University of Leicester - Tradesmen of Stamford

https://leicester.figshare.com/articles/The_corporation_and_tradesmen_of_Stamford_1461-1649_with_an_indication_of_developments_until_1750_/10093028

The corporation and tradesmen of Stamford 1461-1649
(with an indication of developments until 1750)

Doctoral thesis of 1975 by Dennis Gordon Teall of Nassington, Peterborough

This thesis examines critically the corporation of Stamford, from the  granting of its Charter of Incorporation in 1461/2 to 1649, a period  extended in specific instances to approximately 1750.

The emphasis of Section I, 1461/2-1558, is upon a comparative study of  Stanford corporation and other similar bodies elsewhere;

That of Section II, 1549-1649 (1674 in certain matters) is upon the interrelationship  between the corporation as a legal entity and those individuals and  authorities who were involved with it, namely; the burgesses and town  dwellers of Stamford on the one hand; the county, aristocracy, crown  and parliament on the other.

Section III concludes a number of issues  still outstanding in 1649. In each section, an analysis is made of the  powers derived from the royal charters sealed during the period. The bye-laws enacted by the corporation are examined, together with its  administrative and ceremonial procedures. Challenges to the [sanctity]  of the freeman's oath are interpreted.

An appraisal is made of the many  problems which beset the corporation: the poverty of the town, the  visitations of the plague, the influx of foreigners, the need for new  industries, difficulties in making the river Welland navigable. *

The trade structure of the town is looked at in detail by making  comparative analyses of the occupations of freemen for the two centuries 1475-1574, 1575-1674. Their surnames are analysed with a view to  determining the relative proportions of those burgesses who belonged to  well established dynasties and those who were migrants. The length of service by burgesses in the first and second companies is  calculated to ascertain the stability of the ruling oligarchy.

Through the medium of wills and inventories, a look is taken at the  private lives of some of the town's principal tradesmen. In short, this thesis seeks to illumine with the help of contemporary  material, the working of the corporation and the lives of the tradesmen  of the borough of Stamford over a period of two, and in particular  instances, three centuries.

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NOTE: The above is purely a synopsis of the text. The full document of 804 typewritten pages with a large annexe and copious references can be downloaded from the above website link. A worthy recipient of a doctorate based on the comprehensiveness of the research of those 300 years and how it overlapped with the start of the Stamford Canal period.

* His analysis of what really happened about this, by whom, and when, is very enlightening!

There are several plates in the Appendix. These are two of the best.

UoL-Stamford 1620

The first, Stamford in 1600, before the waterside development and canal.

 

UoL-Briggens

and the second, High Lock or Briggens, after the closure.

 

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