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Fleet Prison

Fleet Prison was a notorious London prison by the side of the River Fleet. The prison was built in 1197, was rebuilt several times, and was in use until 1844. It was demolished in 1846.

Fleet Prison
"Pray remember ye poor debtors": inmates of the Fleet Prison beg passers by for alms
Coordinates51°30′58″N 0°6′18″W / 51.51611°N 0.10500°W / 51.51611; -0.10500
StatusClosed
Security classdebtor's prison, contemnor's prison
Population300, plus families
Opened1197
Closed1846
WardenSee below
Street addressoff Farringdon Street
CityLondon
Country
Notable prisoners
John Donne, Theodore of Corsica

History edit

The prison was built in 1197 off what is now Farringdon Street, on the eastern bank of the River Fleet after which it was named. It came into particular prominence from being used as a place of reception for persons committed by the Star Chamber, and, afterwards, as a debtor's prison and for persons imprisoned for contempt of court by the Court of Chancery. In 1381, during the Peasants' Revolt, it was deliberately destroyed by Wat Tyler's men.

During the 15th century, inmates were usually imprisoned here for civil rather than criminal cases, and the prison was considered at the time as more comfortable than Ludgate prison. Inmates had to pay for board and lodgings, provide tips for prison servants and pay a fee for when they entered and leave the prison. Prison cells ranged from luxurious private rooms to inmates who slept two in a bed. The very poor in prison were even known to beg through a grate while in prison.[1]

In 1666, during the Great Fire of London, it burned down on the third day of the fire, the prisoners fleeing in the last moments. After the fire, the warden of the prison, Sir Jeremy Whichcote, purchased Caron House in Lambeth in order to house the prison's debtors. Whichcote then rebuilt the prison on the original site at his own expense.

 
The site of the former Fleet Prison (lower right) on Roque's Map of London 1746

During the 18th century, Fleet Prison was mainly used for debtors and bankrupts. It usually contained about 300 prisoners and their families. Like the Marshalsea prison, it was divided into a restrictive and arduous common side and a more open master's side, where rent had to be paid.[2]

At that time, prisons were profit-making enterprises. Prisoners had to pay for food and lodging. There were fees for turning keys and for taking irons off, and Fleet Prison had the highest fees in England. There was even a grille built into the Farringdon Street prison wall, so that prisoners might beg alms from passers-by. But prisoners did not necessarily have to live within Fleet Prison itself; as long as they paid the keeper to compensate him for loss of earnings, they could take lodgings within a particular area outside the prison walls called the "Liberty of the Fleet" or the "Rules of the Fleet". From 1613 on, there were also many clandestine Fleet Marriages. The boundary of the Liberties of the Fleet included the north side of Ludgate Hill, the Old Bailey to Fleet Lane and along it until the Fleet Market, and ran alongside the prison to Ludgate Hill.[3]

Warden of Fleet Prison Act 1728
Act of Parliament
 
Long titleAn Act to empower His Majesty, His Heirs and Successors, during the Life of Thomas Bambridge Esquire, to grant the Office of Warden of the Prison of The Fleet to such Person or Persons as His Majesty shall think fit; and to incapacitate the said Thomas Bambridge to enjoy the said Office, or any other whatsoever.
Citation2 Geo. 2. c. 32
Dates
Royal assent14 May 1729
Other legislation
Repealed byStatute Law Revision Act 1867
Status: Repealed

The head of the prison was termed the warden, who was appointed by letters patent. It became a frequent practice of the holder of the patent to farm out the prison to the highest bidder. This custom made the prison long notorious for the cruelties inflicted on prisoners. One purchaser of the office, Thomas Bambridge, who became warden in 1728, was of particularly evil repute. He was guilty of the greatest extortions upon prisoners, and, according to a committee of the House of Commons appointed to inquire into the state of English gaols, arbitrarily and unlawfully loaded with irons, put into dungeons, and destroyed prisoners for debt, treating them in the most barbarous and cruel manner, in high violation and contempt of the laws. He was committed to Newgate Prison, and an act, the Warden of Fleet Prison Act 1728 (2 Geo. 2. c. 32), was passed to prevent his enjoying the office of warden.[4]

During the Gordon Riots in 1780 Fleet Prison was again destroyed and rebuilt in 1781–1782. In 1842, in pursuance of an Act of Parliament, by which inmates of the Marshalsea, Fleet and Queen's Bench prisons were relocated to the Queen's Prison (as the Queen's Bench Prison was renamed), it was finally closed, and in 1844 sold to the Corporation of the City of London, by whom it was pulled down in 1846. The demolition yielded three million bricks, 50 tons of lead and 40,000 square feet (3,700 m2) of paving. After lying empty for 17 years the site was sold to the London, Chatham and Dover Railway and became the site of their new Ludgate station.[5]

Wardens edit

  • Roger de Saperton; fl. 1381[6]
  • Elizabeth Venour (c. 1460s)[1]
  • Edmund Haslewood (d.1548) of Maidwell
  • John Haslewood (d.1550) of Maidwell
  • Edward Tyrrell (b 1545)
  • Sir Robert Tyrrell (b.1582)
  • Thomas Babington of Cuddington
  • Sir Jeremy Whichcote (warden 1660–?)
  • Sir William Babington
  • Thomas Bambridge; fl. 1728

Notable inmates edit

In 1601, the poet John Donne was imprisoned until it was proven that his wedding to Anne Donne (née More) was legal and valid. The priest who married him (Samuel Brooke) and the man who acted as witness to the wedding were also imprisoned.

Samuel Byrom, son of the writer and poet John Byrom, was imprisoned for debt in 1725. In 1729 he sent a petition to his old school friend, the Duke of Dorset, in which he raged against the injustices of the system:

Holland, the most unpolite Country in the World, uses Debtors with Mildness, and Malefactors with Rigour; England, on the contrary, shews Mercy to Murtherers and Robbers, but of poor Debtors Impossibilities are demanded ... if the Debtor is able to make up his Affairs with the Creditor, how many Hundreds are afterwards kept in Prison for Chamber-Rent, and other unjust Demands of the Gaolers? ... What Barbarity can be greater, than for Gaolers (without any Provocation) to load Prisoners with Irons, and thrust them into Dungeons, and manacle them, and deny their Friends to visit them, and force them to pay excessive Prices for their Chamber-Rent, their Victuals and Drink; to open their Letters and seize the Charity that is sent them; and, in short, by oppressing them by all the Ways that the worst of Tyrants can invent? Such Cruelty reduces the Prisoners to Despair, insomuch, that many choose rather to shoot, hang or throw themselves out of the Window, than to be insulted, beaten and imposed upon by the Gaolers ... if every Gaoler was allowed a yearly Sallary ... and no Gaoler suffered, under the severest of Penalties, to take either Bribe, Fee, or Reward, no Demand for Chamber-Rent, nor any Fees for Entrance or going out of Prison; in such a Case the Gaols would not swarm as they now do ... In foreign Countries, where the Romish Religion prevails, what Crowds of People of both Sexes, from the highest Prince to the meanest Peasant, thrust themselves into Religious Houses ... it is an apparent Injury to the Country ... too obvious to be denied, that the many Prisons in England, where so many Thousands of both Sexes are detained, is a greater Loss and Injury to the King and Country ...[7]

Other notable inmates include:

 
The Racquet Ground of the Fleet Prison circa 1808

In fiction edit

  • Mr. Samuel Pickwick – protagonist of Charles Dickens's The Pickwick Papers, who is imprisoned in the Fleet for refusing to pay fines stemming from a breach of promise suit brought against him by Mrs. Bardell. The book contains a vivid description of the life, customs and abuses of the prison.[10]
  • At the close of Shakespeare's play, Henry IV, Part 2 (Act V, Scene V), Falstaff is surprised when, instead of being promoted by the new king, the Chief Justice tells his officers to "Go, carry Sir John Falstaff to the Fleet; /Take all his company along with him."
  • In The Luck of Barry Lyndon, Lyndon spends the last nineteen years of his life in Fleet Prison.
  • Near the end of Pierce Egan's 1821 story Life in London, Bob Logic spends time in Fleet Prison for debt.
  • At the end of The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle by Tobias Smollett, Peregrine and some of his friends go to Fleet Prison for bankruptcy after Mr. Pickle loans all of his money and loses his pension in Chapter CVI.
  • Walter Besant and James Rice's novel The Chaplain of the Fleet (1881) is an historical novel which takes place in the Fleet Prison during the eighteenth century.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Castor, Helen (2011). Blood and Roses. Faber & Faber. p. 166. ISBN 978-0-571-28680-5.
  2. ^ "The Fleet Prison - British History Online". British-history.ac.uk. Retrieved 19 May 2018.
  3. ^ "Fleet Bridge - Fleur de lis Court - British History Online". British-history.ac.uk. Retrieved 19 May 2018.
  4. ^ Thomas Bambridge, Dictionary of National Biography, accessed February 2010
  5. ^ Timbs, John (1855). Curiosities of London: Exhibiting the Most Rare and Remarkable Objects of Interest in the Metropolis. D. Bogue. p. 346.
  6. ^ "AALT Page". Aalt.law.uh.edu. Retrieved 19 May 2018.
  7. ^ Byrom, Samuel (1729). An Irrefragable Argument Fully Proving, that to Discharge Great Debts is ... Fleet Prison, London. pp. 13–24.
  8. ^ "Jones, John (born c.1578-1583, died 1658?)". Dictionary of Welsh Biography. National Library of Wales. Retrieved 19 May 2018.
  9. ^ "ONSLOW, Richard (1527/28-71), of Blackfriars, London. - History of Parliament Online". Historyofparliamentonline.org. Retrieved 19 May 2018.
  10. ^ a b Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). "Fleet Prison" . Encyclopedia Americana.
  11. ^ Michael Harris, 'Pitt, Moses (bap. 1639, d. 1697)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004
  12. ^ Julia Gasper, Theodore von Neuhoff, king of Corsica. The man behind the legend, University of Delaware Press, nov. 2012.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  Media related to Fleet Prison at Wikimedia Commons

fleet, prison, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, july, 2017, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Fleet Prison news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Fleet Prison was a notorious London prison by the side of the River Fleet The prison was built in 1197 was rebuilt several times and was in use until 1844 It was demolished in 1846 Fleet Prison Pray remember ye poor debtors inmates of the Fleet Prison beg passers by for almsShow map of City of LondonShow map of City of London in 1300Coordinates51 30 58 N 0 6 18 W 51 51611 N 0 10500 W 51 51611 0 10500StatusClosedSecurity classdebtor s prison contemnor s prisonPopulation300 plus familiesOpened1197Closed1846WardenSee belowStreet addressoff Farringdon StreetCityLondonCountryKingdom of England 1197 1707 Kingdom of Great Britain 1707 1800 United Kingdom 1800 1846 Notable prisonersJohn Donne Theodore of Corsica Contents 1 History 2 Wardens 3 Notable inmates 3 1 In fiction 4 See also 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksHistory editThe prison was built in 1197 off what is now Farringdon Street on the eastern bank of the River Fleet after which it was named It came into particular prominence from being used as a place of reception for persons committed by the Star Chamber and afterwards as a debtor s prison and for persons imprisoned for contempt of court by the Court of Chancery In 1381 during the Peasants Revolt it was deliberately destroyed by Wat Tyler s men During the 15th century inmates were usually imprisoned here for civil rather than criminal cases and the prison was considered at the time as more comfortable than Ludgate prison Inmates had to pay for board and lodgings provide tips for prison servants and pay a fee for when they entered and leave the prison Prison cells ranged from luxurious private rooms to inmates who slept two in a bed The very poor in prison were even known to beg through a grate while in prison 1 In 1666 during the Great Fire of London it burned down on the third day of the fire the prisoners fleeing in the last moments After the fire the warden of the prison Sir Jeremy Whichcote purchased Caron House in Lambeth in order to house the prison s debtors Whichcote then rebuilt the prison on the original site at his own expense nbsp The site of the former Fleet Prison lower right on Roque s Map of London 1746During the 18th century Fleet Prison was mainly used for debtors and bankrupts It usually contained about 300 prisoners and their families Like the Marshalsea prison it was divided into a restrictive and arduous common side and a more open master s side where rent had to be paid 2 At that time prisons were profit making enterprises Prisoners had to pay for food and lodging There were fees for turning keys and for taking irons off and Fleet Prison had the highest fees in England There was even a grille built into the Farringdon Street prison wall so that prisoners might beg alms from passers by But prisoners did not necessarily have to live within Fleet Prison itself as long as they paid the keeper to compensate him for loss of earnings they could take lodgings within a particular area outside the prison walls called the Liberty of the Fleet or the Rules of the Fleet From 1613 on there were also many clandestine Fleet Marriages The boundary of the Liberties of the Fleet included the north side of Ludgate Hill the Old Bailey to Fleet Lane and along it until the Fleet Market and ran alongside the prison to Ludgate Hill 3 Warden of Fleet Prison Act 1728Act of Parliament nbsp Parliament of Great BritainLong titleAn Act to empower His Majesty His Heirs and Successors during the Life of Thomas Bambridge Esquire to grant the Office of Warden of the Prison of The Fleet to such Person or Persons as His Majesty shall think fit and to incapacitate the said Thomas Bambridge to enjoy the said Office or any other whatsoever Citation2 Geo 2 c 32DatesRoyal assent14 May 1729Other legislationRepealed byStatute Law Revision Act 1867Status RepealedThe head of the prison was termed the warden who was appointed by letters patent It became a frequent practice of the holder of the patent to farm out the prison to the highest bidder This custom made the prison long notorious for the cruelties inflicted on prisoners One purchaser of the office Thomas Bambridge who became warden in 1728 was of particularly evil repute He was guilty of the greatest extortions upon prisoners and according to a committee of the House of Commons appointed to inquire into the state of English gaols arbitrarily and unlawfully loaded with irons put into dungeons and destroyed prisoners for debt treating them in the most barbarous and cruel manner in high violation and contempt of the laws He was committed to Newgate Prison and an act the Warden of Fleet Prison Act 1728 2 Geo 2 c 32 was passed to prevent his enjoying the office of warden 4 During the Gordon Riots in 1780 Fleet Prison was again destroyed and rebuilt in 1781 1782 In 1842 in pursuance of an Act of Parliament by which inmates of the Marshalsea Fleet and Queen s Bench prisons were relocated to the Queen s Prison as the Queen s Bench Prison was renamed it was finally closed and in 1844 sold to the Corporation of the City of London by whom it was pulled down in 1846 The demolition yielded three million bricks 50 tons of lead and 40 000 square feet 3 700 m2 of paving After lying empty for 17 years the site was sold to the London Chatham and Dover Railway and became the site of their new Ludgate station 5 Wardens editRoger de Saperton fl 1381 6 Elizabeth Venour c 1460s 1 Edmund Haslewood d 1548 of Maidwell John Haslewood d 1550 of Maidwell Edward Tyrrell b 1545 Sir Robert Tyrrell b 1582 Thomas Babington of Cuddington Sir Jeremy Whichcote warden 1660 Sir William Babington Thomas Bambridge fl 1728Notable inmates editSee also Category Inmates of Fleet Prison In 1601 the poet John Donne was imprisoned until it was proven that his wedding to Anne Donne nee More was legal and valid The priest who married him Samuel Brooke and the man who acted as witness to the wedding were also imprisoned Samuel Byrom son of the writer and poet John Byrom was imprisoned for debt in 1725 In 1729 he sent a petition to his old school friend the Duke of Dorset in which he raged against the injustices of the system Holland the most unpolite Country in the World uses Debtors with Mildness and Malefactors with Rigour England on the contrary shews Mercy to Murtherers and Robbers but of poor Debtors Impossibilities are demanded if the Debtor is able to make up his Affairs with the Creditor how many Hundreds are afterwards kept in Prison for Chamber Rent and other unjust Demands of the Gaolers What Barbarity can be greater than for Gaolers without any Provocation to load Prisoners with Irons and thrust them into Dungeons and manacle them and deny their Friends to visit them and force them to pay excessive Prices for their Chamber Rent their Victuals and Drink to open their Letters and seize the Charity that is sent them and in short by oppressing them by all the Ways that the worst of Tyrants can invent Such Cruelty reduces the Prisoners to Despair insomuch that many choose rather to shoot hang or throw themselves out of the Window than to be insulted beaten and imposed upon by the Gaolers if every Gaoler was allowed a yearly Sallary and no Gaoler suffered under the severest of Penalties to take either Bribe Fee or Reward no Demand for Chamber Rent nor any Fees for Entrance or going out of Prison in such a Case the Gaols would not swarm as they now do In foreign Countries where the Romish Religion prevails what Crowds of People of both Sexes from the highest Prince to the meanest Peasant thrust themselves into Religious Houses it is an apparent Injury to the Country too obvious to be denied that the many Prisons in England where so many Thousands of both Sexes are detained is a greater Loss and Injury to the King and Country 7 Other notable inmates include nbsp The Racquet Ground of the Fleet Prison circa 1808Christopher Billopp Commander in the King s Navy and landowner on Staten Island New York died in Fleet Prison 1725 John Cleland 18th century fighter for the freedom of speech in Great Britain Edmund Dummer 1651 1713 Surveyor of the Navy founder of the Royal Navy docks at Devonport Plymouth Member of Parliament for Arundel and founder of the first packet service between Falmouth Cornwall and the West Indies died a bankrupt in Fleet debtors prison Sir Richard Grosvenor 1st Baronet founder to the lineage of the Dukes of Westminster spent almost 10 years in the prison after his brother in law Peter Daniell defaulted on his debts in 1629 Grosvenor was imprisoned because he had stood surety to Daniell Charles Hall a notable economic thinker and early socialist John Jones of Gellilyfdy a Welsh antiquary and calligrapher who repeatedly imprisoned between 1617 and the 1650s used his time in prison to carry out work copying manuscripts 8 Jorgen Jorgensen a Danish adventurer who helped build the first settlement in Tasmania and for a short time in 1809 ruled over Iceland after which he became a British spy and was later deported to Tasmania Richard Hogarth father of the painter and printmaker William Hogarth and a poor Latin school teacher and operator of an unsuccessful coffee house for Latin speakers was imprisoned for debt in Fleet Prison for five years Sir Thomas Lodge spent a short time in the Fleet after declaring himself bankrupt at the end of his term as Lord Mayor of London in 1563 Richard Onslow spent a short time in the Fleet after being expelled from the Inner Temple for taking part in an affray in 1556 He was later reinstated after an apology and ultimately rose to Solicitor General for England and Wales and Speaker of the House of Commons 9 William Paget actor author of The Humour of the Fleet 1749 John Paston 15th century gentleman and landowner known for the Paston Letters spent three separate occasions in this prison William Penn early champion of democracy and religious freedom was imprisoned for debt in 1707 10 Moses Pitt publisher who in 1691 published The Cry of the Oppressed a moving appeal on behalf of himself and all prisoners for debt across the nation 11 Elizabeth Thomas 1675 1731 satirized as Curll s Corinna in Pope s Dunciad was believed to have collaborated with Curll on Codrus or The Dunciad Dissected 1728 while in prison for debt George Thomson physician c 1619 1676 physician and medical writer fought for the royalists under Prince Maurice during the English Civil War He was captured by the parliamentary forces at Newbury in 1644 and imprisoned for a time here Francis Tregian the Younger reputed to have used his time in prison to carry out work copying musical manuscripts Theodore von Neuhoff the only King of Corsica in 1756 12 just before his death Thomas Keyes or Keys by 1524 before 5 September 1571 captain of Sandgate Castle and serjeant porter to Queen Elizabeth I Without the Queen s consent he married Lady Mary Grey who had a claim to the throne In fiction edit Mr Samuel Pickwick protagonist of Charles Dickens s The Pickwick Papers who is imprisoned in the Fleet for refusing to pay fines stemming from a breach of promise suit brought against him by Mrs Bardell The book contains a vivid description of the life customs and abuses of the prison 10 At the close of Shakespeare s play Henry IV Part 2 Act V Scene V Falstaff is surprised when instead of being promoted by the new king the Chief Justice tells his officers to Go carry Sir John Falstaff to the Fleet Take all his company along with him In The Luck of Barry Lyndon Lyndon spends the last nineteen years of his life in Fleet Prison Near the end of Pierce Egan s 1821 story Life in London Bob Logic spends time in Fleet Prison for debt At the end of The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle by Tobias Smollett Peregrine and some of his friends go to Fleet Prison for bankruptcy after Mr Pickle loans all of his money and loses his pension in Chapter CVI Walter Besant and James Rice s novel The Chaplain of the Fleet 1881 is an historical novel which takes place in the Fleet Prison during the eighteenth century See also editList of demolished buildings and structures in LondonReferences edit a b Castor Helen 2011 Blood and Roses Faber amp Faber p 166 ISBN 978 0 571 28680 5 The Fleet Prison British History Online British history ac uk Retrieved 19 May 2018 Fleet Bridge Fleur de lis Court British History Online British history ac uk Retrieved 19 May 2018 Thomas Bambridge Dictionary of National Biography accessed February 2010 Timbs John 1855 Curiosities of London Exhibiting the Most Rare and Remarkable Objects of Interest in the Metropolis D Bogue p 346 AALT Page Aalt law uh edu Retrieved 19 May 2018 Byrom Samuel 1729 An Irrefragable Argument Fully Proving that to Discharge Great Debts is Fleet Prison London pp 13 24 Jones John born c 1578 1583 died 1658 Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Retrieved 19 May 2018 ONSLOW Richard 1527 28 71 of Blackfriars London History of Parliament Online Historyofparliamentonline org Retrieved 19 May 2018 a b Rines George Edwin ed 1920 Fleet Prison Encyclopedia Americana Michael Harris Pitt Moses bap 1639 d 1697 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press Sept 2004 Julia Gasper Theodore von Neuhoff king of Corsica The man behind the legend University of Delaware Press nov 2012 Bibliography editThe London Encyclopaedia Ben Weinreb amp Christopher Hibbert Macmillan 1995 ISBN 0 333 57688 8External links edit nbsp Media related to Fleet Prison at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fleet Prison amp oldid 1211199891, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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