54. THE HOSPITAL OF ST. JOHN, WINCHELSEA
Probably this was the oldest and most important of the three hospitals at Winchelsea, as
certain rents were assigned to it from time immemorial from the issues of Great Yarmouth,
John de Romeney, as attorney of the brethren
and sisters of the hospital of St. John of Winchelsea, in the time of Edward I receiving
31s. 6d. from this source. (fn. 1) The survey of
1292 mentions the house of St. John in the
thirty-fourth 'quarter' considerably nearer the
business part of the town than were the other
two hospitals. Its lands, granted to the corporation in 1586, amounted to 10 acres. (fn. 2) It was
under the control of the mayor, who had to
visit it once a year, and had power to remove
any objectionable inmate, and, with the consent
of the jurats, might admit any poor man or
woman who had been 'in good love and fame
all their time.' (fn. 3) The Custumal (fn. 4) drawn up
in 1557 suggests that this house and that of
St. Bartholomew were still in use at that date;
but it seems more probable that the section concerning the two hospitals was merely transcribed
from an earlier copy, and that they were already
dissolved, as they certainly were before 1586. (fn. 5)
Footnotes
| 1 |
Cooper, Hist. of Winchelsea, 153. |
| 2 |
Ibid. 109. |
| 3 |
Ibid. 227. |
| 4 |
Ibid. |
| 5 |
Ibid. 109. |