GILDS
There were a great number of religious
gilds and fraternities in Northampton on
the eve of the Reformation. In the church
of All Saints there were the following. The Gild of
St. Mary, stated in 1388 to have been founded before
1272, supplied three chaplains for the saying of
daily masses and other services. (fn. 1) The Gild of St.
John Baptist, founded in 1347 for the maintenance
of one chaplain, and also, if funds permitted, for convivial purposes, (fn. 2) was closely connected with the
craft gild of the Tailors. (fn. 3) The Corpus Christi
Gild, founded 1351, was for the maintenance of one
(later three) chaplains and the organisation of a
Corpus Christi procession. (fn. 4) The Gild of the Holy
Trinity and the Blessed Virgin Mary, founded in
1392, maintained four chaplains to say mass. (fn. 5) The
craft gild of the Weavers came to be connected with
this gild. (fn. 6) The Fraternity of the Rood was for
the adornment of the Rood beam. (fn. 7) The Fraternity
of St. George found a priest to sing mass in St.
George's chapel, and was the owner of St. George's
Hall, which later became the property of the corporation. (fn. 8) The Fraternity of St. Katharine appears
to have existed for the purpose of assisting the
burials of those who died of the plague and were
buried in St. Katharine's churchyard (between College
Lane and Horsemarket). (fn. 9) The chaplains of these
several fraternities formed the college of All Saints,
described in the previous volume. (fn. 10)
In the church of St. Gregory there was the Gild
of the Holy Rood in the Wall, founded by the
Hastings in 1473 for the maintenance of chaplains to
celebrate mass. (fn. 11)
In the church of St. Mary there was the Gild of
St. Katharine, (fn. 12) founded in 1347 for the maintenance
of one chaplain (later two) to celebrate mass, and to
keep the gild Feast on St. Katharine's Day, and
attend at the funeral of the gild brethren.
In the church of St. Giles there were the Gild of
St. Clement, in existence by 1469, (fn. 13) for finding one
priest, (fn. 14) and the Gild of the Holy Cross, mentioned in
a will of the year 1521. (fn. 15)
In the church of St. Sepulchre's there was the
fraternity of St. Martin, mentioned in a will of the
year 1500. (fn. 16)
RELIGIOUS HOUSES.
Besides the parish
churches and chapels of
ease there were five conventual churches and a hospital chapel within the
walls of Northampton in the middle ages as well as
several in the suburb.
The PRIORY OF ST. ANDREW, (fn. 17) founded by
Simon I c. 1100 for Cluniac monks, was at first,
according to the statement of its prior in 1348, located
in a house adjoining the chapel of St. Martin, probably on the present Broad Street. (fn. 18) Later, at a date
to which we have no clue, it was translated to the
site in the north-west corner of the medieval borough
which it occupied till the Reformation, as shown in
Speed's map. The estate map of 1632 (fn. 19) shows that
the priory wall ran from St. Andrew's mill along the
site of the present St. George's Street to the Northgate, then west along the present Grafton Street to
Grafton Square, where the great gate of the priory
probably stood, then south along Lower Harding
Street, west along Spring Lane to St. Andrew's Road
and thence north to St. Andrew's mill. (fn. 20) The priory
church stood between Brook Street and Lower Priory
Street, and Monks' Pond Street runs across the site
of the fish pond. The cemetery lay across Upper
Harding Street, Priory Street and Francis Street,
where stone coffins were found in 1838, 1852, and
1880, some architectural fragments are now in the
Northampton Museum. (fn. 21)
ST. JAMES' ABBEY, (fn. 22) was a house of Austin
Canons, founded at the beginning of the 12th cen-
tury by William Peverel. It lay outside the liberties,
but in the suburb, and owned much property in the
town. The only trace remaining to-day is the
name Abbey Street; a small part of the Abbey wall
on the Weedon Road, near the point where the
roads to Duston and Upton divide, was entirely taken
down in 1927. (fn. 23) The great barn of the abbey was
described by Henry Lee (1715) as 'one of the greatest
and stateliest barns of England. A carriage with
grain could stand in one of its southern porches,
as I have seen, before it was
shaken down and the material
sold.' (fn. 24) He adds that the
abbot of St. James' entertained
travellers coming from the
west, as the prior of St.
Andrew's entertained those
coming from the north, the
town inns being often 'very
ordinary.' From early in the
13th century the two houses
were much used for monastic
gatherings. Twenty at least of
the triennial general chapters
of the Austin Canons were
held at St. James' between
1237 and 1446, and thirty-nine of the forty general
chapters of the Benedictine order between 1338 and
1498 were held at St. Andrew's, though a Cluniac
house. (fn. 25)

Abbey of St. James, Northampton. Party argent and gules a scallop or.
THE FRANCISCANS (fn. 26) first settled in Northampton in 1226. Valuable details as to the foundation of
the house are to be found in the Phillips MS. of
Eccleston, not yet in print when the previous volume
of this history was written, which contains a number
of marginal notes specially bearing on Northampton.
The first two friars arriving in the town in 1226 were
received by Sir Richard Gobion, 'who settled them
outside the east gate on his own hereditary estate
near St. Edmund's Church.' (fn. 27) The knight's own son
John was one of the first to take the habit, and in
consequence the angry parents ordered the friars to
depart. The humble acquiescence of the brothers
and their poverty, however, so touched Gobion's
heart that he relented and allowed them to stay. About
1235 the friars moved into the town, where the townsfolk had given them a site in St. Sepulchre's parish,
and thenceforward a series of grants from their
devoted patron Henry III of timber for building
are found on the Close Rolls. (fn. 28) By 1258 the friary was
complete, and the brothers began building a house
for their schools. The Greyfriars' site, 'the best
builded and largest House of all the places of the
freres,' according to Leland, (fn. 29) was almost due north
of the market place, near the present Greyfriars
Street. Traces of interments were found in 1849,
1887 and 1889, (fn. 30) in Princess Street, showing conclusively that the cemetery lay between Newland and
the south side of Princess Street, on the site of the
present Temperance Hall and Masonic Hall. The
well also was discovered, and is under the present
Masonic Hall.
A house of POOR CLARES or SISTERS MINOR,
the first in England, existed for a short time in Northampton. From 1252 to 1272 the sheriff of Northants
is ordered to provide the sisters with five tunics of
russet every two years. They are described as
dwelling near the Friars Preachers, that is, not far
from the Mayorhold. Nothing is known of the house
beyond the references on the Close and Liberate
Rolls, first noted by Mr. Serjeantson in 1911. (fn. 31)
The FRIARS OF THE SACK (fn. 32) also had a house
in Northampton, founded by Sir Nicholas de Cogenhoe
in the reign of Henry III. In 1271 they received a
grant from the king for the building of their church. (fn. 33)
From the returns to the inquest of 1274–5 it appears
that their house was in the south-east quarter,
between the Derngate and 'Dandeline's court,'
wherever that was. (fn. 34) The friary came to an end
before 1303, (fn. 35) and the order itself was suppressed in
1307.
THE DOMINICANS (fn. 36) first settled in Northampton about 1230, and began building about 1233,
assisted by a series of grants from Henry III, from
1233 to 1270. (fn. 37) The house was large enough for a
provincial chapter to be held there in 1239. (fn. 38) The
building of 'studies' is mentioned in 1258. (fn. 39) Building
continued through the reigns of Edward I and Edward
II, and in 1310 the friars obtained a license from the
bishop to have six superaltars in their church. (fn. 40)
The royal chancery was established in the Blackfriars' Church from 31 July to 6 August 1338. (fn. 41)
No traces of the house are left; it was situated on
the east side of the Horsemarket and its precincts
came down to Gold Street. (fn. 42)
If the later tradition can be trusted, (fn. 43) by which
Simon de Montfort was one of their first benefactors,
THE WHITE FRIARS (fn. 44) must have settled in Northampton by 1265; they were certainly here by 1270,
when Simon de Pateshull was bestowing lands on them. (fn. 45)
An inquest of 1278 (fn. 46) shows that their house was near
the town wall, and they were making additions to
it both at that date and in 1299. (fn. 47) In 1310 they
obtained leave to have six altars in their church, (fn. 48)
and four provincial chapters were held in it in the
course of the 14th century. The site of their house
was in the parish of St. Michael, (fn. 49) near the top of
Wood Street, formerly called Whitefriars Lane,
lying between Newland, Ladies' Lane, and the
Upper Mounts of to-day. (fn. 50) The foundations of the
church were uncovered in 1846, under the road now
known as Kerr Street (fn. 51)
The house of THE AUSTIN FRIARS (fn. 52) was
founded by Sir John Longevile in 1322, (fn. 53) and was
situated on the west side of Bridge Street, opposite
St. John's hospital, on the site now occupied by
Augustine Street. No traces of it remain.

Plan of St. John's Hospital, Northampton
THE HOSPITAL OF ST. JOHN, (fn. 54) founded by
William de St. Clare, Archdeacon of Northampton,
about 1138, is the only one of the religious houses of
Northampton still standing. (fn. 55) It is on the east
side of Bridge Street, within the line of the town
wall, near to the site of the south gate, and
consisted originally of an almshouse and chapel,
with a master's house about 60 yards to the northeast. The site of 3¼ acres was bounded on the
north by St. John's Lane, on the south by the town
wall, and on the west by Bridge Street. The
master's house has been pulled down, but the chapel
and almshouse, or domicile, still stand. In 1871 the
property was sold to the Midland Railway Company,
and the master's house was demolished to make room
for the Midland Station. The infirmary and chapel
were resold to Mr. Mulliner, from whom they were
purchased in 1877 for a Roman Catholic community, in
whose possession they now are. The inmates of the
hospital were transferred to a new building at Weston
Favell, opened in 1879.
The almshouse is a building of red sandstone standing
east and west, in plan a parallelogram, measuring
internally 62 ft. 6 in. by 22 ft., except that the west
wall is slightly skewed in order to accommodate
itself to the direction of the street, and it is attached
by its north-east angle to the south-west angle of
the chapel. The building is of two stories, but has
been a good deal rebuilt and altered. (fn. 55) The roof is
now covered with blue slates: the interior is in a bad
state of repair. The west end, (fn. 56) with its gable to the
street, is apparently of early 14th century date, its
chief feature being a wide and lofty recessed pointed
arch of two moulded orders, the inner springing from
shafts with moulded capitals and bases, within which
is set the continuous moulded west doorway, and
over it the remains of a niche with bracket for a
statue. In the gable above the arch is a large circular
window of four pairs of trefoiled lights radiating
from a quatrefoil, the spaces between having sexfoil
cusping: the window is surrounded by a hoodmould which dies into the apex of that of the great
arch. Probably no other part of the building is contemporary with the west front, but parts of the north
wall and the middle part of the south wall, which
contain pointed windows, are apparently of late
15th century date, and the square-headed windows
on the north side are perhaps a century later. The
greater part of the south wall and the whole of the
east wall were rebuilt in the 18th century, when
wooden-framed windows were introduced on both
floors and alterations made in the interior arrangements. A 4 ft. passage runs down the middle of the
building from the west to the east door, with staircase
and a series of bedrooms on the south, and four
larger rooms on the north side. There is reason to
believe that originally the building did not extend
so far to the east. (fn. 57) the buttresses of the south-west
angle of the chapel having been cut away to allow
for the erection of the east end of the north wall of the
almshouse, which appears to be not earlier than the
end of the 16th century. The side walls are about
16 ft. to the eaves, and in the middle of the south side
is a window of three cinquefoiled lights with depressed
head and hollow chamfered jambs, lighting the staircase, its sill about 6 ft. above the ground. This window
contains the figure of a man and the name of 'Richard
Sherd,' who was master in 1474, (fn. 58) and it formerly contained also fragments of painted glass, including shields
of Grey, Hastings and Valence, but these have
been lately taken out. The stairs are not centrally
placed, being slightly nearer the east end: from a
landing below the window they lead east and west to
two large upper rooms, one at each end of the building,
said to have been for the 'co-brothers' or chaplains. (fn. 59)
On the north side of the ground floor passage is a
room at the west end with a square-headed two-light
window, and next to it one with a small pointed
external doorway. Next to this is a larger room, or
hall, lighted by two three-light windows similar to
that on the staircase, and open to the roof, and at the
east end the kitchen, which has a large projecting fireplace and a two-light square-headed window in the
north wall. The roof of the building is of six bays.
Although the division of hall and kitchen is apparently
modern the construction of the two bays of roof over
the hall seems to imply that this part of the building
alone was always open its full height. (fn. 60) Of the two
upper rooms, which are 22 ft. by 20 ft., that at the
west end is lighted by the circular window and by
two square-headed mullioned windows on the north,
and two wooden-framed ones on the south side, and
has a fireplace in the south-west angle. The eastern
room has also mullioned windows on the north and
wooden ones on the south side, and a fireplace with
moulded jambs. Both rooms extend the full width of
the building, and occupy two bays of the roof.
The chapel is in plan a plain rectangle, 16 ft. wide internally by 44 ft. long, built of local red sandstone, and
the roof covered with blue slates. The three-light east
window is of the early 14th century with cusped intersecting tracery and moulded mullions and jambs, and
the chapel was probably wholly rebuilt in that period.
The entrance is at the west end. The north wall is
blank. The west wall is of the 15th century and has
coupled buttresses at the angles standing wholly
beyond the face of the north and south walls, i.e., the
west end is nearly 6 ft. wider than the body of the
chapel, and it is possible that the whole of the north,
south and east walls have been rebuilt on a narrower
plan, leaving the west end as it was and re-using the
east window. (fn. 61) The building was extensively restored
in 1853–4 by the Charity Commissioners, the whole of
the south wall being then taken down and rebuilt in its
present form with two two-light windows in the
14th century style, (fn. 62) below the westernmost of which
is a small pointed doorway. (fn. 63) The roof of five bays
and the wooden bell turret are modern. The building
was renovated in 1882, to which date the present
fittings belong. The buildings are now undergoing
further repair.
The moulded west doorway has an almost semicircular two-centred head under a square label, the
spandrels of which contain quatrefoils with square-leaf
flowers. The original double doors remain. Above is a
large four-centred five-light window with Perpendicular tracery and moulded jambs and mullions. The
two-armed cross on the gable is said to be original. The
doorway and west and east windows are of oolite. In
the east windows are considerable remains of 15th
century glass, including saints, a head of the Blessed
Virgin, an angel holding a shield, and a kneeling
figure.
The Master's House, now demolished, is said to
have contained work of every century from the 13th
to the 19th, and its architectural history was complicated. (fn. 64) It was rectangular in plan with a south
porch and north-west wing, and had a frontage of
about 87 ft. The hall, 26 ft. 3 in. by 19 ft. 2 in., had
been divided in the 18th century. The kitchen and
offices were at the west end.
THE HOSPITAL OF ST. LEONARD, (fn. 65) founded
by Richard de Stafford in the 11th century, was in
Hardingstone parish, outside the liberties, on the
west side of the road leading to Queen's Cross. The
hospital buildings, of which no description is extant,
included a chapel and churchyard which served the
inhabitants of Cotton End as a parish church. The
Lazar House is mentioned in the Assembly Books
from 1623 to 1823, when it was finally pulled down;
it can have been little more than a cottage at this
time, when there was only one recipient of the
charity.
THE HOSPITAL OF ST THOMAS, (fn. 66) founded
apparently in the 15th century, stood on the east side
of Bridge Street, just outside the south gate. In
1834 the residents removed to a new house in St.
Giles' Street, and the buildings were used for a
carriage-builders' shop until, in 1874, they were
pulled down to make room for a road to the new
cattle market. (fn. 67) It was a rectangular 15th century
stone building, consisting of a large hall, 22 ft. 3 in.
wide internally with upper floor, and a chapel at its
east end 15 ft. wide by 16 ft. 9 in. long, the south wall
of which was continuous with that of the hall. The
roofs were covered with Collyweston slates. At the
time of demolition the hall, or domicile, was 54 ft. 8 in.
long internally, but it had been shortened some 3 ft.
or 4 ft. at the west end, probably for street-widening
purposes. The original west elevation facing Bridge
Street, as shown in Bridges' History, had a central
arched doorway, with window on the south side,
and above these a row of quatrefoils containing blank
shields. Over the doorway was a four-light window
and on each side of it a canopied niche containing a
figure. The hall was, no doubt, formerly divided by
screens in the usual way, with cubicles arranged
round the walls: several lockers (fn. 68) remained in both
the north and south walls, but some had been converted into windows. In the middle of the north wall
was a large fireplace, one jamb only of which was
original, and two square-headed two-light windows.
There was no arched wall opening to the chapel at the
east end of the 'domicile' and no trace of any division
between the chapel and the lower room, though probably a screen had existed. (fn. 69) The upper room had
several windows. The chapel had an east window of
four cinquefoiled lights with vertical tracery and a
canopied niche on either side within: in the south
wall was a piscina and a window of three lights.
Both chapel and domicile had open timber roofs, the
former of two, the latter of five bays, with wind braces
under the upper and lower purlins.
After its vacation in 1834 the building was used for
business purposes. (fn. 70)
Two hospitals stood outside the north gate of the
town in Kingsthorpe parish; the Leper hospital of
Walbeck (fn. 71) and the hospital of St. David and the
Trinity, (fn. 72) founded in 1200 by the prior and convent
of St. Andrew's on the petition of Peter, son of Adam.
THE COLLEGE OF ALL SAINTS, (fn. 73) founded
in 1460, stood on the west side of College Lane, opposite the end of College Yard, and consisted of a
priest's house for the warden and fellows and a
garden. It was used as a hospital for the sick during
the plague of 1603 to 1605, being then the property of
Abraham Ventris. (fn. 74)
There were two HERMITAGES, one on the west
and the other on the south bridge.