The modern state of the city
THE HEALTHY AIR, and pleasant situation of this
city, has been already taken notice of; but the houses
in it, from the length of time since they had been rebuilt, were grown antient again, and from want of any
improvements being made to them, were become unsightly, and the whole city was perhaps esteemed the
most so of any in the kingdom. At length, the necessity of improvement became obvious to every one, and
a general emulation for it took place among the citizens, and under the authority of parliament in 1787,
the city was new paved, and all annoyances were removed. It was lighted with upwards of 240 lamps; a
watch was appointed for the safeguard of the inhabitants, and the houses throughout it were altered to a
chearful, and more modern appearance; and most of
the shops were fitted up in a handsome style, in imitation of those in London; and the improvements would
have been carried still further, had not the short tenure
by which most of the houses in it were held under church
leases, (which is in every place the bane of all industry) deterred the lessees from hazarding more on such
uncertain property; and had not this stopped their ardor
this city would in all likelihood have been second to
few others in the kingdom. However this obstacle
has been in some measure since temoved by the power
given in the late act for the redemption of the land tax
to corporate and ecclesiastical bodies to alienate their
property for this purpose, the dean and chapter, and
corporation of Canterbury, last year having disposed of
many of their houses, gardens, and other possessions
within the city, and the suburbs of it, to their lessees
and others, a circumstance which will no doubt add
fresh encouragement to future improvements here.
All this was scarcely finished, when still further alterations took place, for in 1790, the road to Ashford,
which at the entrance into the city at Wincheap, was
both dangerous and inconvenient, was changed, and a
new one made in a strait line through the Old Castleyard and the antient Worthgate, and at the same time
the Dunjeon-hill and field (fn. 1) were, with much labour, levelled and planted with trees, and beautifully laid out
in walks, for the use and amusement of the public,
and this at the expence of upwards of fifteen hundred
pounds, by James Simmons, esq. an alderman of this
city, to whom the corporation granted it for this purpose, for his life, rent free; but the court of guardians
of the poor having assessed his public spirited improvement, he has since resigned it back to the corporation,
who now appropriate it solely for public use; but the
shameful depredations which have since been continually committed on the shrubs, fences, &c. already advance with the most hasty strides towards its ruin. The
great high road at another entrance into the city, at
St. George's-gate from Dover, being narrow, with several dangerous turns, an act of parliament was obtained that year, entirely to alter the course of it, by
making a new one, in a strait line from that gate for
more than a mile and a half through Barton-field; on
each side of which several genteel houses are already
built; and the commissioners are further impowered,
by the aid of a turnpike, to keep in repair and improve
the high road from hence to the further end of Barham
Downs, where the Dover turnpike ends. To this may
be added, that a new bridge for carriages has been
built by Mr. Simmons, over the river Stour, near Abbot's mill, at the opening in the city wall, where the
three arches were pulled down in 1769, as has been already mentioned before.