CHARITIES FOR THE POOR. (fn. 87)
A hospital,
mentioned in 1568 (fn. 88) and again in 1605, (fn. 89) apparently
had no connexion with later alms-houses. The
unused balances of five charities were combined in
1805 to purchase £700 stock, the income of which
was distributed in bread to the poor. The charities,
however, continued to be administered separately
until 1888, when seven of the more important were
consolidated as the Enfield parochial charities, the
bulk of whose income was to provide pensions for
unrelieved parishioners. In 1904 £800 stock was
appropriated for education and in 1905 a further
18 charities (fn. 90) were included among the Enfield
parochial charities. In 1968 the income of the
combined charities was £11,779 and the expenditure
£12,484, of which £6,226 was spent on pensions,
grants, and fuel, £298 on the alms-houses, and
£3,960 on maintaining the market-place and other
properties, the rents and profits from which
accounted for most of the income. There was a
balance in hand of £16,627.
The first alms-houses were built in Turkey Street
by Anne Crowe, who, by will dated 1763, left £500
stock in trust to repair them and to buy coal for the
inmates. A further £200 stock was bequeathed by
the Revd. C. W. Bollaerts, by will proved 1863. The
modern alms-houses, four two-roomed apartments
in a red-brick single-storeyed range with a steeplypitched roof and tall chimneys, were built at the
expense of H. C. B. Bowles of Myddelton House in
1893, partly on land given by him. In 1960 the
charity had an income of no more than £18 a year
and by a Scheme of 1961 it became one of the
Enfield parochial charities.
Charles Wright in 1848 settled alms-houses which
he had built at Enfield Highway in trust for the
benefit of six aged widows who had lived for at least
a year at Enfield Wash, Enfield Highway, Green
Street, South Street, or Ponders End. (fn. 91) He also gave
a rent-charge on houses in the parish of St. Luke,
Old Street, to provide each widow with £10 a year
and a ton of coal at Christmas. The charity became
one of the Enfield parochial charities in 1905 and the
property in St. Luke's parish had been sold for
investment by 1964. Wright's alms-houses consisted
of a plain brick building, with a central pediment
dated 1847, in 1972.
In 1516 the parish bought a house called Prounces,
probably that occupied by John Prouns in 1399,
with its adjacent grounds. (fn. 92) Enfield grammar school
was built next to the house soon after 1586 (fn. 93) and in
1623, when the estate was settled in trust, the house
was reserved as a schoolmaster's residence. The rest
of the property was leased out and the rents were
applied for unspecified charitable purposes within
the parish. The King's Head inn, south of the school,
was later built on ground belonging to the charity
and in 1793 a building called the old coffee house,
later the church school of industry, occupied the site
of Prounces, another house having been found for
the schoolmaster. The charity was allotted 2 a. on
Enfield Chase in 1806, under the Inclosure Act of
1801. The school and the schoolmaster's house were
included in a Scheme governing the grammar school
in 1874, while the remaining endowments, consisting
of the King's Head and 2 a. adjoining it with an
annual income of £63, were transferred in 1888 to
the Enfield parochial charities.
By deed of 1558 £6 13s. 4d. a year from land called
Poynetts at South Benfleet and Hadleigh (Essex),
formerly the endowment of a chantry in Enfield
parish church, (fn. 94) was set aside for the schoolmaster at
Enfield, the remaining profits being devoted to the
poor. (fn. 95) The land was conveyed to trustees in 1621,
when the schoolmaster's salary was raised to £20.
By the early 19th century the profits seem to have
been devoted entirely to the upkeep of the grammar
school, although they were administered as part of a
general fund which combined the incomes of several
other charities for the poor, a procedure which led to
much confusion. (fn. 96) There is no evidence that the
income from Poynetts was subsequently devoted to
the poor. In 1816 it was invested in land.
Thomas Wilson of London, brewer, by will dated
1590, left the profits of three houses in Whitechapel
as pensions to six poor men of Enfield. In 1614 the
property was settled in trust. One of the houses was
sold in 1803 for £1,260 and the purchase money
invested in stock. In 1888, when the charity became
one of the Enfield parochial charities, its annual
income was £210 from the rents of nos. 2-3
Whitechapel High Street and £68 from £2,281
stock. The remaining houses were sold in 1960.
Jasper Nicholl left £50 to the poor of Enfield, with
which his executors bought the Bull and Bell at
Horsepool Stones, together with 3 a. in Long and
East fields in 1612. The estate was farmed for £3 a
year and the lease bought by the parish in 1620. In
1823 the annual income was £32, of which £25 was
used to relieve two aged women and to provide
bread. In 1861 the land was leased for building and
Jasper Road was constructed. In 1888, when the
charity became one of the Enfield parochial charities,
its annual income was £60, derived mainly from
rents in Jasper Road. Some of the remaining land
was sold to Enfield U.D.C. in 1913.
When Enfield market was established in 1618 (fn. 97)
the profits were reserved for the poor. In 1632 the
parish purchased a building called the Vine at
Enfield Green as a market-house, the rents of which
swelled the income of the charity. The house was
later replaced by a market cross. (fn. 98) Under the
inclosure award of 1806 3 a. on the former Chase
was allotted to the market-place charity, whose
income was combined with that of Prounce's charity
and paid before 1814 to the master of Enfield
grammar school. In 1823, however, £20 of the two
charities' total income of £36 was being paid as a
pension to a widow; £12 came from the marketplace charity and consisted of the rents of five houses
on the western side of the market-place. The houses
were demolished after 1847 (fn. 99) and in 1888, when the
charity became one of the Enfield parochial charities,
its annual income was £9 10s., from market tolls and
dues and the rent of the Chase allotment. By the
mid 20th century the parochial charities were
drawing much of their income from the market,
including £912 in 1968 for the rents of stalls and
another large sum from car-parking fees in the
market-place.
John David, by will dated 1620, devised the house
later known as the Greyhound inn, on the east side
of Enfield Green (afterwards the market-place), for
four poor widows. Five houses were built north of
the Greyhound and were replaced soon after 1788
by a terrace. The charity was allotted 4 a. on the
Chase in 1806 and the annual income was £41 in
1823. The charity became one of the Enfield
parochial charities in 1888, when the income was
£180. The Greyhound, which had long ceased to be
an inn, was leased in 1893 to the London and
Provincial Bank, which built a bank on its site in
1899 and paid a ground rent of £120 per annum to
the parochial charities.
James I was said to have given £200 to Enfield as
compensation for inclosing part of the Chase within
Theobalds Park. With that sum the parishioners
bought 30 a. called Marshes and Devizes at North
Mimms (Herts.), which were settled in trust in 1622,
and devoted the profits to any general use concerning
Enfield or its poor. The estate was sold under an Act
of 1808 (fn. 1) for £1,740, which was invested in stock.
In 1816 the trustees, together with those of Poynett's
charity, purchased the 184-acre Edwards Hall estate
at Eastwood (Essex), of which 95 a. south of the road
from Rayleigh to Southend were considered as the
endowment of King James's charity and the rest as
that of Poynett's charity. (fn. 2) The annual rent of the
southern part of the estate amounted to £40 in 1888,
when King James's charity became one of the
Enfield parochial charities. The property, later
known as Lower Edwards Hall farm, was sold in
1922 and the purchase money, £3,562, invested in
stock.
George Cock of St. James's, Clerkenwell, by will
dated 1635, left £30 from which the income was to
buy bread for the poor. A house and close at Clay
Hill were purchased and in 1806 the charity was
allotted 1 a. out of the former Chase. In 1829 the
premises at Clay Hill were exchanged for a building
used as the vestry clerk's office at Enfield Town and
in 1905, when the charity became one of the Enfield
parochial charities, the rents from the building
accounted for most of the annual income of £67.
William Billings, by will dated 1659, gave a rentcharge of £1 on lands in Enfield and a house at Clay
Hill for clothing poor children. By will dated 1666
Ann Osborne of St. Saviour's, Southwark, gave the
parish of Enfield £100 to buy lands, which would
provide an income for poor widows and the
education of one or more orphans. In 1672 her
bequest was used to purchase the lands subject to
the rent-charge of £1 under Billings's will. The
combined charity was awarded 3 a. on the Chase
under the award of 1806 but the rest of the lands
were sold in 1816 and 1888 and the proceeds
invested in stock. In 1888, when the charity became
one of the Enfield parochial charities, its income was
£29. The allotment from the Chase, fronting Lower
Gordon Road, was exchanged in 1886 for an
adjoining plot, which was sold for £2,500 in 1897,
when the proceeds were invested.
Elizabeth Anne Eaton, by will dated 1806, gave
her estate at Enfield to be divided between six poor
widows. Since the will was imperfect and in default
of heirs, the property escheated to the lords of the
manors of Enfield and Worcesters. James Meyer,
lord of Worcesters, sold the 14 a. in his manor,
invested the proceeds together with £390 from his
own funds in £2,000 stock, and appointed trustees
to divide the income among the six widows. By a
Scheme of 1955 the charity, whose annual income
was £60, was included with the Enfield parochial
charities.
Thomas Wroth, (fn. 3) after a decision of the duchy of
Lancaster court in 1547, gave a rent-charge of
£1 7s. 6d. (fn. 4) for unspecified charitable purposes, as
compensation for inclosing 55 a. in Stonards field.
The money was later spent on bread for the poor.
Robert Rampston, by will dated 1585, gave a rentcharge of £2 on his lands, later known as Strood
Hall farm, in Little Canfield, Little Easton, and
Great Dunmow (Essex), for the relief of the poor.
William Smith, by will dated 1592, gave a rentcharge of £4 on his lands in Enfield for distribution
among the poor. John Deycrowe, by will dated 1627,
gave a rent-charge of £4 on property in Green Street
for the relief of the poor. The rent-charge was
redeemed c. 1895 and the proceeds were invested in
stock. Henry Loft, by will dated 1631, gave rentcharges of £12 for the relief of six poor widows,
£4 for clothing the poor, and £4 for a lecturer at the
parish church, (fn. 5) charged upon his lands in Enfield
and Chigwell (Essex). Thomas Pigot, by will dated
1681, gave a rent-charge of 10s. on his property in
Enfield to provide bread for the poor of Ponders
End. The charity was lost by 1823. Richard Darby,
by will dated 1735, gave £100 to be distributed
among the poor of Ponders End. In 1776 the
accumulated funds were invested in £333 stock,
which in 1905 produced £8 a year. Mary Nicholl,
by will dated 1751, gave the interest on £50 to buy
bread for the poor. In 1905 the income of the charity
was £1 from £53 stock. Frederick Maurer, by will
dated 1772, gave £50 to the poor. Stock worth £57
was bought and in 1813 augmented by a further
£43 stock purchased from the accumulated balances
of other charities administered by the vicar and
churchwardens. In 1905 the charity had an income
of £2 10s.
When the Chase was divided under the Act of
1777, Enfield parish was allotted 200 a. west of
Chase Side, which it inclosed and leased out in aid
of the land tax and poor-rates. After half had been
sold to redeem land tax in 1800 the remainder, called
the Hundred Acres, continued to be administered by
the churchwardens as trustees. Its rents supplemented the poor-rates until it was gradually sold
during the 20th century, when the proceeds were
invested in stock which was worth £131,324 in 1962.
The annual income was c. £6,000 in 1970, when,
following the formation of Enfield L.B., it was
allowed to accumulate pending a decision of the
Charity Commissioners. (fn. 6) Proceeds from the sale of
timber on the Enfield allotment of the Chase also
supplemented the poor-rates; by 1801 £2,668 had
been raised and invested (fn. 7) and in 1895 the parish
derived an annual income of £416 from £15,132
stock. (fn. 8)
Joseph Ellsom, by will dated 1797, gave the
interest on £200 to two poor widows or spinsters
over the age of 60. The residue of his estate, which
amounted to £313, was also invested and the
proceeds were devoted to the relief of two more
widows. In 1905 the income of the charity was £16,
derived from £640 stock. Thomas Dickason, by will
dated 1813, gave the interest on £200 to the poor,
with preference to the widows of householders. In
1905 the income of the charity was £7 from £285
stock. Frances Claxton, by will dated 1817, gave
£333 stock for the upkeep of her grave, with the
residue for the relief of a widow aged at least 60.
In 1905 the income of the charity was £8. John
Francis Mesturas, by will dated 1817, gave £50 to
the poor. In 1905 the income of the charity was £1
from £50 stock. Avice Kelham (d. 1841), by will
dated 1829, gave the interest on £1,000 stock to
provide coal for aged widows. In 1905 the income of
the charity was £25. Ann Gough, by codicil dated
1830, gave £200 to the poor. The sum was invested
in £220 stock, which produced £5 10s. a year in
1905. Thomas Weston gave money at an unknown
date in the 19th century, the income from which was
to augment Thomas Dickason's gift. In 1905 the
income of 9s. 8d. was derived from £20 stock.
Joseph Smith, by will proved 1870, left the
proceeds from the sale of his pictures and other
effects for the benefit of two poor communicants of
Enfield parish church, two of Enfield Baptist chapel,
and two of the Congregational church in Baker
Street. The bequest did not take effect until the
death of Smith's niece in 1905. In 1967 the income
of the charity, which was not administered by the
Enfield parochial charities, was £4 from £71 stock.
William Clark, by will proved 1881, left money to
buy clothing for poor widows. His charity became
one of the Enfield parochial charities under a Scheme
of 1929. In 1960 the income was £16 from £625
stock. Georgiana Hannah Twells, by will proved
1899, gave the interest on £1,000 for clothes and
blankets for the poor of the ecclesiastical district of
St. Mary Magdalene each winter. The charity, which
remained separate, in 1966 had an income of £25,
derived from £1,060 stock. James Foote Clunie,
by will proved 1910, gave his house, Handsworth
Lodge, London Road, to be sold on the death of his
wife to provide coal and general relief for the poor.
In 1960 the income of the charity, which was
administered by the Enfield parochial charities, was
£8 from £279 stock. Eliza Peel, by will proved 1911,
gave the interest on £100 to maintain her family's
graves, with the surplus to provide clothing for four
widows. The charity, which was not one of the
Enfield parochial charities, had an income in 1966
of £4 from £124 stock.