HOSPITALS AND ALMSHOUSES
Wyggeston's Hospital
William Wigston (c. 1457–1536), founder of this
hospital, was a member of a prominent Leicester
family of wool merchants who had risen to prosperity
in the 15th century. He inherited and maintained
considerable commercial interests in Leicester, in
Coventry, and at the port of Calais, of which he was
mayor four times. He was Mayor of Leicester in 1499
and 1510, and represented the borough in Parliament
in 1504. He married twice but had no children. (fn. 1) In
1512 he established a chantry in the Newarke College,
with a chaplains' house in the precincts, and completed the foundation early in 1513. (fn. 2)
By letters patent of 1513 (fn. 3) and 1514 (fn. 4) Wigston was
authorized to found a hospital, for two chaplains and
twelve poor men, which might receive in mortmain
grants of land to the annual value of £49 13s. 4d. A
site in St. Martin's parish was purchased in 1513,
and in 1518 buildings were erected to accommodate
24 poor, the founder having added 12 poor women to
the original number. The first chaplains were William
Fisher, master (1513–34), and John Thorpe, confrater (1513–21). The first inmates were admitted in
1521. (fn. 5)
Most of the lands forming the endowment Wigston
purchased between 1513 and 1520. In 1521 he conveyed to the hospital the manors of Castle Carlton
(Lincs.) and Swannington, and lands in Leicester,
Wycomb and Chadwell, Oadby, and Kimcote and
Walton. (fn. 6) This grant of lands, valued at £40 yearly,
was confirmed by letters patent of 1522. (fn. 7) Following a
similar method Wigston later conveyed to the hospital
other lands in Allington, Foston, and Harlaxton
(Lincs.), and in Bromkinsthorpe, Great-Bowden, and
King's Norton. To complete the endowment Wigston conveyed to trustees for the hospital lands in
Burton on Trent and Horninglow (Staffs.), and in
Wigston Magna, Bottesford, Barkestone, Plungar,
Belvoir, Easthorpe, and Redmile. In an early draft
of his will Wigston provided for the hospital's continued enjoyment of these trust lands but the subsequent enactment of the Statute of Uses made further
assurance unnecessary. (fn. 8) In
1525–6 when the endowment
had virtually been completed
the total income of the hospital
was £96 16s. 11¾d., of which
the rents produced £92 1s. 8¼d.
Expenditure in the same year
was £86 5s. 10¼d. (fn. 9) The hospital later received the sum of
£100 for the defence of its
lands under Wigston's will,
and a 60-year lease of the
tithes of the South Field was
bequeathed to the chaplains by
his widow, Agnes (d. 1541). (fn. 10)
![William Wigston. Per chevron ermine and ermines, a chevron per chevron sable and argent, upon the upper portion three etoiles or. [Leic. City Mun. Rm. 10D34/1196,/1291,/1292]](image-thumb.aspx?compid=66587&pubid=527&filename=fig12.gif)
William Wigston. Per chevron ermine and ermines, a chevron per chevron sable and argent, upon the upper portion three etoiles or. [Leic. City Mun. Rm. 10D34/1196,/1291,/1292]
No authentic copy of the
ordinances which Wigston himself made for the government and administration of
the hospital survives, although a copy is known to
have existed in the 19th century. A version of this
is contained in a pamphlet published in Leicester
after 1877 entitled The Will of William Wigston for
the Government of the Wigston Hospital. (fn. 11) The statutes
were written in the summer of 1521 and were confirmed by John Longland, Bishop of Lincoln, in September 1522, and by Richard Mawdely, Archdeacon
of Leicester, in April 1525. The hospital was to be
called 'the Hospital of William Wigston, Junior', and
dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary, St. Katherine,
and St. Ursula and her Companions. The chaplains
were to be appointed by the founder or his brother
Thomas (canon of Newarke College, d. 1537) during
their lives, and then by the Dean and Chapter of
Newarke College, the Mayor and Justices, and the
Abbot of Leicester—each having the power of
nomination for terms of fourteen days successively
until an appointment was made. The chaplains were
to take oaths on admission to their offices, and to
keep the statutes according to their 'plain, literal and
grammatical sense'. The master was given control of
the hospital's property and authorized to make leases
of its lands. Leases were to be for terms of three
years 'unless by the discretion of the master greater
profit may come'. Fines for renewing leases and
improvements in rents were to be converted to the
hospital's use. The master's salary was to be £8, the
confrater's £6; the master, but not the confrater,
might hold a benefice outside Leicester to augment
his salary. Both chaplains were to reside, although
the master was permitted one month's leave of
absence each year.
The twelve poor folk in whose name the hospital
was incorporated were to be 'men, blind, lame,
decrepit, paralytic, or maimed in their limbs, and
idiots wanting their natural senses, so that they be
peaceable not disturbing the hospital'. They were
to be unmarried and without friends or relations to
support them. In addition to these, twelve women,
'poor, aged, and of good report and honest conversation', were to be maintained in the hospital. The men
were to be appointed by the founder or his brothers,
and the women by the founder or his wife; after their
deaths, all appointments were to be made by Newarke
College, although the chaplains might fill vacancies
when the college failed to appoint or made unsuitable
nominations.
The chaplains were to say daily mass, either in the
morning or evening at a time convenient for the poor;
on Sundays and principal feasts, matins, vespers,
and other offices were to be recited in the presence
of the poor. Attendance at the religious processions
held in St. Martin's parish and keeping the obits of
the founder's two wives were other offices enjoined
on the chaplains. By a composition between the
hospital, the abbey, and the Vicar of St. Martin's,
the chaplains and poor were exempted from parochial
jurisdiction and from the payment of tithes and other
dues in return for an annual rent of 6s. 8d. to the
Vicar of St. Martin's. The hospital was charged with
the maintenance of two chantries in St. Martin's
Church. The first was for Thomas Smyth, a Leicester
draper, and was to last for seventeen years from
Christmas 1525 and be paid for from money left by
Smyth for the purpose; the second, for William
Breyfield, to last for fourteen years from 1533, was,
however, to be maintained from the revenues. When
these chantries ended, their priests were to be retained, if the revenues were sufficient, as additional
chaplains to say mass for the founder's intentions.
Other ordinances governed the domestic life of the
hospital. The poor men were to live in separate rooms
on the ground floor, while the women were to have
rooms on the upper floor with a common room in
addition. No inmate might leave the hospital without
permission. The men were to receive 8d. weekly,
and the women 7d.; gowns were to be provided and a
yearly sum of £2 was to be allotted for new cloth.
The care of the poor was entrusted to three of the
stronger women, two for the men, the third for the
remaining women. These women were charged with
such duties as making the beds, cooking, and attending to the personal cleanliness of the inmates. They
were to receive 8d. weekly and be allowed places in
the hospital when they themselves became infirm.
The first years of the hospital were the most
critical in its history. Throughout a period of continual political and religious change which threatened
the existence of all foundations of a religious character
and which in Leicester saw the dissolution of the
abbey and Newarke College, the hospital preserved
both its status and lands intact. That it did remain
untouched was probably as much due to the newness
and simplicity of the foundation, and to some extent
to the vigilance and continuity in office of Walter
Browne, master, and Thomas Thorpe, confrater, as
to any statutory immunity.
In 1545 commissioners appointed under the first
Chantry Act visited the hospital, and examined its
endowment and financial state. They reported that
its object was the maintenance of one warden, three
chaplains and twenty-four poor to pray for the king
and the founder. One chaplain was noted as a chantry
priest. The chaplains and poor were 'resydent in
good order and estate . . . and all the seyde romes be
full and none voyde'. (fn. 12) The hospital, although liable
for the payment of first fruits and tenths, was considered to be exempt from the Act and from the
second Chantry Act which extended confiscation to
every foundation for the commemoration of the dead.
Thus, neither the association of two chantries supported from the revenues nor the retention of their
chaplains as priests officiating for the founder's intentions obscured the primary purpose of the foundation.
The religious changes, however, had one important
effect on the hospital. With the dissolution of Newarke College in 1548 the Crown acquired the powers
of supervision granted to the college by the founder;
henceforward, the chaplains were appointed by letters
patent under the seal of the Duchy of Lancaster, the
chancellor acting as official visitor.
The revenues during this period, averaging between £95 and £100 yearly, provided adequately for
the hospital's expenses. (fn. 13) The chief outgoings were
the allowances of the poor, totalling £39 13s.; the
salaries of the master and confrater, raised in 1541
to £10 and £8 respectively; the salaries of the other
chaplains, together £10 13s. 4d.; payments for oatmeal, salt, fuel, and candles, averaging £5; and fees,
chief rents, ecclesiastical dues, repairs, and legal
expenses, which amounted to some £25 yearly.
In 1553 the chaplains obtained letters patent confirming the foundation licences. (fn. 14) The object of this
confirmation and its effect in defining the status of
the hospital were, however, both confused by the
religious changes of the reign of Mary. It was in this
reign that the connexion between the hospital and a
grammar school in Leicester originated. Agnes Wigston and Thomas Wigston, the founder's brother,
had entrusted to certain friends, including Walter
Browne, a sum of money to maintain a schoolmaster
in Leicester. Lands in Allington and Denton (Lincs.),
Hathern and Breedon (Leics.), and Netherseal and
Overseal (Derb.), bought in 1545 with this money,
were conveyed to the chaplains and poor in November 1557. (fn. 15) From the income produced, the schoolmaster received £10 yearly and the master and confrater took 7s. and 5s. respectively. In 1558, Browne
and Thorpe purchased property in Humberstone
Gate and Aylestone to support a second master. (fn. 16)
Walter Browne died in 1560 and was succeeded by
Nicholas Harwar; in 1566 Thomas Thorpe was succeeded by John Pott who combined the offices of
confrater and schoolmaster. Of the two former chantry priests, Richard Wilcocks remained as 'curate'
until 1573, while Nicholas Lubbenham, chaplain of
the Breyfield chantry, was appointed Vicar of St.
Martin's in 1557. (fn. 17)
During the hospital's early years most of its lands
were leased for short terms in accordance with the
founder's statutes. Soon, however, the practice grew
of consolidating estates and leasing them for terms of
21 years, three lives, or even 99 years. The practice of
long-term leasing was not necessarily harmful so long
as leases contained such safeguards as impeachment
of waste and while the fines received were put to the
hospital's own use. Two leases for 99 years, however,
those of Castle Carlton (1564) and Swannington
(1566) manors, resulted in grave financial loss and
continual litigation. (fn. 18) Although at first the increased
rents benefited the hospital, the omission of safeguards in the leases, particularly in the case of the
Swannington lease, and the inability of the hospital
to profit from increases in land values rendered the
leases uneconomic.
In 1567 the first of two inquiries into Harwar's
administration was instituted. (fn. 19) Commissioners were
appointed to investigate the whereabouts of plate and
jewels left by Browne to the hospital and the terms
for which leases had been made. Harwar, however,
refused to give evidence, and the commissioners
were only able to record evidence of the Vicar of St.
Martin's that the master had misappropriated £170
received from his predecessor. Harwar died before
proceedings were taken against him. In August 1568
new commissioners of inquiry, including the Earl
of Huntingdon, were appointed to review Harwar's
administration in relation to the statutes, to investigate particular complaints, and to institute the new
master. (fn. 20) This inquiry revealed that Harwar had
made long-term and improvident leases, that he had
misappropriated £166 received from Browne, of
which £100 was money left by Wigston to the hospital, and £144 received from wood sales, and that he
had failed to account for £74, the balance from 1567,
and for the receipts for the first half of 1568. Pott
was also found to owe money to the hospital but
since the inquiry had fled overseas. (fn. 21)
The new master was Thomas Sampson, a wellknown preacher of Puritan views, who, returning
from exile during Mary's reign, had received from
Elizabeth several appointments, including a prebend
in Durham Minster, the deanery of Christ Church,
Oxford, and a prebend in St. Paul's. As master of
the hospital, he was an active and able administrator, and although unsuccessful in an attempt to
challenge the validity of the Castle Carlton lease, he
succeeded in obtaining an agreement with the tenant
of Swannington reserving certain timber for the
hospital's use. Sampson also recovered from the
Exchequer the annual payments for first fruits and
tenths which, despite the exemption granted to hospitals in the Act of 1559, (fn. 22) Harwar had continued to
make. (fn. 23)
One effect of the inquiries into Harwar's administration had been to reassert the founder's statutes.
This reassertion, however, by revealing ordinances
and provisions already invalidated by the Reformation changes was itself a cause of their replacement.
The inquiries had also shown the need of a clearer
definition of the master's powers, particularly with
regard to leases. The necessary restatement of the
statutes was effected when the Earl of Huntingdon, contemplating certain endowments in Leicester,
among them the appointment of a town preacher,
resolved to associate them with a reorganization of
the hospital. By letters patent of 1572 confirming
the foundation, the earl, with Ralph Sadler, the chancellor, and George Bromley, the attorney general of
the Duchy of Lancaster, were authorized to draw up
new statutes. (fn. 24) At the same time the chaplains were
licensed to receive gifts of lands to the annual value
of 100 marks. The new statutes were introduced in
1574 and were confirmed by an Act of Parliament of
1576. (fn. 25) Except for one short interruption, during the
Commonwealth period, they regulated the hospital
until replaced in 1849.
The earl's statutes show changes, both of character
and of detail, from those of the founder. Thus, they
reflected his Protestant views and assured the proper
use of his own endowments, and at the same time
attempted to correct the former abuses in the administration.
The hospital was to be called 'William Wigston's
Hospital' and was to be governed under the authority
of the Crown, the chancellor and council of the
Duchy of Lancaster being constituted official visitors.
The master's control over the administration of the
hospital was confirmed, but leases which he made
were to be for terms of not longer than 21 years or
three lives, and the rents reserved were to be not less
than had been paid in the previous twenty years. He
was also to keep an inventory of the hospital's goods,
and to survey its lands every seven years. The master's
salary was to be £10, together with 7s. from the school
lands and various allowances amounting to about
£15. In addition, he was now entitled to augment his
salary by taking such fines as were reasonable for the
renewal of leases. The confrater's duties were mainly
concerned with the religious instruction of the poor,
the nature of which was described in detail. Under
his supervision, the poor were to attend St. Martin's
every day for morning and evening prayers, while
other evening prayers were to be recited in the
hospital chapel. The confrater's salary was to be
£13 6s. 8d., representing his former salary augmented
by that of the curate, together with 5s. from the
school lands.
The new statutes made few changes in the internal
regulation of the hospital. The master was now
authorized to fill vacancies, although in cases of
neglect the confrater and the Mayor of Leicester
might exercise the power in turn. No provision was
made for any increase either in the number of the
poor or in their weekly allowances, but when the
capital of the hospital exceeded £100 the master
might distribute the surplus among charitable causes
in Leicester.
In fulfilment of the licence granted in the letters
patent of 1572, the Earl of Huntingdon assigned to
the hospital in 1576 three rent charges from his
property in Leicester amounting to £66 13s. 4d. (fn. 26)
This money was to be apportioned in this manner:
£10 to the master of the hospital; £6 13s. 4d. for new
clothes for the poor; £30 to the confrater on condition that he should be 'a continual resident preacher'
in Leicester and should also relinquish his share in
the South Field tithes to the master; £10 to the
schoolmaster; and the remaining £10 to endow two
scholarships at the Universities and two at the free
school itself.
The main effect of these changes was to enhance
the advantages of the mastership at the expense of
adequate provision for the poor. In particular, during
a period when rents were generally rising throughout
the country, the master's new right to take the fines
for leases encouraged him to exact increasingly heavy
payments rather than to raise rents and thereby increase the income of the hospital. Of more immediate
damage was the failure to secure any income to pay
for the allowances given to the master.
By careful management which involved the sacrificing of his personal allowances, Sampson was able
to balance his accounts; but the defects in the new
statutes were soon revealed under the administration
of his son and successor, Nathanael, who steadily
accumulated annual deficits of some £15 so that at
his death in 1611 the hospital owed about £300. The
hospital's plight may be seen in the fact that rents
produced in 1607 the same figure, £115, as in 1573.
Inheriting this debt, John Herault de Saint Sauveur (1611–13) obtained a commission of inquiry into Sampson's administration and took proceedings
against his executors. It was found that he had pawned
the hospital plate and embezzled money received
from wood sales and from the goods of the poor. He
had also granted leases at the instance of his friends. (fn. 27)
Herault tried to overthrow the Swannington and
Castle Carlton leases, (fn. 28) and his efforts were continued by his successor, Samuel Clarke (1613–41),
who obtained settlements improving the reserved
rents. For an undertaking that his lease would not be
questioned again, the lessee of the Swannington
lands agreed to an increase of £10 in the yearly rent
as well as a fine of £500. (fn. 29) In a similar settlement, the
lessee of Castle Carlton agreed to make a rent charge
of £10 8s. in favour of the hospital. (fn. 30)
Clarke was non-resident and left the day-to-day
running of the hospital in the hands of the confrater.
The hospital was fortunate throughout its history in
the character of the confraters, and Thomas Sacheverell and John Angel, both of whom held the post
of town preacher, were able deputies and respected
by the corporation. Clarke, however, exhibited all
the failings of previous masters. An inquiry (fn. 31) instituted after his death revealed that he had consistently taken the money received from the sale of the
goods of the poor, accepted bribes for the admission
of inmates, and removed hospital property to his
house at Kingsthorpe (Northants.). He had also connived at inclosures of land at Norton, Snibston, and
Leicester, to the hospital's detriment, and had offered
tenants renewals of unexpired leases. During his
mastership he received some £1,700 in fines and
£1,000 from the South Field tithes. The original
lease had been extended by Francis Hastings in 1582
for a further term ending in 1640. (fn. 32) Clarke, claiming
to have purchased the reversion, assigned the lease
to his son shortly before his death. The hospital's
doubtful title was further confused by the sequestra
tion of the estates of the principal contestants and bymuch cross-litigation. Finally, although the tithes
were returned to the hospital by the Committee of
Indemnity in 1650, three years later the master
allowed its title to go by default. (fn. 33) The hospital
suffered little during the Civil War although successive masters were involved in the political struggle.
William Chillingworth, a well-known controversialist
and a royalist, was appointed in 1641 but ejected by
Parliament in January 1644 and died the same month.
His royalist successor, John Meredith, despite a
sequestration order in the following April, continued
in office until the nominee of Parliament, Job Grey,
was successfully intruded in 1646. Both Grey and
Angel, the confrater, actively supported the parliamentary cause only to be themselves ejected on
refusing in 1650 to take the Engagement demanded
by the Independents. (fn. 34)
While Chillingworth was master, the lessee of
Swannington sought a renewal of his 99-year lease,
and offered to pay a new rent of £40. (fn. 35) His own tenants
in the same lands also approached Chillingworth
offering a £400 fine for leases directly from the hospital and urging him to contest the lease once again. (fn. 36)
Grey subsequently acceded to both their requests
but, as the rents reserved in the new leases amounted
to only £21, his zeal little benefited the hospital. His
successor, Richard Lee, considering that the hospital
would derive more benefit by permitting the 99-year
lease to run its course, allowed judgement to be given
against the hospital. (fn. 37) The Swannington tenants
thereupon stirred up complaints among the poor
against Lee. A petition sent on their behalf in 1652
calling for a survey of the hospital lands was, however,
set aside by the duchy court on legal grounds. (fn. 38)
Further petitions (fn. 39) by the poor, by the confrater,
William Simmes, and by the mayor and burgesses of
Leicester complaining against Lee's administration
led to the appointment in February 1656 of a commission of inquiry. (fn. 40) The main complaints, which
Lee effectively answered, concerned the low rental
value of the hospital lands, stated to be £200 compared with an estimated value of £1,200, the alleged
oppression of the Swannington tenants, and the
master's retention of most of the profits from the
South Field tithes. The following June an Order in
Council appointed Major General Whalley to examine the value and appropriation of the revenues and
the condition of the foundation, and ordered no
further leases to be made meanwhile. No evidence of
this second inquiry is recorded. (fn. 41) Towards the end of
1656 the mayor and corporation petitioned Parliament
for a reform of the hospital and in November William
Stanley, one of the members for Leicester, introduced
a bill to regulate its government. Lee strongly contested the bill but it was read a third time in February
1657 and received the Protector's assent on 9 June. (fn. 42)
The Act placed the control of the hospital in the
hands of 22 trustees and governors, who were to
include the master and the Mayor of Leicester. (fn. 43)
They were authorized to make by-laws and ordinances and given power to make leases not exceeding
21 years and these were to be made upon reasonably
improved rents instead of fines. The master's salary
was fixed at £40 and the allowances granted him in
the Huntingdon statutes were revoked. Provision was
also made for the development of the hospital in the
form of increases in the number of the poor. The
Act thus overturned the Huntingdon settlement
which had invested in the mastership the whole
profit of the hospital's possessions, and introduced
reforms which, had they been confirmed at the
Restoration, would have put the hospital on a sound
footing and enabled its objects to be extended.
Despite Lee's resistance to the bill, and criticism
of his accounts made during its progress, he was
confirmed as master and granted a licence for nonresidence. (fn. 44) During their short period of control
the governors succeeded in increasing the hospital
revenues although rents still were inadequate to
meet higher expenditure. In 1607 receipts had been
£115 and payments £133, the Huntingdon rentcharge being accounted for separately; by 1650,
receipts had risen to £222 and payments to £240;
in 1659, receipts totalled £267, of which £235 came
in rents, and payments £243. In 1656 the number of
the poor was increased by the addition of one poor
woman for whose maintenance John Whatton of
Leicester gave a rent-charge of £7 from a close in All
Saints' parish to the mayor and burgesses. (fn. 45)
At the Restoration the authority of the Huntingdon
statutes was re-established. John Meredith, excluded
since 1646, returned as master in June 1660, and
Thomas Pestell the younger replaced Simmes as
confrater. One of Meredith's first measures was to
increase the allowances of the poor. These had remained at the scale fixed by the founder for more than
a century until Clarke had raised the sums to 13d. for
the men and nursing women, and 11d. for the other
women. Lee had supplemented the allowances from
his receipts from the South Field tithes, and they
had been raised in 1659. Increases in 1661 and 1663
brought the respective sums to 2s. and 1s. 10d. and
the total payments to £40 above the 1650 figure.
Improved rents helped to meet this new charge on
the revenues, particularly a reserved rent of £60 on
the new lease of the Swannington lands, the original
99-year lease having been surrendered soon after the
Restoration. (fn. 46) Thus when Meredith died in 1665, the
hospital was at last able to meet its expenses.
The master, whose salary of £35 was no longer
augmented from the South Field tithes, continued,
however, to take the fullest advantage of his right to
take the fines for renewal of leases to the hospital's
detriment. The result was that, although most of the
leases were renewed during the second half of the
17th century, there was an improvement of only £100
between 1660 and 1697 in the rents received, and of
this the increase in the rent of Swannington from £35
to £70 in 1668 together with some £18 in mining
rents from Snibston contributed the greater part.
The 99-year lease of Castle Carlton expired in 1665
but the old rent was increased by only £3. (fn. 47) Although
increases in the allowances of the poor and other
expenditure fully absorbed this new revenue, the
hospital's financial condition was at this period
healthy.
In September 1697 a commission, appointed by
the chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, reported
favourably on the financial state of the hospital and
on the discipline of the poor. (fn. 48) The revenues were
stated to be £342, the buildings in good repair, and a
'considerable addition' noted in the allowances of the
poor. The master, Robert Hardwick, did not reside,
but the commissioners regarded this as a benefit to
the hospital since this meant that his allowances did
not have to be paid. The confrater's salary was considered 'too scanty and narrow' and it was recommended that it should be doubled. The advantages
of this office did not compare with those of the mastership, yet when combined with the town and Trinity
Hospital lectureships and a Leicester benefice the
post provided quite a comfortable living.
Unfortunately the prosperity reported by the 1697
commission was both artificial and temporary, for by
1730 the hospital was once more in serious debt. In
1700 rents produced £343 and although payments
amounted to £350 the hospital had capital of £128;
in 1760 the balance of accounts was similar, rents
being £357 and payments £363 but the hospital
owed the master £120. Most of the current leases
had been made in the late 17th century for terms of
three lives and the result was that the value of the
hospital lands remained stationary when costs continued to rise. A 1729 rental shows two leases dating
from 1620 and 1634, twelve from 1660–5, and the
rest from between 1665 and 1689; no leases were
made between 1689 and 1729. (fn. 49)
During the 18th and early 19th centuries the hospital provided in the mastership a comfortable sinecure
for a succession of eminent and learned men who
personally had little concern for its well-being. John
Jackson, a scholar whose Unitarian views aroused
widespread controversy and whose conflict with
Samuel Carte, Vicar of St. Martin's, caused much
local scandal, was followed by William Rawstorn,
Folliott Herbert Walker Cornewall, later successively
Bishop of Bristol, Hereford, and Worcester, and John
Selwyn. Of these, only Jackson resided at the hospital and it was to his credit that despite inadequate
revenues repairs to the hospital buildings were carried
out and the allowances of the poor raised in 1751 and
1755. (fn. 50)
The affairs of the hospital, which throughout the
18th century engaged little public attention, were
during the 19th century the subject of continual
debate and many schemes for reforming its government were introduced. Once again reforms arose
from the investigation of complaints. In 1821 Selwyn
was criticized for the removal and sale of fabric from
the hospital chapel, for his non-residence, and for
misappropriating the proceeds from sales of wood.
Later it appeared that Selwyn had converted the
latter into capital to augment the hospital's negligible
income. The master's exclusive enjoyment of the
fines for leases was, however, the centre of the criticism. A public meeting held in December 1822
petitioned the mayor for official support of a demand
for the remedy of abuses, and the town clerk, Thomas
Burbidge, was ordered to examine the borough
records relating to the hospital. (fn. 51) In his report Burbidge reviewed the administration in the light of both
the Wigston and the Huntingdon statutes and drew
particular attention to two clauses in the latter from
which the hospital's difficulties stemmed. He vividly
contrasted the way in which the masters had interpreted the clause that rents reserved in new leases
should be as much as or more than those received
during the previous twenty years, keeping the rents
almost stationary, with the latitude of interpretation
that they had given to the clause permitting their
exclusive use of the fines for renewals. (fn. 52)
In 1823 a local committee was formed which sought
the abolition of leasing for three lives, a fixed salary
for the master, and the amendment of the statutes, (fn. 53)
and a petition with 5,400 names was sent to the
chancellor of the duchy. The chancellor promised to
make rules ensuring the gradual increase in reserved
rents and obliging the master to account for the fines
he received and also to reside for part of the year.
Later the same year, the chancellor admitted that
the practice of leasing for three lives was improvident
but argued that too sudden a change would be harsh
and even unjust. William Vansittart (1823–47) on his
appointment undertook not to take excessive fines, (fn. 54)
from which Selwyn had received some £24,400, and
the committee, feeling its main object achieved,
ceased further action. In 1826 and 1833 Vansittart
further undertook to raise rents on renewals by a
gradual scale to an increase of one-third on the third
renewal. Moreover, he agreed to account for fines
received, to keep the hospital buildings in good
repair, and to raise the confrater's salary to £100.
Vansittart, who did not reside, augmented his salary
of £45 by the rent of the master's house and, between
1823 and 1834, by £2,588 in fines. However, despite
new rules and safeguards, the hospital lands by 1834
produced only £416, compared with £357 in 1760. (fn. 55)
Commissioners appointed under the Charity Act
(1837) examined the hospital in 1837. (fn. 56) In 1834 the
hospital's income was £508, of which capital invested
by Selwyn in annuities produced £71; expenditure
in the same year was £500, the poor receiving a
weekly allowance of 4s. each. In 1844 Vansittart
made a temporary addition of four women to the
number of the poor and these he maintained at his
own expense. (fn. 57) Gradually the new rules began to
have effect and by 1854 the revenues, excluding
mining rents, had risen to £840. (fn. 58)
Soon after the appointment of Edward Thomas
Vaughan (1847–60) as master, Chancery proceedings
were commenced with the objects of reforming the
practice of life-leasing and of vesting the administration in the hands of trustees. (fn. 59) These concluded in
1849, when the court, declaring that the Huntingdon
statutes in so far as they permitted the master to
grant leases and retain the fines were neither authorized by the 1572 letters patent nor confirmed by the
1576 Act, ordered that the practice of life-leasing
should stop. At the same time the master's salary was
commuted to a fixed sum of £200.
In 1854 proposals that the charity should support
the Free Grammar School were widely discussed,
and in 1857 a new scheme for reorganizing the hospital was approved in Chancery. (fn. 60) This placed the
management of the hospital lands in the hands of
twenty trustees with power to make leases for terms
not exceeding 21 years. A receiver of rents, a surgeon,
and a clerk were also to be appointed. The sum of
£2,500 was settled as the hospital's annual income
and the residue of the actual revenues with royalties
from mining leases was to be invested as capital. The
master's salary was raised to £300 but his authority
was now limited to matters of internal discipline.
The confrater, who was now to receive £200, was
charged with reading morning prayers, performing
divine service and delivering sermons on Sundays,
and administering the Lord's Supper monthly. The
poor's allowances were also increased, the keepers or
nurses receiving 10s. and the remaining poor, both
men and women, 8s. each. Finally, the trustees were
directed to provide new hospital buildings which
were in fact built (see below), and given authority to
set up schools for 200 boys and 100 girls. (fn. 61)
The provisions of the 1857 scheme for the founding of schools were set aside by the Endowed Schools
Act of 1869, and a fresh scheme for the charity was
approved 1873. This divided it into a hospital and
a schools branch and appointed a separate body of
governors, as distinct from the hospital trustees, to
administer the schools. A sum of £15,000, raised to
£20,000 in 1875, was allotted for building the schools,
and a yearly sum of £500 set aside for the boys'
school to be increased to £2,000 a year on opening.
The powers of the duchy over the schools branch
were transferred to the Charity Commissioners, and
regulations for the schools, which were to be called
the 'Wyggeston Hospital Schools', were established.
The boys' school near the site of the old buildings
was opened in 1877 and the girls' school in Clarence
Street in the next year.
In 1876 the trustees recommended changes in the
administration including a new corporate body to
control both the estates and the internal life of the
hospital, the appointment of a single chaplain, and a
system of outdoor relief. (fn. 62)
The 1873 scheme almost caused the closing of the
hospital, for the charity could not afford the annual
payment of £2,000 for the support of the schools. (fn. 63)
In 1876 the revenues amounted to only £2,800 from
land rents and £1,400 from mining rents. A temporary arrangement whereby the schools' income was
paid from the mining rents, which formerly had been
invested to form capital, enabled the hospital to survive. (fn. 64) The threat to the hospital's independent
existence which lay in the contention of the Charity
Commissioners that the schools' income was intended
by the 1873 scheme to be the first charge on the
revenues was increased when in March 1887 a
Chancery order in favour of the schools branch
finally settled the relative claims of the two branches
of the charity. This time the hospital branch was
preserved by a further Chancery order which allowed
the mining rents to be diverted to meet its needs.
In May 1892 the Charity Commissioners introduced a new scheme, (fn. 65) which united the trustees and
governors of the two branches and gave the new corporate body effective control over the whole charity.
Leases were to be for a maximum term of 7 years,
both mining rents and receipts from wood sales were
to be invested, and the annual payment of £2,000
to the schools was settled as the first charge on the
revenues. The trustees were given power to nominate
new inmates and to vary their allowances between a
minimum of 7s. and a maximum of 10s. weekly. The
scheme included provision for an increase in the
number of the poor and the introduction of a system
of outdoor relief on which, when the revenues were
sufficient, the trustees might spend up to £400. Another provision for the appointment of one chaplain
only was put into effect when, on the resignation of
the confrater in 1892, that office was abolished.
In 1892 the charity received an income of £5,146
from estates comprising 3,230 acres and in addition
had an invested capital of £15,000. Even at this date
almost one-third of the current leases had been made
before 1847, and these produced only £185.
The hospital is at present (1956) regulated by a
scheme introduced by the Charity Commissioners in
March 1925. Amendments to the scheme were made
in 1932, 1937, 1947, and 1951 to enable the amounts
of out-pensions and sick-assistance to be raised. (fn. 66)
The management is vested in eighteen governors, of
whom the lord mayor and the master act ex officio,
twelve are appointed by the city and county councils
and other bodies, and the remainder are co-opted.
The inmates receive each 10s. weekly, a yearly sum
of £4,000 is available for outdoor relief, and £500 is
payable in sick-assistance benefits. Recent land transactions, including the sale of the Castle Carlton
estates in 1947–8 and purchases at Norton by Galby
in 1928–9 and 1933–4 and at Churchover (Warws.)
in 1935–7, have increased the total estates to 4,677
acres. In 1950–1 the income of the hospital was
£20,000 and expenditure some £19,000, while a
balance of £5,000 was carried over and the hospital
possessed stock whose nominal value in March 1951
was £209,000. (fn. 67)
The Wyggeston Grammar Schools are no longer
attached to the foundation but the annual payment
of £2,000 is continued and is applied in special
benefits for pupils of both schools. (fn. 68)
The buildings in which Wyggeston's Hospital was
housed from its foundation until 1868 stood in St.
Martin's West, facing the west end of the church
and the churchyard. The hospital building was a
long two-storied building, timber-framed and
covered with plaster. There seems, most unusually,
to have been a stone parapet and stone buttresses.
At the north end was the master's house, originally
the same height as the rest of the hospital, but enlarged in 1730 by the addition of one story and a
sloping slate roof. (fn. 69) At the south end was the little
stone Gothic chapel, abutting on Peacock Lane. This
was also restored in 1730. (fn. 70) The twelve rooms for the
male hospitallers were on the ground floor, and there
were nine similar rooms for the women on the upper
floor, together with the nurses' rooms. A further
range of building at the back contained store-rooms
and kitchens and was probably built later than the
main block. Behind the hospital was a courtyard and
garden, with an entrance from High Cross Street in
which stood the confrater's timbered house. (fn. 71)
The chapel contained a considerable quantity of
painted glass, most of which was removed at the
beginning of the 19th century to the parish church
of Ockbrook (Derb.). Some of the windows were
blocked up at the same time. The chapel also contained the tombs and monuments of several of the
masters and confraters, including that of the first
master, William Fisher. (fn. 72)
The old hospital was vacated in April 1868 but the
building remained standing until 1875. (fn. 73) Despite
proposals, which were urged by the Leicestershire
Archaeological Society, to have the hospital converted
for use as the hall of the proposed Wyggeston School,
the trustees decided in 1873 that it must be demolished. (fn. 74) In May 1874 the confrater's house, with
several other old houses in High Cross Street, was
demolished, and the hospital building and chapel
were pulled down in 1875, when the materials and
fittings were sold for £92. (fn. 75) The tombs and memorial
slabs from the chapel were removed to the new
chapel; the seats from the chapel were given to the
Trinity Hospital and the porches which had faced
the path in St. Martin's West were given to St.
Nicholas's Church, together with a niche from the
chapel. (fn. 76) The site of the old chapel is marked by a
railed square in the yard of Alderman Newton's Boys'
School.
The new buildings were built in Westcotes and
were occupied in 1868. The architect was the Crown
Surveyor, T. C. Sorby. (fn. 77)
Four seals of the hospital are known. The first common seal, which was used until the promulgation of the
Huntingdon statutes, was a pointed oval seal, 2½ in.
long and 13/5 in. across at its widest point, depicting
the Virgin and Child with the arms of the founder
beneath and the legend, in black letter, sigillum
communie hospitalis willelmi wigston. (fn. 78) The
Huntingdon statutes provided for a new seal to be
kept in the common chest. (fn. 79) A matrix which still
survives seems likely to be that of this seal, though it
is not now used. It is a round seal, 13/5 in. in diameter,
bearing the arms of the founder flanked by his initials with the legend in Roman capitals sigillum
hospitalis gulielmi wigston at the top, and below
date eleemosynam et acce omnia munda sunt
vobis. The date 'A° 1574' appears after the word
'Wigston' in the upper inscription. (fn. 80) In 1673 a new
matrix was made with the same designs and legend
on a rather larger seal 2 3/10 in. long and 2 1/10 in. across at
its widest point, on which the legend, in Roman capitals, runs in two lines round the founder's arms.
The matrix is dated on the back. A smaller seal,
probably made at the same time and formerly used
for sealing leases, (fn. 81) bears the founder's arms without
inscription. These three matrices are kept by the
clerk to the governors.
Masters of Wyggeston's Hospital
|
| William Fisher | 1513 (fn. 82) –1534 |
| Walter Browne | 1535 (fn. 83) –1560 (fn. 84) |
| Nicholas Harwar | 1560 (fn. 85) –1568 |
| Thomas Sampson | 1568 (fn. 86) –1589 |
| Nathanael Sampson | 1589 (fn. 87) –1611 |
| John Herault de Saint Sauveur | 1611 (fn. 88) –1613 |
| Samuel Clarke | 1613 (fn. 89) –1641 |
| William Chillingworth | 1641 (fn. 90) –1643 |
| John Meredith | 1643 (fn. 91) –1646 |
| Job Grey | 1646 (fn. 92) –1649 |
| Richard Lee | 1649 (fn. 93) –1660 |
| John Meredith (restored) | 1660 (fn. 94) –1665 |
| Richard Clarke | 1665 (fn. 95) –1684 (fn. 96) |
| John Pyke | 1684 (fn. 97) –1690 |
| Robert Hardwick | 1690 (fn. 98) –1718 |
| Samuel Clarke | 1718 (fn. 99) –1729 |
| John Jackson | 1729 (fn. 100) –1768 |
| William Rawstorn | 1768 (fn. 101) –1790 |
| Folliott Herbert Walker Cornewall | 1790 (fn. 102) –1793 |
| John Selwyn | 1793 (fn. 103) –1823 |
| William Vansittart | 1823 (fn. 104) –1847 |
| Edward Thomas Vaughan | 1847 (fn. 105) –1860 |
| David James Vaughan | 1860 (fn. 106) –1905 |
| Edward Atkins | 1905 (fn. 107) –1927 |
| Sydney Thorold Winckley | 1927–1937 (fn. 108) |
| James Sidmouth Cooper | 1938 (fn. 109) – |
Confraters of Wyggeston's Hospital
Trinity Hospital
At the dissolution of the Newarke College in 1547 (fn. 136)
the hospital attached to it continued to exist under
royal patronage, providing accommodation for 100
poor men and women and 10 nurses. (fn. 137) The annual
revenues of the hospital in the period immediately
after the dissolution of the college amounted to
nearly £220, and were paid through the Duchy
of Lancaster. (fn. 138) In 1610 the Earl of Huntingdon,
who had bought the patent of the former master,
William Fowkes, sold it to Leicester Corporation for
£26 13s. 4d. (fn. 139) The hospital was incorporated as the
Hospital of the Holy and Undivided Trinity by
James I in 1615. (fn. 140) The incorporation was preceded
by an inquiry into the activities of William Fowkes
with regard to the endowments of the hospital, and
the corporation was assisted in its application for the
charter by Sir William Heyrick. (fn. 141) In 1610 the Com
mon Hall decided that the master's yearly salary of
£13 6s. 8d. should be paid into the town's chamber, (fn. 142)
but the salary was granted specifically to the mayor
by Charles I in 1625. (fn. 143)
The charter of 1615 provided that the hospital
should be governed by the mayor as master, with
four aldermen and the two chamberlains as his assistants. A chaplain was to care for the inmates, who
were not to exceed 110 in number. The maximum
yearly value of land which might be held by the
hospital was increased to £350. In 1619 new statutes
for the regulation of the hospital were promulgated
under the seal of the Duchy of Lancaster; these have
been added to from time to time. (fn. 144) The revenues of
the hospital consisted of £229 in 1643, all provided
by the duchy grant. (fn. 145) In 1647 Parliament stopped
this grant and the hospital was supported until 1650
by the corporation, which took great credit for this
but in fact regarded the money as a loan. (fn. 146) In 1650
Parliament granted to trustees certain rents which
produced an income of £271, out of which the hospital, the usher of the Free Grammar School, and the
Vicar of St. Mary's were supported. (fn. 147) The duchy's
payment of £229 was resumed at the Restoration. (fn. 148)
During the late 17th and early 18th centuries the
hospital was almost perpetually in financial difficulties, (fn. 149) which the Duchy of Lancaster was unwilling
to relieve. Many donations, however, were made by
private persons, (fn. 150) especially members of the corporation, whose connexion with the hospital was maintained unofficially as well as officially from the beginning of the 17th century. (fn. 151)
In the later half of the 18th century the corporation's control over the hospital was weakened by the
renewed claims of the Duchy of Lancaster. In 1768
the chancellor of the duchy, Lord Strange, asserted
his right to nominate to vacant places in the hospital,
a right which had previously been exercised by the
mayor, although the general surveillance of the duchy
was provided for by the charter of 1614. (fn. 152) The
chancellor's right to nominate, which he clearly
regarded as an important political asset, was affirmed,
with the proviso that the mayor should have the
nomination if the chancellor failed to act within three
months of a place becoming vacant. In 1786, however,
Lord Hawkesbury, then chancellor, stated that for
the future he would appoint only at the recommendation of the mayor, and in 1837 the Charity Commissioners found that all appointments were made
by the mayor.
Duchy control over the hospital was also renewed
in the 18th century on the question of the rebuilding
of the hospital. Repairs had generally been carried
out with loans from the corporation, as the repairs
fund was too small to permit any piece of work to be
carried out without such help. (fn. 153) The buildings gradually fell into decay, and suggestions were made by the
mayor and his assistants for their improvement.
These were carried out, (fn. 154) but the payment was made
by the duchy, which also issued new orders for the
financial management of the hospital. (fn. 155) The corporation had appealed against the insufficiency of the
hospital's funds in 1772, an appeal which was met
with accusations from the duchy officials of maladministration on the part of the corporation, said to
include the illegal payment of a salary to the mayor
and the extensive non-residence of the poor. (fn. 156) New
orders to improve the conditions under which the
hospital was maintained were promulgated in 1780; (fn. 157)
these included the establishments of new benefits to
encourage residence, the stopping of the mayor's
salary, the increase of the duchy's grant, and the
reduction of the number of the poor to sixty. The
revised revenues were to be just over £488. The
resulting improvements in the hospital's financial
position enabled a repairs fund to be collected and
increased payments to be made to the poor on several
occasions up to 1821. (fn. 158)
After effecting these improvements the duchy's
control seems to have slackened and that of
the corporation strengthened. The hospital was
heavily in debt to the corporation by 1835, when its
income was about £16 below expenditure. (fn. 159) In
1837 there were ten vacancies and economies were
being practised in order to raise extra funds. Each
inmate, whether living in the hospital or not, was
paid 3s. weekly, the keepers receiving 3s. 8½d. Only
28 of the 70 hospitallers lived in the hospital itself
in 1837. (fn. 160) The annual income then amounted to
£864 16d. 9d., of which £485 came from rents,
mainly of property in Leicester itself, but also from
lands in Whetstone, Houghton on the Hill, and
Enderby. The hospital had received numerous gifts
and bequests of lands and rent-charges, some given
for specific purposes, such as the provision of
clothing or food. The Duchy of Lancaster paid a
grant of £246. (fn. 161)
There was still a reduced number of inmates as
late as 1846, (fn. 162) but the hospital supported 90 again in
1877, when the annual income was £1,350, the value
of the land rents having increased to over £900. (fn. 163)
The income in 1953 had risen to about £3,500, of
which £330 came from rents, many of the gifts of
land having been sold and the money invested. The
4 acres of 'charter land', all lying close to the hospital
and the only land retained from the 16th century,
was still in the possession of the hospital and had a
rental of £270. Rent-charges were paid out of houses
in East Bond Street, High Street, Northgate Street,
and Frog Island in Leicester, and from land at
Donington le Heath, Desford, and Ashby Magna.
The pension of £246 from the Duchy of Lancaster
was still paid. (fn. 164)
In 1955 the hospital was regulated by a scheme of
the Charity Commissioners of 1907, revised in 1931
and 1935. (fn. 165) The Mayor of Leicester was master of
the hospital, assisted by four aldermen and two other
members of the corporation who retained the name
of chamberlains and dealt with the finances. The
chaplain was appointed by the Duchy of Lancaster
and there was accommodation for 40 inhabitants of
the hospital, including the matron and four keepers.
There were still some out-pensioners in 1955, but
their number has fluctuated. Appointments to vacancies were made by the chancellor of the duchy, one
in every five on the recommendation of the chaplain
and the remaining four on the recommendation of
the mayor.
The original 14th-century building consisted of an
aisled hall, probably of seventeen bays, nearly 220 ft.
long and one of the longest hospital halls in England. (fn. 166)
The stone arches and piers are still intact for six
complete bays at the eastern end of the main nave
and the north aisle. The south aisle was demolished
in 1776, when the upper floor was added and the
outer walls to a great extent rebuilt to the designs of
Joseph Pickford of Derby under the auspices of the
Duchy of Lancaster. (fn. 167) The new upper floor cut
across the nave and remaining aisle and is lighted by
dormer windows. About 100 feet of the west end of
the hall was demolished in 1902, when a road was
cut through the west end of the Newarke to the new
bridge. A new hospital building by R. J. and J.
Goodacre of Leicester was built along the line of the
new road and at an angle to the remains of the old
hall. (fn. 168) The inmates of the hospital have their rooms
in the new wing; the old hall is occupied by common
rooms and passages.
The 14th-century chapel stands at the east end of
the old hall, the last two bays of which, including
part of the south aisle, form an ante-chapel. The
chapel retains some of its original windows, and a
two-light window from Ashby Folville has been
inserted. Some of the woodwork is from the former
Wyggeston Hospital chapel. The chapel was restored
and refitted in 1876 to the designs and at the cost of
Thomas Nevinson, the Leicester architect. (fn. 169)
The brass seal of the hospital is an oval, bearing a
design of a three-headed arrow, issuing from a cloud.
To the left is a scroll, bearing the legend in antitrinitarios, and to the right a cinquefoil ermine.
The legend reads sigillum hospitalis sanctæ
trinitatis in novo opere leic. An inscription on
the back of the seal records that it was the gift of
Sir William Heyrick in 1615. (fn. 170)
St. John's and Bent's Hospitals
In 1589 Elizabeth I granted the lands of the dissolved hospital of St. John to the corporation of
Leicester. (fn. 171) At an unknown date in the early 17th
century six poor widows were installed by the corporation in the old building in High Cross Street
which had been used as a wool hall since the Dissolution. (fn. 172) The widows seem to have had no other
regular income than the annual gift of 55s. which
Trinity Hospital had made since St. John's Hospital
had been transferred to it at the end of the 15th
century. (fn. 173) Donations were made by all the members
of the corporation at the end of the 17th century and
the corporation arranged for the preaching of a sermon for the hospital on St. John's day. (fn. 174) In 1686
lands were purchased for the hospital by the corporation and the number of widows was increased to
eight as the result of another gift. (fn. 175) Considerable
donations were made to the hospital during the 18th
century. (fn. 176) The income of the hospital was nearly £59
in 1836. (fn. 177)
In the 17th century St. John's Hospital was refounded in the lower floor of the old hall, but was
moved to the first floor in 1682. (fn. 178) The ground floor
of the building was afterwards occupied by Bent's
Hospital, founded by John Bent who in 1697 left
lands at Enderby for the building of four extra
rooms at St. John's for the accommodation of four
widows and a nurse. (fn. 179) These were brought into use
in 1703. (fn. 180) The hospital's income was nearly always
insufficient and it was in debt to the corporation for
most of the 18th and early 19th centuries. (fn. 181)
The old building, especially the Bent's Hospital
part, was stated to be in very bad condition at the
beginning of the 19th century. (fn. 182) It was rebuilt in
1860. The respective incomes of the hospitals were
£70 and £76 in 1877; (fn. 183) by 1936 these had increased
to £180 and £100, and they were supporting eleven
women between them. (fn. 184) This number has since been
gradually reduced, and in 1955 there were no inmates. The trustees intend (1955) to provide new
accommodation, as the existing buildings are to be
demolished when High Cross Street is widened. The
hospitals were controlled in 1955 by the Trustees of
the Leicester Church Charities. (fn. 185)
Spital
The origins of this hospital are uncertain, but it
seems likely that it was the 'lazarhowse' in St.
Margaret's parish mentioned in 1550. (fn. 186) A leper hos
pital 'by Leicester' was supported by the county
during the 16th century with a yearly payment of
£12, and was known as the Spital by 1599. (fn. 187) It is
marked on Speed's map of 1610, at the end of Belgrave Gate. (fn. 188) In 1599 the Mayor of Leicester wrote
to the Earl of Huntingdon complaining that the
county now refused to support the hospital and
asking his help in forcing the county to continue its
payments. (fn. 189) In December he repeated his plea, saying that the inmates of the hospital were starving,
and that they could not beg, the nature of their
diseases preventing them from going outside. (fn. 190) The
borough made one payment to the Spital in 1600 (fn. 191)
and a bequest was made to it in 1628. (fn. 192) The borough's
efforts were presumably successful. By 1720 the
county was again fully supporting the institution,
which then usually contained six inmates, probably
by then ordinary paupers, each of whom was paid
1s. 2d. weekly. (fn. 193) These payments were the same in
1792, and Throsby, writing at that time, believed
that six poor widows lived in the Spital, about which,
however, he knew very little. (fn. 194) Nichols equated the
Spital with the Cock Muck Hill Houses, but the
identification does not seem to be correct. (fn. 195) A house
at the end of Belgrave Gate still retained the name of
the Spital House at the end of the 18th century and
is illustrated in Nichols. (fn. 196) It may perhaps be identified with the Pack Horse Inn, which belonged to
the county authorities at the beginning of the 19th
century, and was leased for £20 yearly, which was
distributed to five poor persons in the county. The
whole of the income, however, was not used in this
way, and the Charity Commissioners were of the
opinion that the county only held the house as
trustees for some unknown charity. (fn. 197) This does not
seem likely in view of the county's proved connexion
with the Spital since the 16th century. The Commissioners suggested that a new arrangement should
be made. In 1856 the chairman and treasurer of
the county magistrates sought permission from the
Charity Commissioners to sell the property and reinvest the proceeds. They urged that nothing was
known of the charity except what was in the Commissioners' own report and that it was not certain in
whom the legal estate of the property should be
vested. The charity had, they said, always been administered by the treasurer of the magistrates who
then distributed £14 6s. each year. After some difficulty new trustees were appointed by application to
the Charity Commissioners, the property was sold,
the purchase money was invested, and arrangements
were made for the interest to be distributed to four
or five poor persons. Further investments have since
been made and although there were complaints in
the period 1897–1913 that the charity should not
be administered by the county magistrates since the
'area' of the Spital House was now in the borough,
it was still so administered in 1955. The county
magistrates appoint to vacancies on the board of
three trustees. (fn. 198)
Consanguinitarium
The Consanguinitarium was founded in 1795 by
John Johnson, the Leicester-born architect, for the
benefit of his poorer relatives. (fn. 199) There were to be five
occupants and elaborate rules were laid down for
their conduct. The foundation was endowed with
land at Lubbenham. The original building in Southgate Street was a battlemented stone house with
Gothic windows, partly screened from the street by a
handsome row of four houses also built by Johnson
in the classical style on the spot where he was born. (fn. 200)
The original endowment was designed to produce
an income of £70 a year and at his death in 1815
Johnson left the four houses to his relatives, charging
each with a payment of either £4 or £6 for the further endowment of the Consanguinitarium. When
the Charity Commissioners reported on the foundation, one of the inmates had a family of children,
which 'although not expressly forbidden, appears
inconsistent with the objects of the founder', who
had laid down that children were on no account to be
allowed to play on the lawns. In 1878 the Consanguinitarium was rebuilt in Earl Howe Street, to the
designs of Robert Johnson Goodacre, a relative of the
founder. (fn. 201) Johnson's original buildings were demolished, but in 1955 his foundation continued.
Sarah Barlow Almshouses
The Sarah Barlow Memorial Cottage Almshouses
were built in Knighton Drive in 1887 under the will
of Miss Sarah Barlow, who also contributed a large
sum to the building of St. John's Church, Clarendon
Park Road. (fn. 202) In 1955 they housed four elderly women.
The income from the remainder of the estate was
used partly to supplement the almshouse endowment; the residue was dispensed at the discretion of
the trustees. (fn. 203)
Miss Lawton's Almshouses
Miss Martha Ann Lawton's Almshouses were built
in Evington Street to the designs of William Jackson
in 1864. They housed in 1955 four elderly women,
members of the Church of England with small
incomes. (fn. 204)
The Countess of Devonshire's Hospital
In 1837 the Charity Commissioners reported that
although this hospital had disappeared it was still
remembered by people then living. (fn. 205) It stood outside
the gates of Cavendish House, built on the site of
Leicester Abbey, and was founded in the reign of
Charles I by Elizabeth, Countess Dowager of Devonshire (d. 1642). Throsby, writing in 1777, stated that
it had been decayed but had recently been largely
rebuilt by John Manners, son of Lord William Manners. It was originally built to house six poor women
and had an income of £30 a year. (fn. 206) The building was
demolished about 1796 by Sir William Manners, and
the foundation is not mentioned by Nichols. The
Charity Commissioners applied to the owner of the
land, Lord Huntingtower, who replied that he knew
nothing of the hospital but would be willing to support it if his obligation to do so could be proved.
Nothing had been done as late as 1877 (fn. 207) and the hospital was never revived.
Simon's Hospital
Matthew Simon by will dated 1712 bequeathed to
trustees the hospital which he had founded in Blue
Boar Lane for six poor women of St. Nicholas's
parish. (fn. 208) The endowments consisted of lands at
Scraptoft and Knighton and part of the manor of
Hamilton, and by the end of the last century these
brought in £600 a year. (fn. 209) The rents were also subject
to various charitable payments. The hospital was rebuilt in 1817, but was demolished to make way for
the building of the Great Central Railway. (fn. 210) The endowments were used thereafter for the rest of Simon's
charity, which included payments to Trinity and
St. John's Hospitals, and bequests for apprenticing
eight children. In 1956 the income of the charity was
used to provide small pensions to poor women. (fn. 211)
The charity is vested in private trustees.
Miss Mason's Almshouses
In 1832 Elizabeth Charlotte Mason built four houses
in Vauxhall Street for the reception of four poor
women of Leicester. At her death in 1833 she bequeathed the residue of her estate for the endowment
of the houses. (fn. 212) The annual dividends amounted to
nearly £50, out of which the inhabitants of the houses
received pensions of 4s. weekly. The residue of the
income was reserved for repairs by the trustees. By
1936 the pensions had been reduced to 2s. 6d. and
the almshouses were demolished in 1937 during
clearance in the Vauxhall Street area. (fn. 213) The funds of
the charity were formed into a charity for the payment of pensions in 1955. (fn. 214)