45) The preliminary peace treaty with America later that year encouraged
hopes of renewed trade, but by 1788 many families traditionally employed in the
cloth industry had been driven to find other work. The number of weavers who
voted in elections fell from 224 in 1768 to 115 in 1790. (fn. 46) Among surviving
baymakers were Michael Hills, who by 1787 had a manufactory where he employed
weavers who paid rent to him, and his son-in-law Thomas Boggis (d. 1790).
Thomas's brother Isaac (d. 1801) carried on the business, assisted by Peter Devall,
who had bought a bankrupt baymaking business and also worked for Thomas
Boggis. (fn. 47) The outbreak of war with France in 1793 was said to have reduced the
weekly output of Colchester bays from 400 to 160 pieces. As late as 1802, however,
there were signs of defiant optimism for the trade, (fn. 48) but in 1812 only the Mansfields,
the Devalls, and William Argent remained as baymakers and Thomas Hocker, a
former baymaker, had become a yarnmaker. The Mansfields' business ceased soon
afterwards and Argent, whose warehouse was recorded in 1818, was dead by 1822. (fn. 49)
Peter Devall, who concentrated the preparation of yarn in his two mills at Bourne
Pond and Lexden and weaving in his warehouse in Priory Street, extended the
range of his products and continued in business into the 1830s. (fn. 50)
Diversification from the Mid 18th Century
Some redundant spinners and weavers may have found employment in Michael
Boyle's silk and ribbon factory established c. 1790. (fn. 51) A few years after Boyle's death
in 1809 a firm in Wyre Street was producing silks, velvets, and bombazines, and
after the Napoleonic war a co-operative of silk weavers began to produce materials
for the local market. (fn. 52) Stephen Brown & Co. had apparently established silk mills
in St. Peter's Street by 1824, when two men in St. Botolph's parish sought relief
pending employment in the silk trade. In 1827 the overseers of that parish withheld
relief from paupers who refused to send their children to work in the mills, and
in the 1830s the industry employed mostly women and children. (fn. 53)
The clothing industry benefited from the growing demand for fashionable clothes
and for uniforms when the town was garrisoned. In the early 19th century Charles
Keymer, woollen draper, also traded as a tailor employing a foreman, 9 journeymen
tailors, and 2 apprentices; in 1810 Alexander Fordyce Miller, wool merchant,
draper, and the principal tailor in the town, employed c. 40 men mainly making
uniforms for entire regiments. Journeymen moved from one master tailor to
another, and in 1813 their representative successfully negotiated with the masters
collectively for increased wages. The trade seems to have suffered little from the
closure of the barracks; in the 1820s even a small tailoring business had plenty of
work, and in 1832 directories listed 20 tailors in the town. (fn. 54) The wholesale
manufacture of clothing, important in Colchester later in the 19th century,
originated in 1817 when Hyam Hyam, a pawnbroker with a quantity of cloth on
his hands, speculated in ready-made clothing. (fn. 55)
Among non-textile artisans those engaged in the leather and building industries
were probably the most numerous. Leather workers formed the predominant group
throughout the period. Most of them were cordwainers, (fn. 56) who maintained their
own constitution in 1723 and a friendly society in 1785, when they sought to restrict
the trade to apprenticed men. (fn. 57) From 1800 boot- and shoemakers received nearly
a third of the boys apprenticed under the poor law. (fn. 58) Local tanneries may have
produced the dressed calf skins exported from Colchester in 1716, 1729, and 1730. (fn. 59)
A tannery survived in Lexden in the 18th century. (fn. 60) One in St. Peter's parish
seems to have ceased by 1754, but in 1770 Francis Abell, saddler in that parish,
built a new tannery there, (fn. 61) which was acquired by William Swinborne c. 1776.
At about the same time Swinborne acquired Cole's tannery, established by 1760
near East bridge, and he retained both until his death c. 1792. (fn. 62) Edward Capstack,
currier, had the tannery in St. Peter's parish by 1798 and may have had an interest
in the other at East bridge, (fn. 63) but from 1823 John Golding was tanner at East Street
and Edward Goode at Middleborough. They were succeeded c. 1832 by Robert
Dakin at Balkerne Lane and J. C. Eisdell at East Bridge. Eisdell and F. W.
Warmington, tanners, curriers, and leather merchants of Colchester and Bethnal
Green (Mdx.), played an important role in the development of the local shoemaking
industry in the 19th century. (fn. 64)
The building trade thrived during the period as public and private buildings were
improved or rebuilt. Carpenters, masons, and bricklayers added the fashionable
windows, brick fronts, and interior woodwork which distinguished the town houses
of the period. A few builders such as James Deane, Isaac Green, and William
Phillips were locally notable. (fn. 65) Building materials, including bricks, pantiles, galley
tiles, mortar, and wainscot boards, were recorded among imports from Rotterdam
in the early Georgian period. (fn. 66) Brick-earth was available locally and there were
kilns at Mile End and the Hythe. (fn. 67)
Many small industries recorded in Colchester in the period (fn. 68) were found in similar
towns, but oysters and candied eryngo root were specialities for which Colchester
was notable. (fn. 69) There were usually eight or more clock- and watchmakers in the
town during the first half of the 18th century, and c. 375 surviving Colchester
clocks have been recorded. The Hedge family started as clockmakers in 1739 and
ran a factory from 1745 to c. 1778; Joseph Banister (d. 1875), partner and successor
of Nathaniel Hedge (d. 1818), patented an improved escapement for clocks and
watches in 1836. (fn. 70) A long-established kiln making clay tobacco pipes flourished
throughout the period. A cork cutting business, recorded 1793-c. 1902 may have
been the only one in the county. (fn. 71) Seedsmen and gardeners were recorded
throughout the period, providing seeds, plants, and trees for the gardens that were
attached to most town houses. The Cant family's nursery, founded in St. John's
Street in 1765, continued to flourish on various sites in the 20th century. (fn. 72) John
Aldus on East Hill was succeeded by his son John in 1767. Also in St. James's
parish was Thomas Essex (d. 1799), nurseryman and seedsman from 1760 or
earlier, who planted cherry trees in Childwell field in 1770 and enlarged his nursery
in 1781. (fn. 73) John Agnis, who offered pineapple plants for sale at his nursery in East
Street in 1771, survived in 1793, when there were six or more other seedsmen in
the town. (fn. 74)
Some industries arose from Colchester's position as a port and a centre of an
improving agricultural economy. A saltworks had been established at the Hythe
by 1712, when Richard Freshfield acquired it for refining rock salt, imported
mainly from Liverpool, which in 1737 shipped 9,200 bushels to Colchester. (fn. 75) By
1786 Colchester grocers were importing their own salt, probably already refined. (fn. 76)
Between 1798 and 1801 only 34 qr. of salt was carried coastwise from Colchester
compared with 303 qr. from Maldon, and although James Thorn was refining salt
at Colchester c. 1812, the saltworks there closed soon afterwards. (fn. 77)
Most of the watermills that ringed the town were used for fulling at some time
in the Georgian period and as the cloth industry declined they were converted for
grinding seed or grain in competition with c. 12 windmills. (fn. 78) In the early 18th
century malt was exported from Colchester to Rotterdam to supply the Dutch
distilleries; (fn. 79) later in the period local maltsters and brewers established their own
distilleries in Colchester and acquired many local inns. A malting established at
the Hythe by 1706 was bought in 1727 by Richard Freshfield, who had a brewery
in St. Giles's parish by 1735 and acquired a number of inns. (fn. 80) Samuel Todd had
established a distillery near Headgate by 1749, when he bought Second mill,
Lexden Road, with its malting house. (fn. 81) The mill and malting business survived
Todd's bankruptcy and were said in 1785 to be extensive, but the malting and kiln
had fallen into disuse by 1787. (fn. 82) In 1807 the Colchester brewery of Robert and
Samuel Tabor acquired nine public houses within the borough. (fn. 83) Samuel Bawtree
and George Savill bought Hull (or Distillery) mill in 1811 and built a distillery on
the site and a rectifying house in Culver Street. (fn. 84) Thomas Andrews's brewery,
recorded from 1774, passed c. 1815 to his kinsmen, the Cobbold family, who had
maltings at the Hythe. (fn. 85) Cinder ovens recorded at the Hythe in 1773 and 1786
probably provided coke for malting kilns until a gasworks was established in 1817. (fn. 86)
Shipbuilding was carried on at the Hythe throughout the period. Most of the
vessels built there and registered in the port 1779-1822 were smacks, sloops,
cutters, and yawls, of between 10 and 25 tons burthen, but some larger vessels
were built there, including four sloops (67 to 108 tons), three sailing barges (82-93
tons), and a brigantine (104 tons). (fn. 87) In 1790 the Colchester yard built 13 ships,
but in 1791, 1804, and 1805 the numbers were 4, 6, and 5 respectively. (fn. 88) William
Stuttle, shipbuilder at the Hythe from 1790 or earlier, employed 5 shipwrights and
2 apprentices building merchant ships there in 1804. That yard had passed to
Westerby Stuttle by 1818, and may have been acquired soon afterwards by Philip
Sainty who built ships at Colchester from c. 1819 until 1848 or later. (fn. 89)
Considerable quantities of iron and some steel were imported from Sweden in
the 1720s and 1730s by Colchester merchants, principally the aldermen John Blatch
and his political adversary George Gray, plumber and glazier, who kept an iron
warehouse. (fn. 90) Swedish and Russian iron was apparently being imported in 1767
when William Seaber the younger introduced American iron in competition with
it. (fn. 91) Some of the metal was probably used by Colchester craftsmen. Among freemen
voters in 1768 there were 7 whitesmiths, 4 cutlers, and an ironmonger. (fn. 92) There
were at least as many in the 1780s and it is likely that whitesmiths and ironmongers
were making castings for domestic ironware and the building industry before
foundries were established. The later ironfounders Joseph Wallis, Richard Coleman, and William Dearn were formerly described as whitesmiths or ironmongers. (fn. 93)
Access to raw materials through the port and to limekilns and coke ovens at the
Hythe, the demands of the building industry and agriculture, and the presence of
skilled metalworkers made Colchester a suitable site for ironfoundries at the end
of the century. (fn. 94) In 1792 Joseph Wallis built a foundry on Winnock's charity land
at the west end of High Street as an adjunct to his ironmongery shop. (fn. 95) Richard
Coleman, whitesmith, who probably had a business attached to his house in Wyre
Street from 1802, had established a foundry at the Hythe by 1807, when he made
railings for All Saints' church. Surviving examples of Coleman's ironwork include
the gates of his own foundry (fn. 96) and those at St. Martin's church, Spring House,
Lexden, and Trinity House, Wivenhoe. Wallis's foundry and shop were favourably
situated to attract trade from farmers attending the market, and his products also
included 8 cast iron columns for the office of the Essex & Suffolk Equitable Insurance
Society, built on the site of the old corn exchange in 1819, and 26 castings of coats of
arms in Essex churches. (fn. 97) Wallis (d. 1827) and Coleman (d. 1828) were succeeded
by their sons Charles and Richard, who formed a short-lived partnership soon
afterwards, leaving the Hythe and extending the High Street premises. By 1834
Coleman on his own had established the Abbeygate works. (fn. 98) William Dearn,
nailmaker, who had settled in Colchester by 1816, was also an ironmonger and
brazier by 1826. He built a house in St. Botolph's Street c. 1832 and later added
a foundry to his business there. (fn. 99) John Oakes, engineer, had a foundry in the 1830s. (fn. 1)
Engine building and general engineering, for which Colchester and West Ham
were the two main centres in Essex in the 19th century, developed after the
establishment of the early foundries. A millwright's and engineering business was
started c. 1810 by Mr. Sansom at Greenstead. (fn. 2)
External Trade
Colchester was well placed as a centre of internal and external trade to take
advantage of the consumer revolution of the 18th century. (fn. 3) It was linked to English
and Continental ports by sea and to London and Harwich by road also. In the
early 19th century a Colchester grocer, James Lovett, bought goods not only from
suppliers in London, the home counties, and East Anglia, but also from Cheshire,
Lancashire, Leicestershire, Staffordshire, and Yorkshire. (fn. 4) Fairs were held five
times a year between April and October. The popularity of the St. Dennis's or
October fair, said to be waning in 1748, (fn. 5) suffered further when cattle sales were
stopped because of disease between 1748 and 1755. (fn. 6) In 1769, however, the
midsummer fair was the largest known for 20 years, (fn. 7) and goods were brought from
London for sale at the October fair, by both London and Colchester tradesmen. (fn. 8)
The April fair had ceased by 1803, but the other four survived at the end of the
Georgian period and the town's markets continued to draw cereals, meat, and
vegetables from the countryside and fish from the sea. (fn. 9)
The river Colne was navigable to large ships only as far as Wivenhoe, three miles
below the Hythe, but hoys and lighters could reach the quays and a customs house
there. (fn. 10) Merchants such as John Blatch, George Gray, Henry Walker, John Savill,
Daniel Blyth, and John Baker and the families of Freshfield, Kendall, Rogers, and
Tabor flourished throughout the period, usually dealing in more than one
commodity. (fn. 11) The goods passing through the port in the early Georgian period
were probably similar to those listed in 1669 as subject to tolls and other charges, (fn. 12)
but with significant additions among imports. They included Holland linen, Silesia
lawns, tea tables, close stools, bricks, and paper. The overseas exports were mainly
bays, says, serges, and skins to Rotterdam and oysters to Dieppe and Dunkirk. In
the 1720s the principal imports were iron, steel, and timber from Sweden and
Norway and pantiles and brandy from Rotterdam.
Coastal shipping carried coal from Sunderland and Newcastle, rock salt from
Liverpool, fuller's earth from Rochester; from London came raw wool, raw and
tanned skins, foreign linen, spices, lemons, oranges, snuff, and tobacco. Bays were
the main commodity sent coastwise to London, with some potash, seeds, and
re-exported Holland linen. (fn. 13) Legitimate trade with the Continent was vulnerable
during the wars with France. In the 1740s the export of bays was said to be
hampered by the lack of proper convoys to protect ships from enemy attack, (fn. 14)
although contraband traffic in tea, wine, brandy, and coffee continued. (fn. 15)
Trade recovered between the wars and in 1754 the wares of a Colchester
merchant, John Rogers, included Liverpool, Bow, and foreign china, Staffordshire
stoneware, Dutch stoneware and tiles, and India fans. (fn. 16) Coastwise trade continued
during the 1780s but not without risk; in 1781 a cargo of rock salt bound for
Colchester from Liverpool was captured by a French privateer off Beachy Head. (fn. 17)
Exports of bread grains were disrupted during food crises. (fn. 18) Wheat, barley, and
malt were shipped to London, Rochester, Southampton, and Berwick-on-Tweed.
Cereals and malt exported from Colchester between 1780 and 1786 amounted to
152,681 qr. of wheat, 77,135 qr. of barley, and 70,571 qr. of malt, compared with
133,946 qr., 64,658 qr., and 218,314 qr. respectively from Harwich. (fn. 19) In 1800 there
belonged to the port 156 vessels, totalling 4,663 tons and employing 434 men,
compared with 137 vessels, 7,015 tons, and 814 men belonging to Harwich. (fn. 20) In
terms of the tonnage of coastwise shipping Colchester rose in rank among 79
English ports, London excepted, from 31st to 22nd place between 1737 and 1751. (fn. 21)
Estimated by tonnage of shipping owned, Colchester held fourth place among the
five major East Anglian ports in 1709. All those ports increased their tonnage
between 1709 and 1792, but by 1751 Colchester had lost rank to Ipswich. (fn. 22) The
river channel was apparently impeded by shoals and silt by 1818, when ship owners
and masters of Colchester and Maldon asked for a buoy on the southern extremity
of the Colne bar and for the appointment of river and harbour pilots. Trinity House
instituted a pilotage service in 1819, (fn. 23) but no major improvement was made to the
channel in the Georgian period. (fn. 24) Between 1817 and 1820 coal imports rose from
22,439 chaldrons to 25,383 chaldrons, the increase being ascribed partly to the lack
of wood for fuel. (fn. 25) By 1832 there were 8 or more coal merchants trading from the
Hythe. (fn. 26)
Smuggling of wine and spirits from the Continent, and of tea, spices, china, and
textiles from the Far East flourished along the Essex coast, as elsewhere, in the
period. (fn. 27) Its effect on Colchester's economy and the extent to which local merchants
and tradesmen dealt in contraband goods are not known. In 1717 attached to the
custom house at the Hythe were a collector, a surveyor, a landwaiter, a searcher,
two tidesmen, another searcher at Wivenhoe, two boatmen at Brightlingsea, and a
boatman at Mersea Island, the collector's jurisdiction being co-extensive with the
port of Colchester. The revenue vessel, based at Wivenhoe, was merely a smack
in the 1720s and 1730s. It was replaced c. 1740 by a sloop, which was still in service
in 1760, but had itself been replaced by a cutter by 1770. The number of seamen,
under a commander and a mate, was increased from 9 and a boy in 1730 to 11 by
1742, and 24 and a boy by 1790. (fn. 28) Appointment to customs posts was in the Rebow
family's patronage for many years. (fn. 29) The annual value of contraband goods seized
within the port of Colchester usually ranged between £800 and £1,000, but in
1722 it amounted to £1,347 and in 1770 to £2,350.
Rowing boats and coasters were the most common smuggling craft taken, but in
1745 an armed cutter was seized. (fn. 30) Goods seized by the revenue men were sold at
the custom house at the Hythe, and boats were broken up in local shipyards. (fn. 31)
Among Colchester men identified as smugglers were Mason, a glazier (fl. 1715),
John and Edward Harvey and John Johnson, indicted in 1726, Henry Hubbard
taken in 1730, John Skinner, farmer at Old Heath who was hanged in 1746 for
killing his servant, and Henry Sadler taken in 1770. A Colchester gang was active
in 1729; similar gangs kidnapped a customs officer in 1744, retrieved contraband
tea from the custom house at the Hythe in 1748, attacked a revenue sloop carrying
a cargo of tea in 1778, and captured the sloop when it was an unmanned in 1781. (fn. 32)
In 1779 tradesmen of Colchester and neighbouring parishes were among petitioners
to parliament for relief from smuggling, (fn. 33) and the Twining family, tea traders in
London and Colchester, constantly urged governments to reduce the punitive tax
on tea to make smuggling less profitable. (fn. 34)
Retail Trade
The introduction in 1715 of a fine on shopkeepers who were not freemen, its
enforcement by imprisonment in 1725, and the assessment of 88 'foreign'
shopkeepers in 1735 suggest that the number of shops was growing early in the
period. (fn. 35) By 1730 the intrusion of hawkers and pedlars was seen as a threat to
resident traders and shopkeepers. (fn. 36) In 1764, when restrictions on Sunday trading
were invoked after a lapse of several years, a walking draper from Epping was
among those indicted. (fn. 37) The incursion of dealers into the main streets of the town,
deplored by Philip Morant, (fn. 38) proceeded throughout the period as houses and
warehouses, some formerly associated with the bay industry, (fn. 39) were acquired by
merchants, tradesmen, and shopkeepers. (fn. 40)
Besides traditional craftsmen selling their own wares, there were shopkeepers
who bought goods from both local and London warehouses, so that a wide range
of food, wine, clothing, furniture, hardware, textiles, watches, clocks, and trinkets
could be bought in the town as well as books, paper, prints, and music. (fn. 41)
Advertisements stressed connexions with London fashion or advantage over
London prices. (fn. 42) Fashionable china and glass were sold to the public direct from
warehouses in the town; one on North Hill offered Liverpool ware in 1742; in the
1750s William Hassells, a Staffordshire potter, traded twice a week from his
warehouse in Wyre Street, and in 1791 Christopher Potter advertised French china
from his new Paris factory. (fn. 43) In 1788 the tax on retail shops in the town, valued
above £5 and excluding those selling only bread, flour, meal or bran, (fn. 44) amounted
to £23 15s. 9d. The largest sums were raised in the parishes of St. Runwald (£8
3s. 4d.), St. Peter (£6 10s. 1d.), and St. Nicholas (£5 2s. 8d.).
The victualling trade in Colchester sometimes provided a second line of business
for other tradesmen and an opportunity for redundant clothworkers. (fn. 45) Many inns
and public houses flourished in the town. The alehousekeepers' threat to withhold
the annual fine of 10s., imposed on non-freemen under a bylaw of 1715, and their
subsequent action in King's Bench led to the borough justices being fined for
misdemeanour in 1740. (fn. 46) With those of other towns they complained at the billeting
of soldiers and their horses. (fn. 47) The building of infantry barracks in 1794 only partly
relieved the problems of billeting, and stables were added to the barracks only in
1800. (fn. 48) The large numbers of soldiers in the town brought custom to many inns,
whose names proclaimed their military connexions. A number of inns were staging
posts, and kept horses and vehicles for hire. The principal inns were more than
victualling houses; they provided rooms for political clubs, auctioneers, travelling
salesmen, and entertainers. (fn. 49)
Banking and Insurance
Capital for business improvements was usually raised locally by mortgaging real
property, and short-term circulating capital helped to prime the local economy. (fn. 50)
In the earlier 18th century local merchants provided some banking services. Among
them were Charles Whaley, wine merchant, and John Mills, tea dealer, whose
activities gave rise to two rival banks. Mills, who was negotiating his customers'
bills and notes by 1740, (fn. 51) opened a tea warehouse in High Street in association
with his cousins Richard and John Twining of London in 1766, and in 1787 opened
the Colchester and Essex bank in partnership with them. Mills, entitled to all
profits and subject to all losses, indemnified the Twinings in every respect. The
partnership was dissolved in 1797, but the bank survived in the hands of Mills's
son, John Fletcher Mills, and John Bawtree. (fn. 52) Charles Whaley was a principal
creditor of three Colchester bankrupts between 1737 and 1743. (fn. 53) The Whaley
family joined with the Crickitts in a bank established in High Street by 1774. (fn. 54)
George Round joined the firm in 1790. When Crickitt's Chelmsford bank stopped
payment in the bank panic of 1825, the Round family acted swiftly to restore
confidence and Crickitt withdrew from the firm. (fn. 55) The Colchester bank for savings
was instituted in 1817 for the deposit of small sums which were invested by trustees
drawn from the local gentry, clergy, and businessmen of the town. (fn. 56)
The incidence of bankruptcy throughout the period reflects the vulnerability of
the textile industry and the victualling trades, but also suggests confidence and
expansion of business activity in the town. Among 43 Colchester men against whom
bankruptcy proceedings were initiated in the period 1700-1800 there were 8
baymakers and 7 vintners or innholders; two thirds of the failures occurred after
1750. Failed tradesmen were usually indebted to other Colchester tradesmen or
merchants, suppliers in London and Suffolk, or local gentry who had provided
loans. Debts owed to creditors in remoter provinces include those of two
woolcombers to a Leicestershire gentleman, probably for wool, in 1719 and 1722,
and of a 'chapman' to a Huddersfield clothier in 1725. (fn. 57)
The Essex Militia Insurance Office was established in 1762 by William Seaber
the elder, draper turned wine merchant, in partnership with William Keymer,
bookseller, to insure men liable for service in the militia. (fn. 58) The Essex Equitable
Insurance Society, founded in 1802 at the instigation of the banker John Bawtree,
was among the earliest provincial fire insurance companies started in reaction to
and independent of the cartel formed by the old established London companies.
Its 24 directors, drawn equally from Colchester and the county, acquired a lease
of the corn exchange in 1803, bought its first fire engine in 1812, in 1819 built an
office on the site of the exchange, and in 1820 promoted the Essex Life Insurance
Society. (fn. 59)
Colchester's economy responded quickly to some of the national financial crises
of the 18th century. The vehemence of a petition to parliament from the corporation
and inhabitants following the South Sea Bubble in 1720 suggests that many
Colchester people suffered from the collapse, which probably caused the unusually
high number of six bankruptcy cases initiated in 1720-1. (fn. 60) The frequent elections
for parliament and borough offices required generous spending by the candidates
which profited mainly the victualling trades, but occasionally contributed to the
bankruptcy of candidates and their supporters. In the crisis year of 1772 the
London bank in which the unsuccessful parliamentary candidate, Alexander
Fordyce, was partner, failed. Bezaliel Blomfield, one of three baymakers brought
to bankruptcy that year had supported Fordyce; he and others may have suffered
financially from the involvement. (fn. 61) The failure of Daniel Whittle Harvey in the
parliamentary election of 1815 (fn. 62) contributed to the bankruptcy of Henry Thorn,
silversmith turned rag merchant, who had bought Battleswick manor. (fn. 63)
The Poor
The vicissitudes of the bay industry immediately affected weavers working at
home on a single loom and many were driven to seek poor relief. (fn. 64) By so doing
they forfeited their right to vote as freemen, so that their declining numbers cannot
be estimated from poll books, but 12 men identified as weavers in 1788 were
recorded in other trades in 1812. (fn. 65) Some baymakers, cardmakers, and multi-loom
weavers survived by acquiring real estate, taking up a secondary occupation,
obtaining paid offices, or sending their sons into other trades or to other towns. In
the 1730s John Skingsley was baymaker and distiller, Peter Cresswell was weaver
and victualler, and Joseph Duffield was cardmaker and coal merchant; Ellis Clarke
on his death in 1723 owned 8 tenements, including 2 inns. The Triggs family
turned from weaving and woolcombing to innkeeping between 1768 and 1772;
some members of the Shillito family survived as cardmakers and were appointed
masters of the house of correction in 1744 and 1757. (fn. 66) Unemployed weavers and
the old were usually the majority among recipients of parish poor relief, but
Colchester did not bear the whole cost of recession in the trade for many spinners
employed by baymakers lived beyond the borough and liberties. (fn. 67)
Three almshouses and a number of bread charities were founded to ease the plight
of the old and the poor; (fn. 68) when war or bad harvests made food scarce and raised
prices, private charity supplemented parish doles with immediate gifts of food. An
ox was given to feed the poor in 1771 and in 1795 a subscription raised £700 to
provide 4,000 food tickets. (fn. 69) The corporation, with no direct role in poor relief,
reiterated statutory controls on bread and on weights and measures. (fn. 70)
Protests by and on behalf of the poor occasionally erupted into riot. In 1740
rioters threatening to stop wagons laden with corn from reaching the Hythe for
shipment were prevented by a party of dragoons, and the justices appealed to
parliament to restrict the export of grain. (fn. 71) In 1766 the mayor apparently dealt
successfully with a threat of violence to enforce price-fixing and the borough's
M.P.s promised to support prohibition of corn exports and local efforts to relieve
the poor. (fn. 72) In 1772 rioters stopped farmers' carts and for a week enforced the sale
of meat, flour, and wheat below market prices, (fn. 73) and James Ashwell, a prominent
grocer, received a letter threatening farmers, millers, shopkeepers, and butchers
in general and his own life in particular. (fn. 74) The corporation petitioned parliament
for the free import of grain and other provisions, and the mayor promised to protect
carts coming into the town. (fn. 75) The justices sentenced thieves of food or livestock
to transportation. (fn. 76) When, in July 1789, as revolution grew in France, a mob seized
a wagon of wheat, Francis Smythies, town clerk, rescued it and conducted it to
the Hythe. The dragoons, summoned in case of further disturbance, arrived in the
town soon afterwards. (fn. 77) During a shortage of flour in 1795 a meeting of the
principal inhabitants recommended methods of economy in the use of flour and
potatoes and raised a subscription for relief. (fn. 78) In the barracks the bread ration was
reduced and soldiers were allowed to seek employment in the harvest fields. (fn. 79)
Protesters at the turn of the century claimed that the poor were starving to death
and that a man had no choice but to steal or abandon his family. To the rising cost
of poor relief (fn. 80) was added, in wartime, the maintenance of militia men and their
families, which in 1797 and 1800 amounted to a 6d. rate. Further rates were raised
to provide statutory recruits to the army and navy. (fn. 81) Supplying the garrison in
time of war brought prosperity to farmers, market gardeners, and shopkeepers,
some of whom suffered a severe reverse of fortune when the barracks were
demolished at the end of the Napoleonic War. (fn. 82) Shipments of corn and wool
through the port declined from 81,442 qr. and 3,959 cwt. respectively in 1817 to
54,463 qr. and 2,146 cwt. in 1820. A shortage of corn to ship to London caused
one carrier, Charles Parker, to lay up two of his five ships in 1820. By 1821
Colchester banks restricted credit as the price of wheat fell; many farmers who had
started business with high wartime prices on borrowed capital were ruined and
Parker was bankrupt in 1822. The shortage of cash and credit among farmers
affected the traders with whom they customarily dealt. In 1821 John Metcalf,
woollen draper, estimated that his trade had declined by more than a third; he had
plenty of wool to sell but few customers for his cloth. John Rouse, ironmonger,
claimed that his trade in agricultural tools had declined and that blacksmiths and
wheelwrights to whom farmers owed money were consequently in debt to him. (fn. 83)
The Professions
Many professional men were attracted to Colchester. The existence of 12 churches
in Colchester, although most of their livings were poor, ensured the presence in
the town of a number of clergymen. Lawyers and doctors established practices in
Colchester. Attorneys were prominent throughout the period in politics and public
affairs, especially in the disputes about the borough's charter, and served the
borough's court of quarter sessions. (fn. 84) Attorneys also served as town clerks and on
navigation, improvement, and bankruptcy commissions. (fn. 85) In private practice they
were investment brokers, conveyancers, and landowners' stewards and agents. (fn. 86)
Among them were Charles Gray, attorney in the quarter sessions court in 1719
and later M.P., (fn. 87) Samuel Ennew (d. 1795), town clerk, recorder, and clerk of the
peace for the county, William Mayhew (d. 1764), campaigner for the recovery of
the borough charter, Francis Smythies (d. 1798), controversial town clerk and
leader of a Tory faction, and Smythies's more dignified son of the same name, who
as town clerk guided the old corporation in its last years. (fn. 88) Apothecaries, physicians,
and surgeons were recorded in the town throughout the period. They were
appointed to the gaol and, on a casual basis, attended and occasionally inoculated
the poor in parish workhouses. (fn. 89) In 1779 seven of the 19 members of the Colchester
Medical Society lived in the borough. (fn. 90) Directories listed 8 medical men in 1793
and 11 in 1832, (fn. 91) by which time the Essex and Colchester hospital had been
established, with an honorary staff of two physicans, three surgeons, and a salaried
apothecary or house surgeon. (fn. 92)
Colchester's maritime interest stimulated the teaching of mathematics and
navigation, especially in nonconformist boys' schools, and produced a number of
land surveyors and mapmakers. The schoolmasters William Cole, John, Joseph,
and Willam Kendall, J. Nelson, and Hayward Rush were among the nine or so
Colchester land surveyors and map makers active in the late 18th and early 19th
century, whose work is known. (fn. 93) Cole's son-in-law Robert Hale, formerly a baker,
became a land surveyor and mapmaker; his grandson, William Hale (1797-1870),
who patented an hydrodynamic method of ship propulsion in 1827, was commemorated as a pioneer of rocket propulsion by the naming of Hale's crater on the
moon in 1970. (fn. 94)