Glasshouse Yard Explained

Glasshouse Yard
Start:Seventeenth century
End:1915
Replace:Finsbury
Coordinates:51.5214°N -0.0979°W
Populationfirst:1,221
Populationfirstyear:1801
Areafirst:5.6acres
Areafirstyear:1801–1911
Populationsecond:1,415
Populationsecondyear:1841
Populationthird:931
Populationthirdyear:1881
Populationlast:463
Populationlastyear:1911[1]

The Liberty of Glasshouse Yard was an extra-parochial liberty adjacent to the City of London. The liberty took its name from a glass manufacturing works established there. The area now forms part of the London Borough of Islington.

Formation

This area was originally part of the parish of St Botolph without Aldersgate. Most of that parish lay within the medieval, near fixed, boundaries of the City of London, with the main exception being this northernmost area in the adjoining county of Middlesex.[2] Over the centuries housing and the population of this portion increased such that it became by the 18th century an overwhelmingly urban extension of London of roughly the same density as the south. The Yard's own administration was formed, (board of trustees), when the Act for the Relief of the Poor 1601 (Elizabethan Poor Law) was introduced.[3]

The Glasshouse

The name and date of establishment of the liberty (1601) attest to its "glass-house" or glass-making factory, recorded in later decades. This status coincided with the reign of Elizabeth I, whose government pursued a policy of encouraging new industries, exempting them from onerous tithes. High fire risk (and noxious industries such as tanning, dyeing and slaughterhouses) were banned from the City so such industries occupied the area immediately adjoining it.[4] By 1661 the factory was manufacturing crystal glass. By 1700 production appears to have ended.[5]

Extent

The Liberty of Glasshouse Yard was bounded to the south by the (many parishes of the) City, to the west by the parish of St Sepulchre to the northeast by the Liberty of Charterhouse and to the north and north west by the parish of St Luke's. It had an area of,[6] and by the 19th century became partly covered by Goswell Street (the A1) and Pickaxe Street.[3] [7] [8] [9]

Governance

Finsbury division

The liberty formed part of Ossulstone Hundred, one of six divisions of Middlesex primarily used for taxation assessment purposes after the mid medieval period as the powers of the King's courts and each parish vestry superseded those of manorial courts and especially the Hundred Court.[10] Ossulstone was the hundred nearest the city, and saw great population growth. By the 17th century the hundred divided and further empowered into divisions, and Glasshouse Yard became part of the Finsbury Division.[11]

Poor law

The liberty was a separate jurisdiction from the remainder of the parish of St Botolph for the administration of the poor law,[3] [12] and by the early eighteenth century the chief officer was known as the "headborough".[13] The Poor Law Amendment Act 1834 allowed for the grouping of parishes into Poor Law Unions, with a single workhouse established in each union. In 1837 Glasshouse Yard was included in the East London Poor Law Union, which comprised the City parishes of St Botolph, Aldersgate, St Botolph, Aldgate, St Botolph, Bishopsgate and St Giles, Cripplegate.[11] [14] [15] A board of guardians of twenty members was formed, with 2 being elected from the parish of St Botolph Aldersgate.[16] The union built a workhouse at Homerton in 1852.[14] [16]

The Poor Law Amendment Act 1866 provided that all areas for which a separate poor rate was made were to be constituted as parishes, and accordingly Glasshouse Yard became a distinct civil parish separate from its mother parish.[12] [17] In 1869 the East London PLU was merged with two other unions to form the City of London Poor Law Union, covering 118 parishes.[14] [15] In 1901 Glasshouse Yard was transferred to the Holborn Poor Law Union.[15] [18]

Holborn District Board

The Metropolis Management Act 1855 introduced the first modern local government bodies to govern the built-up area of London. The act introduced two tiers of administration: the Metropolitan Board of Works (MBW) which was to undertake major infrastructure projects with below it a lower level of incorporated parish vestries or district boards. District boards covered two or more parishes and consisted of a number of elected vestrymen from each constituent parish, the number depending on population. The Holborn District Board of Works covered five Middlesex parishes and consisted of forty-nine vestrymen, of which one represented Glasshouse Yard.[19] The first elections were held in November 1855, when the entire membership of the board was elected. Thereafter elections for one third of the seats were held in May, beginning in the year 1857.[20]

In 1889 the area of the Metropolitan Board became the County of London, and the London County Council replaced the MBW. The district board continued to exist for a further eleven years.

Metropolitan Borough of Finsbury

The London Government Act 1899 abolished the vestries and district boards within the County of London, replacing them with twenty-eight metropolitan boroughs. On 1 November 1900 Glasshouse Yard became part of the Metropolitan Borough of Finsbury which also consisted of the parishes of Charterhouse, Clerkenwell, St Luke and St Sepulchre.[21] Glasshouse Yard was formally abolished in 1915 when the five parishes in the borough were merged into a single parish of Finsbury.[22]

Modern development

The area once occupied by the liberty has been extensively redeveloped since the Second World War. A modern street named Glasshouse Yard has been constructed to the west of Goswell Road and adjacent to the Golden Lane Estate.[23]

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Glasshouse Yard ExP/CP/ParLib: Census Tables. A Vision of Britain Through Time. University of Portsmouth and Others. 5 March 2011.
  2. Joseph. April 1844. The Metropolis: Its Boundaries, Extent, and Divisions for Local Government. Journal of the Statistical Society of London. 7. 1. 69–85. 10.2307/2337746. 2337746.
  3. Book: Noorthouck, John . A New History of London: Including Westminster and Southwark . 2 . 2 The suburbs of the City. 747–768 . British History Online . 4 March 2011 . 1773 . John Noorthouck.
  4. Book: Memorials of Old London . II . 49 . Bemrose & Sons . 4 March 2011 . 1908 . Ditchfield . Peter Hampson.
  5. Web site: Glasshouses . Glassmaking in London . 4 March 2011 . 2001 . Watts . David .
  6. Book: William Page. A History of the County of Middlesex. 5 March 2011. Victoria County History. 2. 1911. British History Online. 112–120. Table of population, 1801-1901.
  7. Book: Elmes, James. A Topographical Dictionary of London and its environs . 211 . British History Online . 4 March 2011 . 1831 .
  8. Book: Harben, Henry A. A Dictionary of London . British History Online . 4 March 2011 . 1918 .
  9. Web site: SAINT BOTOLPH ALDERSGATE: CITY OF LONDON . AIM 25 . 4 March 2011 .
  10. Youngs (1979) p.647
  11. Book: Samuel Lewis. A Topographical Dictionary of England. 1848. British History Online. London. 294–298.
  12. Youngs (1979) p.323
  13. Book: William John Hardy. William John Hardy. Middlesex county records. Calendar of Sessions Books 1689-1709. 1905. 335–353. Sessions Books: 1709.
  14. Web site: CITY OF LONDON BOARD OF GUARDIANS. Higgon. Katharine. 2009. Archives in London and the M25 area. AIM25. 6 March 2011.
  15. Youngs (1979) p.649
  16. Web site: East London. Higginbotham. Peter. 14 June 2010. The Workhouse. 6 March 2011.
  17. Web site: Status details for Civil Parish. A Vision of Britain. University of Portsmouth and others. 6 March 2011.
  18. Web site: HOLBORN BOARD OF GUARDIANS. Higgon. Katharine. 2009. Archives in London and the M25 area. AIM 25. 6 March 2011.
  19. Metropolis Management Act 1855 Schedule 2
  20. Metropolis Management Act 1855, ss.7-9
  21. Youngs (1979) p.645
  22. Youngs (1979) p.305
  23. Web site: Glasshouse Yard. Google Maps. 6 March 2011.