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A42371 Englands grievance discovered, in relation to the coal-trade with the map of the river of Tine, and situation of the town and corporation of Newcastle : the tyrannical oppression of those magistrates, their charters and grants, the several tryals, depositions, and judgements obtained against them : with a breviate of several statutes proving repugnant to their actings : with proposals for reducing the excessive rates of coals for the future, and the rise of their grants, appearing in this book / by Ralph Gardiner ... Gardiner, Ralph, b. 1625. 1655 (1655) Wing G230; ESTC R3695 131,711 221

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to joyn issue upon to stand and fall by as I am by this challenging any to brand me with the least of injustice I ever did them being ready with my fortune to make good what I prosecute The thing I aim at is a right understanding between the free and unfree men of England a perfect love every one injoying their own and to be governed under our known and wholesome Laws as also an obedience thereunto and not by a hidden Prerogative alias Charters It being a wonder there dare be such presumption in this Corporation to exercise such insolencies which were the greatest obstructors of our Nations Liberties by garisoning that Town The Mayor Aldermen and Recorder with the Burgesses and others against the free-born of England which prohibited all Trade from the 9th day of January 1642. to the 14th of November 1644 in that Port which caused Coals to be four pound the Chaldron and Salt four pound the weigh the poor Inhabitants forced to flie the Country others to quarter all Armies upon free Quarter heavy Taxes to them all both English Scots and Garisons Plundered of all they had Land lying waste Coal-pits drowned Salt-works broken down Hay and Corn burnt Town pulled down mens wives carried away by the unsatiable Scots and abused All being occasioned by that Corporations disaffection And yet to tyrannize as is hereafter mentioned I appeal to God and the World Ralph Gardner Charter-Law with its Practice discovered CHAP. I. Newcastle upon Tynes Patron King John surnamed without land Raigned 17 Yeres and 7 monethes died ●9 dai● of october 121● Was buried att Worcester in the 51. Yere of his age A KIng John who usurped the Crown of England was only for formalities sake sworn by a Bishop who being demanded the reason why he did so said that by the gift of Prophecy certified that at some time King John would take the Crown and Realm of England and bring all to ruin and confusion he pretending the King his Brother was dead in the time of his being absent beyond Sea being the first Author of Charters for gain and people like himself for lucre of gain sold their Birth-right to become Bodies Corporate and oppressors of the free-born people of England For before Charters were all the Free-holders of England were free to make Laws for the good of the Nation but Corporations being subordinate to such Laws as he by his Prerogative gave them being repugnant to the known fundamental Laws of England In the first year of his reign dreadful tempestuous weathers by rains that the grounds were so spoiled that whereas corn was sold for one shilling the Boule in King Henry the seconds daies then cost 13 shillings the Boule also an abundance of fish found dead upon the Land by the corruption of the waters no hay could be mowed and hale as big as hens eggs B He was an Usurper a Tyrant a bloody person a Murderer a perjured person a covetous person a demolisher of famous Towns with fire and a seller of Englands Supremacy to the Pope whose reign was oppressive and end shame For further satisfaction I refer you to his true History I shall onely give a brief of some passages in his reign He made a Law that all Jews that would not turn Christians should pay a certain great sum of money or be imprisoned and when they did turn they they should have their money again a young Merchant paid 60 l. to continue a Jew and after turned to be a Christian then he demanded his money from the King but he being unwilling to part with money demanded what reason he had to turn and sent for his Father and Mother to dis-swade him and to perswade him to change again to be a Jew C He gave command that all the Jews in England and Wales to be forthwith imprisoned men women and children by reason they turned so fast to be of his Religion and then seized on all their riches to satisfie his covetous disposition and such as would not confess where their money was pulled out their teeth and eies and then took the thirteenth part of all estates moveable to war against the Earls of Marsh who desired him to forbear but he would not for which they dispossessed him of all his Lands in France c. He having little love to his Wife Izabel the Queen was divorced pretending she was too near of K●n to him and so took another D He murthered Duke Arthur Earl of Brittan his eldest Brothers Son being Heir to the Crown in the Castle of Roan in France and chased William de Branes out of England and caused his wife and children to be starved to death in Winsor Castle He dis-inherited many of the Nobility without Judgement of the Law and put to death Ramp Earl of Chester for reproving him for lying with his Brothers Wife and reproached others of his Nobles telling them how often he had defiled their beds and defloured their Daughters E He granted to the City of London their Charter and Letters Pattents to chuse their Mayor yeerly in the tenth year 1210 who governs well c. F He removed the Exchequer from London to Northampton and got a great Army to go against the King of Scots but the King of Scots met him and did him homage and gave him his two Daughters as pledges and Eleven thousand Scotch Marks and upon his return took homage of the Free-holders of England and sware them to his allegiance all above 11 years of age G He made oath to be obedient to the Pope of Rome by name Innocentius to Randolphe his B●ll who went with his Nobles to Dover where he met with the said Popes Bull and there resigned the Crown with the Realm of England and Ireland into the Popes hand See his Oath in chap. 59. B Upon which the Bishops who he had banished returned to England by leave from the Pope King John met them and fell flat upon his face on the ground and asked them forgiveness melting bitterly into tears c. H He grants the very next year after his power was given to the Pope unto the Town of Newcastle upon Tyne Letters Pattents to be a Corporation and to hold the said Town in Fee-farm at the rent of 100 l. per annum as by the said recited Letters Pattents in the second Chapter more at large appears An. 1213. Surely this Charter is not good by Law c. I He was the cause of firing the chief Town in Northumberland called Morpeth and caused many more Towns in England and Wales to be burnt The Barons of England being armed demanded of him the Laws and Liberties granted by King Edward the Confessor vulgarly called St. Edward he desired respite till Easter and gave Sureties to perform them K He met with the Barons of England in Running Meadow between Winsor and Stains upon the 16 of June granted under his hand to them the Liberties of England without
Bishop of Durham who killed Levisus was killed by them for which William the Conqueror sent down Odo with an Army who totally laid Northumberland to waste cut off the heads of all the people after they had dismembred them Little of Confession or Repentance was by King John as was by William the Conqueror for he upon his Arrest at the Suit of Death confessed he had committed many outrages and won England by the Sword and not by Inheritance and was heartily sorry for the wrongs he had done and required his body to be buried at Cain in Normandy when he was dead they would not affoard him a burial-place till such time as one of his relation was constrained to purchase so much ground but soon after they defaced his Tomb took up his bones and brake them and cast them away In the fifteenth year of King Richard the second the Scots burnt all the Towns of Northumberland and the North as far as York except Rippon who redeemed themselves with a sum of mony In the sixth year of King Edward the third 1332. a great Battel was fought between the English and the Scots near Barwick where was killed eight Earls fifteen hundred Horse and thirty five thousand Foot In the thirteenth year of King Edward the third 1339. An inundation of water surmounted the Wall of Newcastle and broke down six pearches in length and drowned one hundred and sixty persons neer the Wark Knowl In the year 1345. William Douglas lead into Northumberland above thirty thousand Scots and fired many Towns but was overcome by a stratagem with Bishop Ogle The next year 1346. King David King of the Scots entred Northumberland with a great Army and fought at Nevils-Crosse where he was overthrown himself taken prisoner by one Copland of Northumberland who had five hundred pound per Annum given to him and to his heirs for ever In King Richard the seconds dayes 1379. the Scots entred England and killed all men women and children in the North parts notwithstanding the plague was sorely amongst them 1383. The Scots entred England and lead all the people away prisoners that were in Northumberland and laid that County to waste 1384. They entred again and did the like 1389. The Scots again invaded England where a great battel was fought at O●terborn in Northumberland where they were over-thrown and eleven hundred killed and thirty thousand put to flight who upon their flight killed men women and sucking babes and filled houses with people two hundred in a house and then shut the doors and fired the houses 1399. King Richard the second caused seventeen Counties to be indicted pretending they were all against him with the Duke of Glocester Arundel and Warwick and commanded them all to give it under their hands and seals that they were Traytors though indeed they never were And then he makes them pay some a thousand pound some more some lesse King Henry the fourth Great fights were between Doughlas and Piercy in the North. And in the years 1639. and 1643. and 1648. It being well known to all the misery they brought upon the North and heavy Impositions both upon the North and South parts as appears in the close of the Epistle to the Reader c. It is no small mercy that we now live so in peace here being none of those bloody times and our Ancestors would willingly have enjoyed this mercy and we hunger after blood which they wallowed in what bloody minded men are these I wish them in better minds and to be contented with that which in former times could not be obtained Many have admired the poverty of Northumberland as well they may for what with the bloody Tyrants the Scots on the North of that poor County and oppressive Corporation of Newcastle on the South thereof bounded in with the High-lands on the West and the Sea on the East that it can get nothing but stroaks and worried out of what they have and not being tollerated to make use of their own and cold blasts from the Sea but it would be otherwise if such Gentlemen might be re-imbursed for such sums of money as they would expend to vend Coals out of Hartly Blithe and Bedlington Rivers which be convenient places to vend them at after some charge which would be done by having either their money again or Custome free for some years to re-imburse them which would not onely make that poor County as rich as any is but reduce the excessive rates of Coals and Salt and bring in many thousands per Annum into the publick revenew c. enable the people to be serviceable and abundantly increase Trade and Navigation as also there being as good Coals as possibly can be burnt which now lyes c. and others not knowing their right is stript of it But if one thing they look after which is to examine some Records they may perceive what is their Rights and which was especially in a book lodged in the Exchequor made in the year 1080. it being called Domus Dei or Dooms day being a perfect Survey of all the Lands in England the Rent Value Quantity c. by which William the Conqueror taxed the whole Nation and it goeth by the name of the Role of Winton being ordered to be kept in Winchester and recites the Earldomes Hundreds Tythings Woods Parks and Farms in every Territory and Precinct with Plowlands Meadows Marshes Acres c. what Tenements and Tenants then the Corporation of Newcastle might be as glad to keep what is their own as they are to take from others c. CHAP. LVII THe reason of my Collecting these few Statutes is to shew how they are intrenched upon by an illegal Charter and pressing upon a remedy shal cite Poulton which is that seeing we have all received and allow it for truth that the ignorance of the Law doth excuse none of offence and also that the Law doth help the watchful and not the sloathful man Therefore it behoveth each person first to seek the knowledge of those Laws under which he doth live and whereby he is to receive benefit or to sustain peril and next with all industry to frame his obedience unto them or humbly to submit himself to the censure of them And though we find by experience that some men by the sluggishnesse of their natures others by the carelesnesse of their own welfares And a third sort wholly given over to pleasures and vanities do little respect to know and lesse to obey our criminal and capital Laws being things of great moment importance and therefore do oftentimes taste the smart of them and repent of their follies when it is too late Many there be that by reading desires to conceive them others for increase of their knowledge others in their actions to be directed by them therefore to content such as knoweth not as yet these heads that they may know what they condemn and do tend to the breach of the peace of
any difficulty and the whole Realm was sworn thereunto And soon after subtlely and privately sends to the Pope and other Nations for Armies to make void those Charters and Liberties granted to the Barons and to subdue England and promised them great rewards Forty thousand Souldiers that were to have Norfolk and Suffolk to conquer England for King John were all cast away on the Sea The Pope sends in great strength who landed at Dover and destroyed many Towns by fire and with the sword slew many thousands of people the Pope excommunicating the Barons particularly by their names great subversion and dissolution thereupon fell laying all Hedges and Ditches level tormenting the Barons with their wives c. L The Barons were necessitated to send for Lewis Son to the King of France for to come with an Army to joyn with them to conquer King John whose cruelties were intollerable which was done and King John overthrown and forced to flee towards Lin being poysoned by a Monk at Swinsted the reason he gave was that if he had lived half a year longer a half penny loaf would cost 20 s. he died and was buried at Worcester and King Henry the third Son to King John of nine years of age was crowned at Glocester c. M The reason of King John his granting Charters in England and making Corporations was for that he had but little land to raise great Rents from them and to assist him with strength by out-voting the Knights of M the Shires as is hereafter exprest For all Free-holders of England that had forty shillings a yeer met two times a yeer at Sessions Meadows neer Rockingham Castle in Northampton-shire and there made such Laws as the Nation was governed by and confirmed by the King N King John resolving to have Monies and Aid of men to go to Normandy to conquer them could not conveniently motion it by reason of the numerousnesse of the Free-holders but made a speech to them that he had contrived a very ●it and convenient way for the making Laws for the good of the whole Nation which was that by reason he conceived it a great trouble for all them to come so far for that purpose onely to make Laws that they would chuse two Knights of every Shire and County in England and Wales and give to them the full power of the Nation and then the said Knights to come and fit with him in Parliament at Westminster and also to allow them four shillings a day out of the County stock which more plainly appears in the Statute of 35. Hen. 8. Ch. 11. Knights to have 4 s. per diem and Burgesses 2 s. per diem O King John when he had got the hundred and four Knights in Parliament they having the full power of the Nation from the Free-holders immediately required from them great Subsidies and Armies to go for Normandy to recover such Lands as he had lost P The Knights answered they onely were intrusted to make Laws and not to taxe the Free-holders who had intrusted them and not to raise Armies and that by so doing they could not discharge the trust reposed in them Q The King finding his expectation frustrated having nothing doubted but to have wrought his design on so small a number Mastered his passion and not long after acquainted the Knights that he was sorry for the great burden which lay upon them for making Laws being for a publick and that they were too few in number and that he had found out a way how to ease them and bring in a great revenew to free the Nation from impositions R Which was that he resolved to Incorporate all the great Towns in England and Wales and depute Magistrates to govern as his Lieutenants and every Corporation should hold their Town in Fee-Farm from him and his heirs at a certain Rent some more others lesse according to the quality c. S Also that every Corporation should chuse two Burgesses to ●it and vote with them in Parliament they knowing the state of every County and the Burgesses of the Corporation by which means the Burgesses being more in number then the Knights might out-vote them and vote for him the Knights medled not therein at all but were out-voted by these Vassals and Tenants to the King they granting to him what ever he demanded or else must forfeit their Charters And he granted to them what ever they demanded c. T The Free-holders of England were represented in Parliament by their Knights in their Election And if the Burgesses were Free-holders then represented in the same Knights V But if the Burgesses were no Free-holders then no power in England to make Laws or to ●it in Parliament to out-vote the true Representative which are the Knights especially representing no body further then the will of the King who was onely to confirm Laws but not to make them King John had four considerations in making great Towns Corporations 1 To assume ● Prerogative 2 To raise vast sums of Mony 3 To divide the Nation 4 To enslave bodies Corporate by being his Vassals and Slaves Charters are no Laws and nothing is binding that is not lawful no Laws are made but by Parliament read Stat. 2. Edw. 3. 8. CHAP. II. Newcastles first Charter A KIng John by his Letters Pattents dated the day of in the fourteenth yeer of his Reign and in the Yeer of our Lord 1213. Granted Demised and Confirmed to the honest men of the Newcastle upon Tyne and to their Heirs his Town of Newcastle upon Tyne with all the Appurtenances to Fee-farm for one hundred pounds to be ●endred to the said King and his Heirs at his Exchequer to wit at the Feast of Ea●ter fifty pounds and at the Feast of St. Michael other fifty pounds saving to the said King the Rents Prizes and Assizes in the Port of the said Town Further he grants to them and confirmeth one hundred and ten shillings and six pence of Rent which they have by the gift of the said King in the said Town of Escheats to be divided and assigned to them who lost their Rents by occasion of a Ditch or Trench and of the new work made under the Castle towards the River or Water so that thereof they might have the more that lost the more and they that lost the lesse should have the lesse He also granted to them for him and his Heirs that in nothing they should be answerable to the Sheriffe nor to the Constable for those things which belong to them as the said Charter testifieth Wherefore he willeth and firmly commandeth that the said men and their Heirs may have and hold the same Town with its Appurtenances to Fee-farm for the said hundred pounds yeerly to be paid as is aforesaid well and in peace freely quietly and intirely with all Liberties and free Customes which they were wont to have in the time of King Henry the 2. Father of the said King
John as by the said Letters Pattents appeareth The said King John was the cause of burning Morpeth the chief Town in Northumberland and many more Towns in Wales because of the enmity between him and the family of the Bruces who originally were planted in Wales Wherefore the said Charter made by the said King John to the said honest men of Newcastle upon Tyne cannot be valid in Law because in the fourteenth year of his Reign he subjected himself to be a Vassal to the Pope of Rome as is aforesaid and for many other reasons mentioned in the said Charter it self considered in themselves In this Charter of King John that he grants to the honest men of Newcastle upon Tyne he mentions not the Port of the River of Tyne from Sparhawk at Tinmouth-Bar upon the Sea to Hadwyn streams above Newburn in Northumberland neither is there so much as one syllable whereby the said King grants to them the two third parts of the said River or any of the Fishing between the said places c. CHAP. III. A KIng Henry the Third being earnestly supplicated by the good men of Newcastle to confirm King Johns Charter which was done upon the second day of July in the year of our Lord 1234. the said King Henry did not inlarge their jurisdiction at all but onely grants them the Charter in the very same words as King John had in his Charter granted B King Henry the Third by his Letters Pattents under the Great Seal of England dated at Westminster the first day of December in the three and twentieth year of his Reign upon the good men of Newcastles supplication thought it fit to give them Licence to dig Coals and Stones in the common Soil of that Town without the walls thereof in the place called Castle-field and the Frith and from thence to draw and convert them unto their own profit in aid of their said Fee-farm Rent of a 100 ● per Annum and the same as often as it should seem good unto them the same to endure during his pleasure which said Letters Pattents were granted upon payment of twenty shillings into the Hamper nothing more was given neither Lands c. but only to work the Coals during pleasure for their own use C King Henry the Third was petitioned again by the same honest men for so they were called by King Johns Charters probi homines That his Majesty would be graciously pleased to give them all the Stone and Coals in a place called the Frith adjoyning to the former the better to enable them to pay their Fee-farm Rent which also was granted paying forty shillings per Annum into the Hamper upon the eleventh of May in the one and thirtieth yeer of his Reign All which Coals and Stones have do and will amount to many thousands of pounds yet no land above the said Coals was granted unto them CHAP. IV. A KIng Edward the First in the Nineteenth yeer of his Reign was supplicated by the good men of Newcastle to grant them a sum of money and a Licence for the building of a Wall round the Town on which Wall one of the Mayors of Newcastle was hanged as by the Record of the Registery appears That two third parts of the River of Tyne from Sparhawk to Beadwyn shelves were in this Kings hands And for such Lords as held any Fishings on the South-side of the said River of Tyne which went to the Mid-stream they were meer intruders of one sixt part more then was their own for whereas they were to have had but one third part they claimed half B And that this King gave Licence to build a Wall about the Town of Newcastle and gave mony towards this wall which was not bestowed C And that divers purpreslures were then incroached upon by the good men of the Town of Newcastle upon the Moat of the Newcastle built by William Rufus adjoyning thereunto And to the end that the then Sheriffe of Northumberland might present these incroachments into the Chancery whereby to discover their unjust dealing and intrusion upon the said Moat of the said Castle they the said good men gave to him the said Sheriffe a gift or bribe of ten Marks that he might not vex them as by the said Record more at large appears c. CHAP. V. THe said King Edward the Third by his Letters Pattents dated at Westminster the tenth day of May in the one and thirtieth yeer of his Reign confirms all former Charters with an addition of his own that he for himself and his Heirs Granted Demised and Confirmed unto his honest men of the Town of the Newcastle upon Tyne his Town of Newcastle before called Manchester with all its Appurtenances for a hundred pound per Annum to be paid to the said King and his Heirs c. Which he the said King confirms to the said men and Burgesses and to their Heirs for ever And because on the behalf of the said Burgesses of the said Town it was humbly supplicated to the said King That whereas the said Moore and Lands called Castle-fields and Castle-moor on the North-side of the said Town of Newcastle from a certain place called Ingler Dike c. as the same are butted and bounded c. even to the said Town of Newcastle are the lands and soil of the said Town of Newcastle belonging to the same beyond memory with all profits coming of the said Lands Moor and Soil as by an Inquisition thereof taken and returned into the Chancery appeareth And albeit the said Burgesses and their Predecessors from the time they have had the said Town to farm they have held the said Moor and Land as though it were appertaining to the said Town and have alwayes hitherto peaceably and quietly had and reaped all the profits coming of the said Moor and Lands yet the said Burgesses now they are turned from honest men to Burgesses the next will be to For that there is no mention made of the said Moor and Lands albeit they be of the Appurtenances of the said Town do fear that they may be impeached afterwards and for that the said Town as well by reason of the last Pestilence at that time as by the hazards of Wars and divers other adversities was so impoverished and destitute of men that the profits of the said Town sufficed not for the payment of the said Farm as they then pretended The said King being willing to provide for their indempnity in that behalf and for him and his Heirs granted that they and their Heirs might have and hold the same Moor and Soil as if it were appertaining to the said Town with all profits out of the same c. And that they the said Burgesses and their Heirs in the said Moor and Lands may dig and may have Coal Slai● and St●ne there and from thence may draw them and may make their profit of the said Coals Slait and Stones and other profits coming out of the said
of Newcastle complained again upon the same business by pleading some new matter in their Petition and the reference they obtained on their Petition was Ordered by the King and Council this 13th of February 1632. that Sir Heath's Ballast-shoar should be built The Commissioners aforesaid put in the third Petition not doubting but that by such new matter they should prevent the building of the said Shoar Ordered by the King and Council the 27 Feb. 1632. That Sir Heath's Ballast-shoar Wharf or Key a building shall be built go forward and be quite finished See ch 13. A 19 A 20 G 34 A. B CHAP. XIX THe Mayor and Burgesses exhibited another great complaint to the King and Council wherein nine severall absurdities appeared by Capt. Crosier and especially against Sir Rob. Heaths shoar c. At the Court at Greenwich the 1. of June 1634. King Charls Lord Arch. Bish Canterbury Lord Keeper Lord Arch Bishop of York Lord Treasurer Lord Privy-Seal Lord Duke of Lenox Lord Marquis Hambleton Lord Chamberlain Earl of Dorset Earl of Bridgewater Lord Vi. Wimbleton Lord Newbrough Mr. Treasurer Mr. Comptroler Mr. Vice-Chamberlain Mr. Secretary Winwood Mr. Secretary Cook Upon consideration this day had at the Board his Majesty being present in Council of a complaint made by the Mayor and Burgesses of Newcastle against the Ballast-shoars lately built by the said Sir Robert Heath at Shields upon the River of Tyne pretending the same to be a great prejudice of the shipping and Navigation and to the annoyance and damage of the said River the care consideration thereof was by his Majesty especially intrusted unto them E and upon hearing the allegation on both sides with their learned Council in the Law it was thought fit and ordered that the said Shoar should be finished and backed with Ballast to make it fit for the Salt Works which for his Majesties Service are begun and intended to be performed G In the first place that the Sea-men should have liberty freely to cast their Ballast there H without interruption if they find convenient none being compelled to it or hindred from it That neither those of the Town of Newcastle nor free Hoast-men I which sel all Coals do hinder the same indirectly by denying or unnecessary denying to carry down coals in Keels or Lighters to the ships which shall cast their Ballast at that Shoar to the end this shoar which may be for the safety and incouragement of Navigation and Shiping may be so used as the same may neither be prejudiciall to the Town in diverting or withdrawing of Trade nor to his Majesty in his Customs or Duty nor hurtful to the said River His Majesty will refer the ordering hereof to himself as wel in the particulars aforesaid as in all other things thereunto appertaining in such sort as both the Town and Seamen shall find his Majesties Regall care over them Sic subscripsit Ex. Majest See 12 Chap. 3. 18. D. F 23 A 42. E It is conceived Orders are no Laws and the latter Order which contradicts the former voids it So by this of King Charls voids King James's for the power of the River in Chap. 12. I CHAP. XX. Jarrow Slike c. A ON the 4th of December 1634. certain Lands and Wasts were discovered to the late Kings Commissioners at the Commissionhouse in Fleetstreet as belonging to the Crown concealed especially a parcel of Land or Waste in the River of Tyne called Jarrow Slike at South-Shields in the County of Durham which the water at a full Sea covers every Tyde and is by estimation 300 Acres a fit and convenient place for ships to cast Ballast at for many years to come without any prejudice to the River and great furtherance of Trade See Chap. 56. Chap. 34. A. B The Mayor and Burgesses of Newcastle hearing thereof put in their Claim to the said Commissioners and alleadged that all that ground belonged to them with all other grounds to a low-water mark from the full Sea mark on both sides the River from a place called Sparhawke in the Sea to Headwin-streams which is seven miles above Newcastle being fourteen miles in length granted to them and their Heirs for ever from King John by Charter and confirmed by his Successors and therefore beseeched time to make it so appear There being no such thing granted could never make it appear Along time was given them but nothing appeared as truth of any such Grant and two years after upon the first day of July 1637. they instead of wearying out the Commissioners and Gentlemen that discovered the same was called to make good their claim then they became Petitioners to the Kings Commissioners that they would be pleased to sell that parcel of wast ground called Jarrow-slike to them and to admit them to purchase the same for which they would give two hundred pounds by reason it lay more convenient for them then any else but they would give no more money for it See chap. 18. A. B See chap. 2. Upon which one Mr. Thomas Talbot and Mr. Richard Allen of London gave four hundred pound and got it The King upon the 27 of November 1637. by his Letters Pattents under the Great Seal of England confirmed the same Jarrow-slike and waste ground upon the said Talbot and Allen and their Heirs for ever they paying in to the Exchequor five pound per annum as a Fee-farm Rent which said ground is in contest between the said Gentlemen and Sir Henry Vane If this ground to a full Sea-Mark were really the Corporation of Newcastles it would have so appeared in the Charter granted by King John and also they then might have made good their claim and not to have become Petitioners to purchase the thing which was their own before even as they do in this so in other things Also if all ground be theirs from a full Sea-mark why were they Tenants to the late Dean and Chapters of Durham of certain ballast shores built to the low water-mark on which all ballast is cast And if all ground were Newcastles from a full Sea-mark why should Mr. Bonner c. buy the Lady Gibs ground and build a Ballast-shoar to a low water-mark and wrong the Town of their right And why should not Gates-head and both the shields which are built to a low water-mark pay Newcastle rent c. See Chap. 18. B 34. A. B. CHAP. XXI A KIng Charles in August in the 13. year of his Reign created a new Corporation of free Hoast-men in Newcastle called in English Coale-Engrossers and grants a Lease to Sir Tho. Tempest Knight with others for the selling of all Coals exported out of the River of Tyne and to receive eleven shillings and four pence per Chaldron Custome and twelve shillings from all strangers which shall be transported over Sea and to have two pence per Chaldron towards their charge and power to seize of all Coals sold by the Owners of such Coals sold In
Moor and Lands in aid of the payment of their said Fee-farm without impeachment c. As by the said Letters Pattents made by the King himself and his Council and by the Fine of forty shillings paid in the Hamper more at large appeareth By these last mentioned Letters Pattents the Burgesses of Newcastle can challenge no title in the said Castle-moor and Castle-field because the said Letters Pattents are contrary in themselves This is the first claim the said Burgesses lay to the Castle-moor being a quantity of eight hundred and fifty Acres of ground besides Pasture for all their Kine and Coals for all their Fuel which are gotten upon the said Castle-moor CHAP. VI. KIng Richard the Second by his Charter dated the ninth day of April in the first year of his Reign 1378. confirms all the former Charters and Grants to the Town of Newcastle the same priviledge as granted before in diging of Coals Slait and Stone in Castle-field and Castle-moor but doth not grant the Land onely the Coals Slait and Stone for the Towns best advantage CHAP. VII KIng Henry the Fourth being humbly petitioned by the Burgesses of Newcastle that his Highnesse would be graciously pleased to divide the Town and Corporation from the County of Northumberland and to grant them a Sheriffe with more Liberties and Immunities which was granted that the Corporation of Newcastle shall be a distinct County of it self dis-joyned from the County of Northumberland and not to meddle in the said new County as by the Charter more at large appears upon Record in the Tower of London 7. Ed. 6. 10. 1. Mary 3. This was a preparative for the Town of Gates-head c. CHAP. VIII A QUeen Elizabeth obtained a Lease from the late Bishop of Durham dated the 26. of April in the 24. year of her Reign 1582. of all the whole Mannors of Gates-head and Wickham and all the Coal-pits and Coal-mines within the said Mannors of Gates-head and Wickham aforesaid and in all the common Wasts and Parks belonging to the said Mannors at the Rent of ninety pounds per Annum or thereabouts for ninety nine yeers which the Earle of Leicester procured from the said Queen and sold or gave the same to Sutton of the Charter-house who for twelve thousand pounds as is reported sold the same to the Mayor and Burgesses of Newcastle but when he understood the yearly value which was worth at least fifty thousand pounds per Annum attested by Doctor Cradock sometimes Arch-deacon of Northumberland deceased this Lease being called the Grand Lease was granted to Sir William Readal and others for the use of the Mayor and Burgesses and free honest men and expires the 26. of April which shall be in the year of our Lord 1681. as appears in the 11. Chap. I 7. Edw. 6. 10. CHAP. IX A QUeen Elizabeth requires the great Arrear of two pence per Chaldron which was granted to King Henry the Fifth as Custome by the Parliament as appears by that Statute Chapter the tenth ninth yeer which was neglected to be paid unto the Crown by the Mayor and Burgesses for many yeers together insomuch as they were not able to pay the same but humbly beseeched those Arrears may be forgiven by reason of their inability And to grant them a Charter to incorporate a new fraternity or brother-hood to be called Free Host-men for the selling and vending of all Coals to shipping And in consideration thereof they would pay to her Majesty and her successors twelve pence for every Chalder exported from thenceforth to the free people of this Nation The Queen conceiving that twelve pence upon every Chalder would be better for the future and well paid would rise to a greater Revenew then the two pence so long in arrear could endamage which was granted upon condition specified in that Grant remaining in the Exchequer with many seals to it That they should sell all Coals to Masters of Ships At this day the Fitters reckon with the Masters for so much a Chalder as eleven shillings for so many as is conceived to be aboard the Ship and then he goeth with the Master to reckon which the said Masters payes the one shilling per Chalder Custome being allowed in his hand the Master conceives he doth not pay it further then being left in his hand by the Fitter but if the Masters will look upon that Lease they will find they are to have the best Coals for ten shillings and the worst for nine shillings the Chaldron at most and now they pay eleven shillings by which means the one shilling per Chaldron is paid by the Master and not by the Host man and so falls upon the whole Nations back I refer you further to the Lease for if the Master buy dear he must needs sell dear B By the same fallacy they wronged the King of his Customes 9. Hen. 5. 10. which plainly appears in that Statute if you please to read it the same they have to cheat the Queen and her Successors for the twelve pence per Chaldron CHAP. X. A QUeen Elizabeth being humbly intreated by the Mayor and Burgesses of Newcastle that her Majesty would be graciously pleased to grant them a Charter of Liberties concerning Sea-jurisdiction and of Admiralty in that Port to wit between Sparhawk in the Sea and Hadwyn streams being fourteen miles in length for the advance of the estate of that Town which also was granted as follows B The Queen by her Letters Pattents dated the thirtieth day of August in the one and thirtieth year of her Reign touching the Office of the High Admiralty of the River of Tyne and Port of Newcastle grants the Reversion to the Mayor and Burgesses of Newcastle by reason it was granted under the Great Seal of England bearing date the fifth of February 1522. unto Charles Lord Howard of Effingham amongst other things in his said Pattent in the Office of Lord High Admiral of England c. for life who out-lived the Queen and dyed 26. January in the sixteenth year of King James the Mayor and Burgesses pretending they had right thereunto from King Henry the sixth which if they had was extinguished upon the Queens grant to the High Admiral c. And by this grant of hers to Newcastle she onely grants what is in her to grant which is onely the Reversion after the surrender forfeiture or death of the aforesaid Lord High Admiral but she dying before the Lord High Admiral it is conceived her grant is void And it was never since confirmed by any other to the said Mayor and Burgesses for King James upon the 28 of June in the sixteenth year of his Reign two dayes after the Lord High Admiral died The Commission or Letters Pattents of the Admiralty of England was conferred upon the Duke of Buckingham so that Newcastle by this change hath but a slender pretence of Right to the Admiralty of that part of Newcastle C The said Corporation humbly
forfeiture of those Merchandizes to be had and levied for the publick use of the said Mayor and Burgesses fo 118. The Queen moreover granteth that the said Mayor and Burgesses and their Successors fo 118. may have hold c. all such like Liberties Customs Franchises c. and all other the premises c. to the said Mayor and Burgesses granted and confirmed as is before expressed and that they may injoy and use them for ever fully freely c. without impeachment molestation c. fo 119. Further the Queen pardoneth and releaseth to the said Mayor and Burgesses and to their Successors all and all manner of Actions Suits Impeachments by Writ of Quo Warranto to be brought or executed against the said Mayor fo 120. and Burgesses and their Successors by the said late Queen c. or by any of her Officers by reason of any Franchize Liberty c. by the said Mayor and Burgesses or their Predecessors within the said Town and limits thereof before times challenged or usurped and that the said Mayor and Burgesses shall be quit and altogether discharged for ever fo 121. The Queen further granteth that every person or persons who for ever hereafter shall be admitted to be Burgesses c. shall be admitted by the Mayor and Burgesses c. or by the greater part of them fo 122. O Moreover the Queen often considering in her mind of how much availe it is to the Commonwealth of England to have Youth well educated and instructed from their tender years c. fo 123. ordaineth and granteth that within the said Town of Newcastle and the Liberties thereof that there be erected and for ever there be one Free Grammer-Schoole which shall be called the Free Grammer-School of Queen Elizabeth in Newcastle and shall consist of one Master and Schollars to be instructed in the same and that they the Master and Schollars of the same School fo 124. for ever hereafter shal be one Body corporate in Law fact and name by the name of the Master and Schollars of the Free Grammer-School of Queen Elizabeth in Newcastle upon Tyne c. and by that name may have perpetual succession and shall be in perpetuall times to come fo 125. persons able and capable in the Law of having purchasing c. Lands Tenements c. to them and their successors in Fee simple or for term of years so they exceed not the yearly value of 40 li. and so they be not holden of the said Queen her Heirs and Successors in chief nor by Knights service c. f. 126 127 128. and that the Mayor and Burgesses of Newcastle and their Successors or the greater part of them c. fo 129. shal have power to make an honest learned and discreet man to be the first and modern Usher in that School there to continue during the good pleasure of the Mayor and Burgesses c. fo 130. and if it happen the Master and Usher to die or leave the said School c. fo 131. then they may chuse other men to be Master and Usher c. fo 132 133. P ANd whereas the Mayor and Burgesses of Newcastle more deeply considering and weighing the effect of divers Letters Pattents c. And whereas the said Town is an ancient Town and the Mayor and Burgesses of the same time out of mind fo 133. of man they have had a certain Guild or Fraternity commonly called Hoast-men for the discharging and better disposing of Sea-coals and Pit-coals Grind-stones Rub-stones and Whetstones in and upon the River and port of Tyne which Guild or Fraternity is granted or established by none of the said Letters Pattents Whereupon the said Mayor and Burgesses have humbly supplicated the said Queen that in supply of the said defects That We would exhibit Our liberality and favor fo 134. and that We would vouchsafe to make reduce and create the said Guild into a Body corporate and politick c. The said Queen therefore Ordaineth fo 135. appointeth and granteth that William Jennison the elder and 44 persons more commonly called the Hoast-men of the said Town of Newcastle upon Tyne and Brethren of the said Fraternity and all others which now are or hereafter shall be elected admitted c. into the said Guild or Fraternity of the said Hoast-men of Newcastle upon Tyne f. 136 137. hereafter shal be one Body corporate and politick in Law Fact and Name by the name of the Governor and Stewards and Brethren of the Fraternity of the Hoast-men in the Town of Newcastle upon Tyne c. one body corporate and politick really and at full for Us Our Heirs and Successors We do erect make ordain and creat c. And that by the same name they may and shall have a perpetual succession and are and shall be in perpetual times to come persons able and in Law capable to have purchase receive and possess fo 138. Lands Tenements Liberties c. to them and their Successors in perpetuity and otherwaies and to give grant demise c. the same Lands Tenements and Hereditaments and to do all other things by the name aforesaid and that by the same name they may plead or be impleaded c. in what Court soever c. fo 139 140. Q And that the said Governor and Stewards and Brethren of the Hoast-men of the Town fo 140. of Newcastle aforesaid and their Successors that seal at their pleasure may break alter and make as to them shall seem good And the Queen appointeth that there be and shal be for ever hereafter of the number of the Hoast-men c. which yearly upon the fourth of Jan. fo 141. shall be chosen c. by the said Brethren of that Fraternity c. to be Governor c. And likewise there shall be for ever hereafter two honest and discreet men of the said number of Hoast-men c. fo 142. who shall be the said fourth of January chosen by the said Governor Steward and Brethren of the said Fraternity c. And that the Queens will in the premises may have a more excellent effect She fo 143. assigneth nameth and createth William Jennison the elder to be the first and modern Governor c. fo 144. Moreover She hath assigned named constituted and appointed Francis Anderson and John Barker to be the first and modern Stewards of that Fraternity c fo 145 146 147 148 149. R The Queen further grants to the said Governor Stewards and Brethren of the said Fraternity of Hoast-men c. and to their Successors fo 149. that the said Governor Stewards and Brethren c. and their Successors c. shall have in every fit time for ever hereafter full power of meeting in their Guild-hall or in any other place convenient within the said Town and there to constitute make fo 150. such Laws Institutes c. which to the said Governor Stewards and Brethren c. good