ST. MARTIN'S PARISH.
This was the oldest
parish in the city, being in existence before the
foundation of New Salisbury. (fn. 1) Until the formation
of the other two medieval parishes it included not
only the nucleus of parishioners around Milford
Hill, but also all the scattered inhabitants on the
bishop's manor of Milford. After the division of
city and suburbs into three parishes in 1269, St.
Martin's was bounded on the north by Milford
Street, on the west by Brown Street and the east
wall of the Close running down Exeter Street, and
on the south by the Avon. Its eastern boundary was
not defined until the 19th century, but was often
taken to be the line of the ramparts, the road to the
church, and the churchyard. (fn. 2) The church itself
stood just outside what later became the protective
ditch of the city, first begun in the 13th century. (fn. 3)
In 1269 the parish included houses outside the
eastern bars of the city in Milford and Winterbourne
Ford, and also certain inhabitants who were said to
have previously been parishioners of the hospital of
St. Nicholas. (fn. 4)
Milford Street, the north side of which was in
St. Edmund's parish, was called Winchester Street
until the 16th century. The name also included the
street now called the New Canal; the town ditch ran
through this and the west end of Milford Street, and
property was described as being 'in Winchester
Street upon the ditch' (fn. 5) or 'in Winchester Street by
the bars', (fn. 6) depending on its position in the street.
A survey of 1580 mentions the 'Catherine Wheel' in
Winchester Street 'otherwise called Milford Street', (fn. 7)
and the inn can be traced to the present one of that
name in Milford Street. (fn. 8) The name Winchester
Street may have been applied to this road when the
way to Winchester lay through Milford and
Clarendon Park; (fn. 9) as this route was abandoned,
probably in the later Middle Ages, the name was
perhaps transferred to the present Winchester
Street, which lèd into the road to Winchester via
St. Thomas's Bridge. Milford Street now consists
chiefly of buildings of the 18th century or later;
most at the west end have modern shop fronts, but
the east is mainly residential. Earlier survivals
include nos. 15–17 and no. 41, slate-hung buildings
of the 17th century or before, and no. 88 at the
south-east corner with a projecting gable of halftimber and herring-bone brick, probably of the 16th
century. No. 42 is an early 18th-century house of
brick, with projecting bay window on the first floor.
The Red Lion Hotel has an early 19th-century front
with high arched entry into a courtyard surrounded
by older buildings.
South of Milford Street and parallel to it is a
street which until the 15th century was reckoned
part of New Street. (fn. 10) The part in the parish of St.
Martin subsequently acquired three separate names,
beginning with Payne's Hill in the east. A family
called Payne lived in this part of the street in the
17th century. (fn. 11) The street, which is a cul-de-sac,
contains a notable brick house of the early 18th
century, with a pedimented hood on carved brackets
above the doorway. The next portion, Barnard
Street, had at its east end the site of the medieval
Barnwell's Cross, possibly named after the family
called de Bernewell. (fn. 12) Near this Cross a cattle
market was held in 1428 (fn. 13) and still in 1614. (fn. 14) Trinity
Street, so called by 1751, (fn. 15) took its name from
Trinity Hospital, which was the most important of
the city's almshouses, founded by Agnes Bottenham
in 1379. (fn. 16) The present building of 1702 is of brick,
built round asmall courtyard, and includes a chapel. (fn. 17)
St. Ann Street, further south again, was one of
the earliest built up ways, leading directly from the
Close to St. Martin's church; it was known as St.
Martin's Street until the 16th century, (fn. 18) and as
Tanner or Tanner's Street from then until the 18th
century, (fn. 19) when its modern name became current. (fn. 20)
The way out of the city lay along St. Ann Street and
St. Martin's Church Street, and then north of the
church into the Southampton road. In 1611 the east
end of St. Ann Street was closed by a row of houses,
of which the present corner house of St. Martin's
Church Street may be a survivor. (fn. 21) These houses
still existed in 1781 but by 1800 part of the row
had been demolished and the present Southampton
Road, leading straight into St. Ann Street, cut
through. (fn. 22) Although mainly of the 18th century St.
Ann Street contains some notable earlier buildings;
these include the half-timbered post office and
adjoining buildings (nos. 60–66), and the Jacobean
façade of the Joiners' Hall (nos. 56–58). (fn. 23) Windover
House (nos. 22–24) contains the roof of a medieval
hall and solar range, but was considerably remodelled
in the early 17th century and later. (fn. 24) Surviving
houses show that in the 18th century St. Ann Street
must have been a fashionable address. Among many
good examples from this period, nos. 8, 44–6, 49, 54,
68 and 82–4 may be mentioned, and nos. 34–8 are
earlier timber-framed houses refronted in brick
then. The street is still mainly residential.
Of the streets joining Milford Street to St. Ann
Street, the name of Culver Street was in use in the
14th century. (fn. 25) Women of ill repute frequented it
until banished by the assembly of the city in 1452. (fn. 26)
In the 16th and 17th centuries it was referred to as
Culver Street alias Bell-founder's Street, probably
because it was there that John Wallis and other
founders had their foundry until 1730. (fn. 27) This alias
was also applied to Guilder Lane in the mid-17th
century, which suggests that it had previously
formed part of Culver Street. (fn. 28) Dolphin Street
derives its name from a tavern called the Dolphin
which stood there in 1830, when the street was called
Little Culver Street. (fn. 29) The names of Gigant Street
and Love Lane both occur in the 15th century. (fn. 30)
In Gigant Street are various commercial premises,
including the Anchor Brewery dating partly from
the 18th or early 19th century. In 1751 the bishop's
pound stood in Love Lane, but 100 years later a
block of eight cottages stood on the site. (fn. 31) Brown
Street was so called by c. 1270–80. (fn. 32) An alternative
name, perhaps for one part of it, was Tuttebelles
Street, in use in the 13th and 14th centuries. (fn. 33) The
Priory (no. 95), near the south end, is a large brick
house with a central two-storied porch and stone
dressings, probably dating from the early 17th
century. Remains of early windows in the side wall
of the adjoining 18th-century house (no. 93) suggest
that the Priory originally extended further north.
It probably acquired its name in the 19th century,
when the building was extensively restored in the
Tudor style. This end of the street also contains
several notable 18th-century houses including nos.
37–9, 81, and 87–91. Further north are smaller
houses and commercial premises. In 1434 there were
houses at the junctions of Chipper Street (now Salt
Lane) with Brown Street and Gigant Street, so that
these names must both have applied to longer
stretches of street than at present. (fn. 34)
Exeter Street was known until the 18th century
as Drakehall or Dragall Street, probably from the
early residence there of William le Drake. (fn. 35) It has
always been the only way leading south to Harnham,
and its importance dates from the building of the
bridge over the Avon in the 13th century. (fn. 36) Only the
east side of the street is built up, for on the west the
Close wall forms the boundary. By 1716 it contained
houses as far south as Brickett's Almshouses. (fn. 37) North
of these the street still largely retains its residential
character and early-19th-century appearance, except
where St. Osmund's church has been inserted into
the line of buildings. The fronts, however, conceal
some medieval buildings.
East of Exeter Street and south of St. Ann Street
is a large area of low-lying land which has been
called Bugmore (i.e. boggy moor) since at least the
14th century. (fn. 38) Meadows here were probably the
property of the bishop from early times. In the 15th
century the city chamberlains received rent from
the city ditch, which extended along the eastern side
of Bugmore meadows. (fn. 39) In 1593 rights over the
ditch there and a meadow adjoining were claimed
by both city and bishop; it was said on behalf of the
former that the city had taken the profits for 300
years. (fn. 40) But from this date the claim of the bishop
appears to have been undisputed. (fn. 41) In the 18th
century the bishop owned two meadows, Great
Bugmore (18 a.) and Little Bugmore (6 a.), (fn. 42) which
were watered by the combined flow of the Canal and
the street channels of the city. In the mid-19th
century this made the Bugmores twice as valuable
as other water-meadows below the city. (fn. 43) In 1874
they were bought by the city. Part of the area was
used for building a sewage works; the remainder is
allotment gardens. (fn. 44)
West of Bugmore and south of St. Ann Street lies
a district called the Friary, reached by a lane called
Friary Lane, formerly Freren Street (fn. 45) or Bugmore
Lane. In the angle between this lane and St. Ann
Street stood the church and house of the Grey
Friars upon land acquired c. 1229. (fn. 46) Nearby, Friary
Court and Cradock House were formerly one large
house of the early 17th century. Both have 18th-century additions, and their former outbuildings are
now Friary Cottage and Friar's Orchard, Behind
were gardens called Friar's Orchard, which were
built over in the early 19th century. (fn. 47) The commonalty established a workhouse for the poor and sick at
Bugmore in 1623. (fn. 48) When the workhouse in Crane
Street was set up in 1637, (fn. 49) the building in Bugmore
probably became a pest house, for the commonalty
ordered a pest house at Bugmore to be demolished
or sold in 1668. (fn. 50) In 1763 Lord Folkestone bought a
house and land at Bugmore and gave it to the city
for a small-pox hospital. (fn. 51) In the 19th century it
was usually leased to the overseers of the united
parishes as a fever hospital, and was so used in the
cholera epidemic of 1849. In 1851 it was described
as a small, ill-built, and dilapidated house with a
gable roof overhanging the open sewer. (fn. 52) It was
pulled down in 1879 (fn. 53) and its site in Friary Lane has
since been used as a corporation yard.