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  • Sept. 27, 1862
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    Article THE ANTIQUITIES OF WELLS, SOMERSETSHIRE. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 14

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The Antiquities Of Wells, Somersetshire.

perfect , and adds much to the picturesque beauty of the house , the rest of which is entirely modernised ; and the original offices seem to have been destroyed , as is frequently the case . The singing-school is over part of the west Avail of tho cloister , and joins on to the south-ivest corner of tire cathedral . The organist ' s house is close to this , and is one of the smaller houses of the fifteenth century , the plan of Avhich Avas that ofthe letter T » the hall forming the top strokeand the rest of the house

, the stem ; but the house has been almost entirely spoiled during the last century ; vile additions having been made to it , encroaching on the small space originally left between the house and the cloister , and destroying the outline of the house , AA'hich , when it stood clear , must have been extremely picturesque . The interior is also spoiled by modern partitions , IIOAV become more old-looking and more rotten than the original roof of the half which remains .

Most of the canons' houses have been either rebuilt entirely or much spoiled by modern alterations ; one of them to the north-east of the cathedral ( IIOAV occupied by Canon Brodrick ) has a good porch and a panelled battlement of the fifteenth century . Another house , rather farther to the east ( noiv the school ) , is partly of the fourteenth century , with a . good finial on the gable , and the moulded arch of a doorway of that period ,

•evidentl y the chief entrance to the hall originally , but long blocked up . Tiris hall has a fine timber roof with angel corbels , but quite concealed hy modern lath and plaster ceilings . The cellar or store-room remains , with several lockers in the wall , •and is noiv the school-room . The solar over this is modernised , feut this also contains the old roof , ivith its gable and coping . To this , wings have been added in the fifteenth or sixteenth ¦ century , apparently to obtain additional bed-rooms ; and it is

probable that at that time the original kitchen and offices at the other end of the hall ivere destroyed , and new ones made in the new wing . Such a change as this was very frequently made in the sixteenth century . The very remarkable and picturesque Vicars' Close is so well ¦ known that it is not necessary to repeat any long story about it , but the outline of its history may be mentioned . The Vicars ' Choral formed part of the original establishment of the

cathedral , and were incorporated by Bishop Joceline in the beginning ef the thirteenth century ; and , as he was a great builder , it ,-is probable that he built houses for them ; hut all that we have remaining of his time are some fragments of beautifully-sculptured ornament used up as old material , and built in the spandrels of the arches of the windows , and in the parapet . These correspond exactly with his work in the cathedra ! , and with the remains of his palace at AVookey ; but they may have been

brought from some part of the cathedral IIOAV destroyed , and the original vicars' houses may ha ve been of Avood only , as AA-as very usual at that period . These ivere rebuilt by Bishop Ralph , of ShreAvsbury , in the fourteenth century ; and he expressly mentions in his will the houses that he has built for the vicars ; but all that now remains of his work is the hall , with its west windoiv and side windows ; the east end over the gateway was lengthened in the time of Henry VIII . hRichard Pomeroy .

y The present houses were entirely built hy the executors of Bishop Beckington , late in the fifteenth century , on one uniform plan ; and several of these remain perfect , though in many cases they have been altered , and two houses thrown into one . JTov can Ave complain much of this when we remember that the houses were originally intended for bachelors only , and each consisted of tAvo rooms Avith closets at the back , but no offices . The vicars dined together in their common hall , and required

no kitchen in their houses . The Close was , in fact , a college , in which each student had a separate small house , instead of his t \ vo rooms in a large one . The very beautiful gate-house and bridge over the road from the Vicar's Hall to the cathedral is part of the numerous works of Bishop Beckington , one of the greatest benefactors of the city . The southern arch of this bridge , the one nearest to the Chapter-house , has long bee . u concealed from vieiv on the east

side by a wall , Avhich has lately been removed ; on the Avest side by a stable built up against it , probably in the seventeenth century , but constructed of old materials so ingeniously put together as to deceive the eye at a very short distance , and to appear like part of the original structure . This obstruction , 1 am happy to say , is about to be removed and the arch left open , ivhich will greatly improve the effect of this very remarkable bridge . I can see no reason for keeping the passage across this bridge always closed , or Avhy the theological students should not he

allowed to go across it from their library , formerly the Vicars ' Hall , to the cathedral , as the vicars did of old . This would be , in fact , restoring it to the purpose for which it was built ; for the present theological students much more truly represent the class of persons for whose use the Vicars' Close itself and the bridge was built , than the present corporation of vicars does . The degradation of the class of vicars choral generally , nowcalled singing men , is one of the curses brought upon the Church

by the change in the value of money . The only other jtfediawal house is , I believe , Bishop Bub-Avith ' s almshouse , near St . Cuthbort's Church . This is remarkably perfect and very interesting , though much spoiled about a dozen years ago by some stupid builder , who could not understand or appreciate the wise arrangements of our ancestors . The original plan ivas a great hall , with a chapel at the end of it , and with cells along the sides for tlie almsmen , ivhich ivere

open at the top to the lofty and fine timber roof , so that each old man had the benefit of many hundred cubic feet of air ; and , in case he became ill or infirm , he could hear the service chanted daily in the chapel Avithout leaving his bed ; and if he was able only to craiA-1 to the door of his cell , he could see the elevation of the host hy looking along the central passage to the chapel , and he could always attend divine service , hpAvever old ov infirm he might be . At the opposite end of tlie hall ivas a building of

two stories , the loiver one of Avhich Avould he the common room of the almsmen ; and over it the chaplain ' s or master ' s apartment . In this apartment is noAv preserved a very fine moneychest of the fifteenth century , Avith the usual three locks , and painted in the old style ivith a scroll patera . This is supported on a stand made for ifc in the time of James I ., Avith some curious doggerel verses upon it . It is , perhaps , hardly necessary to observe that the arrangement of the cells along the sides of a

large hall is exactly the same as that of the dormitory of a monastery . This arrangement is the most economical of space consistent with an abundance of air , and has been adopted in the dormitory of Ridley school , and some other large schools , where

the masters are enlightened enough to profit by the wisdom of their ancestors . The same arrangement is also adopted in some of the public baths lately erected in various places , and for the same reasons . Tire partitions of the cells give privacy without losing space ; and , being open at the top to the roof , there is plenty of air . At Glastonbury , an almshouse of this description has had the hall roof destroyed , and each of the cells roofed over , so as to turn them into a little street of cottages . I cannot see

the advantage of this change , When the old arrangement was kept up , the almsmen , or the monks , were kept warm in the winter hy hangings and an awning- over the cell . But the modern builder has effected the improvement of making each cell as nearly air-tight as possible with lath and plaster , and introduced a second set of cells on a floor over the original ones ; thus entirely spoiling the old hall , and alloiving each almsman only a i-ery limited lof airhardlsufficient for

suppy , y health . I knoAv nothing ofthe history of this alteration , hut ifc seems natural to suppose that it has been done under the direction of some corporate body of governors , and has been considered a clever and ingenious construction , to accommodate double the number of almsmen in the same space and under the same roof ; and it looks as if the trustees of the property with Avhich the hospital was endoived by the founder , had , after long neglect , been seized Avith some qualms of conscience , or some

Avliolesome fear of the Charity Commission , and had observed that their funds were more than sufficient for the then existing number of almsmen at the then rate of payment . In such cases it very commonly happens that the change in the value of money since the time of the foundation is entirely forgotten . IE tlie endowment ivas in land , as it probably was , it is worth noiv , in nominal money value , tAventy times the sum afc Avhich it was reckoned by the founder . This is no random assertion , hut is well known to those who have studied the subject ; and I am not now ' speaking of the AVells case in particular : I only guess from appearances that the case is one of those of constant occurrence evervAvhere *

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1862-09-27, Page 14” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_27091862/page/14/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
SHARP PRACTICE. Article 1
THE THREATENED SECESSION FROM THE SUPREME GRAND ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER OF SCOTLAND.—No. V . Article 1
A ROMAN CATHOLIC'S NOTION OF FREEMASONRY. Article 7
DEATH OF THE SON OF BURNS'S "SOUTER JOHNNY." Article 9
CAMBRIAN ARCHÆOLOGICAL SOCIETY. Article 10
THE ANTIQUITIES OF WELLS, SOMERSETSHIRE. Article 13
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 15
Untitled Article 16
METROPOLITAN. Article 16
PROVINCIAL. Article 17
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
ROYAL ARCH. Article 18
TURKEY. Article 18
Untitled Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Antiquities Of Wells, Somersetshire.

perfect , and adds much to the picturesque beauty of the house , the rest of which is entirely modernised ; and the original offices seem to have been destroyed , as is frequently the case . The singing-school is over part of the west Avail of tho cloister , and joins on to the south-ivest corner of tire cathedral . The organist ' s house is close to this , and is one of the smaller houses of the fifteenth century , the plan of Avhich Avas that ofthe letter T » the hall forming the top strokeand the rest of the house

, the stem ; but the house has been almost entirely spoiled during the last century ; vile additions having been made to it , encroaching on the small space originally left between the house and the cloister , and destroying the outline of the house , AA'hich , when it stood clear , must have been extremely picturesque . The interior is also spoiled by modern partitions , IIOAV become more old-looking and more rotten than the original roof of the half which remains .

Most of the canons' houses have been either rebuilt entirely or much spoiled by modern alterations ; one of them to the north-east of the cathedral ( IIOAV occupied by Canon Brodrick ) has a good porch and a panelled battlement of the fifteenth century . Another house , rather farther to the east ( noiv the school ) , is partly of the fourteenth century , with a . good finial on the gable , and the moulded arch of a doorway of that period ,

•evidentl y the chief entrance to the hall originally , but long blocked up . Tiris hall has a fine timber roof with angel corbels , but quite concealed hy modern lath and plaster ceilings . The cellar or store-room remains , with several lockers in the wall , •and is noiv the school-room . The solar over this is modernised , feut this also contains the old roof , ivith its gable and coping . To this , wings have been added in the fifteenth or sixteenth ¦ century , apparently to obtain additional bed-rooms ; and it is

probable that at that time the original kitchen and offices at the other end of the hall ivere destroyed , and new ones made in the new wing . Such a change as this was very frequently made in the sixteenth century . The very remarkable and picturesque Vicars' Close is so well ¦ known that it is not necessary to repeat any long story about it , but the outline of its history may be mentioned . The Vicars ' Choral formed part of the original establishment of the

cathedral , and were incorporated by Bishop Joceline in the beginning ef the thirteenth century ; and , as he was a great builder , it ,-is probable that he built houses for them ; hut all that we have remaining of his time are some fragments of beautifully-sculptured ornament used up as old material , and built in the spandrels of the arches of the windows , and in the parapet . These correspond exactly with his work in the cathedra ! , and with the remains of his palace at AVookey ; but they may have been

brought from some part of the cathedral IIOAV destroyed , and the original vicars' houses may ha ve been of Avood only , as AA-as very usual at that period . These ivere rebuilt by Bishop Ralph , of ShreAvsbury , in the fourteenth century ; and he expressly mentions in his will the houses that he has built for the vicars ; but all that now remains of his work is the hall , with its west windoiv and side windows ; the east end over the gateway was lengthened in the time of Henry VIII . hRichard Pomeroy .

y The present houses were entirely built hy the executors of Bishop Beckington , late in the fifteenth century , on one uniform plan ; and several of these remain perfect , though in many cases they have been altered , and two houses thrown into one . JTov can Ave complain much of this when we remember that the houses were originally intended for bachelors only , and each consisted of tAvo rooms Avith closets at the back , but no offices . The vicars dined together in their common hall , and required

no kitchen in their houses . The Close was , in fact , a college , in which each student had a separate small house , instead of his t \ vo rooms in a large one . The very beautiful gate-house and bridge over the road from the Vicar's Hall to the cathedral is part of the numerous works of Bishop Beckington , one of the greatest benefactors of the city . The southern arch of this bridge , the one nearest to the Chapter-house , has long bee . u concealed from vieiv on the east

side by a wall , Avhich has lately been removed ; on the Avest side by a stable built up against it , probably in the seventeenth century , but constructed of old materials so ingeniously put together as to deceive the eye at a very short distance , and to appear like part of the original structure . This obstruction , 1 am happy to say , is about to be removed and the arch left open , ivhich will greatly improve the effect of this very remarkable bridge . I can see no reason for keeping the passage across this bridge always closed , or Avhy the theological students should not he

allowed to go across it from their library , formerly the Vicars ' Hall , to the cathedral , as the vicars did of old . This would be , in fact , restoring it to the purpose for which it was built ; for the present theological students much more truly represent the class of persons for whose use the Vicars' Close itself and the bridge was built , than the present corporation of vicars does . The degradation of the class of vicars choral generally , nowcalled singing men , is one of the curses brought upon the Church

by the change in the value of money . The only other jtfediawal house is , I believe , Bishop Bub-Avith ' s almshouse , near St . Cuthbort's Church . This is remarkably perfect and very interesting , though much spoiled about a dozen years ago by some stupid builder , who could not understand or appreciate the wise arrangements of our ancestors . The original plan ivas a great hall , with a chapel at the end of it , and with cells along the sides for tlie almsmen , ivhich ivere

open at the top to the lofty and fine timber roof , so that each old man had the benefit of many hundred cubic feet of air ; and , in case he became ill or infirm , he could hear the service chanted daily in the chapel Avithout leaving his bed ; and if he was able only to craiA-1 to the door of his cell , he could see the elevation of the host hy looking along the central passage to the chapel , and he could always attend divine service , hpAvever old ov infirm he might be . At the opposite end of tlie hall ivas a building of

two stories , the loiver one of Avhich Avould he the common room of the almsmen ; and over it the chaplain ' s or master ' s apartment . In this apartment is noAv preserved a very fine moneychest of the fifteenth century , Avith the usual three locks , and painted in the old style ivith a scroll patera . This is supported on a stand made for ifc in the time of James I ., Avith some curious doggerel verses upon it . It is , perhaps , hardly necessary to observe that the arrangement of the cells along the sides of a

large hall is exactly the same as that of the dormitory of a monastery . This arrangement is the most economical of space consistent with an abundance of air , and has been adopted in the dormitory of Ridley school , and some other large schools , where

the masters are enlightened enough to profit by the wisdom of their ancestors . The same arrangement is also adopted in some of the public baths lately erected in various places , and for the same reasons . Tire partitions of the cells give privacy without losing space ; and , being open at the top to the roof , there is plenty of air . At Glastonbury , an almshouse of this description has had the hall roof destroyed , and each of the cells roofed over , so as to turn them into a little street of cottages . I cannot see

the advantage of this change , When the old arrangement was kept up , the almsmen , or the monks , were kept warm in the winter hy hangings and an awning- over the cell . But the modern builder has effected the improvement of making each cell as nearly air-tight as possible with lath and plaster , and introduced a second set of cells on a floor over the original ones ; thus entirely spoiling the old hall , and alloiving each almsman only a i-ery limited lof airhardlsufficient for

suppy , y health . I knoAv nothing ofthe history of this alteration , hut ifc seems natural to suppose that it has been done under the direction of some corporate body of governors , and has been considered a clever and ingenious construction , to accommodate double the number of almsmen in the same space and under the same roof ; and it looks as if the trustees of the property with Avhich the hospital was endoived by the founder , had , after long neglect , been seized Avith some qualms of conscience , or some

Avliolesome fear of the Charity Commission , and had observed that their funds were more than sufficient for the then existing number of almsmen at the then rate of payment . In such cases it very commonly happens that the change in the value of money since the time of the foundation is entirely forgotten . IE tlie endowment ivas in land , as it probably was , it is worth noiv , in nominal money value , tAventy times the sum afc Avhich it was reckoned by the founder . This is no random assertion , hut is well known to those who have studied the subject ; and I am not now ' speaking of the AVells case in particular : I only guess from appearances that the case is one of those of constant occurrence evervAvhere *

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