THE LIBERTY OF PORTSMOUTH AND PORTSEA ISLAND
The island of Portsea is separated from the mainland by a narrow channel known as the Port Creek,
crossed by means of an iron bridge which replaces one
of stone. North of the island rise the grassy slopes of
Portsdown, while the Portsea side is fringed with the
loopholes of half-hidden fortifications. In 1831 part of the
island, viz. Hilsea, which is
now included in Cosham parish
(q.v.), and a portion of Portsea
parish known as the Gildable,
lay in the hundred of Portsdown, while the rest of the
island was within the borough
of Portsmouth. Now (i.e.
since 1835) the whole of
Portsea is contained in the
borough, which includes that
part of the island south of
an irregular line crossing from
Langstone Harbour at a point north of Great Salterns
to Portsmouth Harbour, midway between Great
Horsea Island and Tipner.

Borough of Portsmouth. Azure a star between the horns of a crescent or.
The district which is now Portsmouth borough was
sparsely inhabited in the eleventh century, for in 1086
there were only a few villeins, bordars, and serfs on
the demesne lands of the manors of Buckland, Copnor,
and Fratton, while the town of Portsmouth did not
then exist. (fn. 1) The island is, for the most part, unproductive. The soil is either sand or gravel upon
Bagshot and Bracklesham beds in the south, and
London clay farther north. Vegetables only are
grown in any quantity, and all wheat is imported. In
the seventeenth century the inhabitants depended
almost entirely on the Isle of Wight for their supplies
of wheat and flour. (fn. 2) This fact doubtless accounts for
the scarcity of mills in the island. At present a windmill stands in Fratton. It may have been built on the
site of the windmill which belonged to the Domus
Dei at the time of its dissolution. (fn. 3) There used also
to be a water-mill, known as Beeston's Mill, or the
King's Mill, since it was used for grinding wheat for
the garrison of the town. It stood on the Old Gun
Wharf, but has not been rebuilt since it was burnt
down about 1891. The mill-stream entered through
the Gun Wharf and reached as far as the site of the
Mill-Dam Barracks, where it terminated in the Mill
Pond. (fn. 4) The mill took its name from the Beeston
family, its former tenants. (fn. 5) In a map of the town
dated 1668 two fresh-water mills are marked near
each other at the head of the mill-pond. (fn. 6) They
appear to have been those granted to the abbey of
Fontevrault in 1189. (fn. 7) It appears, from a papal confirmation in 1201, that one of these mills was granted
to the abbey by Richard I. (fn. 8) A mill called 'le
Brendemulne' at Portsmouth was in the custody of
Maud countess of Ulster in 1340, and was granted
for life to Stephen Lambyn of Winchelsea for his good
service to the king at sea. (fn. 9)
Late in the twelfth century the town of Portsmouth
grew up in the south-western corner of the island,
doubtless owing its origin to the increasing difficulty
of reaching Portchester by sea. When the docks,
which had been built on the peninsula to the north
of the town, came into importance in the seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries, the town of Portsea arose
round the dockyard to accommodate the workers
there; and during the nineteenth century it has
grown until, at the present day, Portsmouth and
Portsea, with their members of Landport, Southsea,
Milton, and Eastney, form practically one town almost
co-extensive with the island.
The town of Portsmouth (Portesmue xii–xiii cent.;
Portesmuth xiv cent.) proper is a wedge-shaped
district, separated from the larger inhabited parts of
the island by the Civil Service Recreation Grounds
and Southsea Common. The High Street, or main
thoroughfare, runs north-east and south-west, and containsseveral buildings of interest. At the north end of the
street stand the red-brick gabled buildings of the Portsmouth Grammar School. Opposite are the Cambridge
Barracks, named after the late Duke of Cambridge, and
occupying the site of the old theatre once under the
management of Charles Kemble. Further down the
street is the house formerly known as the "Spotted
Dog," where the murder of the duke of Buckingham
took place in 1628. Facing it, but lower down,
is the church of St. Thomas, the old parish
church of Portsmouth, while opposite, at the corner of
Pembroke Road, is the old Guildhall, now used as the
Borough Museum. This building took the place of
a former hall, built in 1738, (fn. 10) which stood across the
High Street. In a house in the High Street, George
Meredith was born in 1828.
Across the south end of the High Street stands a
strong stone fort, which forms the corner of the Point
Barracks, and overlooks the old Victoria Pier, from
which can be obtained a fine view of the narrow
entrance to Portsmouth Harbour, and of the distant
hills of the Isle of Wight. The King's Stairs lead
down to a shingle beach, whence in former times a
strong chain could be drawn across to the Gosport
side as an additional defence to the harbour mouth.
Nothing of this is visible from the High Street, the
view thence being bounded by the grey stone wall of
the fort, in which is set a niche containing a bust of
Charles I as Prince of Wales, with an inscription
recording his safe arrival at Portsmouth in October,
1623, after his travels in France and Spain. Soon after
the bust had been set up, the Governor, Viscount
Wimbledon, recommended that the signs of the inns
in the High Street should be set in to the houses 'as they
are in all civil towns,' since they not only obscured but
outfaced the figure, and ordered that all officers and
soldiers should doff their hats in passing it. (fn. 11) A series
of narrow streets running at right angles to High
Street contains some of the oldest houses in the town,
for the most part two-storied buildings interspersed
with warehouses, and it is noticeable that in this district
the population has decreased of late years, while in
other parts of the island it has more than doubled
itself. At the back of these narrow streets, which
form the old town of Portsmouth, are the Colewort
Barracks, which take their name from the Colewort
Garden, which was still in use as a burying ground in
1817. (fn. 12) It is said to have belonged to the chapel of
St. Mary, which existed in this part of the town in
the time of Queen Elizabeth, (fn. 13) and from which,
doubtless, St. Mary Street took its name. The present
church of St. Mary, which stands at the back of the
barracks, was not built till 1839. (fn. 14)
At the back of the Point Barracks, and parallel
with the coast line, Broad Street leads from the High
Street to the Point, a small peninsula washed by the
waters of the harbour and the Inner and Outer Camber.
In the latter are the docks which accommodate the few
trading vessels, chiefly coasting ships, that visit the
town. Between the Point and Gosport plies a steam
ferry capable of transporting thirty carriages as well as
passengers. This 'floating bridge,' which was established under an Act of 1838, (fn. 15) and the ferry are the
chief means of communication with Gosport. The
ferry had been maintained by the inhabitants of
Gosport, and in 1600 it had fallen into decay as
the sailors had been pressed in great numbers. Consequently a decree was issued forbidding the lease
of the ferry to private individuals, and commanding
the maintenance of twenty boats and a skilful man in
each. (fn. 16) Subsequently it was leased to certain decayed
seamen, (fn. 17) but after their lease had lapsed no grant of
the ferry was made for nearly a century, during which
time the men-of-war and merchantmen took advantage
of the opportunity of smuggling when carrying people
across the harbour. (fn. 18)
Near the Camber is a dry dock for trading vessels,
and still farther north is the Gun Wharf, the arsenal
where is stored ordnance both for the fleet and for the
garrison of the town. It consists of the old and the
new Gun Wharf, separated by a small basin where
barges enter to carry the naval guns from the wharf to
the battleships in the dockyard, or to unlade stores of
rifles and bayonets, which are kept in the Armoury.
The latter is ingeniously decorated with obsolete
weapons and armour of all descriptions and from all
countries. The main entrance of the wharf is near
the United Service Recreation Grounds, which form a
fine open space between Portsea and Portsmouth, and
are entered through one of the old town-gates, the
Landport Gate, which formerly stood at the entrance
of Warblington Street.
It is evident that Portsmouth did not exist as a town
before the twelfth century, though the favourable
position of its present site, more especially as a landing place, was recognized some time before any
settlement was made there. The story runs that in
501 Port landed with his two sons Bieda and
Mægla, 'at a certain place which is called Portes
Mutha,' and there slew a very noble young Briton. (fn. 19)
It is evident that the chroniclers in reciting this
story were merely trying to account for the name
of the place, (fn. 20) another form of which is preserved in
the Chronicle of Abingdon Monastery. (fn. 21) To that abbey
King Edgar granted the catch of fish from one vessel
at 'Portmonna hyth,' besides a certain rent from
Southampton, in 962. No mention of Portsmouth
occurs in Domesday Book, but with the Norman
Conquest and the consequent closer relations between
England and the continent such a harbour could not
fail to become of importance. (fn. 22) Henry II took
advantage of the harbour, and many times crossed
thence to his continental possessions, and in 1189
Richard I landed at Portsmouth. (fn. 23) At that date there
appears to have been no town there, but merely a few
sea-faring people, while the town of Southampton had
control of the harbour. (fn. 24) It was doubtless the strategical advantages of the island that induced Richard I
to build a town there. (fn. 25) He let out the land to various
men to build thereon, and granted a charter to the inhabitants in 1194. (fn. 26) It is dated 2 May, from Portsmouth, where he had been staying since the preceding
24 April, just before leaving England for the last time.
The king himself had houses built there, for in
1197–8 £2 18s. 3d. was spent on the improvement
of his houses and hall (curia) at Portsmouth, and in
the same year 4s. was accounted for as the rent of
building sites. (fn. 27) From these accounts, and from the
sums spent in the following year on tables and benches
for the king's house, it would appear that the latter at
least was new. (fn. 28) In 1298 it was in such bad repair that
it threatened to collapse, and an inquisition being taken
as to its value, the hall, with certain other houses, was
assessed at £40, the chapel at £20, and the site at
2s. (fn. 29) The position of this building may be marked by
the name Kingshall Green, which was given to the site
of the former Clarence Barracks in Penny Street. (fn. 30)
It was only fitting that the early history of a town
founded by Richard Cœur-de-Lion should be filled
with war and preparations of war. During the
thirteenth and fourteenth centuries the town was used
as a rendezvous for expeditions to Normandy, (fn. 31)
Poitou, (fn. 32) and more especially to Gascony, (fn. 33) while
ships from most of the maritime towns of England
were sent thither to transport men and horses, provisions, and arms gathered from all the country, (fn. 34) and
in 1254 the Great Council of the realm itself met
there. (fn. 35) Besides the trade thus brought into the
town, it carried on considerable traffic with the western and northern countries of Europe. Large quantities of wheat were exported to France and Spain, (fn. 36)
in addition to that conveyed from Portsmouth for the
provision of troops during the French wars. The
wool-trade also was so considerable that Portsmouth
was among the fifty-seven towns summoned to send
wool-merchants to consult with the king at York in
1327–8, (fn. 37) and the townsmen joined in a petition that
the wool-staple for South England should be at
Southampton and not at Winchester, as had been
appointed. (fn. 38) In 1449 three pockets of wool and
eighty-nine sheepskins called 'Moreyns' were arrested
on board a boat of Harfleur at Portsmouth. (fn. 39) The
chief import was wine, most of which was brought from
Bayonne and Bordeaux. (fn. 40) Woad also was imported
from Normandy in considerable quantities, (fn. 41) and wax
and iron from France. (fn. 42) Nevertheless the vessels
belonging to the port were neither many nor large,
for when summoned in 1336 to send to the king's
aid all their vessels capable of carrying over forty dolia
of wine, they could only provide two, one of which
was out of repair. (fn. 43)
Judging by the number of conveyances of houses
in the town, even early in the thirteenth century,
it would seem that it was of fair size. Some of
the buildings had an upper room or solar. (fn. 44) The
majority were probably made of wood, for in 1338
only the Domus Dei and the parish church escaped
the fire when the French burnt the town. The inhabitants were all but ruined by the four hostile
assaults which they suffered during the fourteenth
century, and until the building of the docks by Henry
VII the prosperity of the town was at a low ebb,
though the wool and wine trades were still carried on. (fn. 45)
The building of the docks brought new life to the
town; brew-houses were built and leased to private
individuals on condition that the king should have the
use of them in time of war, (fn. 46) and in 1525 there were
also five royal brew-houses, the 'Rose,' the 'Lion,' the
'Dragon,' the 'White Hart,' and the 'Anchor,' (fn. 47) and
foreign trade increased. Leather was brought from
Spain, (fn. 48) and Portsmouth vessels traded largely with
Holland, (fn. 49) and the import of woad was still continued. (fn. 50)
An effort was also made to encourage weaving in the
town, a petition being addressed to the queen in 1585
to allow clothiers residing within the liberties freedom
from custom for twenty years on condition that they
should each keep two corselets and able men to wear
them, and to fix the wool-staple for the adjoining
counties at Portsmouth. (fn. 51) Nevertheless, in 1579 the
townspeople were obliged to seek relief throughout
the realm for the losses which they had sustained by
sea and by fire. (fn. 52) Camden described the town as
'populous in time of war, but not so in time of peace.'
The presence of the fleet at Portsmouth during the
sixteenth century obliged the laying of posts to London,
first through Bagshot and later by way of Petersfield and Guildford. (fn. 53) The port at this time was
infested with smugglers and pirates, even the mayor
being accused of dealing with them, (fn. 54) while it was frequently used by priests and recusants in escaping from
the country. (fn. 55) In 1554 precautions were taken to prevent merchants from bringing in goods duty-free under
pretence that they belonged to the king, (fn. 56) and during
the seventeenth century merchant vessels made a
practice of sinking hogsheads and casks in the harbour
till an opportunity should arise for landing them. (fn. 57)
From the sixteenth century till the middle of
the nineteenth Portsmouth was essentially a garrison
town, and, more especially during the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries, the inhabitants found the consequent restrictions somewhat irksome. (fn. 58) During the
seventeenth century, also, the quartering of soldiers upon
the already overcrowded inhabitants became a serious
grievance. (fn. 59) In 1665 Commissioner Thomas Middleton complained that nine people were packed in a room
16 ft. by 12 ft., while in the house of the mayor himself there were twenty-six in family. (fn. 60) The number
of poor in the town also became so alarming to the
garrison that the Council of State sent an urgent command to the mayor in 1651 to provide for their
employment and relief. (fn. 61) Poverty had doubtless been
increased by the siege of 1642, and for many years
vain attempts had been made to secure the more
effectual paving and cleansing of the town. (fn. 62) The
inhabitants suffered severely from small-pox and the
plague during the seventeenth century, the latter being
rife in the town both in 1625 (fn. 63) and 1665, (fn. 64) and even
when the plague had left the town there were more
deaths from fever and ague than there had been in
its time. (fn. 65) The overcrowding was relieved during
the next century by the growth of Portsea, while the
paving and watching of the town were improved
under a series of Acts of Parliament, the first of which
was passed in 1763–4. (fn. 66) The commissioners for the
paving and cleansing of the town first met in 1768,
and under them its general condition was rapidly improved. (fn. 67) Their work is now ably carried on by the
Urban Sanitary Authorities.
The discovery of New England had opened a fresh
field of commerce to the merchants of Portsmouth.
They were especially anxious to obtain the monopoly
of the tobacco trade, and petitioned in 1625 that all
tobacco should be unladen in their port, and that
all ships bound for New England should be obliged to
set forth thence, but without apparent result. (fn. 68) A
proposal made in 1632 for a joint-stock company to
monopolize all trade in the port and ten miles out to
sea also seems to have come to nothing. (fn. 69) Nevertheless, by the end of the seventeenth century the
customs paid there had increased from £800 to
£6,000, (fn. 70) the chief import still being French wine. (fn. 71)
Early in the last century the import of coal had
increased, (fn. 72) while cattle were brought from the west
of England and cows from Ireland. The coasting
trade is now alone considerable, and it has been
gradually diminished by the ever-increasing facilities
for transport overland. The watermen were loud in
their protestations against stage-coaches, and proposed
in 1673 that, as the latter had of late strangely increased to the great prejudice of watermen and seamen,
the coach-owners should be obliged to contribute
towards the building of hospitals in several ports. (fn. 73)
Both the coasting and foreign trade are limited by the
restrictions imposed upon Portsmouth as a naval harbour, and the use of the greater part of the neighbouring coast-line for Government purposes. The
Portsmouth and Arundel Canal was intended to
facilitate the coasting-trade by allowing barges to
enter from the Langstone Harbour and unlade near
the site of the present town station. It was opened
on 28 May, 1823, (fn. 74) but was never a success owing to
the slowness of transport. The London & South
Western Railway, a branch of which was laid down to
Portsmouth under an Act of 1839, (fn. 75) and the Portsmouth Railway from Godalming to Havant, extended
to Portsmouth in 1853, (fn. 76) superseded the canal, which
was ultimately filled in, since it had been found that
the salt water percolated to the fresh springs in the
town. Its former course is marked by such names as
Arundel Street. (fn. 77)
During the American and Napoleonic wars the
town increased rapidly in size and importance, and
with the establishment of peace its prosperity did not
fail. (fn. 78) In 1544 there were not more than a hundred
able-bodied persons besides the garrison in the town, (fn. 79)
while three centuries later the population of Portsmouth
was over nine thousand, and that of Portsea was nearly
forty-four thousand.
Previous to 1194 all customs from the port of
Portsmouth had evidently been assessed with those of
Southampton. Immediately after Richard I had given
the town its charter, £7 was deducted from the ferm
of Southampton for the portage and customs of
Portsmouth, and for these William of Ste. MèreÉglise, afterwards bishop of London, was to account
separately. (fn. 80) In 1196 £8 was similarly deducted, (fn. 81)
but no separate account for Portsmouth is to be
found on the Pipe Roll of the following year. In
1198, however, the receipts of the sheriff included
£10 6s. 6d. for the year's pontage and small customary dues apart from the ferm (census) of Portsmouth
and Kingston, which amounted to £14 2s. 7d. (fn. 82) It
appears, therefore, that it was only the pontage and
petty customs of Portsmouth that had been separated
from those of Southampton. The port itself remained
a member of the latter, and the greater customs were
still collected and accounted for with those of Southampton, an arrangement which gave rise to several disputes
between the two towns. Portsmouth did not become
a separate port until late in the eighteenth century.
The petty customs together with the pontage were
all the rent paid by the men of Portsmouth for their
town before 1197, and even in the following reign
the bailiffs declared that the dues arising from custom
and pontage were all that they owed to the king by way
of ferm, (fn. 83) yet in 1198 the sheriff had accounted for
£14 odd as the 'census' or ferm of Portsmouth and
Kingston, (fn. 84) while the receipts from the town amounted
to over £15 in the following year. (fn. 85) The next Pipe
Roll gives no details of the sheriff's account for Portsmouth, and in May 1201 only £5 is given as the
amount of ferm paid. (fn. 86) In the year ending May,
1202, the ferm was £18, (fn. 87) and so continued until
November, 1229, when it was raised to £20. (fn. 88) This
ferm, which had been previously received by the
sheriff for the crown, was granted by Edward I to
his mother, Queen Eleanor, for life, in May, 1281, (fn. 89)
and confirmed to her five years later. (fn. 90) Later it
formed part of the dowers assigned successively to the
queens of Edward II and Edward III. (fn. 91) In 1403
Henry IV granted it for life to Eleanor widow of
Nicholas Dagworth, but the gift was almost immediately cancelled. (fn. 92) Henry VI gave the ferm of Portsmouth to his uncle Humphrey duke of Gloucester
for life in 1442. (fn. 93) In 1450, three years after the
duke's death, this ferm with many others was definitely assigned to the use of the royal honsehold, (fn. 94)
and was partly employed on repairs in the Palace of
Westminster and the Tower of London. (fn. 95) The
former settlement was confirmed in 1485, (fn. 96) but
Henry VIII granted £10 from the petty customs of
Portsmouth to Alice Davy in November, 1519, in
reward for her services as gentlewoman to Katharine
of Aragon and nurse to Margaret queen of Scotland. (fn. 97)
£12 odd rent from the town was granted to Queen
Anne by James I and to Queen Catherine by
Charles II, (fn. 98) and finally under an Act of Parliament
dated 1670 it was conveyed to the trustees for the
sale of fee-farm rents. (fn. 99) No record of its sale has
been found, and in 1835 the farm to the crown was
still included among the expenses of the corporations, (fn. 100)
but it has since ceased to be paid.
Portsmouth, therefore, has existed as a borough
since 1194. (fn. 101) The charter then granted to it by
Richard I recites that the king had retained in his
own hands the 'borough' of Portsmouth, and that he
had established a fair to be held there annually to last
fifteen days, commencing on the feast of St. Peter
ad Vincula (1 August), while all men who should come
to it from places within his kingdom should enjoy the
same liberties as those who attended the fairs at
Winchester and Hoyland. At the same time he
granted that his burgesses there should have a weekly
market to be held on Thursdays, with all such privileges
as were enjoyed by the citizens of Winchester and Oxford; that all the burgesses in the town, and holding of
the town, wherever they should go within his realms,
should be quit from toll, pontage, passage and pavage,
stallage and tallage, and from shires and hundreds, and
from summons and aids of the sheriff, and from all pleas,
including pleas of the forest; and that his burgesses
having houses and tenements within the town should
hold them with toll and theam infangtheof and
utfangtheof as freely as the citizens of Winchester
and Oxford held theirs. Finally, he forbad their
being impleaded touching any tenement in the town
save before himself. (fn. 102) In October, 1200, soon after
his accession, King John confirmed his brother's
charter, at the same time extending the clause as to
pleas about tenements in the town so that they might
be heard either before him or the chief justice. (fn. 103)
For this confirmation the men of Portsmouth paid
ten marks and a palfrey. (fn. 104) Henry III also in a
charter dated 18 November, 1229, renewed the former grant of his father and uncle, but omitted entirely
the phrase as to pleas before the king or his justice;
on the previous day the ferm of the town had been
increased from £18 to £20. (fn. 105) On 5 April, 1255,
the same king confirmed to the burgesses of Portsmouth all their liberties included in his own charter
and those of Richard I and John, (fn. 106) and in July
1256 he granted a gild merchant to the good men
of Portsmouth and freed them from caption of
person or goods for debt save where they were principal debtors or securities or where the principal debtor
belonged to their community and was able to satisfy
the debt while the men of the gild had failed to do
justice; at the same time he confirmed to them the
freedom from cheminage throughout the king's forest,
and other privileges which they had been wont to
enjoy. (fn. 107) Edward II, in February 1312–13, inspected
and confirmed the charters of 1194, 1200, 18 November, 1229, and 5 April, 1255, (fn. 108) and this confirmation was itself confirmed in 1358 by Edward III. (fn. 109)
In 1384 Richard II confirmed the charter of Edward
III, and also the grant of a gild merchant. (fn. 110) There
followed successive confirmations of the same charters
in 1401, 1423, 1461, 1484, 1489, 1511, 1550, and
1561. (fn. 111) The town was thus practically governed by
the charters of Richard and John until the end of
the sixteenth century; then, in February 1599–1600,
Queen Elizabeth reorganized the corporation of the
town. (fn. 112) In this its first definite charter of incorporation, after reciting the ancient constitution and privileges of the borough, and referring to the ambiguities
in its former charters and to its important position as
a port and frontier town, she declared that, at the
petition of Lord Mountjoy, then captain there, the
borough of Portsmouth should henceforth be a free
borough, and its inhabitants a body corporate under
the name of the Mayor and Burgesses of Portsmouth,
with the usual ability to acquire lands and privileges,
to plead and be impleaded, and to possess a common
seal. The charter then recounts the details of the
corporation and the functions of its various officers.
In spite of the new life inspired by Elizabeth's charter
of incorporation the town had fallen into great decay
by 1625, and the mayor and inhabitants petitioned
for a renewal of their privileges with a grant of certain trading advantages. (fn. 113) In November, 1627, a
new charter of incorporation was granted to the
town, enlarging considerably the privileges bestowed
by Elizabeth, making some changes in the constitution of the body corporate, and giving the inhabitants licence to weave, make, and sell all kinds of
kersies and broadcloths. (fn. 114) In April, 1666, the king
threatened to take the town into his own hands and
proposed giving the care of it to the LieutenantGovernor, Sir Philip Honeywood, owing to the
remissness of the mayor and aldermen in not providing for the removal of the plague-stricken soldiers
and inhabitants to the pest-house. (fn. 115) In 1682
Charles II invited all corporate towns and boroughs
to show their loyalty to the crown by surrendering
their charters. This Portsmouth did in the same
year, and, though the surrender was not formally
enrolled, the king granted the town a new charter in
August, 1682. (fn. 116) It recited the surrender of the
charter of Charles I and re-incorporated the borough,
adding to it the town of Gosport. The corporation,
according to this charter, was similar to that organized
under that of Charles I, save that its jurisdiction
extended over Gosport. One clause alone sufficed to
give the crown almost absolute power over the
borough: mayor, aldermen, and burgesses were all to
be removable by the king's sign manual. By this
charter the town was governed till October, 1688,
when James II issued a proclamation revoking all
charters granted after the surrender of the boroughs
to Charles II, since in almost every case the deeds of
surrender had not been enrolled; (fn. 117) accordingly, the
men of Portsmouth applied for the return of their
former charter to Lord Dartmouth, among whose
papers it had been found. (fn. 118) They were evidently
successful, for the charter is still among the corporation records, and the town is still governed by it,
subject to such modifications as were provided by the
Municipal Reform Acts of the last century.
The town of Portsmouth had a corporate existence
soon after its foundation. Richard I in his charter
granted definite privileges to the burgesses, and before
1214 they possessed lands in common, for the burgesses of Portsmouth had alienated a messuage and
land in Portsmouth called Westwood to the Domus
Dei there. (fn. 119)
This corporate body had no definite name till the
sixteenth century. King John's charter was addressed
to 'the burgesses of Portsmouth,' but the men of
Portsmouth paid for its enrolment. (fn. 120) The bailiffs of
Portsmouth acted for the town in the time of King
John, (fn. 121) and a royal writ was addressed to them in
1224, (fn. 122) and subsequent writs were sent to the bailiffs
and men or to the men of Portsmouth. (fn. 123) The
'customs and usages' of the town, which may be assigned to the latter part of the thirteenth century,
were drawn up by the mayor, bailiff, constables, serjeants, and jurats, (fn. 124) but it is doubtful whether the
word here translated 'mayor' may not have been
'prepositus' in the original document, which, unfortunately, is not in the possession of the corporation.
The office of mayor certainly existed in 1323, when a
writ was addressed to the mayor and bailiffs of Portsmouth ordering them to search for and arrest all
letters coming into the realm. (fn. 125) The bailiffs continued in existence long after the introduction of the
offices of 'prepositus' and mayor, and in Elizabeth's
charter of incorporation it is stated that the town had
formerly been governed by a mayor, two bailiffs, two
constables, and other public officers, and the name of
the reorganized corporation is given as 'the Mayor and
Burgesses of the Borough of Portsmouth.' Under the
charter of Charles I the name of the corporation was
'the Mayor, Aldermen, and Burgesses of Portsmouth,'
but the government of the town was practically vested
in the mayor and aldermen only. This charter also
mentions a recorder, justices of the peace, common
clerk, and two serjeants at mace. Under the charter
of Charles II (1682), the recorder was included in the
governing body; but since this grant was cancelled
under the proclamation of October, 1688, the corporation of the town remained unaltered till the
Municipal Reform Act of 1835, under which its
nature was entirely changed. It now consists of fortytwo councillors, one-third of whom retire in rotation
every three years, and fourteen aldermen, from among
whom the mayor is chosen. (fn. 126) The councillors are
chosen by the burgesses, and serve for a term of three
years. In 1888, under the Local Government Act,
Portsmouth became a 'county borough' for administrative purposes. (fn. 127)
The number of burgesses varied considerably from
time to time. The privileges granted by Richard I
were to be enjoyed only by those who held land or
property in or of the town. (fn. 128) In the earliest recorded
list of burgesses (c. 1575) there are fifty-four names,
including that of the mayor, but of these six are marked
as deceased; (fn. 129) twenty-five burgesses besides the mayor
and twelve aldermen are named in the charter of
Charles I, and Charles II appointed the same number
in 1662 when no fewer than eighty-eight burgesses
were disfranchised. (fn. 130) There was evidently no limit
to the number of burgesses elected each year, for
within five months of the year 1773 no fewer than
forty-three were admitted to the freedom of the
borough, (fn. 131) and in 1834 seventy-eight burgesses were
sworn besides nine aldermen. (fn. 132) There was apparently
no qualification necessary for a burgess. It was not
even needful for him to be a resident, for the following
names occur on the list of burgesses:—John White of
Southwick, 1553; William Gage of Havant, 1557;
William Bennet of Fareham, 1634; and so on throughout the list. (fn. 133) It was possible also for the soldiers in
the garrison and officers in the dockyard to become
burgesses; thus in 1531 Richard Palshyd, a captain of
the garrison; in 1594, Joshua Savour, master gunner;
in 1575, Richard Popinjay, government surveyor;
and in 1576, William Davison, admiralty-serjeant,
were burgesses. (fn. 134) Early in the seventeenth century,
however, when the relations between the town and
the garrison were somewhat strained, it was considered
contrary to the customs of the town for a soldier of
the garrison to be given the freedom of the borough,
and in 1618 Thomas Mondaie, one of the burgesses,
was disfranchised because he had bought a soldier's
place, and was under the command of the governor. (fn. 135)
On the other hand an ordinance had been made in
1545–6, forbidding the captain of the town from
receiving any inhabitant as a soldier there. (fn. 136) Before
the charter of Charles I (1627), burgesses were elected
with the common consent of the mayor and burgesses
in the borough court. After 1627 till the Municipal
Reform Act of 1835 they were chosen by the mayor
and aldermen whenever they thought fit. (fn. 137) In 1682
an ordinance was made providing against the proposal
of any new burgess save in the council in the Councilhouse. (fn. 138) Since 1835 every ratepayer has been accounted a burgess.
The fine paid for the freedom of the borough
varied considerably, while in many cases no fine at
all is recorded. In 1546 Francis Botkyn gave 10s. at
his election, (fn. 139) while Richard Jenens paid 26s. 8d. on
a similar occasion in 1593, (fn. 140) and in 1531 John Playfoote of Copnor agreed upon his admission as burgess
'of his mere mind and good will' to repair the prison
house. (fn. 141) William Heaton, gentleman, paid 10s. fine
and 10s. upon a breakfast for the burgesses at his
election in 1597. These conditions were determined
by two arbiters, one representing the town and one
the burgess-elect, evidently the customary mode of
agreement as to the fine to be paid. (fn. 142) On the
election of honorary burgesses at the request of the
mayor and aldermen, the town paid certain fees to
the town clerk and other officers. (fn. 143) Many famous
men have thus been burgesses of Portsmouth: the list
includes Sir Christopher Hatton, Sir Julius Cæsar,
Thomas Pride, George Monk, Samuel Pepys,
Admirals George and John Byng, Lord Chancellor Erskine, and many other well-known men.
Burgesses were disfranchised before 1662 by the
common consent of the mayor and burgesses. (fn. 144) In
that year many members of the corporation were disfranchised by the Royal Commissioners on grounds of
disaffection, (fn. 145) and in the charter of Charles II it was
definitely stated that the burgesses and other members of
the corporation were removable by the king's sign manual,
but this clause was only in force till the proclamation
of 1688 annulled the charter of Charles II.
Once elected the burgesses formerly enjoyed many
privileges, which have now fallen into insignificance.
Their share in the government of the town was
probably considerable until the rise of the twelve
assistants and afterwards of the aldermen, and at all
times these last have been chosen from their number.
Under the charter of Richard I they were free from
toll and passage and the many other dues paid by
ordinary travellers in the king's realms. They were
quit of suit at the shire and hundred courts and from
pleas of forest; in fact, they had all the liberties
granted to the citizens of Winchester and Oxford. (fn. 146)
The burgesses who brought pleas to the borough
courts paid a smaller fee than the ordinary inhabitant
or 'stranger.' (fn. 147) Besides this they had various trading
advantages. They could buy and sell within the
town without a licence from the mayor, (fn. 148) while the
non-burgess who did so was amerced in the court
leet. (fn. 149) Early in the seventeenth century the townsmen struggled to maintain this right against the
soldiers of the garrison, who persisted in keeping alehouses and victualling-houses in the town. (fn. 150) In
1630, in answer to a petition from the soldiers
stating that, if not allowed to trade, they would not be
able to live, since they only had 8d. a day, and that
not paid, it was ordered that they should be allowed to
trade in the town till they received their full pay, or
the matter should be debated in the presence of both
parties. (fn. 151) Two years later it was again ordered that
no soldier should trade or keep an ale-house in the
town, but the regulation seems to have been broken
very soon. (fn. 152) The borough also regulated trade in
the harbour, for Robert Reeve was heavily fined in
1594 for having bought a ship in the harbour while
not a burgess. (fn. 153) Under Elizabeth's charter of incorporation neither the burgesses nor inhabitants of the
town were to be impanelled on any jury save in
causes affecting property within the borough; and to
the present day they are free from serving on county
juries. They were for many years exempt from
wharfage dues, but this privilege was disputed early in
the last century. (fn. 154) Perhaps the most important
privilege enjoyed exclusively by the burgesses was
their right to vote for the two members returned by
the town to Parliament. This they retained till
the Reform Act of 1832. Their functions primarily
included all the responsibility of the government of
the town, until the growth of the office of alderman.
Then their duties became more formal; they were
obliged to attend the mayor in their gowns when
summoned, and their presence at the election of a
new mayor was also enforced. (fn. 155) In 1605 their
gowns were known as cloaks in contradistinction to
the gowns of the assistants. (fn. 156) In 1700 it was agreed
that since many burgesses, in spite of their oath, had
absented themselves from the mayor's courts and
assemblies, all inhabitants when admitted as burgesses
should either pay a fine of £5 or take a special oath
to attend the mayor's courts and assemblies. (fn. 157)
A method of government which placed supreme
control in the hands of an indefinite number of
burgesses must have proved somewhat clumsy in the
working. It is not surprising, therefore, to find a
more limited number of the burgesses gradually
forming a council to aid the mayor or bailiffs in the
executive branches of their business. Owing to the
absence of early records it is difficult to discover at
what date such a council first existed, but in the list
of usages and customs of the town which was probably drawn up late in the twelfth or early in the
thirteenth century, mention is made of twelve jurats,
who were apparently identical with the mayor's
council of twelve men which he himself chose yearly
upon his election. (fn. 158) In 1537 it was the twelve
jurats who made certain regulations concerning trade
in the town. (fn. 159) Probably these twelve men were
those 'senior and principal better and more honest
burgesses' from whom the mayor was to be chosen
according to the terms of Queen Elizabeth's charter
of incorporation, and represented the mayor's assistants. The latter term occurs about the middle of
the sixteenth century. There were evidently eight
assistants, two of whom attended the mayor in
rotation at the weekly courts of the borough. (fn. 160) In
1585 the mayor, aldermen, and inhabitants of Portsmouth petitioned the queen with regard to the decay
of trade in the town, (fn. 161) hence it seems probable that
the terms 'alderman' and 'assistant' were interchangeable before the charter of 1627, in which it is definitely
stated that there should be twelve aldermen to form
the council of the borough, and aid and assist the
mayor. They were to be chosen for life from the
burgesses, and vacancies were to be filled up by the
remaining aldermen and mayor or the majority of
them. On at least one occasion a newly elected
burgess was immediately chosen as alderman. (fn. 162) This
occurred in 1656. In 1662 the Royal Commission
appointed four new aldermen in place of four removed
for alleged disloyalty. (fn. 163) Under the charter of
Charles II the aldermen were removable, like the
burgesses, by the royal sign manual. Towards the
end of the seventeenth century there were continual
discords among the aldermen. In the words of a
contemporary tract, 'the beginning of our divisions
and distractions may be dated from the time
Mr. Ward, our vicar, made choice of Mr. Ely
Stamyford for churchwarden at Easter, 1703. (fn. 164)
These divisions continued with increasing acrimony
between the Whig and Tory parties. Both parties
chose numerous burgesses for political purposes, and
the struggle continued till 1711, when the two leading Whigs, Henry Seagar and Thomas White, were
ousted from among the aldermen by a mandamus
from the Queen's Bench. A similar conflict arose
in the latter part of the eighteenth century. (fn. 165) From
1782 onwards the Whig party was supreme in the
town, and until the Reform Act of 1832, their
selection of burgesses was openly based on political
considerations, while the aldermen were almost all of
the Carter family. (fn. 166) Under the Municipal Reform
Act of 1835, the number of aldermen was altered to
fourteen, half of their number retiring every three
years, an arrangement which is still in force.
There appear to have been no privileges attached
to the office of alderman beyond its political and
social power. The former rested chiefly in the
ability of the aldermen to choose burgesses and hence
to influence both the parliamentary and municipal
elections. Their duties included all the government
of the town and the management of the corporation
estates. They were bound to attend the common
council when summoned by the mayor. (fn. 167) In 1678
a rule was made that they should attend him to church
every Sunday, and in 1682 it was agreed that they
should wear their scarlet gowns on election day,
certain feast days, the first Sunday in the month, and
any other day appointed by the council. (fn. 168)
The earliest government of the town appears to
have been by a reeve and bailiffs. Possibly William
de Ste.-Mère Eglise, who accounted for the petty
customs of the town when they were first separated
from those of Southampton, acted as the first reeve. (fn. 169)
Theobald, the reeve of Portsmouth, witnessed a conveyance of land in Portsmouth in 1201, (fn. 170) and in
1216 a royal writ was addressed to the reeve and men
of Portsmouth, (fn. 171) while the reeve and whole court of
Portsmouth witnessed a conveyance of the thirteenth
century. (fn. 172) In 1270 Peter Coperas was reeve. (fn. 173)
The number of bailiffs is so far unknown. Probably,
as at Winchester, there were two; Elizabeth's charter
states that the town had been governed by a mayor
and two bailiffs. It was the bailiffs who collected the
rents and customs and were responsible to the crown
for the farm of the borough during the reign of King
John. (fn. 174) Pleas were also held before them and writs
addressed to them (fn. 175) ; they acted as the king's
escheators in the town. (fn. 176) Their duties also included
the hearing of recognizances of debt, (fn. 177) and the sealing of conveyances of lands within the borough, since
the seals of the parties to the deeds were unknown to
most men. (fn. 178) Towards the end of the thirteenth
century the government seems to have been modified
in form. The ancient usages of the town, which
apparently belong to the latter end of the century,
were drawn up by the mayor and one bailiff. (fn. 179) The
mayor evidently succeeded the reeve, and in 1323
definite mention is made of the mayor and bailiffs. (fn. 180)
Subsequently the importance of the mayor's office
increased, while the bailiffs gradually lost their authority. In a deed of sale of a stall or shop in the
market dated 1450 the rent was said to be paid to
the king by the hands of the bailiffs, but only one
bailiff witnessed the deed, (fn. 181) and only one is recorded
as accounting for the farm of the town in 1443. (fn. 182)
In 1521 the bailiff of Portsmouth gave a detailed
account of a suspicious character lately seen near
Havant, (fn. 183) and on 28 April, 1538, when Thomas
Carpenter was mayor, Thomas Yonge, bailiff of the
town, evidently had full authority over the watchmen
and constables there. (fn. 184) Unfortunately, owing to the
loss or destruction of the corporation records for the
sixteenth century, there is no clue to the time when
the bailiff's office lapsed, (fn. 185) but apparently it was in
disuse before 1600, the date of Queen Elizabeth's
charter to the town. The ancient usages of the
town state that the bailiff received one-half of the
surplus of any fine which exceeded 24s. and 12d. in
every pound recovered in the borough court, besides
6s. 8d. fine for drawing a weapon, and 6d. for bloodshed in the case of any frays in the town. From the
first the mayor seems to have been chosen by the
burgesses from among themselves. (fn. 186) The election
took place on the Monday preceding Michaelmas
Day, (fn. 187) a custom which continued till 1627, when,
under the charter of Charles I, it was altered to the
Monday week before that feast. In 1835 the day of
election was again changed to 9 November. Before
this time the mayor had been sworn into office on the
Michaelmas Day after his election. Under Elizabeth's
charter he was to be chosen from among the senior
and better burgesses, and by the charter of 1627
it was ordained that he should be chosen by the
majority of the aldermen and burgesses from the
aldermen. By the Municipal Corporations Act of
1835 the election was vested in the borough council,
i e. the mayor, aldermen, and councillors. His duties
necessitate residence within the borough limits. (fn. 188)
Under the charter of Charles I the mayor was
removable at the will of the aldermen, and so continued till 1835, except during the few years that
the charter of Charles II was in force, when
he might have been removed by the royal sign
manual, as has been before pointed out. During the
bitter political struggle between the Whig and Tory
aldermen Henry Seagar, who had been chosen
mayor by one party, was ousted under a mandamus
from the Queen's Bench in 1711, as having been
unduly elected. (fn. 189) Again, at the latter end of the
same century party feeling was so strong that for
three years the mayoralty was in dispute. (fn. 190) In
October, 1779, John Carter was elected by the Whig
party, Edward Linzee, who had been chosen in the
preceding September, not having appeared to be
sworn. Carter was ousted in the following January,
and John Godwin, who took his place, resigned in
May, so that from that time till Michaelmas, 1780,
there was no mayor at all in the town, and during a
whole year no justices nor minor officials were
sworn. (fn. 191) Early in the seventeenth century there were
evidently objections raised to the choice of members
of the garrison as mayor, for William Winter at his
election in 1635 renounced his position in the garrison and promised 'hereafter to be none of their
company.' (fn. 192) In the case of Benjamin Johnson, a
storekeeper who was chosen mayor in 1665, a deputy
fulfilled the greater part of his functions, though he
attended the more important councils, e.g. to consult
as to the prevention of the plague. (fn. 193) He refused to
relinquish office, saying that only the king and council
could remove him, (fn. 194) and in spite of definite orders to
the contrary several officers in the docks were chosen
mayor, for in the words of a letter addressed to
Samuel Pepys, 'the king had as good as taken away
the charter from the town as prohibit his officers from
being magistrates.' (fn. 195)
The appointment of a deputy mayor in case of the
mayor's sickness or any other reasonable cause of
absence was provided for in the charter of Charles I.
The deputy was to be one of the aldermen and was
chosen by the mayor himself.
As the office of bailiff became extinct, it devolved upon
the mayor to preside over the court leet and view of
frankpledge in the town. In the charter of Charles I
it is stated that either the mayor or the recorder
must be present at these and at the court of record.
The charter of Elizabeth provided that he should be
ex officio a justice of the peace, and, with the common
clerk, should hear and seal recognizances of debt.
The mayor's hospitality consisted mainly in great
banquets on special occasions. At first he was bound
to provide two grand feasts at the time of the sessions
and one on the Friday following, together with other
banquets on election days and Michaelmas Day, and a
piece of roast beef on Christmas Day, Easter Day, and
Whitsunday. Late in the seventeenth century the
mayor's salary having been reduced by £10 to increase
the fund for paving the town, one of these feasts was
abolished; and in 1681, when the town was burdened
with the costs of a suit concerning the elections, the
two grand feasts of the session were excused. (fn. 196)
At first there was no definite allowance due to the
mayor from the corporation funds, but he had certain
perquisites, e.g. two bushels of wheat from every
boat-load brought into port, (fn. 197) and certain amercements
at law days and courts, (fn. 198) the latter privilege being
evidently a survival of the old custom which allowed
the bailiff 12d. in every pound recovered in the
court. (fn. 199) In 1543 these amercements were commuted
for an annual payment to be settled at the election of
the mayor. (fn. 200) Latterly the amount assigned to him
yearly was £30, but late in the seventeenth century this
was reduced to £20, and in 1671 this was changed for
the use of the butchers' shambles and the loft above
them, the corporation keeping them in repair, (fn. 201)
while, in 1693, it was arranged that the mayor himself should pay the cost of repairs. (fn. 202) Finally, in
1785, it was arranged that all the former perquisites of
the mayor should be added to the common fund, from
which the expenses of the mayoralty up to £300
yearly were to be paid by the chamberlain. (fn. 203) It was
a privilege of the mayor to elect a burgess on retiring
from office. (fn. 204) At an election of aldermen in 1690 a
discussion arose as to whether the mayor had a
casting vote in the matter, and the decision was in
the negative, (fn. 205) but by 1835 it was customary for
him to have a casting vote. (fn. 206) At that date also he
had the appointment of certain minor officers such
as the serjeants-at-mace. In 1682 it was ordained
that when not wearing his robe he should carry a
white staff 6 ft. to 7 ft. in length. (fn. 207)
By Elizabeth's charter the powers of justices of the
peace were first definitely conferred on the mayor and
three of the senior or better burgesses of the town, (fn. 208)
though some at least of their functions, e.g. the
suppression of riot and the prevention of forestalling,
must have been previously exercised by officials of the
corporation. Under the charter of 1627 the mayor,
ex-mayor of the previous year, the recorder, and three
other aldermen were justices of the peace for one year,
being chosen Monday week before Michaelmas by the
mayor, aldermen, and burgesses for the time being.
The three aldermen then appointed by the king had
all previously acted as mayor, and it evidently became
the custom later for the office only to be given to
ex-mayors, for Hugh Salisbury, an officer of the
dockyard who had been elected justice in 1666,
excused himself for taking such an office since there
were only three aldermen besides himself who had
been mayors. (fn. 209) The charter of Charles II extended
the jurisdiction of the justices of Portsmouth to
Gosport, but otherwise no change was made, except
that it definitely stated that only aldermen who had
been mayors could become justices of the peace.
Owing to the party struggles of the eighteenth
century no new justices were sworn into office in
1779. (fn. 210) The number of magistrates has since
increased.
The recorder, or presiding officer in the court of
record, and more recently the quarter sessions of the
borough, is definitely mentioned in the charter of
Charles I. It is evident, however, that the office was
in existence previous to that time, for in 1601 John
Moore, 'recorder of Portsmouth,' was returned as
member of Parliament for the town. (fn. 211) He had been
under-steward of Portsmouth during the highstewardship of Henry, earl of Sussex, who was
appointed in 1590. (fn. 212) Again, in 1615, Moore was
entered in the list of officers as serjeant-at-law and
recorder. (fn. 213) According to the charter of 1627 the
recorder was to be a man learned in the laws of
England, to be elected by the mayor and aldermen
and to continue in office during good behaviour, but
before 1833 his term of office had been changed to
one for life. (fn. 214) The charter of Charles II included
the recorder among those who had power to make
by-laws for the government of the town. His fee,
which was paid from the rent-roll by the mayor,
amounted to £10 in 1682. (fn. 215) By the Municipal
Reform Act of 1835 the choice of a recorder was
vested in the crown. Among those who have held
this office was Judge Jeffreys, appointed in 1685,
presumably on the nomination of the earl of Dartmouth. (fn. 216) His duties were fulfilled by a deputy.
The stewards have been said to be predecessors of
the recorders, but little is known of their office. In the
ancient usages and customs of the town, the steward
is named among the officers to be elected with the
mayor, (fn. 217) and record is kept of the appointment of
seneschals or stewards in the sixteenth century, John
Moore, the recorder of 1600, being deputy-steward
under the earl of Sussex, as stated above.
The chamberlain or treasurer of the corporation
was of considerable importance in the sixteenth and
following centuries. In 1531 there were two
chamberlains, (fn. 218) and again in 1561 the 'chamberlains'
had charge of the town muniments, (fn. 219) but in 1620
there was only one. (fn. 220) In addition to his ordinary
duties as treasurer he was responsible for the repair of
the town property, e.g. the pound. He was elected
annually by the mayor and a majority of the aldermen,
but as a rule the chamberlain of the previous year
was re-elected. (fn. 221) His place is now taken by a
treasurer and accountant.
The coroner's office is prescriptive. The 'Customs'
of the fifteenth century state that he was elected
yearly with the mayor. (fn. 222) During the eighteenth
century it was customary for the town clerk to be
chosen as coroner each year. (fn. 223) Controversies arose
in the eighteenth century between the admiralty
coroner and the coroner of Portsmouth as to the
extent of their jurisdictions, and in 1738, the matter
having been laid before the King's Bench, it was
decided that they held concurrent jurisdiction on
board the men-of-war in the harbour. (fn. 224)
The charter of 1627 provided that there should
be a town clerk of the borough who should also be a
clerk of the peace, but the two offices are now held
separately and the town clerk himself is assisted by a
deputy.
In attendance on the mayor were the serjeants-atmace, their duties including the care of the town
hall, (fn. 225) the summoning of members of the council, (fn. 226)
and the preservation of the peace. (fn. 227) From the fourteenth century onwards there were apparently two
serjeants. (fn. 228) At first certain fees from burgesses and
strangers pleading in the borough court were due to
them, (fn. 229) but in 1682 their salary was a fixed one. (fn. 230)
By 1835 there was only one serjeant, and he was
appointed annually by the mayor, the choice generally
falling on the officer of the previous year. (fn. 231)
Other officers were the beadle, whose duties in 1685
included the cleaning of all gutters; (fn. 232) the hayward,
who had care of the cattle in the common fields, and
impounded strays; the constables, whose numbers
increased from three in 1531 (fn. 233) to twenty-two in
1833, (fn. 234) but whose influence in the government of
the town decreased after the thirteenth century, when
they had a voice in the formation of by-laws; (fn. 235) and
the ale-tasters and searchers of market, who sought
offenders against the assize of bread and ale. There
were also four cofferers, who in the thirteenth century
had charge of the borough muniments, (fn. 236) an office
which was filled in 1531 by the mayor and two other
burgesses, (fn. 237) and seems, later on, to have been exercised
by the justices of the peace, while the cofferers' duties
were those of auditors. (fn. 238) In connexion with the port
there were also water-bailiffs, a wharfinger, and a
measurer. (fn. 239)
Richard I exempted the town of Portsmouth and
the burgesses holding in it and of it from pleas of
the shire and hundred, and from all other pleas, including forest pleas; (fn. 240) moreover, he gave them the
right of infangtheof and utfangtheof, so that from the
first foundation of the town the burgesses had criminal
jurisdiction therein. The early 'Customs' recite the
punishments awarded in various cases: the pillory for
minor thefts, death by burning or drowning at Catcliff (the site of the older portion of the royal dockyard) for murder, the cucking-stool for scolds, and
fixed fines and the forfeiture of the weapon drawn in
breaking the peace for assault. (fn. 241)
Under the Municipal Corporation Act of 1835
Portsmouth was allowed to retain quarter sessions of
the peace. (fn. 242) The business of these courts had also
included the lighting and cleansing of the town until
special trustees were appointed for that purpose in the
eighteenth century. (fn. 243) It is curious that burgesses
were occasionally disfranchised at the sessions of the
peace, although their removal was dependent on the
votes of the mayor and aldermen, and not only on
those of the magistrates. (fn. 244) For more than a century
the sessions have been held three times a week, while
the court of record, instituted by Charles I to deal
with civil cases in the town, has been held every
Tuesday. In 1819 a Bill was introduced for the
more easy recovery of small debts in Portsmouth, but
the attempt was unsuccessful, (fn. 245) and as yet the
borough has no separate court of requests.
Court-leet and view of frankpledge were probably
the oldest of the borough courts. It was doubtless
the perquisites of these courts for which £8 10s. 3d.
were accounted in 1198. (fn. 246) Their business included
the supervision of weights and measures, the making
of presentments concerning such misdemeanours as
encroachments, frays, and bloodshed, breach of the
pound, and all offences affecting trade in the town,
such as breaking the assize and using false weights. It
appears also that the court-leet dealt with such matters
as would elsewhere have been heard in the courtbaron of the lord of the manor; for instance, tenants
were there admitted to the town lands, at the same
time taking an oath to be true tenant to the mayor,
aldermen, and burgesses. (fn. 247) During the seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries the criminal work of the
court-leet was gradually assumed by the justices of the
peace, and its local duties, such as the supervision of
the repair and lighting of the streets, were executed
by the commissioners for that purpose. Thus, early
in the nineteenth century, though the court was
nominally held every Tuesday, the presentments were
invariably postponed till the court day next before the
Easter or Michaelmas sessions, (fn. 248) and it is doubtful if
they performed any real business even then, for no
leet presentments later than those for 1778 are to be
found among the corporation records. (fn. 249)
A court of piepowder was formerly kept during fairtime. (fn. 250) The same court was held for burgesses as
well as strangers during a month which commenced
a fortnight before Michaelmas Day. (fn. 251) A memorandum
made on the cover of a seventeenth-century book of
sessions of the peace and view of frankpledge notes
that 6s. was due to the mayor and 4s. to the town
clerk for every court of piepowder held; (fn. 252) but the
court fell out of use as the fair deteriorated.
The fair itself was granted to the burgesses by
Richard I. It was to be held on the feast of St. Peter ad
Vincula (1 August) and during the following fortnight,
and the charter extended to those who attended it all
the privileges enjoyed by visitors to the fairs at Winchester. (fn. 253) The grant of this fair was confirmed in
the subsequent charters, and doubtless it brought
much trade to the town and profit to the corporation, who took the tolls. In 1585, when the prosperity of Portsmouth was at a low ebb, the mayor
and corporation, in petitioning for various trading
advantages, begged that they might be allowed to hold
two free fairs yearly, each to last for twenty days, and
that during fair-time all men might discharge merchandise there for half the usual custom; (fn. 254) but
apparently no grant of a second fair was made, nor is
the original one definitely mentioned in the charter
of 1600. Charles I, in 1627, confirmed the fair or
feast to be held on the feast of St. Peter ad Vincula
and the fourteen days following according to the grant
of Richard I, but abolished 'a certain other fair'
which the burgesses had been wont to hold for fifteen
days from the first day of August. It seems probable
that, as the fair was subsequently held on 29 June
and the fortnight following, it was under this charter
that the date of the fair was altered from its original
date to the only feast of St. Peter observed in the
English calendar. With the change of style in 1752,
the first day of the fair was again altered to 11 July.
It was a trading fair of some importance, held in the
open street, and was resorted to not only by the
people of the neighbourhood, but by traders from
Normandy and Holland. The chief articles sold
were cutlery and earthenware from the Midlands,
cloth from the west of England, baskets from Normandy, and Dutch metal and delftware. The fair
opened with the display of an open hand or glove,
which was placed at the end of a pole and exhibited
from the window of the old gaol in the High Street,
and latterly from the old town-hall. The glove is
now kept in the borough museum: it replaced an
older one which had been stolen and sold in America. (fn. 255)
Towards the end of the eighteenth century the fair
began to deteriorate, becoming a mere gathering of
shows and gingerbread stalls, and a great inconvenience
and nuisance to the inhabitants. Several attempts were
made to put an end to it, but they were ineffectual,
until in 1846 a clause inserted in a Local Improvement Act finally abolished it after an existence of
more than six centuries. (fn. 256)
The markets also instituted by the charter of 1194
are held on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays,
though the original grant only mentions Thursday as
market-day. The charter gave to the burgesses all
the liberties enjoyed by the citizens of Winchester and
Oxford at their markets. During the seventeenth
century 'standings' were let out in the markethouse, (fn. 257) which was presumably under the gildhall,
which stood across the High Street. Later, the
ground floor of the old town-hall, at the corner of
Pembroke Road, was known as the market, but
was let to a yearly tenant as a shop. (fn. 258) It is now held
in the Commercial Road, the main thoroughfare
northwards from the present town-hall. Vegetables,
fruit, and dairy produce are sold wholesale and retail.
The market begins in the early hours of the morning,
when cars are driven in from all the country round,
and even from over the Sussex borders. The carts
themselves are drawn up in the road and used as stalls,
or the fruit and vegetables are exposed for sale in
baskets placed along the curb, while the salesman
stands in the gutter. The corporation still takes 2d.
toll for each standing.
On 4 July, 1256, Henry III granted to the 'good
men' of Portsmouth that they and their heirs might
have a gild merchant in the town, with all the liberties
thereto belonging. A clause in the charter was
evidently intended to free the community from
liability for the debts of its individual members, (fn. 259) and
the grant ends with a confirmation of exemption from
cheminage and the other privileges enjoyed by the
men of the town during the reigns of Richard I and
John. It is curious to note that, though the burgesses obtained several confirmations of their other
charters, it was not till 1384 that this grant of a gildmerchant was exemplified. (fn. 260) Owing to the unfortunate
loss of the earlier town records, the relations between
the gild and the corporation remain unknown;
nevertheless, it may be inferred that they were closely
allied, from the fact that it was the mayor and burgesses who regulated the trade in the sixteenth and
following centuries, and that the borough courts were
held in the Gildhall. (fn. 261)
The earliest known common seal of the town is
in the possession of the Society of Antiquaries, and is
said to date from the thirteenth century. It shows a
single-masted vessel on the waves, with furled mainsail. Above the vessel are a crescent and star.
The common seal at present in use bears on the
obverse a similar vessel, with an anchor at the bow
and an indented flag at the mast-head. Before the
mast are two figures rowing; two others in a tower
at the stem are blowing long trumpets. The legend
is 'Sigillum Commune de Portemutha.' On the
reverse are three canopied niches. In the centre niche
are the Virgin and Child; in the right-hand niche
St. Nicholas with hand raised in benediction; and in
the left-hand niche St. Thomas of Canterbury, holding his archiepiscopal cross. The legend is 'Portum
Virgo Juva Nicholae Fove Roge (fn. 262) Thoma.'
The seal of the mayoralty is circular, and bears the
crescent and star of the borough arms, and the legend
'S. Prepositi de Portesmuth.'
A seal affixed to warrants authorizing flogging
during the eighteenth century bears the Tudor rose
surmounted by a crown, and the legend 'Prepositus
Portesmouth.'
The corporation insignia include:—
(1) A small silver mace with cup-shaped head, on
one side of which is the Tudor rose and on the other
the fleur-de-lis crowned; no hall-mark.
(2) A silver parcel-gilt mace with semi-globular
head engraved with the star, a five-bladed shaft, and
the arms of Charles II on a boss on the head, so fixed
that it may be reversed to show the arms of the Commonwealth; no hall-mark.
(3) A silver-gilt mace 'converted' at the Restoration. The head is surmounted by a crown, of which
the arches are of unusual character. The maker's
mark is W. H.
(4) The mayor's chain of office, purchased in
1859, is of gold. Attached is a pendant bearing the
borough arms.
Among the fine collection of corporation plate
are:—
(1) A silver-gilt cup with the hall-mark of 1525–6
and the inscription 'Si Deus Nobiscum quis contra
nos.' On the inside of the foot the initials F. B.
(2) Three silver spoons of Elizabethan pattern marked
with the hall-mark of 1558–9 and bearing the letters
F. B. pounced on the stems; and three silver spoons
marked respectively with the hall-marks of 1588,
1601, and 1618, the earliest having the initials I. S. A.
engraved on the knob.
(3) A standing silver-gilt cup with cover. On
the edge of the bowl the legends 'Multa cadunt
inter calicem supremum labra' (sic) and 'Vivite ad
extremum C.C.' The following inscription referring
to the donor, Sir Benjamin Berry, is pounced round
the lip of the cup: 'This sweete berry from benjamin
did falle then goode sir benjamin berry it call.'
(4) Silver tazza pounced with the initials I. S. A,
and marked with the hall-mark of 1582.
(5) A silver-gilt covered cup surmounted by a
female figure. On the bowl is an inscription stating
the cup to be the gift of Robert Lee of London,
merchant-taylor, and on the cover the legend
'Amieorum beneficia non peribunt.' The hall-mark
is of the year 1590–1.
(6) A silver-gilt standing cup and cover bearing the
arms of Portsmouth and of the three donors, John
Watts, William Bryan, and John Riddlesden, and
the legend 'Tres prohibet supra rixarum metuens
gratia.' (fn. 263) The hall-mark is of 1606.
(7) Silver-gilt standing cup and cover inscribed
'The gift of Thomas Bonner, 1609.'
(8) Silver double salt-cellar, with cover bearing the
hall-mark of 1615.
(9) Two small silver wine-cups pounced with the
name of the donor, William Haberley, and marked
with the hall-mark of 1617. A third somewhat
similar cup has the hall-mark of 1618. A modern
facsimile of the last was given to the corporation in
1875.
(10) A plain silver cup, having the hall-mark of
1619, and inscribed 'The gift of Elizabeth Ridg,
widow, 1629.'
(11) A plain silver cup, 'the gift of James Moray,'
marked with the hall-mark of 1625.
(12) A plain silver rose-water salver and ewer, both
marked with the hall-mark of 1637, and inscribed
'The gift of John Herman, Esq, deceased, to ye
mayor and aldermen of ye towne of Porstmouth.'
(13) A plain silver salt-cellar marked with the hallmark of 1665. On the foot is inscribed the name of
Edward Silvester.
(14) A plain tankard marked with the hall-mark
of 1679, and inscribed 'The gift of Thomas Hancock, alderman, to the corporation of Portsmouth,
1679.'
(15) A plain flagon, with the hall-mark of 1681.
Engraved on the front is the inscription 'The gift of
Captain Thos. Allin, commander of His Majts ship ye
Rubie, to ye corporation of Portsmouth, Anno
Domini, 1682.'
(16) A pair of silver-gilt flagons, the gift of Louise,
duchess of Portsmouth, in 1683. They bear her arms
with the motto 'Abeb. Ent. Lealdet.'
(17) A silver-gilt loving-cup, presented to the corporation by Robert East in 1890.
(18) A silver rose-water dish and ewer, the gift of
Alderman Ridoutt to the corporation in the same
year. (fn. 264)
According to the thirteenth-century custumal of
the town, the jurisdiction of the borough extended
'from the Est side of Hambroke (fn. 265) to Hasilhorde, (fn. 266)
and ynward as far as it ebbith an Floweth into the Byrg
of Faram ande to Palsgrove as strong as we have hit in
Lond yn owre Fraunchise.' Thus the borough claimed
jurisdiction over the whole harbour. Proceedings
were taken in Chancery in 1435 by John Matthew,
deputy to the lord admiral, against the bailiff and
burgesses of Portsmouth for assaulting him and preventing him from holding a court in the borough. (fn. 267)
It appears that on the first attempt to hold an
admiralty court there in February, 1434–5, the
bailiff showed the deputy a copy of the town charter,
which did not satisfy him that the borough was without the jurisdiction of the admiralty, whereupon the
bailiff pleaded the town's customs, and begged for
respite until the Lord Chancellor's decision as to the
meaning of the charter should be known. The
deputy agreed, but nevertheless held a court at
the water-side some time later, and was interrupted by
the bailiff, serjeant, and constables. A struggle ensuing,
it was reported that the bailiff was killed, and the
whole town came out against the deputy, who had to
be escorted to his house by the bailiff's officers. He
pathetically complained that in the confusion the king's
books were cast to the ground, and that he had 'never
yet found a purse of black leather, in which was £13
of gold . . . . and a seal of office.' The same
question arose from time to time. In the corporation
books of the eighteenth century is an entry recording
a request from the vice-admiral of Hampshire for
permission to hold a court of admiralty in the town.
In acceding to this request, the corporation added a
saving clause for their privileges, and asserted the
non-precedential nature of the occasion.
In 1822 the question of the right of the corporation to the foreshore and soil of the harbour was
raised, (fn. 268) but the case was not proceeded with until
1869. In 1877 the cause was heard, but the corporation failed to establish its right, except to that part
of the harbour adjacent to the old town. (fn. 269)
From a perambulation of the borough and its
liberties in 1566, (fn. 270) it appears that its jurisdiction
extended as far north as a line from Tipner to the
Green Post on the London Road, and as far east as
the bounds of Copnor, Kingston, and Fratton, while
the sea formed the southern boundary. The borough
proper was co-extensive with Portsmouth parish, the
liberties were part of Portsea parish, the east of Portsea being known as the Gildable. (fn. 271) Under the
Reform Act of 1832 the Gildable was included in
the borough for parliamentary purposes, (fn. 272) and three
years later the parliamentary boundaries were adopted
for municipal purposes, (fn. 273) the town being divided at first
into six, and later into fourteen wards. (fn. 274) Under this
arrangement the borough included all the old parishes
of Portsmouth and Portsea. In 1895 the small
extra-parochial district of Great Salterns was added
to it. (fn. 275)
In 1295 Portsmouth returned two burgesses to
Parliament, viz. Richard de Reynold and Stephen
Justice, (fn. 276) and from that date until the present day it has
sent two burgesses to every Parliament with some few
exceptions. These occurred chiefly in the fourteenth
century, when the bailiffs failed to return burgesses to
six several Parliaments. (fn. 277) This failure was probably
due to the burden of their expenses, which fell upon
all the burgesses, for as late as 1597 one representative
was paid 2s. a day during the session of Parliament. (fn. 278)
The lord of Portsea manor was bound to contribute
towards these expenses, since divers of his lands lay
within the liberty of the town. (fn. 279) It might therefore
be concluded that the vote was vested in landholders within the borough; but, so far as can be
drawn from the existing returns, the bailiff and
burgesses alone had a voice in parliamentary elections.
This was the case in 1477–8; in 1572 the mayor,
chamberlains, and commonalty of the town elected
two burgesses, and in 1584 the election was by the
burgesses and freeholders, but with these exceptions
the returns were always made by the bailiff, or mayor,
and burgesses, until the charter of incorporation
granted by Elizabeth, after which they were made
by the mayor, aldermen, and burgesses, except in
1688, when the commonalty also voted. In 1695–6,
the election of Colonel Gibson and Admiral Aylmer
having been contested on the grounds that nonburgesses had been allowed to vote, decision was given
in favour of the mayor, aldermen, and burgesses. (fn. 280)
At a former election the inhabitants of Portsea who
paid scot and lot endeavoured to vote, but the gates
of the town were shut upon them. (fn. 281) During the
eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries further
difficulties arose respecting non-resident burgesses.
The question was finally brought before a committee
of the Commons in 1820, and a decision given in
favour of the non-residents, (fn. 282) but the Reform Act
of 1832 gave the vote to householders both in
the old borough of Portsmouth and in the parish of
Portsea, an arrangement which has not since been
altered. (fn. 283)
The jurisdiction of the town over the harbour
has been the subject of much dispute owing to the
early relations between Southampton and Portsmouth.
Evidently before the foundation of the town by
Richard I the customary dues from ships lading and
unlading in what is now known as Portsmouth Harbour were accounted for by the men of Southampton;
then, after Richard's charter to Portsmouth, £7 was
deducted from the ferm of the former for the pontage
and petty customs of Portsmouth. (fn. 284) The greater
customs were still collected by the men of Southampton, and the customer there accounted for them until
the end of the eighteenth century. (fn. 285) The port of
Portsmouth was named in King John's charter to
Southampton. Perhaps from this grant arose a plea
between the men of the two towns as to what right
the bailiffs of Portsmouth had to take the ferm of
their town, which was alleged to belong to Southampton. They asserted that they collected the pontage
and other water-dues, of which their ferm consisted,
under the sheriff's writ, and denied that the bailiffs of
Southampton had any right in their town. (fn. 286) Unfortunately no account of the termination of this
plea has been found, but in 1239 an agreement was
made by which the burgesses of Southampton retained
only their rights over the water. (fn. 287) Thenceforward
the customer of that town collected the greater customs, while the petty customs were retained by the
men of Portsmouth, who also had jurisdiction over
the whole of the harbour from the western portion of
Southsea Common to Haslar and northwards to Fareham Bridge and Paulsgrove. (fn. 288) In 1279 a commission
was issued to inquire into the alleged exaction of
undue customs at Portsmouth, by which the trade of
the town had been greatly prejudiced, (fn. 289) and again, in
1344, merchants began to abandon the town owing to
the double customs exacted, first by the men of Southampton in the port, and then by the bailiffs of Portsmouth in the town, in accordance with letters patent
granting them the dues on goods bought and sold
there towards building the town walls. (fn. 290) In 1432
the men of Newport complained that no deputy
customers were appointed in the various havens of
Hampshire, and the customers at Southampton were
commanded to place deputies at Portsmouth and other
harbours for one year. (fn. 291) In the fifteenth century the
water-toll of Portsmouth was farmed out by the
steward of Southampton, (fn. 292) and again in 1571 the
township petitioned that a deputy-customer might be
appointed there 'as in former time,' (fn. 293) and in 1602
Portsmouth was named as a member of Southampton, (fn. 294) and was still so in 1696, at which date
the customer of Southampton reported that it had
formerly paid to the king £800 yearly in customs,
but had so grown in recent years as to produce
£6,000. (fn. 295) Nevertheless Portsmouth remained a
member of Southampton port till late in the eighteenth or early in the nineteenth century, when it
was separated and became itself a port. (fn. 296) Its extent,
set out in 1852, includes the whole coast-line from
the limits of the port of Arundel at Bosham Creek
westwards as far as Hill Head, the limit of Southampton
port. (fn. 297)
It is as a naval station rather than a trading centre
that Portsmouth has gained its importance. Before
the building of the town the harbour was used as a
starting-point for Normandy; the royal treasure was
sent there from Winchester for transport, (fn. 298) and in
1177 almost all the ships of England were gathered
at Portsmouth and Southampton. (fn. 299) For two centuries after the town had been founded it was used
as a rendezvous for expeditions to Normandy and
Gascony. (fn. 300) King John gathered a fleet of unprecedented size there in 1205 Under Edward III menat-arms took ship there for Brittany, (fn. 301) and in 1416
the French blockaded the English fleet then lying
at anchor in the harbour. (fn. 302)
King John caused some kind of protection to be made
for his ships there during the winter months, for in 1212
he commanded the sheriff of Hampshire to cause the
royal basin or dock (exclusa) at Portsmouth to be inclosed with a strong wall for the safe-keeping of his
ships during the following winter. (fn. 303) It appears that
the 'basin' here referred to was a pond belonging to
the abbey of Fontevrault, probably attached to the
mills granted to the abbey by Richard I, in which
case it was situated near the present Gun Wharf.
Sixteen years after the building of the walls, at the
petition of the abbess, Henry III commanded the
constable of Rochester to provide wood to fill up the
basin and to make another causeway there, notwithstanding that King John had caused walls to be built
close by for the protection of his vessels from storms. (fn. 304)
There was still a royal ship at Portsmouth in 1232
under the custody of Vincent de Hastings, (fn. 305) to whom
a grant of the 'water of Portsmouth' by King John
had been confirmed in March, 1216–17. (fn. 306) Probably,
therefore, the king's ships continued to have their
winter quarters at Portsmouth, though no definite
mention of a dock is found before 1495, when
Henry VII ordered the construction of a dry
dock there. (fn. 307) It is said to have been situated near
the King's Stairs, i.e. in Portsmouth itself. Throughout the reign of Henry VIII large sums were expended
on this dockyard and the storehouses attached, and in
1523 a new dock was rebuilt for the Henri Grâce à
Dieu. (fn. 308) Towards the end of the reign special efforts
were made to maintain the importance of the harbour.
Sir Anthony Knyvet, governor of the town in 1544,
set forth its convenience, since the greatest ships could
get in and out at all tides, and it was only one night's
sailing from Newhaven, Dieppe, Harfleur, and the
Seine. (fn. 309) In 1545 a new chain was stretched across
the harbour, and the whole fleet concentrated to
defend the town; (fn. 310) but after the succession of
Edward VI Portsmouth fell into comparative insignificance as a naval station, owing to its distance from
London. (fn. 311) The old dry dock had been filled in
before 1627, when Buckingham was earnest in his
endeavours to build a new double dock in its place. (fn. 312)
Unfortunately his death deferred its construction,
and, though ships were stationed in the harbour and
estimates made for a new dock, the latter was not commenced till 1656. (fn. 313) The yard was partly fortified in
1667. (fn. 314) Subsequently the docks were extended
northwards, many acres being reclaimed from the
harbour for this purpose, and their importance increased during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
with that of the Channel Fleet. Portsmouth from this
time has been intimately connected with naval history,
notably with the execution of Admiral Byng in 1757,
the loss of the Royal George in 1782, and the mutiny
at Spithead in 1797. The Naval College was
established within the dockyard in 1733, and in 1798
a new dock was built to receive ten sail of the line. (fn. 315)
With the introduction of steam vessels more accommodation was needed, and for this purpose a new
steam-basin was opened in 1848. (fn. 316) Between that
date and 1876 the area of the yard was more than
doubled, a large extension including fitting-out, rigging, and repairing basins being opened in 1876. (fn. 317)
Small additions have been more recently made. The
yard now occupies the greater part of the peninsula to
the north of Portsmouth, and gives employment to
many thousands of men, since it is used for the building and repairing of all kinds of vessels, from the
torpedo-destroyer to the largest of our men-of-war.
The position of Portsmouth, favourable as it is for
a trading port and naval station, lays the town open to
foreign invasion. It was here that Robert of Normandy is said to have landed in 1101, when he
sought to wrest the kingdom from his brother
Henry, (fn. 318) though it is probable that the chroniclers
refer to the whole harbour as Portsmouth, and that
the actual landing was effected at Portchester. (fn. 319) The
fortification of such a town was, therefore, of the
utmost importance, yet little effort was made to protect it before the fourteenth century. There is,
indeed, record of the serjeanty due from William of
Cosham in the thirteenth century of providing one man
in the 'castle of Portsmouth' in time of war, (fn. 320) but the
name seems to be either an error of the scribe for Portchester, or to have been given to that castle owing to
its position at the head of Portsmouth Harbour. When
the town was first founded a house was built there for
the king, and ditches were made about its court, (fn. 321) but
there is no evidence of a royal castle there previous to
the fifteenth century. The first assault on the town
came, however, not from the Continent, but from the
barons of the Cinque Ports. In 1216 they had served
as allies with the men of Portsmouth in aiding the
Dauphin against King John, (fn. 322) but in the succeeding
reign both the men of Portsmouth and Southampton
suffered grievously from the violence of the barons,
who seized cargoes on their way to Portsmouth and
transferred them to their own ships, and refused to
allow the bailiffs to enter their vessels to buy wine. (fn. 323)
In 1265 the barons of the Cinque Ports, joining in the
political struggles of that date, and doubtless inspired
with no good feeling against a prosperous port in their
immediate neighbourhood, landed in force at Portsmouth, slew some of the men who had gathered
together in defence of the port, put the rest to flight,
and finally burnt the town. (fn. 324) Some years later an
affray in the Isle of Wight, though it did not closely
affect the town, must have caused no little excitement
there. In 1293 some English sailors set upon certain
men of Bayonne and slew them, mistaking them for
Spaniards. It was in Portsmouth Church that they
swore to their mistake, and bound themselves to provide three chaplains at Portsmouth and three at
Bayonne to pray for the souls of the slain. (fn. 325) The
defenceless state of the town is well shown by its
fate during the Hundred Years' War. Early in 1338
some ships and galleys which were reported to have
come from Normandy landed on the south coast and
plundered and burnt the towns and villages near
Southampton and Portsmouth, all the latter town
save only the parish church and the Domus Dei being
destroyed by fire. (fn. 326) The king, having compassion on
the misery of the townspeople, pardoned them
the triennial tenth and fifteenth then due, (fn. 327) and
in the following year gave them respite from the
exaction of wool. (fn. 328) These concessions were extended from time to time; (fn. 329) in 1339 efforts were
made to strengthen the defences of the town, and the
commissioners of array for the guard of the sea in
Oxfordshire were charged to increase their payment
for this purpose in order to provide a man-at-arms
and two archers to do guard at Portsmouth. (fn. 330) In 1342
further steps were taken to protect the town, which
had offered no resistance to the first French attack. (fn. 331)
In that year townsmen were released from payment
of all tallages and contributions to the king on condition that they applied the contingent due from them
in walling and fortifying the town, this work being
under the sheriff's supervision. (fn. 332) An order was also
sent to the sheriff to cause the king's grant to be proclaimed, and to permit the men of Portsmouth to levy
customs in their town for the purpose of walling and
paving it. (fn. 333) This last grant, however, proved more
hindrance than help, for when merchants discovered
that they must pay dues to the burgesses of Portsmouth
on selling their goods in the town, as well as custom
to the men of Southampton on entering the port,
they took their merchandise elsewhere, so that two
years after the grant of this doubtful privilege the
townsmen petitioned for its reversal. (fn. 334)
After the renewal of hostilities with France in 1369
the town was again burned by the enemy, whereupon
the impoverished inhabitants petitioned for respite
from the payment of ferm, (fn. 335) and after inquisition had
been made on the subject they were released from
payment for ten years. (fn. 336) The town is said to have
been again assaulted and plundered by the French
expedition which, under Jean de Vien, ravaged the
south coast in 1377. (fn. 337) There is a tradition that it
was again attacked in 1380.
The necessity for strong fortifications having been
thus forcibly proved, Thomas earl of Kent, Nicholas
Sharnesfield, knight of the chamber, and Robert
Cholmelegh, king's esquire, were appointed to survey
Portsmouth and take order for its defence in 1386, (fn. 338)
and in 1421 Robert Barbot was clerk of the king's
works there. (fn. 339) Within the three following years he
received over £690 for works about the town. These
included the erection of a new tower 'for the safe
custody of the king's ships,' and the construction of a
wharf at 'Chiderodd' as a foundation for another
new tower. (fn. 340) No record of any former tower is at
present forthcoming, but from the wording of Robert
Barbot's account it might be inferred that the tower
built by him took the place of an older one, perhaps
built after the survey of 1386. (fn. 341) Robert Thorpe
accounted for repairs about the 'castles' of Portchester
and Portsmouth from 1441 to 1443. (fn. 342) One of these
towers was still standing in 1483, when it was
mentioned in the grant of the government of the town
to John le Moyne. (fn. 343) It was doubtless identical with
the round tower which is shown at the mouth of the
harbour on a plan of the time of Henry VIII. (fn. 344)
In 1513 special instructions were given to the earl
of Arundel for the keeping of the tower and blockhouses at Portsmouth, (fn. 345) and at about this date a large
storehouse was built and the old brew-houses were
repaired. (fn. 346) Nevertheless in 1518 Fox, then bishop
of Winchester, wrote to Wolsey: 'If war be intended
against England the Isle of Wight and Portsmouth
are too feeble for defence. Our manner is never to
prepare for war to our enemies be light at our
doors.' (fn. 347) A few years later, in accordance with further
advice from the bishop urging that Portsmouth and
the Isle of Wight should be provided with artillery,
'for if they be lords of the sea Calais will never be
lost,' (fn. 348) ten ships were engaged in carrying ordnance
to Portsmouth. (fn. 349) Still, in 1526 the town was 'in
sore ruin and decay,' (fn. 350) and when in 1538 a vessel
from Southampton, pursued by four French ships, ran
aground beside Palshyds Bulwarks, the ordnance of the
town was out of order and the Frenchmen boarded
and carried off their prize unresisted. (fn. 351) In the
following year new ramparts and fortifications were
well advanced owing to fear of a French war, (fn. 352) but
two years later the hastily-built ramparts were 'clean
fallen down' and the king so annoyed that he went
in person to direct how they should be rebuilt. (fn. 353) In
1544 Sir Anthony Knyvet, then governor of the town,
petitioned for more men to defend it, stating that
whereas there had formerly been a hundred gunners
there, there were latterly only fifty, besides four or
five hundred bakers and brewers and also labourers
repairing the wall, and reinforcement would be difficult in time of war owing to the single approach to
the island over Portsea Bridge. (fn. 354) In 1545 arose
another alarm of attack; the council met there to
consider its defence, artillery from the Tower of
London was sent thither, the whole navy gathered
for its defence, and four of the inhabitants were
appointed to watch nightly with the soldiers. (fn. 355) In
the following year plans were made for the partial inclosure of the town with ramparts of turf and a ditch,
and for the protection of the wharves with mounds
of earth, (fn. 356) but in 1559 Portsmouth was reported to
be 'nothing strong' and a man could gallop his horse
up the ditch, (fn. 357) and this in spite of many plans for its
defence in the preceding years. (fn. 358) In June, 1557, a
terrible fire broke out and destroyed the royal storehouse known as the Broomehouse. (fn. 359) During the
latter part of Queen Elizabeth's reign the work of
fortification went on apace under the direction of Sir
Henry Radcliffe, then governor of the town. A
commission was issued to assemble and train the
townsmen and islanders, (fn. 360) and an estimate made for
the building of a 'new great bridge' and gates to the
town, (fn. 361) the work being done by labourers levied
from the country round. (fn. 362) In 1587 the inhabitants
were ordered to cut down all hedges within forty or
fifty yards of the town walls. (fn. 363) At this date it was
considered that a thousand men could hold the town
until the navy could come to their aid, (fn. 364) but in 1590
able men to the number of 2,000 were appointed in
fourteen neighbouring hundreds to be ready to repair
thither in case of assault. (fn. 365) Again in 1596 special
preparations were made to resist a threatened attack
from Spain. (fn. 366) In 1624 the ramparts were severely
damaged in a great storm. (fn. 367) A few years later the
town was filled with the men levied for the duke of
Buckingham's expedition, (fn. 368) yet the fort itself was
in ruins. (fn. 369) In 1634 it was proposed to remove the
old town wall, (fn. 370) and three years later the townsmen
were commanded to cover all houses near the king's
buildings with tiles instead of thatch as a precaution
against fire. (fn. 371) The chain which had been laid
across the harbour in 1621, was by this time destroyed. (fn. 372) It has since been replaced, for it can still
be seen at low tide.

A Plan of Portsmouth 1762.
Reproduced by Henry Lewis. 114, High Street, Portsmouth-1890. from a copy in the possession of R East Esg.
The strength of the town was tried during the civil
wars. It being the policy of the Parliamentarians to
secure for themselves the chief maritime towns, they
were necessarily anxious to make sure of Portsmouth,
and the more so that it was reported in May, 1641,
that the queen was besieged there, while the king
himself was said to be on his way thither with the
army. (fn. 373) Colonel George Goring, then governor of
Portsmouth, was suspected of complicity in a plot to
possess the Papists of the town, and was sent to
London to be examined before Parliament, where he
succeeded in justifying his conduct. The soldiers themselves not being trusted, trained bands from the county,
which was for the most part inclined to favour the
Parliamentarians, were sent into the town. (fn. 374) The
townspeople were very ill-disposed towards the governor
owing to his royalist principles. There had also been
a growing feeling of dissension between the garrison
and the townsfolk for many years past. As early as
January, 1546–7, Edward Vaughan, then captain of
Portsmouth, had brought a complaint against the
mayor touching the gauge of beer, (fn. 375) and in 1564 a
quarrel arose between the corporation and the
governor as to houses which the latter had built on
waste land. (fn. 376) Irritation increased under the government of the earl of Sussex, captain of Portsmouth
from 1571 to 1593, who caused the townsmen to
cut down the hedges near the walls. They welcomed
his successor, 'thinking his coming amongst them
to be their year of jubilee, and having now some
hope to grow rich, which heretofore was impossible
by reason of the great dislike between them and the
dead earl.' (fn. 377) Again in 1609 the mayor and his
brethren petitioned the governor, the earl of Pembroke, for more liberty of ingress and egress, for equal
benefits of the law with the soldiers, for special provisions for the relief of poor soldiers and their families,
and that members of the garrison should not be
allowed to trade in the town. (fn. 378) The governor
acceded to most of these requests, but the soldiers
again raised the question of the trading privilege in
1627 (vide supra), while in 1632 the mayor and
aldermen objected to the removal of the wall between
the Quay Gate and the Square Tower, (fn. 379) and further
difficulties arose with regard to the mayor's having
assessed the garrison as well as the town for shipmoney. The sergeant-major then in command complained at this time that the townspeople had always
shown themselves 'like most splenetive men' to the
garrison. (fn. 380) In 1635 the townsmen recited the concessions made by the earl of Pembroke, and stated
that they had been confirmed by the king in 1632,
but complained that they had since been broken,
their chief grievance being that the soldiers traded
within the town. (fn. 381) The dislike of the townsfolk to
Colonel Goring was increased by political considerations. (fn. 382) He stood by the Parliament until they had
paid him over £5,000 for fortifications and other
sums for arrears due to the garrison, (fn. 383) and these
having been received, declared for the king on
2 August, 1642, (fn. 384) whereupon the gentry of Hampshire surrounded the town to prevent aid reaching
him from the king, while Parliament appointed the
earl of Pembroke governor in his stead. (fn. 385) Having
built a wooden fort to protect Portsbridge and commandeered provisions from the whole island, Colonel
Goring administered an oath of loyalty to the king to
his soldiers, and ejected those who refused to take it. (fn. 386)
Before 16 August he was forced to abandon the
wooden fort at the bridge, which was at once seized
by the Parliamentary adherents of the neighbourhood. (fn. 387) The king's ships, which had declared for
Parliament, prevented stores being brought in, and
early in September the batteries from Gosport opened
fire upon the town (fn. 388) and Southsea Castle surrendered
without a blow. The majority of the soldiers, finding that no help came from the king, took part with
the town in opposing all further resistance, and the
officers were obliged to surrender on 4 September. (fn. 389)
The work of fortification was subsequently continued by Parliament. (fn. 390) In 1648 the garrison petitioned for the trial of the king, (fn. 391) but their pay was
still in arrears, and £6,000 was needed for the repair of
the fortifications to prevent the tower at the harbour
mouth from falling into the sea. (fn. 392) In 1660 the town
stood for Parliament against the army. (fn. 393) In 1665 a
new plan for the fortifications of the town made by
Sir Bernard de Gomme was carried out by Dutch
prisoners of war. (fn. 394) The king himself visited these
new works in September 1668, (fn. 395) and the lands
acquired for this purpose were vested in him and his
successors two years later. (fn. 396)
New barracks were built in 1688 at a time when
they were most grievously needed, for the inhabitants
were overburdened with the number of soldiers quartered upon them. (fn. 397) Nevertheless the townspeople
remained loyal, and in 1690 prepared to raise five
companies of foot should they be needed. (fn. 398) Early
in the eighteenth century more land was purchased
for the fortifications of Portsea, (fn. 399) and in 1748 the
town was secured from attack by land by the raising
of works round the dockyards and gun-wharf. At
this time the ancient town of Portsmouth, i.e. that
part which lies entirely within the south-western corner
of Portsea Island, was completely surrounded by earthworks, the ramparts being strengthened at the angles
by King's Bastion, Pembroke Bastion, and East Bastion,
all looking over what was then a morass between
the town and Southsea Common, Town's Mount,
and Guy's Bastion facing inland, and Beeston's Bastion
at the corner of what is now the new gun wharf,
but was then below water. The Point, protected by
its round tower, was without the town, access to it
being gained through King James's Gate. This with
King William's Gate, Quay Gate, and Lion Gate, the
last being the entrance to Portsea, has been destroyed,
but the Landport or St. George's Gate has been
removed to form the entrance to the recreation
ground, while the old Unicorn Gate is one of the
entrances to the Dockyard. (fn. 400)
The town walls were demolished between the years
1871 and 1878. (fn. 401) The present line of fortifications
extends along the coast, a part of the old ramparts
remaining near Governor's Green. The most southerly point of the island is guarded by Southsea Castle,
a formidable building within a strong high wall partly
surrounded by a deep fosse, and flanked by two batteries. The first castle was built before 1547, in which
year a stone platform was raised, and the neighbouring bulwarks of earth strengthened. (fn. 402) It was possibly
identical with the Southampton Castle of Portsmouth
to which John Chalderton was appointed captain in
1555. (fn. 403) A plan of the castle of this date shows it
to have been a square fort within diamond-shaped
walls, flanked by two platforms. (fn. 404) In 1627 this
building was burnt to the ground, the woodwork
of the chimney having first caught fire. (fn. 405) At the
time of the fire there were neither guns, men,
nor powder in the castle, (fn. 406) and two years later the
captain of Southsea complained that it was 'a
castle where is neither house nor lodging, to guard
a fort that is unprovided for defence or offence.' (fn. 407)
It was rebuilt in 1634, (fn. 408) but the lodgings and storerooms were again burnt down in March 1639–40. (fn. 409)
Its surprise and capture by the Parliamentarians during the siege of Portsmouth in 1642 rendered the
town untenable. (fn. 410) Towards the end of the century
it was used as a state prison, (fn. 411) and was under the control of the governor of Portsmouth. (fn. 412) Beyond the
castle are the Eastney Batteries overlooking the Channel, and behind them a well-kept road leads past the
military church, known on account of its shape as the
'Crinoline Church,' towards the Eastney Barracks. The
church has recently been replaced by a large red-brick
building on the Henderson Road farther inland.
The military governor of Portsmouth at first held
also the office of governor of Portchester Castle. (fn. 413) It
appears that in early times the latter was ex officio governor of Portsmouth, but during the troubled years when
the town was burnt by the French, separate captains
were appointed to the two places with full power to rule
and punish all the men of the towns and their neighbourhoods as well as men-at-arms, hobelers and archers,
and to hold an array there in order to resist the
enemy. (fn. 414) A saving clause for the jurisdiction of the
governor was inserted in the later charters of the town.
After the reign of Henry VIII the office was not
always granted with the constableship of Portchester,
though the two were occasionally held together. (fn. 415)
Since 1834 a lieutenant-governor has ruled the town.
Governor's Green, an open turfed space forming the
south-east corner of Portsmouth town and protected
towards the sea by part of the old town ramparts, is
the site of the old governor's house, which has been
replaced by a modern building standing in its own
grounds near Cambridge Road. On the green stands
the GARRISON CHURCH, a building of very great
historical and architectural interest, which after a somewhat chequered career is now most efficiently cared for
and maintained. It has a vaulted chancel of three bays,
with north vestries, and a nave with aisles of five bays,
the chancel having been the chapel, and the nave the
living-rooms of the hospital of St. John Baptist and
St Nicholas, (fn. 416) otherwise known as Domus Dei, or God's
House, founded by Bishop Peter des Roches of Winchester (1205–1238) shortly before 1214. It was
brought to its present condition, after various repairs
mentioned below, by a thorough renovation and refitting
in 1866 under Street. The chancel is lighted by
triplets of lancets on north and south, and three
trefoiled lancets on the east, and is covered with a
quadripartite ribbed vault springing from clustered
wall shafts which stop on the moulded string running
at the level of the window-sills. In the south-west
angle of the chancel is a small doorway leading to an
octagonal stair turret which gives access to the roof
over the vault, and the middle bay on the north of
the chancel is taken up by a modern organ chamber,
with a vestry added to the east. The nave arcades,
the western bay of which is entirely modern, are very
finely proportioned, with lofty pointed arches of two
chamfered orders on octagonal pillars with moulded
capitals and bases. The roof originally stretched in
one span over nave and aisles, the outer walls of the
latter having been heightened in modern times and
two-light windows of fourteenth-century style inserted,
but parts of the older and thicker walls are still to be
seen, being best preserved at the south-east angle.
The south doorway is in the west bay of the south
aisle, and with the south porch and west front of the
nave is entirely modern. Attached to the pillars in
the nave are the colours of the 7th Royal Fusiliers, of
the Scinde Camel Corps placed in the church in
memory of General Sir Charles Napier, and of the
67th (South Hampshire) Regiment.
After the surrender of the hospital in 1540 it was
handed over to the military authorities, and for a
time the church was used for the storing of armour,
while the rest of the building was used as the
governor's house. (fn. 417) In 1582 plans were made for
its repair, two of the arches being in ruin, while there
was a breach 50 ft. long in the wall of the house. (fn. 418)
The latter was again repaired in 1644; (fn. 419) in it took
place the marriage of Charles II and Catherine of
Portugal, and the allied sovereigns lodged there in
1814. The whole building except the church was
demolished in 1826. (fn. 420)
Without the town, i.e. outside what was once the
walled town of Portsmouth, lies the extensive parish
of PORTSEA, which includes Kingston, Buckland,
Stubbington, Stamshaw, Fratton, Copnor, Milton,
Eastney, and Southsea. All these are now within the
municipal borough of Portsmouth, but before the
Reform Act of 1835 only a part of Portsea was
within the liberty of Portsmouth, while the remainder
of the parish, known as the Gildable, was included in
the hundred of Portsdown. (fn. 421) The men of the
Gildable were accustomed to do watch and ward
without the town, (fn. 422) and had a separate constable. (fn. 423)
Buckland, Copnor, and Fratton are assigned to Portsdown
Hundred in the Domesday Book, but this was before
the existence of Portsmouth borough. Stamshaw was
certainly within the liberty of Portsmouth, (fn. 424) while
Kingston, which was apparently included in the
borough in 1194, is mentioned separately on the Pipe
Roll of 1198. (fn. 425) In 1606 Richard Earnley of Gatcombe, whose hall lay in Hilsea, while his parlour
was in Portsea parish, had to do service for the Portsea
half of his house at Southsea Castle. (fn. 426)
The town of Portsea stands on the former site
of Portsmouth Common, and took its present name
in 1792. (fn. 427) The streets are narrow, and the houses
for the most part low, with tiled roofs and doors
approached by two steps from the street. Some
of the lowest houses are still known as 'garrison
houses,' because, it is said, the inhabitants were not
allowed to build them higher lest they should interfere with the outlook from the old fortifications. Still
narrower, ill-paved alleys intersect the town in its
poorest parts. The high walls of the dockyard bound
it on two sides, while along the third runs the Hard,
a roadway leading by the harbour-side to the main
gates of the yard. The Portsea Extension Railway
connects the town station with the harbour, where a
new station was built on a pier in 1876. Facing the
harbour is a row of houses, chiefly taverns, where the
sailors used to be paid off, while on the wooden seats
opposite watermen wait to take visitors to Nelson's
flagship, the Victory, or round the harbour. Following the dockyard wall Queen Street is reached. It is
the main thoroughfare of Portsea, and is lined with
single-windowed shops stocked with goods to suit the
needs of sailors and dockyard men. Indeed, it is to
the docks that Portsea owes its origin, and this appears
most clearly in the names of the streets, which date
from the beginning of the eighteenth century. Queen
Street itself was named after Queen Anne, as appears
from a legend on one of the houses there, and the
names Marlborough Road and Orange Street are
significant of the date of the town. Defoe described
it as a suburb, or rather a new town, which promised
to outdo Portsmouth as to the number of inhabitants
and the beauty of the buildings, especially as it was
unencumbered by the laws of the garrison and the
town duties and services. (fn. 428) Complaints of encroachments on the town common were frequent
after about 1690, (fn. 429) when it is said to have been an
open field with one hovel upon it; but by 1775 it
was closely built with houses for the dockyard-men, (fn. 430)
and the population increased with great rapidity as the
dockyard rose in importance. In 1764 an Act was
passed for the better paving and cleansing of the
common, (fn. 431) and under a new Act for the same purpose, passed in 1792, the town was first named
Portsea. (fn. 432) The lighting and paving have since been
transferred to the Portsmouth authorities.
The fortifications of Portsmouth were extended in
the eighteenth century to surround Portsea, but were
so formed that the borough and its suburb were two
walled towns adjacent to each other. The Portsea
lines were complete in 1809. (fn. 433)
Long before the town of Portsea had come into
existence there was a manor of that name in the island,
a large portion of which was demesne land of the
manor. The manor or court-house has long since
disappeared. (fn. 434)