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Shrewsbury Drapers Company

The Shrewsbury Drapers Company was a trade organisation founded in 1462 in the town of Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England. The members were wholesale dealers in wool and later woollen cloth. The Company dominated the trade in Welsh cloth and in 1566 was given a regional monopoly in the Welsh Wool trade. In the seventeenth century the trade had difficulties particularly during the English Civil war and then further declined in the eighteenth century with the industrialisation of cloth production and the improvement of transport infrastructure. This made it practical for merchants from Liverpool and elsewhere to travel into Wales and purchase cloth directly from the producers. The Reform Acts of the early nineteenth century took away the power of the trade guilds and the trade ceased. Since that time the Shrewsbury Drapers Company has survived and continues as a charity that runs almshouses in Shrewsbury.

Shrewsbury Drapers Company
Drapers Hall, Shrewsbury, now a boutique hotel
Formation1462
Founded atShrewsbury, Shropshire, England
TypeCharity
Registration no.Charity No: 1132671
Legal statusActive
PurposeOperation of almshouses
Headquarters1 Frankwell, Shrewsbury, SY3 8LG
Coordinates52°42′39″N 2°45′34″W / 52.710946°N 2.759567°W / 52.710946; -2.759567
Region
Shrewsbury
ServicesLow-income housing
Websiteshrewsburydrapers.org.uk

Please note

The image shown in the infobox on the right is not Drapers Hall it is The Old House on Dogpole just around the corner from Shrewsbury Drapers` Hall.

Early years: 12th–15th centuries edit

Shrewsbury in 1334 was the 7th wealthiest town in England outside of London, and was well situated to handle trade from north and central Wales in time of peace. The drapers[a] took the role of middlemen when the trade in raw wool was replaced by trade in woollen cloth.[1] In the late 12th and 13th centuries all trade in Shrewsbury was controlled by the Guild Merchant. Following other guilds the Drapers took steps to become independent from the guild Merchant. The first step was taken by an independent draper in 1444, when Digory Watur, founded almshouses in front of the west tower of St Mary's Church, that housed 13 residents.[1] He also approached the trustees of the religious guild of the Holy Trinity of St Mary and then asked Edward IV to merge the trade and religious guild into The Shrewsbury Drapers Company. was incorporated in 1462 by a royal charter

The new guild was described in the charter as "A Fraternity or Gild of the Holy Trinity of the Men of the Mystery of Drapers in the town of Salop".[2]As part of the religious charter a chantry priest was appointed by the guild to say Mass for the guild in the chapel of St Mary's Church. The Company erected an altar in the chantry chapel of St Mary's in 1501, part of which may still exist.(This needs to be checked)[2]

However, it was not all without problems: as an example, in 1470 the weavers of Shrewsbury obtained an order by the town authorities that banned the drapers from bringing in Welsh cloth. The prohibition proved unsustainable.[3]

The independent Mercers' Company, formed in 1425, had become the richest and strongest trade organisation in Shrewsbury in the 15th century,[4] although that was about to change.

Rise to dominance of cloth trade: 16th century edit

In the early 16th century Welsh cloth for export was mainly produced in south Wales and shipped from the local ports. Later there was a shift in production to mid and north Wales.[5] After the Act of Union in 1536 the Shrewsbury Drapers provided an increasingly important export market for Welsh light coarse cloths, known as cottons, friezes and flannel and Welsh plains. The Mercers, who retailed cloth, had formerly claimed a share of the Welsh trade, as had the Shearmen, who finished the cloth. In the early 16th century the Drapers shut the Mercers out of the trade and make the Shearmen purely subcontractors, creating an effective monopoly.[2]

During the Reformation the company's religious duties were eliminated.[2] The drapers came to wield great power in Shrewsbury, and included all the leading men of the town. From the mid-16th century to the end of the 17th century members of the Company dominated Shrewsbury's administration.[2] The drapers provided homes for a number of poor people, whom they employed, and gave work to over 600 shearmen. In 1565 this was used to justify an act of parliament that gave them a monopoly of the cloth trade in the town.[4] The formal monopoly was repealed after six years, but the drapers usually managed to exclude competitors.[6] In 1576 the Company built a new Drapers Hall in St Mary's Place on the site of an earlier hall.[1] The company was allowed a coat of arms the same as that of the London Drapers in 1585.[2]

At first the "staple", or woollen cloth trading centre for Welsh cloth, was located in the town of Oswestry about 16 miles (26 km) to the north west of Shrewsbury. In 1585 the market was temporarily moved to Knockin due to an outbreak of plague in Oswestry.[7] There was also a market in Welshpool in Montgomeryshire, where it was reported that 700,000 yards of webbs were manufactured in the reign of Queen Elizabeth I (r. 1558–1603). The Shrewsbury Drapers had to make dangerous journeys through unsettled country to reach these markets.[8] They carried arms and travelled together for protection against robbers.[1]

Prosperity and challenges: 17th century edit

 
WALES
 
Liverpool
 
Oswestry
 
Welshpool
 
Shrewsbury
 
Bristol
 
London
class=notpageimage|
Wool trade locations in England

In 1609 a charter of King James I (r. 1603–25) confirmed the Shrewsbury Drapers Company's constitution, rights and landholdings.[2] It took £400 for a Shrewsbury Draper to set up in business in the 17th century, a substantial sum at the time.[9] 43% of the 203 Freemen admitted to the Company between 1608 and 1657 were sons of gentlemen.[10] Often a young man would enter business in partnership with his father.[11] In 1608 there were 84 Shrewsbury Drapers. This had risen to 113 by 1625.[12] Many of the drapers were engaged in other businesses such as brewing or the law.[1] In the 17th century Shrewsbury was regularly visited by drapers from the north of England and the midlands. The textile industry created a lively market for pack horses.[13] In 1618 the first brick house in Shrewsbury was built by William Rowley, a brewer and draper. In 1638 the first mayor of Shrewsbury, Thomas Jones, was a leading draper.[1]

Sir Edward Coke sponsored the Welsh cloth bill in 1621, which aimed to eliminate the effective monopoly of the Company over transport of the cloth to London. The first draft said that all merchants were to be allowed to buy cloth anywhere in Wales and to export it subject to paying duties to the crown. The export clause was later qualified to add "only after the cloth had been entirely finished at home." Two Shrewsbury burgesses tried to block the bill at its third reading in 1621 on the grounds that it would overthrow a statute that specified standard dimension for Welsh cloth, allow forestalling and/or ingrossing, overthrow the charter of Shrewsbury and allow Welsh clothiers to sell their cloth in any English town.[14] Coke refuted these arguments, saying that Shrewsbury would only suffer from the bill because it had a monopoly. He said monopolies were "to be detested", and could not be justified by "reason of state."[15] The bill was passed by the commons and sent to the Lords.[16]

In 1621 the drapers "agreed to buy no more cloth in Oswestry". John Davies noted in 1633 that "Oswestry flourished and was happy indeed by reason of the market of Welsh cottons, £1,000 in ready money was left in the town each week: sometimes far more. But now since the staple of cloth is removed to Shrewsbury, the town is much impoverished, Shrewsbury having now ingrossed the said market..."[7] After the market moved to Shrewsbury on Fridays a clothier from Merioneth had to travel 20 miles (32 km) further each way, and could only get home very late on Saturday. In response to a plea from the rector of Dolgelley in 1648 the drapers agreed as a compromise to buy cloth on Thursdays.[17]

The Welsh cloth makers, who lacked capital, produced poor quality drapery for which there was relatively low demand.[5] The drapers bought the cloth in semi-finished form, and sold it after it had been finished, or nearly finished.[18] The better Welsh wool was woven into cloth and fulled in Wales, making "plains" or "webs", or the wool was woven and fulled in Shrewsbury or nearby towns such as Wrexham, Denbigh, Oswestry and Chirk. The Shrewsbury drapers brought this cloth and had it cottoned and shorn.[19] Other plains were finished as high friezes, with the upper fibres on one side raised into a rough, curly nap, suitable for cold weather outer clothing.[19] Some cloth was sold as "Shrewsbury" or "Welsh" cottons, mostly destined for London, some of which was exported to France or the Mediterranean.[19] The finished cloth was sent on weekly trains of pack horses to the cloth market in Blackwell Hall in the City of London.[1] Shrewsbury had a large body of craftsmen to finish the cloth, so plains that were bought on Monday could be cottoned and on the way to London by Wednesday.[20]

After the English Civil War (1642–51) regulations were made in 1654 "for preventing the Drapers forestalling or engrossing the Welsh flannels, cloths, &c."[21] Many of the drapers supported Parliament during the civil war, and as a consequence the company was not given royal support after the monarchy was restored in 1660 under Charles II (r. 1660–85). The cloth trade went into a gradual decline after this date.[1] The number of drapers had fallen back to 61 in 1665.[12]

Decline of trade: 18th–19th centuries edit

 
Old Market Hall, Shrewsbury (left). The drapers held their markets on the second floor.[b]

The monopoly of the Shrewsbury Drapers was still intact in the middle of the 18th century.[23] Slave owners in the West Indies and the American colonies in the 18th century found that slaves were more productive if they were clothed. William Lee of Virginia stated that "Good Welch cotton seems upon the whole to answer best", and others were "light and insufficient." The main market for the Atlantic trade was at Shrewsbury.[24]

During the 18th century the turnpike system improved the roads and Welsh businessmen began to control production, causing a decline in the importance of the company.[2] Factors from Liverpool and Bristol took control of the trade away from Shrewsbury.[25] Instead of the weavers carrying their cloth to the market towns, the factors came to them to buy the cloth. The factors would extend credit to the poorer weavers so they could buy wool.[25] The Shrewsbury Drapers were fast losing their control of the trade by 1770.[26] An author wrote of Shrewsbury in the 1790s,

From very early days this place possessed almost exclusively the trade with Wales in a coarse kind of woollen cloth called Welsh webbs, which were brought from Merioneth and Montgomeryshire to a market held here weekly on Thursdays. They were afterwards dressed, that is, the wool raised on one side, by a set of people called Shearmen. At the time of Queen Elizabeth, the trade was so great, that not fewer than 600 persons maintained themselves by this occupation. The cloth was sent chiefly to America to clothe the negroes, or to Flanders, where it is used by the peasants. At present the greatest part of this traffick is diverted into other channels, and not more than four or five hundred thousand yards are brought to the ancient mart. Flannels both coarse and fine are purchased at Welsh-Pool, on every other Monday, by the drapers of Shrewsbury, who now principally enjoy this branch of commerce.[27]

From around 1790 individuals other the Shrewsbury drapers began to go direct to the cloth makers to buy their products, taking advantage of the improved roads. By the end of the century the market in Shrewsbury had almost ceased, and in March 1803 the Company gave up the great room in which the trading had been conducted.[28] In 1804 report by Mr. Evans of his tour through north Wales said,

The webbs used to be carried to Liverpool or Shrewsbury to market; but the Liverpool dealers have now persons in pay on the spot, to purchase of the makers; and to assist the poorer manufacturers with money to carry on their trade ... Since this, the drapers of Shrewsbury are obliged to go up to the country, and purchase the articles in small quantities at farms and cottages. After undergoing the operation of scouring, bleaching, and milling, it is packed up in large bales, and sent to Shrewsbury, Liverpool, and London; and thence exported to Germany, Russia and America.[29]

An 1824 gazetteer noted that domestic production of cloth by small farmers had greatly declined due to the introduction of spinning mills. The Thursdays webb market was no longer operational and the drapers bought the cloth through their agents in the country.[30] As the Industrial Revolution developed in the 19th century the trade guilds became irrelevant, and their regulatory powers were removed by the Municipal Corporations Act of 1835.[1]

Later years: 19th century to present edit

After 1835 the Company retained ownership of Elizabethan Drapers Hall with its 17th century furniture and the almshouses. These were assigned to a charitable trust. By the end of the 19th century the company's role was simply the trustee of the almshouse buildings in Longden Coleham. In the late 1960s the Company agreed to take responsibility for the Hospital of St Giles almshouses, which they rebuilt. By the 1990s maintenance of the Drapers Hall, which was partly rented out for residential use, was becoming a drain on the charity's resources. The Hall was sold to the London Drapers, who restored it and converted it into a boutique hotel.[2] In 2013 it was reported that the Shrewsbury Drapers Company was planning to create 21 sheltered apartments for elderly people in Abbey Foregate, Shrewsbury.[31]

Notes edit

  1. ^ In the middle ages the term "draper" referred to a dealer in wool and woollen cloth.[1]
  2. ^ The ground floor of the Old Market House in Shrewsbury, which was 105 by 24 feet (32.0 by 7.3 m), was used for the corn market on Saturdays and for wool at the annual wool fairs. The large chamber on the floor above, the same size, was rented by the Company of Drapers until 1803 for the flannel market.[22]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Master 2011.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i History of Shrewsbury Drapers – self.
  3. ^ Unwin 2012, pp. 86–87.
  4. ^ a b Unwin 2012, p. 98.
  5. ^ a b Hudson 1989, p. 208.
  6. ^ Unwin 2012, p. 99.
  7. ^ a b Gregory 1824, p. 390.
  8. ^ Welsh Pool 1880, p. 191.
  9. ^ Grassby 2002, p. 84.
  10. ^ Grassby 2002, p. 152.
  11. ^ Grassby 2001, p. 289.
  12. ^ a b Grassby 2002, p. 58.
  13. ^ Chartres & Hey 2006, p. 233.
  14. ^ White 1979, p. 111.
  15. ^ White 1979, p. 112.
  16. ^ Healy 2010.
  17. ^ Thirsk & Finberg 1967, p. 157.
  18. ^ Kerridge 1988, p. 214.
  19. ^ a b c Kerridge 1988, p. 19.
  20. ^ Kerridge 1988, p. 177.
  21. ^ Owen 1808, p. 461.
  22. ^ Tell 1892, p. 243.
  23. ^ Clapham 1949, p. 244.
  24. ^ Evans 2010, p. 50.
  25. ^ a b Evans 2010, p. 52.
  26. ^ Davies 2007, PT312.
  27. ^ Gregory 1824, p. 495.
  28. ^ Gregory 1824, p. 924.
  29. ^ Owen 1808, p. 462–463.
  30. ^ Gregory 1824, p. 496.
  31. ^ Guild in talks on almshouses future 2013.

Sources edit

  • Chartres, John; Hey, David (2 November 2006), English Rural Society, 1500-1800: Essays in Honour of Joan Thirsk, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-03156-1, retrieved 2 April 2016
  • Clapham, John (1949), A Concise Economic History of Britain from the Earliest Times, CUP Archive, GGKEY:HYPAY3GPAA5, retrieved 2 April 2016
  • Davies, John (25 January 2007), A History of Wales, Penguin Books Limited, ISBN 978-0-14-192633-9, retrieved 28 March 2016
  • Evans, Chris (1 September 2010), Slave Wales: The Welsh and Atlantic Slavery, 1660–1850, University of Wales Press, ISBN 978-0-7083-2304-5, retrieved 28 March 2016
  • Grassby, Richard (2001), Kinship and Capitalism: Marriage, Family, and Business in the English-Speaking World, 1580-1740, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-78203-6, retrieved 2 April 2016
  • Grassby, Richard (7 November 2002), The Business Community of Seventeenth-Century England, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-89086-1, retrieved 2 April 2016
  • Gregory, T. (1824), The Shropshire gazetteer, retrieved 2 April 2016
  • "Guild in talks on almshouses future", Shropshire Star, 25 June 2013, retrieved 2 April 2016
  • Healy, Simon (2010), Andrew Thrush; John P. Ferris (eds.), "BERKELEY (BARKLEY, BARTLETT), Francis", The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1604-1629, retrieved 2 April 2016
  • History of Shrewsbury Drapers, Shrewsbury Drapers Company, retrieved 2 April 2016
  • Hudson, Pat (26 October 1989), Regions and Industries: A Perspective on the Industrial Revolution in Britain, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-34106-6, retrieved 28 March 2016
  • Kerridge, Eric (1 March 1988), Textile Manufactures in Early Modern England, Manchester University Press, ISBN 978-0-7190-2632-4, retrieved 2 April 2016
  • Master, Nigel Hinton (May 2011), Shrewsbury Drapers Company: A Brief History, Shrewsbury Town Centre Residents' Association, retrieved 2 April 2016
  • Owen, Hugh (1808), Some Account of the Ancient and Present State of Shrewsbury, Sandford, retrieved 2 April 2016
  • Tell (1892), "Sale of Welsh Cloth", Bye-gones, Relating to Wales and the Border Counties, retrieved 2 April 2016
  • Thirsk, Joan; Finberg, H. P. R. (1967), The Agrarian History of England and Wales: 1500-1640, edited by Joan Thirsk, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-06617-4, retrieved 2 April 2016
  • Unwin, George (12 November 2012), Industrial Organization in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries: Unwin, G., Routledge, ISBN 978-1-136-23697-6, retrieved 2 April 2016
  • "Welsh Pool", Collections Historical and Archaeological Relating to Montgomeryshire and Its Borders, The Club, 1880, retrieved 2 April 2016
  • White, Stephen D. (1979), Sir Edward Coke and the Grievances of the Commonwealth, Manchester University Press, ISBN 978-0-7190-0759-0, retrieved 2 April 2016


shrewsbury, drapers, company, trade, organisation, founded, 1462, town, shrewsbury, shropshire, england, members, were, wholesale, dealers, wool, later, woollen, cloth, company, dominated, trade, welsh, cloth, 1566, given, regional, monopoly, welsh, wool, trad. The Shrewsbury Drapers Company was a trade organisation founded in 1462 in the town of Shrewsbury Shropshire England The members were wholesale dealers in wool and later woollen cloth The Company dominated the trade in Welsh cloth and in 1566 was given a regional monopoly in the Welsh Wool trade In the seventeenth century the trade had difficulties particularly during the English Civil war and then further declined in the eighteenth century with the industrialisation of cloth production and the improvement of transport infrastructure This made it practical for merchants from Liverpool and elsewhere to travel into Wales and purchase cloth directly from the producers The Reform Acts of the early nineteenth century took away the power of the trade guilds and the trade ceased Since that time the Shrewsbury Drapers Company has survived and continues as a charity that runs almshouses in Shrewsbury Shrewsbury Drapers CompanyDrapers Hall Shrewsbury now a boutique hotelFormation1462Founded atShrewsbury Shropshire EnglandTypeCharityRegistration no Charity No 1132671Legal statusActivePurposeOperation of almshousesHeadquarters1 Frankwell Shrewsbury SY3 8LGCoordinates52 42 39 N 2 45 34 W 52 710946 N 2 759567 W 52 710946 2 759567RegionShrewsburyServicesLow income housingWebsiteshrewsburydrapers wbr org wbr ukPlease noteThe image shown in the infobox on the right is not Drapers Hall it is The Old House on Dogpole just around the corner from Shrewsbury Drapers Hall Contents 1 Early years 12th 15th centuries 2 Rise to dominance of cloth trade 16th century 3 Prosperity and challenges 17th century 4 Decline of trade 18th 19th centuries 5 Later years 19th century to present 6 Notes 7 SourcesEarly years 12th 15th centuries editShrewsbury in 1334 was the 7th wealthiest town in England outside of London and was well situated to handle trade from north and central Wales in time of peace The drapers a took the role of middlemen when the trade in raw wool was replaced by trade in woollen cloth 1 In the late 12th and 13th centuries all trade in Shrewsbury was controlled by the Guild Merchant Following other guilds the Drapers took steps to become independent from the guild Merchant The first step was taken by an independent draper in 1444 when Digory Watur founded almshouses in front of the west tower of St Mary s Church that housed 13 residents 1 He also approached the trustees of the religious guild of the Holy Trinity of St Mary and then asked Edward IV to merge the trade and religious guild into The Shrewsbury Drapers Company was incorporated in 1462 by a royal charterThe new guild was described in the charter as A Fraternity or Gild of the Holy Trinity of the Men of the Mystery of Drapers in the town of Salop 2 As part of the religious charter a chantry priest was appointed by the guild to say Mass for the guild in the chapel of St Mary s Church The Company erected an altar in the chantry chapel of St Mary s in 1501 part of which may still exist This needs to be checked 2 However it was not all without problems as an example in 1470 the weavers of Shrewsbury obtained an order by the town authorities that banned the drapers from bringing in Welsh cloth The prohibition proved unsustainable 3 The independent Mercers Company formed in 1425 had become the richest and strongest trade organisation in Shrewsbury in the 15th century 4 although that was about to change Rise to dominance of cloth trade 16th century editIn the early 16th century Welsh cloth for export was mainly produced in south Wales and shipped from the local ports Later there was a shift in production to mid and north Wales 5 After the Act of Union in 1536 the Shrewsbury Drapers provided an increasingly important export market for Welsh light coarse cloths known as cottons friezes and flannel and Welsh plains The Mercers who retailed cloth had formerly claimed a share of the Welsh trade as had the Shearmen who finished the cloth In the early 16th century the Drapers shut the Mercers out of the trade and make the Shearmen purely subcontractors creating an effective monopoly 2 During the Reformation the company s religious duties were eliminated 2 The drapers came to wield great power in Shrewsbury and included all the leading men of the town From the mid 16th century to the end of the 17th century members of the Company dominated Shrewsbury s administration 2 The drapers provided homes for a number of poor people whom they employed and gave work to over 600 shearmen In 1565 this was used to justify an act of parliament that gave them a monopoly of the cloth trade in the town 4 The formal monopoly was repealed after six years but the drapers usually managed to exclude competitors 6 In 1576 the Company built a new Drapers Hall in St Mary s Place on the site of an earlier hall 1 The company was allowed a coat of arms the same as that of the London Drapers in 1585 2 At first the staple or woollen cloth trading centre for Welsh cloth was located in the town of Oswestry about 16 miles 26 km to the north west of Shrewsbury In 1585 the market was temporarily moved to Knockin due to an outbreak of plague in Oswestry 7 There was also a market in Welshpool in Montgomeryshire where it was reported that 700 000 yards of webbs were manufactured in the reign of Queen Elizabeth I r 1558 1603 The Shrewsbury Drapers had to make dangerous journeys through unsettled country to reach these markets 8 They carried arms and travelled together for protection against robbers 1 Prosperity and challenges 17th century edit nbsp WALES nbsp Liverpool nbsp Oswestry nbsp Welshpool nbsp Shrewsbury nbsp Bristol nbsp Londonclass notpageimage Wool trade locations in England In 1609 a charter of King James I r 1603 25 confirmed the Shrewsbury Drapers Company s constitution rights and landholdings 2 It took 400 for a Shrewsbury Draper to set up in business in the 17th century a substantial sum at the time 9 43 of the 203 Freemen admitted to the Company between 1608 and 1657 were sons of gentlemen 10 Often a young man would enter business in partnership with his father 11 In 1608 there were 84 Shrewsbury Drapers This had risen to 113 by 1625 12 Many of the drapers were engaged in other businesses such as brewing or the law 1 In the 17th century Shrewsbury was regularly visited by drapers from the north of England and the midlands The textile industry created a lively market for pack horses 13 In 1618 the first brick house in Shrewsbury was built by William Rowley a brewer and draper In 1638 the first mayor of Shrewsbury Thomas Jones was a leading draper 1 Sir Edward Coke sponsored the Welsh cloth bill in 1621 which aimed to eliminate the effective monopoly of the Company over transport of the cloth to London The first draft said that all merchants were to be allowed to buy cloth anywhere in Wales and to export it subject to paying duties to the crown The export clause was later qualified to add only after the cloth had been entirely finished at home Two Shrewsbury burgesses tried to block the bill at its third reading in 1621 on the grounds that it would overthrow a statute that specified standard dimension for Welsh cloth allow forestalling and or ingrossing overthrow the charter of Shrewsbury and allow Welsh clothiers to sell their cloth in any English town 14 Coke refuted these arguments saying that Shrewsbury would only suffer from the bill because it had a monopoly He said monopolies were to be detested and could not be justified by reason of state 15 The bill was passed by the commons and sent to the Lords 16 In 1621 the drapers agreed to buy no more cloth in Oswestry John Davies noted in 1633 that Oswestry flourished and was happy indeed by reason of the market of Welsh cottons 1 000 in ready money was left in the town each week sometimes far more But now since the staple of cloth is removed to Shrewsbury the town is much impoverished Shrewsbury having now ingrossed the said market 7 After the market moved to Shrewsbury on Fridays a clothier from Merioneth had to travel 20 miles 32 km further each way and could only get home very late on Saturday In response to a plea from the rector of Dolgelley in 1648 the drapers agreed as a compromise to buy cloth on Thursdays 17 The Welsh cloth makers who lacked capital produced poor quality drapery for which there was relatively low demand 5 The drapers bought the cloth in semi finished form and sold it after it had been finished or nearly finished 18 The better Welsh wool was woven into cloth and fulled in Wales making plains or webs or the wool was woven and fulled in Shrewsbury or nearby towns such as Wrexham Denbigh Oswestry and Chirk The Shrewsbury drapers brought this cloth and had it cottoned and shorn 19 Other plains were finished as high friezes with the upper fibres on one side raised into a rough curly nap suitable for cold weather outer clothing 19 Some cloth was sold as Shrewsbury or Welsh cottons mostly destined for London some of which was exported to France or the Mediterranean 19 The finished cloth was sent on weekly trains of pack horses to the cloth market in Blackwell Hall in the City of London 1 Shrewsbury had a large body of craftsmen to finish the cloth so plains that were bought on Monday could be cottoned and on the way to London by Wednesday 20 After the English Civil War 1642 51 regulations were made in 1654 for preventing the Drapers forestalling or engrossing the Welsh flannels cloths amp c 21 Many of the drapers supported Parliament during the civil war and as a consequence the company was not given royal support after the monarchy was restored in 1660 under Charles II r 1660 85 The cloth trade went into a gradual decline after this date 1 The number of drapers had fallen back to 61 in 1665 12 Decline of trade 18th 19th centuries edit nbsp Old Market Hall Shrewsbury left The drapers held their markets on the second floor b The monopoly of the Shrewsbury Drapers was still intact in the middle of the 18th century 23 Slave owners in the West Indies and the American colonies in the 18th century found that slaves were more productive if they were clothed William Lee of Virginia stated that Good Welch cotton seems upon the whole to answer best and others were light and insufficient The main market for the Atlantic trade was at Shrewsbury 24 During the 18th century the turnpike system improved the roads and Welsh businessmen began to control production causing a decline in the importance of the company 2 Factors from Liverpool and Bristol took control of the trade away from Shrewsbury 25 Instead of the weavers carrying their cloth to the market towns the factors came to them to buy the cloth The factors would extend credit to the poorer weavers so they could buy wool 25 The Shrewsbury Drapers were fast losing their control of the trade by 1770 26 An author wrote of Shrewsbury in the 1790s From very early days this place possessed almost exclusively the trade with Wales in a coarse kind of woollen cloth called Welsh webbs which were brought from Merioneth and Montgomeryshire to a market held here weekly on Thursdays They were afterwards dressed that is the wool raised on one side by a set of people called Shearmen At the time of Queen Elizabeth the trade was so great that not fewer than 600 persons maintained themselves by this occupation The cloth was sent chiefly to America to clothe the negroes or to Flanders where it is used by the peasants At present the greatest part of this traffick is diverted into other channels and not more than four or five hundred thousand yards are brought to the ancient mart Flannels both coarse and fine are purchased at Welsh Pool on every other Monday by the drapers of Shrewsbury who now principally enjoy this branch of commerce 27 From around 1790 individuals other the Shrewsbury drapers began to go direct to the cloth makers to buy their products taking advantage of the improved roads By the end of the century the market in Shrewsbury had almost ceased and in March 1803 the Company gave up the great room in which the trading had been conducted 28 In 1804 report by Mr Evans of his tour through north Wales said The webbs used to be carried to Liverpool or Shrewsbury to market but the Liverpool dealers have now persons in pay on the spot to purchase of the makers and to assist the poorer manufacturers with money to carry on their trade Since this the drapers of Shrewsbury are obliged to go up to the country and purchase the articles in small quantities at farms and cottages After undergoing the operation of scouring bleaching and milling it is packed up in large bales and sent to Shrewsbury Liverpool and London and thence exported to Germany Russia and America 29 An 1824 gazetteer noted that domestic production of cloth by small farmers had greatly declined due to the introduction of spinning mills The Thursdays webb market was no longer operational and the drapers bought the cloth through their agents in the country 30 As the Industrial Revolution developed in the 19th century the trade guilds became irrelevant and their regulatory powers were removed by the Municipal Corporations Act of 1835 1 Later years 19th century to present editAfter 1835 the Company retained ownership of Elizabethan Drapers Hall with its 17th century furniture and the almshouses These were assigned to a charitable trust By the end of the 19th century the company s role was simply the trustee of the almshouse buildings in Longden Coleham In the late 1960s the Company agreed to take responsibility for the Hospital of St Giles almshouses which they rebuilt By the 1990s maintenance of the Drapers Hall which was partly rented out for residential use was becoming a drain on the charity s resources The Hall was sold to the London Drapers who restored it and converted it into a boutique hotel 2 In 2013 it was reported that the Shrewsbury Drapers Company was planning to create 21 sheltered apartments for elderly people in Abbey Foregate Shrewsbury 31 Notes edit In the middle ages the term draper referred to a dealer in wool and woollen cloth 1 The ground floor of the Old Market House in Shrewsbury which was 105 by 24 feet 32 0 by 7 3 m was used for the corn market on Saturdays and for wool at the annual wool fairs The large chamber on the floor above the same size was rented by the Company of Drapers until 1803 for the flannel market 22 a b c d e f g h i j Master 2011 a b c d e f g h i History of Shrewsbury Drapers self Unwin 2012 pp 86 87 a b Unwin 2012 p 98 a b Hudson 1989 p 208 Unwin 2012 p 99 a b Gregory 1824 p 390 Welsh Pool 1880 p 191 Grassby 2002 p 84 Grassby 2002 p 152 Grassby 2001 p 289 a b Grassby 2002 p 58 Chartres amp Hey 2006 p 233 White 1979 p 111 White 1979 p 112 Healy 2010 Thirsk amp Finberg 1967 p 157 Kerridge 1988 p 214 a b c Kerridge 1988 p 19 Kerridge 1988 p 177 Owen 1808 p 461 Tell 1892 p 243 Clapham 1949 p 244 Evans 2010 p 50 a b Evans 2010 p 52 Davies 2007 PT312 Gregory 1824 p 495 Gregory 1824 p 924 Owen 1808 p 462 463 Gregory 1824 p 496 Guild in talks on almshouses future 2013 Sources editChartres John Hey David 2 November 2006 English Rural Society 1500 1800 Essays in Honour of Joan Thirsk Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 03156 1 retrieved 2 April 2016 Clapham John 1949 A Concise Economic History of Britain from the Earliest Times CUP Archive GGKEY HYPAY3GPAA5 retrieved 2 April 2016 Davies John 25 January 2007 A History of Wales Penguin Books Limited ISBN 978 0 14 192633 9 retrieved 28 March 2016 Evans Chris 1 September 2010 Slave Wales The Welsh and Atlantic Slavery 1660 1850 University of Wales Press ISBN 978 0 7083 2304 5 retrieved 28 March 2016 Grassby Richard 2001 Kinship and Capitalism Marriage Family and Business in the English Speaking World 1580 1740 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 78203 6 retrieved 2 April 2016 Grassby Richard 7 November 2002 The Business Community of Seventeenth Century England Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 89086 1 retrieved 2 April 2016 Gregory T 1824 The Shropshire gazetteer retrieved 2 April 2016 Guild in talks on almshouses future Shropshire Star 25 June 2013 retrieved 2 April 2016 Healy Simon 2010 Andrew Thrush John P Ferris eds BERKELEY BARKLEY BARTLETT Francis The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1604 1629 retrieved 2 April 2016 History of Shrewsbury Drapers Shrewsbury Drapers Company retrieved 2 April 2016 Hudson Pat 26 October 1989 Regions and Industries A Perspective on the Industrial Revolution in Britain Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 34106 6 retrieved 28 March 2016 Kerridge Eric 1 March 1988 Textile Manufactures in Early Modern England Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 2632 4 retrieved 2 April 2016 Master Nigel Hinton May 2011 Shrewsbury Drapers Company A Brief History Shrewsbury Town Centre Residents Association retrieved 2 April 2016 Owen Hugh 1808 Some Account of the Ancient and Present State of Shrewsbury Sandford retrieved 2 April 2016 Tell 1892 Sale of Welsh Cloth Bye gones Relating to Wales and the Border Counties retrieved 2 April 2016 Thirsk Joan Finberg H P R 1967 The Agrarian History of England and Wales 1500 1640 edited by Joan Thirsk Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 06617 4 retrieved 2 April 2016 Unwin George 12 November 2012 Industrial Organization in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries Unwin G Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 23697 6 retrieved 2 April 2016 Welsh Pool Collections Historical and Archaeological Relating to Montgomeryshire and Its Borders The Club 1880 retrieved 2 April 2016 White Stephen D 1979 Sir Edward Coke and the Grievances of the Commonwealth Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 0759 0 retrieved 2 April 2016 Portal nbsp Companies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shrewsbury Drapers Company amp oldid 1152520346, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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