SOCIAL LIFE
Little can be said about social and intellectual
life in Salisbury before the beginning of the 18th
century; but with the peaceful political conditions
of this period there grew up in Salisbury, as in other
cities, a number of cultural, especially musical,
activities and a variety of public amusements. By
1750 there were several coffee-houses, the most
fashionable being in Blue Boar Row and later called
the 'Parade Coffee-House'. (fn. 1) Towards the end of the
century the Salisbury Guide, announcing the 'genteel
amusements', which could be enjoyed in the city by
inhabitants and visitors, listed a concert once a fortnight, which had been established about 1730; two
Assemblies in the winter, one supported by the city
and the other by the Close; a theatre; a catch-club,
held at the 'Spread Eagle' every other Tuesday
during winter; the races, with a ball at the Assembly
Rooms on the evening of the last day; and a musical
festival every autumn in honour of St. Cecilia. (fn. 2)
Most of these activities continued into the 19th
century, but seem to have declined in the middle of
that century. A guide-book of 1857 dismissed the
places of amusement in the city as 'not very
numerous'. (fn. 3) In addition to these public activities,
there were many social clubs. In the 18th century
there was a social club open to men and women,
which met at the Maidenhead Inn in the evening for
cards and conversation, moving on later for supper
at the houses of the various members; a literary
society, for men only, where essays were read and
debated; and a free and easy society, also for men
only, which met every Saturday at a different inn. (fn. 4)
An archery society was formed in 1791, a society
for the encouragement of horticulture in 1830, and
a horticultural fête was held in the grounds of St.
Edmund's College in 1846, the chief feature being
a grand dahlia exhibition. (fn. 5) In the later 19th century
a multiplicity of clubs flourished. A cycling and
athletic club was founded in 1885, which by 1897
had over 300 members, and had acquired its own
headquarters with a room for reading and social
activities. (fn. 6) The Salisbury Field Club was founded
in 1890, a microscopical society in 1895 and a city
club for 'social intercourse and mutual improvement' in 1892. By 1897 there existed, in addition to
these, a chess club, a rowing and sailing club and
a Salisbury and district fanciers' association, interested in poultry, pigeons, rabbits, and cage birds. (fn. 7)
In the early years of the present century there came
into existence a camera club, a gardeners' mutual
improvement society, and St. Thomas's society —
the last a social club for young men. (fn. 8) A rambling
club was in existence in the 1930's. (fn. 9) Further, a
number of music societies flourished from the late
18th century onwards.
An interest in music was perhaps to be expected
in a cathedral city. The annual music festivals on
St. Cecilia's Day began before the middle of the
18th century, though the exact date is not known.
Subscription concerts appear to have been started at
about the same date and from the 1740's the music
festivals were organized by the managers of the
concerts, the moving spirit being James Harris who
had taken up residence in the present Malmesbury
House in the Close in 1733. (fn. 10) The festivals, which
included music in the cathedral and at the Assembly
Rooms, continued annually until 1787, when they
were interrupted partly by the alterations being
made to the cathedral, and partly by quarrels among
the managers after Harris's death in 1780. They
were revived in 1792 and continued until 1796.
They then lapsed until 1800, when they were again
revived and held every three years until 1828. (fn. 11) In
the mid-19th century Harris's place in the musical
life of the city seems to have been taken by William
Price Aylward, who had a piano and music shop in
New Canal, was a teacher of music, and became
manager of the Assembly Rooms. He organized
subscription concerts and a brass band which in the
1840's played in the Market Place two evenings a
week in the summer. He seems also to have been
the founder of a philharmonic society, and in 1885
his daughter organized a series of chamber concerts
in which she herself played the piano. (fn. 12) The
Salisbury and Winchester Journal contains frequent
announcements of concerts of various kinds at the
Assembly Rooms, ranging from the Viennese Ladies
Orchestra to the Ethiopian Harmonists, who in 1847
gave three concerts on the bones, banjo, tambourini,
and violin, an entertainment 'as delightful as it was
singular'. (fn. 13) Benjamin Banks (1750–95), one of the
leading English makers of Amati violins, worked in
Salisbury for many years and his business was
carried on by his two sons after his death; (fn. 14) and the
city's interest in music is also reflected in the large
number of music teachers. Directories and the
educational advertisements in the Salisbury and
Winchester Journal show a steady quota of music
teachers throughout the 19th century, and by 1913
the numbers had risen to 20 — 9 men and 11
women. (fn. 15)
Plays were performed in the early 18th century
at the Vine Inn in the Cheese Market. (fn. 16) In 1777 the
New Street theatre was built and continued under
various managements until 1871. Two well-known
actors of the 19th century made their first appearances at this theatre. In 1808 John Vandenhoff
(1790–1861), son of a Salisbury dyer, appeared as
Osmond in 'The Castle Spectre', and in 1836 Robert
Henry Wyndham (1814–94) paid the manager £20
to be allowed to play Norval in 'Douglas'. (fn. 17) The
theatre was pulled down in 1871 and the site used
for the building of the School of Science and Art. (fn. 18)
Visiting companies then performed from time to
time at the Assembly Rooms, or in Hamilton Hall,
the School of Science and Art, (fn. 19) until 1889, when
the County Hall was built in Endless Street. This
had a good stage and seated over 1,000 people. It
became a cinema early in the present century, (fn. 20) and
Salisbury appears to have been without a theatre
until the opening of the Arts Theatre in Fisherton
Street in 1950. This is now (1960) called the Playhouse and has a repertory company supported by
the Arts Council. (fn. 21)
Salisbury was one of the earliest provincial towns
to have its own newspaper. (fn. 22) The Salisbury Postman,
started in 1715, seems to have had a very short life;
so also does the Salisbury Journal, started by William
Collins in 1729. In 1738, however, Collins started
the Salisbury Journal and Weekly Advertiser, which
was issued from various addresses until 1748, when
it was established in New Canal. When Collins died
in 1740 it was taken over by his brother Benjamin
(printer of the first edition of The Vicar of
Wakefield), who in turn passed it on to his son, Benjamin Charles Collins, in 1775. In 1772 its name was
changed to the Salisbury and Winchester Journal, and
its circulation in 1780 was said to be upwards of
4,000. Collins died in 1808 and the paper, after being
run for a short time by his son, was taken over in
the same year by B. C. Collins's nephew, William
Bird Brodie (M.P. for Salisbury, 1833–43), who
also took over the Collins family's banking business.
In 1847 Brodie went bankrupt and in 1848 the paper
was bought by James Bennett, whose family is still
managing it at the present time (1960). In 1816 a
rival paper was started by George Simpson of
Truro, Simpson's Salisbury Gazette, but it met with
such hostility that in 1819 it was transferred to
Devizes and became the Wiltshire Gazette. In the
1830's the Journal, under Brodie's management, was
strongly Whig and pro-reform, and a Tory paper,
the Salisbury and Wiltshire Herald, was started in
1833. It became the Wiltshire County Mirror in 1852,
and continued under that name until 1911, when
it was taken over by the Wessex Associated Press
and incorporated with the Wiltshire News. Meanwhile the Journal, under Bennett's management,
became neutral in politics, with an inclination
towards Liberalism which became less and less
marked, and became Unionist in the 1890's. The
need therefore arose for a Liberal paper, and this
was met about 1860 by the appearance of the
Salisbury Examiner. This paper was unable to compete with the Salisbury Times, started in 1868, which
absorbed the Examiner in the same year. The
Salisbury Times has continued, under various
managements and at various addresses, to the present
time.
There was an increasing reading public in Salisbury for other types of literature besides newspapers.
In 1794 Fellows's Circulating Library was established in Catherine Street. This was a subscription
library of modern books — histories, novels, travels,
plays, and magazines — and by 1798 it possessed
over 1,200 volumes. Books could also be borrowed by
non-members on payment of a deposit and a small
fee. (fn. 23) The Salisbury and Wiltshire Library and
Reading Society was established in 1819, 'to promote
literary and social intercourse', to establish a permanent reference library, circulate books among its
subscribers, and provide a reading room for newspapers and 'ephemeral publications'. In the 1830's
it had premises in the Market Place. At the end of
1846 it was re-opened under improved management
'at the Printing Office on the Canal', and it was
established in rooms over Brown & Co.'s bookshop
in 1857. (fn. 24) A movement to establish a public library
began in 1847, when the Free Trade Reading Rooms,
set up during the agitation against the Corn Laws,
closed on the attainment of their object, (fn. 25) but it was
not until 1890 that a public library with a reading
room and lending department was established in
Endless Street. (fn. 26) In 1905 the present library in
Chipper Lane was opened, money for the building
being provided by Andrew Carnegie. (fn. 27) Meanwhile
in 1861 the Salisbury and South Wilts Museum
had been founded in Castle Street by Dr. Richard
Fowler to house the various objects found when the
canals and channels in the streets were filled in. The
museum was moved to St. Ann Street in 1864, and
in 1867 the Blackmore Museum, built by William
Blackmore to house his collection of Mexican antiquities, was opened in a house separated only by a
garden from the Salisbury Museum. The two
museums expanded as a result of gifts and bequests
from local benefactors, and in 1933 they were joined
by the building of a new gallery and became one
museum. (fn. 28)
The early years of the 19th century saw the
beginnings of adult education in Salisbury, as in
many other towns. A Mechanics' Institute was
opened in 1833, which flourished and provided
weekly lectures for several years. It then languished
and by the early 1840's had ceased to exist. (fn. 29) In
1836 a proposal was discussed for the establishment
of a Literary and Philosophical Institution, of which
the Mechanics Institute should form a part. (fn. 30) A
Literary and Scientific Institution was founded in
1850, (fn. 31) and by 1851 had about 400 members, and
a library of over 600 books. The Salisbury Christian
Institute had at that time 45 members, and gave
fortnightly lectures in winter on history, science,
literature, and the fine arts. (fn. 32) In 1865 a meeting of
inhabitants discussed the establishment of a School
of Science and Art in connexion with the Science
and Art department of the South Kensington
Museum. A list of subscriptions for this purpose
was headed by the bishop, the dean, the city's
M.P.'s, and the Mayors of Salisbury and Wilton. (fn. 33)
In 1871 Hamilton Hall was built in New Street as a
Literary and Scientific Institution, and by 1875 it
was also housing a School of Art. (fn. 34)
Salisbury has been well provided with schools
from the 18th century onwards, not only with the
public schools listed elsewhere, (fn. 35) but also with
private schools, day and boarding, for boys and for
girls. In the later 18th century there were two girls'
schools in the Close, Mrs. Ivie's at the Hungerford
Chantry and Mrs. Smith's (later Mrs. Voysey's) at
the King's House; (fn. 36) and a directory of 1798 gives
two boarding schools for girls, Mrs. Ivie's and Mrs.
Cambell's. (fn. 37) In the same period two attempts, not
very successful, were made by former masters at the
Choristers' School to set up boys' schools of their
own; by the Revd. Henry Todd and by John
Williams, both in St. Ann Street. (fn. 38) In 1822 there
were at least 14 private schools — 9 for boys and 5
for girls; 22 in 1830 — 12 for boys and 10 for girls;
and 16 in 1842 — 9 for boys and 7 for girls. (fn. 39) The
Educational Census of 1852–3 gave 25 private day
schools in Salisbury, teaching 159 boys and 249
girls; (fn. 40) and in 1865 there were 16 schools — 3 for
boys and 13 for girls. (fn. 41) The educational advertisements in the Salisbury and Winchester Journal
throughout the 19th century show that there continued to be a number of private schools in existence,
for both boys and girls. While some of these schools
seem to have been short-lived, others flourished for
a number of years; for example the establishment
of Mrs. Mary Toovey in Castle Street from about
1842 until at least 1857, and subsequently conducted
by the Misses Toovey in Endless Street until 1880
and possibly later; (fn. 42) and the preparatory school 'for
a limited number of young gentlemen' kept in the
Close by the Misses Sarah and Ann Noyes from
about 1830 until at least 1846. (fn. 43) Henry Hatcher
(1777–1846), the historian of Salisbury, set up a
school in Fisherton in 1822, which moved to Endless
Street in 1824. Here it flourished until his death,
and his former pupils were planning a presentation
to him just before he died. (fn. 44)
Salisbury had many distinguished visitors in the
18th and 19th centuries and seems early to have
become a place visited by royal and aristocratic
tourists. George III often stayed there on his way
to and from Weymouth; the Duke of Cumberland
came for the music festival in 1813, and Princess
Charlotte stayed at the palace in 1814. Other royal
visitors were the Prince of Orange in 1797, the Duke
and Duchess of Orleans in 1816, the Grand Duke
Nicholas of Russia (later the Tzar, Nicholas I) in
1817, the Archduke Maximilian in 1819, and the
Duke and Duchess of Kent and Princess Victoria
in the same year. (fn. 45) All these people visited the
cathedral, Stonehenge, Old Sarum, and generally
Wilton House and Longford Castle. In 1823 Fonthill
Abbey was opened to the public, thus providing a
further attraction for tourists, and for some weeks
the city was crowded with visitors. (fn. 46) The Salisbury
Guide, which appeared regularly from about 1770
to 1826, provided an 'accurate description' of these
various sights and other information about the city
and was clearly designed for visitors. Royalty continued to visit Salisbury in Victorian times; the
Prince Consort and the Prince of Wales to see
Stonehenge in 1851, and the Prince of Wales again
with his tutor to see the cathedral, Wilton House,
and Wardour Castle in 1856; the Crown Prince and
Princess of Prussia in 1861 and again in 1871, and
many royal and distinguished people for the autumn
manœuvres in 1872. (fn. 47) The races, also, were a means
of bringing visitors to the city. (fn. 48) The cathedral,
however, has probably been the principal attraction
for tourists from the 18th century and even earlier.