EVENT ON A FAIRE DAIE IN ATHERSTONE,
1597
This
map is particularly interesting as it shows the town’s
market square hardly changed from Shakespearean times. An
archdeaconry court case which was found in a box of moldy
old documents amongst the Lincoln Diocesan Church archives
throws some light on events that took place in an alehouse
in the town square as far back as 1597 when local villagers
crowded into Atherstone to sell their produce and to enjoy
the annual fair. The case involved an errant wife from Appleby
who had run off to the Atherstone fair with one of her neighbours.
One of the Atherstone residents called forth to give evidence
in the case was Hugh Drayton who kept an alehouse in Atherstone
overlooking the market square.
John Petcher of Appleby was brought before
the Leicester archdeacon's court on 29th October, 1597 charged
upon a “common fame” of having committed adultery
with Sara Winter the wife of Robert Winter, his neighbour.
We later find that John purged himself of this offence “as
well by his own oath as by the oaths of four of his honest
neighbours”, was acquitted of the charge and “restored
again to his good name”.
Petcher was brought before the court on presentments
based upon “common knowledge” but most of the
evidence is circumstantial. He was reported to have been in
the company of Sara Winter on several occasions, and to have
frequented Robert Winter’s house in his absence. A certain
Galfridus Meassen from the adjacent village of Measham is
alleged to have told Richard Aldret of Appleby that he saw
John and Sara “together between two rye lands in Measham
fields” (though he does not say what they were doing
there). The principal articles of the indictment are more
concerned with Petcher’s luring Sara “by diabolical
persuasion and enticements of the flesh” to local towns
and fairs – specifically to the market towns of Ashby,
Atherstone and Leicester. This mention of fairs is especially
interesting as Q.R. Quaif found from his study of Somerset
Consistory Court records, “wayward wives” and
their lovers often met secretly in alehouses and at fairs.
These festive occasions provided opportunities for illicit
liaisons denied to couples within the narrow watchful world
of their own parish.
It seems that Sara Winter, the young woman
charged with adultery, was particularly attracted to fairs.
She had already set tongues wagging in Appleby after being
seen in the company of a certain sheep farmer called John
Petcher from the same village. Her husband Robert was evidently
trying to put a stop to her philandering for there are reports
of his having “put away his wife”. This could
explain why she was staying with Nicholas Taylor and his family
in Appleby in the days leading up to the Atherstone fair.
It was suggested that Robert may have been trying to “intrap”
her when he offered a reward to a shifty character called
Edward Taylor “to watch Sara and Petcher misbehaving”.
This would also explain why she was taken to Atherstone by
Edward’s kinsfolk rather than by husband Robert. There
is a further suggestion that Robert had a hand in a crafty
scheme whereby he got Nicholas Taylor to try to to persuade
Sara to start a suit against her husband on the grounds that
he had refused to cohabit with her – a ploy to entice
Petcher to lay out money for a court action. And there are
rumours that Robert bribed Edward Taylor, by providing fuel,
bread and money to secure him as a witness against Petcher.
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The case describes events which took place
on the fateful afternoon of the annual fair in Atherstone,
and centred around the alehouses with which the town was particularly
well provided. There were in fact 32 alehouses in the town
by 1720 and Hugh Drayton’s tavern or “victualling
house” was probably one of many drinking and eating
houses fronting the square which can be seen on the Bracebridge
map. A mid sixteenth century court roll lists Hugh Drayton
as a customary tenant paying 1s 3d for a burgage plot in the
town while a Christopher Drayton paid rent for a barn in the
market place and five acres of land. The Drayton family seem
to have been well established family in the parish of Mancetter.
Among the surviving sixteenth century probate records John
Drayton the elder is described in 1556 as a “yeoman”and
a “butcher”, while William and Hugh Drayton, are
both described as tanners. It is possible that Hugh the tanner
and Hugh the tavern keeper are one and the same. Hugh Drayton’s
alehouse was evidently well frequented by local villagers
on market days and the festive atmosphere is well captured
in witnesses’ depositions. According to the records
when Edward Taylor, the key witness arrived in Atherstone
he was barely able to conceal his delight upon discovering
that John and Sara were sitting together in the alehouse.
But his enthusiasm overran his discretion for not long after
his arrival, perhaps after a few ales, we hear he “did
openly before witnesses slander John Petcher…and called
him whoremaster” - a serious accusation in those days
which had to be carefully examined.
The events which followed can be pieced together
from two dozen pages of witness depositions for the archdeaconry
court case. By mid afternoon the fair was at its height and
a merry throng had crowded into the alehouse. The downstairs
rooms were “greatly frequented with guests going in
and out continually”. Several groups of people sat eating
and drinking in the hall which joined onto the parlour where
John and Sara sat with Nicholas Taylor and his wife. It’s
not certain how long the couple were left alone together after
Nicholas and his wife withdrew. However, as it was pointed
out, although the parlour door was closed it was unlocked;
so there was little chance of their being left undisturbed.
Much was made of the suggestion that “most men coming
into a victualling house on a fair day, especially if they
lack a place to sit in, do usually look into a parlour where
guests use to be”. If they couple were fornicating,
it was argued, surely the landlord, his wife, his servants
or his guests would have known! The court was rightly sceptical
about Taylor’s claim to have “taken” the
couple in adultery and his supposed refusal of sixpence from
Petcher to keep silent about the matter, since no one else
came forward to verify this tale. Also there is strong evidence
that Taylor spent most of the afternoon drinking with Hugh
Drayton in a nearby alehouse. It is hardly surprising that
his allegations were described as expedients for him to “release
or excuse himself, and not for any truth that is in the matter”.
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The sworn depositions of the three Swepstone
farmers, Richard Dudley, William Chilwell and Thomas Burrows,
all support this judgement. According to their account they
were sitting in the hall when Nicholas Taylor’s wife
entered “meaning to see whether the said Petcher and
Sara were naughty together”. But she “could not,
nor did see them in any such sort and was reproved of the
said Dudley for her peeping in”. Dudley’s admonition
suggests that the Swepstone farmers did not think well of
spying on their neighbours. All three swore that they had
been in the alehouse or in the street outside all afternoon
and they had not set eyes upon Edward Taylor or his wife in
that vicinity. Furthermore they avowed that their beasts were
so crowded against the alehouse that no one could possibly
have approached the parlour window from outside.
The case against Petcher was therefore turned
into an attack on the character of the principal witness.
Edward Taylor is scornfully caricatured as “a man that
hath not land, lease, stock or possessions…to maintain
his wife and children”, who had “for very poverty,
idleness or some other cause given over his occupation of
blacksmith wherein he was trained and brought up” taking
up “bad, shifty and dishonest practices”. He had
already confessed himself before witnesses to adultery and
was commonly known to be a cozener or defrauder of men. A
long catalogue of his alleged crimes include allegation that
he robbed a woman upon the highway, with a threat that if
the woman informed upon him he would say that she gave him
money for sexual favours. He is also accused of stealing candlesticks
from a house in Ashby and barley sheaves from Appleby fields.
He was accused of extorting money from the young men of Appleby
with a document purporting to give him authority to take soldiers
and one occasion he apparently tried to steal a horse from
George Smaller’s stable at Snarestone, “and was
riding away with him, and had ridden so away if the said Smaller
had not met him and scared him”. If these stories were
true it is amazing that Taylor had so far escaped imprisonment
or hanging. Indeed, it appears that he had spent time in Leicester
gaol but he had persuaded the keeper to allow him “to
go awhile into the town” and absconded, despite a solemn
promise to return. His wife Helen, who was “commonly
accepted to be light fingered and of no credit or reputation
at all” had also spent time in Ashby gaol for stealing
a pair of shoes. It’s possible Taylor’s criminal
tendencies were exaggerated to blacken his name and destroy
his credibility as a witness, but these accusations seem to
indicate that there was a great reservoir of “tolerated
criminality” in Elizabethan times and that local ne’er-do-wells
were to some extend shielded by their neighbours. According
to G.R. Elton, one Somerset magistrate complained in 1596
that as much as four fifths of crimes that had been committed
went unreported.
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The case against Petcher is typical of its
kind. It is first mentioned in the Liber Actorum or Instance
Court Act Book for October 1597. Witnesses were still being
examined the following March and April, after which the case
seems to have been abandoned. Ten years later, following an
archdiaconal visitation Petcher’s name is included on
a list of those suspected of fornication who had been overlooked
by negligent churchwardens. Clearly the effectiveness of these
courts in suppressing immorality must be questioned. The courts
of quarter sessions and assizes meted out punishments that
included imprisonment, branding, amputation and hanging for
crimes against the state- but the archdeaconry court had to
rely on social sanctions. Convicted adulterers and fornicators
were usually made to perform “penance in sheets”
which according to William Harrison in 1587 needed replacing
with “some sharper law” since it was “counted
as no punishment at all to speak of, or but smally regarded
of the offenders”. Its not surprising that the villagers
often treated the church courts with contempt considering
that Petcher’s acquittance owes much to sworn depositions
against the principal witness and the hint of Winter’s
own complicity in using the court to entrap his wife.
The investigation throws some light on the
petty intrigues of Elizabethan village life but of course
it leaves many unanswered questions. The witnesses’
depositions reflect ambivalent attitudes towards sexual misbehaviour-
ranging from vehement denunciation on the one hand to apparent
indifference on the other. The court proceedings can penetrate
only the surface layers of this tightly-knit world at irregular
intervals, yet they provide a strong impression of social
intrigue and surreptitious behaviour in seemingly quiet villages
which is not very different from that of our own times. Did
Sara and John continued to keep company together, or did Sara
return to live peacefully with her aggrieved husband? Was
Edward Taylor dragged before the assizes for his roguish ways?
Did Hugh Dayton continue to keep company with local rogues
like Edward Taylor in his Atherstone alehouse? Whatever the
answers to these questions we are left with the impression
that sixteenth century inhabitants of Atherstone and its surrounding
villages lived socially more eventful, emotionally more unsettled
and sexually more active lives that one might at first suppose
from just studying the economic records.
© Alan Roberts 2000
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| References: |
| Witnesses
depositions from Archdeaconry Court Proceedings, Leicestershire
Record Office: 1D41/4/673a, /721c &c. Apart from
church and probate business the archdeaconry courts
dealt almost exclusively with moral offences. Their
twin preoccupations with illicit sex and defamation
earned them the popular name of “bawdy courts”.
For alehouse liasons see Q.R. Quaif, Wanton Wenches
and Wayward Wives, 1979 p. 128. Atherstone alehouses,
Victoria County History of Warwickshire Vol. IV, p.
126.
Drayton refs. B. Bartlett, History and Antiquities of
Mancetter, 1791, pp 150-3.
Drayton inventories in Marion J. Alexander, “Sixteenth
century probate documents from Mancetter”, Warwickshire
History, Winter 1985/6 Vol. IV, no. 4.
G.R. Elton’s introduction to J.S. Cockburn’s
History of English Assizes, 1558-1714, p. 107.
Negligent Churchwardens, Leics. Record Office 1D41/11/30
f121.
William Harrison’s Description of England, ed.
G. Edelen, Ithaca, 1968, p. 189.
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17th CENTURY ATHERSTONE FROM QUARTER
SESSIONS RECORDS
The Poor of Atherstone
The Warwickshire Quarter Sessions Order Books give frequent
references to the poor of Atherstone. In Easter 1625 for example
the Warwickshire Justices of the Peace ordered that a certain
Joan Hill, described as 70 years old, “poor and impotent”
was to be given 6d weekly and a “habitation”.
In 1628 it was remarked that the there was an “extraordinary
great” number of poor people in Atherstone compared
to the neighbouring towns and in 1639 there is reference to
the poor harboured in cottages in Ridge Lane in the parish
of Mancetter. The Atherstone constables were to provide them
with “divers parcels of timber and other materials…to
erect more cottages”. After 1650 it was ordered that
the hamlet of Oldbury which “hath no poor in it”
was to join Mancetter for the maintenance of Atherstone’s
“multitude of poor impotent persons”.
Source: Warwick County Records, Quarter Sessions Order Books,
Vol. I pg.6, 63;
Vol. III, pp 78-79, 107.
An Unruly Atherstone Alehouse!
In 1664 the Warwickshire Justices of the Peace “suppressed”
William Robinson, an Atherstone alehouse-keeper for “keeping
ill rule in his house”.
Quarter Sessions Order Book, Vol. IV, pg 259.
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Sincere thanks from the Atherstone Project Group to Alan Roberts
for his contribution!
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