17th Century London Life



LONDON IN THE 17TH CENTURY In 1600 Westminster was separate from London. However, in the early 17th century, rich people built houses along the Thames between the two. In the late 17th century many grand houses were built west of London. Unexpected pleasures in 17th-century London And yet, despite all the perils of 17th-century London, life in the great city was not all gloom and doom. Its citizens found much to amuse and delight them. Pleasures that had been banned under Cromwell ’s Commonwealth returned with Charles II’s restoration. The population of London was about 250,000 by 1600 and during the 17th century London continued to grow. Banqueting House was built in 1622. In 1635 the king opened Hyde Park to the public. In 1637 Charles I created Richmond Park for hunting.

The chimney sweep has been around for hundreds of years and still today is a necessary and important profession. The early Romans first made the switch from a single fire in the center of a room to an isolated fireplace to heat buildings and cook indoors, but it was not until 16th century England that the trend of fireplaces and chimneys really caught on. It was not long before people built fireplaces in each room of their home to use as a heat source. In 17th century England, along with all of the new fireplaces came a hearth tax, based on the size of the house and the number of chimneys the house had. To avoid these high taxes, builders would connect the flues of new fireplaces with those of an existing chimney, creating a complex maze of pitch black narrow tunnels inside the home.

In this same time period, coal became a popular substitute for burning wood in fireplaces. As a result of this switch from wood to coal, the need for regular cleaning became increasingly necessary. The use of coal left large sticky soot deposits on the walls of the fireplace that had to be cleaned off regularly for the chimney to remain cleared. If the fireplace was left uncared for, the coal residue would cause the chimney to back up and pollute the home with harmful fumes. At this point the profession of the chimney grew rapidly. With the rise in coal use, regular chimney sweep visits became a safety necessity. In London at this time, Queen Victoria mandated that all chimneys be cleaned regularly. At this time, chimney sweeps became known for bringing clean and fresh air back to the home and they became associated with good hearth and good health.

Many times in literature, movies and artwork child sweeps were portrayed as having fun and the cheerful young apprentices of accomplished older sweeps. The truth was a bit different of course. Many orphans were forced into child labor and treated poorly as they worked long, hard hours as chimney boys.

Cleaning the inside of the soot-filled chimney flues was a difficult and dangerous job because of the narrow chimney flues and the amount of soot the sweepers were exposed to. For this reason, the job was left to poor orphan boys brought in by the chimney master or children sold by their parents into the trade. The children served as indentured servants to their master; in exchange for a home and food and water the children were taught the trade. The children climbed into the chimneys to scrape off the coal deposits and brush the walls with little scrubber brushes. The conditions were harsh and the work was hard. Children were often scared to climb into the narrow passageways, so to give them a little extra encouragement the chimney masters would light a small fire under the child to coax him up the interior walls, hence the start of the expression, “to light a fire under you”. The life of a ‘climbing boy’ was not just undesirable but dangerous as well. Because they worked and lived in the soot and grime of the chimneys, the children often developed respiratory problems and other related issues. Fatal falls from rotting chimneys were not uncommon either. William Blake, an English poet, illustrates the difficult life of a chimney sweep boy in his poem, “The Chimney Sweeper”.

In London, sweeps would spend all day moving from one roof to the next of the row houses.

Finally, in 1864, Parliament passed the “Act for the Regulation of Chimney Sweepers” which ended the use of young boys to clean the chimneys. At this time, various cleaning devices were invented to aid the chimney sweep in cleaning and bushing the walls from one end of the chimney. One method of chimney cleaning invented around this time used a heavy lead or iron ball and rope system used to clean the chimney from the top all the way down to the fireplace. And, in the 18th century, a man named Joseph Glass invented chimney cleaning equipment consisting of a set of canes and brushes that could be used from the fireplace to clean all the way up to the top of the chimney. More modern variations of both of these inventions are still used today.

In the 1960s, gas and electricity have replaced coal and fireplaces as the main heating source for homes. This change in fuel type has mandated a revision to the role of the chimney sweep. In the 1970s though, when the price of fossil fuels rose dramatically, people went back to burning wood in their fireplaces rather than to use other more costly methods of heating. But when people used fireplaces that had been left unused for a long period of time without proper cleaning and care, house fires and carbon monoxide poisonings from clogged chimneys became commonplace. This switch back to the use of fireplaces after years of non-use was very dangerous if the proper provisions were not taken care of beforehand. Presently, the professional chimney sweep has made a comeback with fireplaces getting regular use rather than just used for a decoration and this old profession is still growing today.

Although the life of the early chimney sweeps including children has often been dramatized and romanticized as being cheery and fun in stories, movies and artwork, the reality was quite different and the sweep’s life many times was one of toil and hardship.

One of the most famous literary works about Chimney Sweeps is William Blake’s poem, “The Chimney Sweeper.”

The chimney sweep today has come a long way from sending children armed with brushes up the chimney flues. Professional chimney sweeps are educated in the codes and science behind chimneys and fireplaces. Chimney sweeps now do more than simply clean a chimney; they diagnose and service problems, repair all types of chimneys and install fireplaces and hearths. Through it all, the chimney sweep remains an important profession that will continue to grow and bring good health and good hearth to every home they service.

Today, the chimney sweep is a well respected professional that helps to provide homeowners and businesses to maintain safe operation of heating systems, fireplaces, stoves, flues and chimneys of all kinds. Organizations like the CSIA and the NCSG hold members to very high ethical and educational standards of performance as well

London
17th Century London Life
  • Landscape
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  • People
    • Settlement patterns
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  • History
    • The early period
    • Evolution of the modern city

Life In 17th Century London

By 1520 London was again enjoying prosperity, with 41 halls of craft guilds symbolizing that well-being. Toward the middle of the 16th century London underwent an important growth in trade, which was boosted by the establishment of monopolies such as those held by the Muscovy Company (1555), the Turkey (later Levant) Company (1581), and the East India Company (1600). It also grew in population, with the number of Londoners increasing from over 100,000 in 1550 to about 200,000 in 1600. The additional population at first found living space in the grounds of the religious institutions seized during the Reformation by Henry VIII (after 1536). To fill the void left by the cessation of the religious charities, the city organized poor relief in 1547, providing grain in times of scarcity and promoting the foundation or reconstitution of the five royal hospitals: St. Bartholomew’s, Christ’s, Bethlehem (the madhouse known as Bedlam), St. Thomas’s, and Bridewell. Many of the private charities founded at this time are still in operation.

The population of the City and its surrounding settlements had reached 220,000 by the early years of the 17th century despite laws that attempted to contain the size of the capital. Indeed, the City Fathers (members of the Court of Common Council) tried to stop the subdivision of old houses into smaller, densely packed dwellings (a process known as “pestering”). New industries, including silk weaving and the production of glass and majolica pottery, were established, often outside the gates in order to avoid the restrictive regulations of the livery companies, which were successors of the craft guilds and were so named because of the distinctive clothing of their members. Slaughterhouses and numerous polluting industries were sited beyond the walls, especially to the east. The establishment of Henry VIII’s naval dockyard at Deptford on the south bank was accompanied by a straggle of waterfront hovels on the north bank at Wapping.

17th Century London Life Story

When Henry VIII in 1529 began to convert Cardinal Wolsey’s York Place into the royal palace of Whitehall and to build St. James’s Palace across the fields, the City of Westminster began to take more definite shape around the court. Between Westminster and the City of London the great houses of nobles began to be built, with gardens down to the river and each with its own water gate. Along the Strand opposite these houses were distinguished lodgings for gentlemen who were in town during legal sittings. By the early 17th century the name London began to embrace both the City of London and the City of Westminster as well as the built-up land between them, but the two never merged into a single municipality.

17th Century London Life Insurance Company

The reign of Elizabeth I (1558–1603) arguably marked the apogee of the city’s domination of England. The queen based her strength on its militia, its money, and its love. It provided one-quarter of the men for service abroad in 1585 and formed its armed “trainbands” (trained bands) to defend England against the threatened Spanish invasion.

17th-century London

The trainbands remained a force to be reckoned with, and Charles I, who had damaged the City’s trading interests and flouted its privileges as cavalierly as he had Parliament’s, was deterred from attacking London in 1642 by their presence at Turnham Green. Hostility toward the king made the fortified City the core of parliamentary support, and Parliament’s success in the Civil Wars was due in good part to City allegiance.

In the early 1630s the 4th earl of Bedford began developing Covent Garden, originally the convent garden of the Benedictines of Westminster, thereby initiating the process of building estates of town houses on land acquired from former religious houses.

In 1664–65 the plague, a frequent invader since the Black Death of 1348, killed about 70,000 Londoners (a previous outbreak in 1603 had killed at least 25,000). In 1666 the Great Fire of London burned from September 2 to September 5 and consumed five-sixths of the City. St. Paul’s Cathedral, 87 parish churches, and at least 13,000 dwellings were destroyed, but there were only a few human fatalities. From the unscorched corners in the northeast and extreme west, rebuilding began. Because reconstruction had to be undertaken rapidly, adoption of a rational street plan was rejected, but the old streets were made wider and a bit straighter. Between 1667 and 1671 most of the houses were rebuilt (in brick since half-timbering was no longer allowed). Because many of the tiny parishes were combined and a few churches had escaped the fire, only about 50 churches were rebuilt, in addition to a new St. Paul’s. Sir Christopher Wren, mathematician, astronomer, and physicist, though only informally trained as an architect, was given the formidable task of designing them and supervising their construction.

17th Century London Life Assurance

There is a famous inscription by Wren’s son in St. Paul’s Cathedral, addressing the visitor in the following words: “Lector, si monumentum requiris, circumspice” (“Reader, if you seek a monument, look about you”). Much of the historic legacy of the City is in fact Wren’s monument. His churches are a series of virtuoso variations on basic architectural concepts. They range in style from the homely Dutch to the Gothic, but most of them embody his own conception of the classical style. The dome of St. Paul’s is one of the most perfect in the world and, like the rest of the cathedral, is classical in theme with Baroque grace notes. The Monument for the Great Fire was adapted from a Wren design and erected near Pudding Lane, where the fire had started in the house of the king’s baker. Wren constructed four other churches outside the City, built the Royal Hospital located in Chelsea, and designed parts of Kensington Palace, Greenwich Hospital, the Royal Observatory of Greenwich, and Hampton Court Palace.

London In The 14th Century

Under Charles II royal abrogation of City rights was resumed, and, although James II restored forfeited City charters before his flight to France in 1688, it was in Guildhall under protection of the trainbands that the lords spiritual and temporal met to declare allegiance to William, the Dutch prince of Orange (thenceforth known as William III of Great Britain).

To support the War of the Grand Alliance (1689–1713), City merchants in 1694 formed the Bank of England, and thenceforth the City’s money market became a prime factor in the affairs of state. Another aspect of the City’s power in the nation was the centring of the national press in Fleet Street (The Times, founded in 1785 off Blackfriars Lane, moved to new premises only in 1974). Finance, commerce, and port activities dominated the City and the East End of London, while expansion of government and the attractions of fashionable society stimulated development of the West End.

Sixteenth Century London

As London continued to grow, the greater part of the metropolis lay outside the boundaries of the City. Whereas in 1550 75 percent of Londoners had lived under the Lord Mayor’s jurisdiction, by 1700 (when there were 500,000 Londoners) only 25 percent did so, and in 1800 (when the population reached 1,110,000) the proportion was only 10 percent. Starting with Westminster Bridge (1750), half a dozen new bridges were built over the Thames, allowing new areas to be built up to the south. Important expansion occurred around the docks to the east as well as to the north and in the fashionable west. The rapidly expanding capital was governed by a patchwork of authorities, some of which were very ineffective. By 1700 London had overtaken Paris in population.