tio CORNELL UNIVERSITY ** LIBRARY Cornell University Library HD6460 .U62 Industrial organization in the sixteenth) olin 3 1924 032 451 191 Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924032451191 Industrial Organization in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries By George Unwin Sometime Scholar of Lincoln College Oxford At the Clarendon Press 1904 U .. ^^^- HENRY FROWDE, M.A. PTBLISHER TO THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD LONDON, EDINBURGH NEW YORK PREFACE This book has grown up out of a piece of research which I planned as a student of Berlin in 1898, and com- menced to carry out as a student of the London School of Economics in the following year. An article published in the Economic Journal for September 1900, under the title ' A Seventeenth-Century Trade Union,' which was the first outcome of this investigation, has, with the kind per- mission of the editors, been reproduced almost in full in Section 4 of Chapter VIII. Setting out with the detailed examination of the records of a single London company, I was gradually led to include within the scope of my inquiry, first, the other industrial companies of London, then the similar organizations in other English centres of industry, and finally the parallel development in continental cities, and especially at Paris. In this way I came to entertain the idea of doing some- thing, however tentative, to bridge over the gap which appeared to exist in industrial history between mediaeval England and the England of the eighteenth century. The chapters on mediaeval industrial organization in Professor Ashley's Introduction to Economic History and Theory on the one hand, and on the other hand the History of Trade Unionism, and Industrial Dem.ocracy of Mr. and Mrs. Webb, have supplied me not only with a starting-point, but with an invaluable and constantly renewed stimulus. I should not, however, have ventured to undertake the task, if it had not been for the inspiration and the guidance derived from the lectures and writings of Professor Gustav Schmoller of Berlin, and if I had not been able to avail myself very largely of the researches in German economic history of the school which Professor SchmoUer may be said to have founded. iv PREFACE No one, whatever his special subject or period, who attempts to make a contribution to English economic history can avoid laying- himself under obligations to the work of Dr, Cunningham. My own debt would have been much greater if I could have taken advantage of the enlarged edition of the later portion of the Growth of English Industry and Commerce — which, however, did not appear till my book was ready for the press. I have done my best by the addition of references to enable the reader to avail himself of this great storehouse of economic learning. In the case of the French work to which that of Dr. Cunningham most nearly corresponds — the Histoire des classes ouvrieres et de f Industrie enFrance of M. Levasseur — I have been somewhat more fortunate. More than forty years after the first appearance of what has since been the standard work on the subject, M. Levasseur is at present engaged on a revised edition embodying the results achieved by historical research in the interval. The first two volumes of this edition, which appeared in 1900 and 1901, furnish the student with an indispensable guide to the sources of French social history. Those sources are rapidly becoming accessible in printed form, and amongst them are many records of industrial organization, the most valuable of all for the purpose of comparison with English contemporary records being the edition by M, Rene de Lespinasse of the ordinances of the Parisian corporations — which forms part of a magnificent series of volumes, de- signed to illustrate the history of Paris in all its aspects. Although London certainly has fallen behind Paris in this respect, the progress made of late in the publication of municipal records in England generally has been very marked. Many old cities and boroughs have taken the matter in hand for themselves, with excellent results ; the Historical MSS. Commission have reported on the records of many others; and the, local historian, thanks no doubt in some degree to the influence of Mrs. J. R. Green's Town Life in the Fifteenth Century, has begun to show far more appreciation than formerly of the value of local PREFACE V records as material for social and economic history. Two books exemplifying this tendency which I have found especially helpful are Miss Harris's Life in an Old English Town and Canon Morris's Chester in the Plantagenet and Tudor Reigns. With regard to the sources from which materials have been drawn, this book will be found to fall into two fairly distinct halves. The first of these is based almost entirely on the published histories, articles, and records of which a list wiU be found in Appendix C ; whilst the materials for the second portion, which begins on p. 112, have been mainly derived from the manuscript sources indicated in Appendix B. In this difference of material there is implied almost inevitably a difference of method. In the earlier chapters an attempt has been made to exhibit the transformation of the London craft organizations as part of a development which belongs to the general history of Western Europe, and this has involved an extensive use of the comparative method. It may perhaps be thought that too much stress has thus been laid upon the parallelism between English economic development and that of continental nations. This, however, has not been put forward as the final aspect of social history ; although it certainly seems to deserve more attention than has been commonly bestowed upon it. At a later stage of inquiry it would, no doubt, be necessary to insist upon the element of differentiation due to the working of causes peculiar to each nationality. If this task has not been undertaken in the later chapters, it is because an almost entire dependence upon manuscript material precludes any extensive application of the com- parative method. In attempting to give a somewhat de- tailed account of the activity of the new type of industrial organization which displaced the craft gild, I have been obliged to confine myself, not merely to England, but to London, and even to certain selected industries of the metropolis. The court books of two Livery Companies, constituting between them a continuous weekly record of administrative activity for nearly three centuries, served vi PREFACE as a backbone to the investigation ; whilst a large amount of supplementary material relating to these and to the other companies was found among the Domestic State Papers, in the MS. department of the British Museum, in the Privy Council Register, in the Repertories of the City of London or in the archives of the House of Lords. It would be impossible for an individual student with less than a lifetime at his disposal to exhaust the unpublished material to be derived from these sources. The Calendars of State Papers— especially those more recently issued— have enormously facilitated the task of the historian by enabling him to dispense, in the great majority of cases, with a reference to the original MS. ; whilst the volumes issued by the Historical MSS. Commission, and Mr. Dasent's edition of the Acts of the Privy Cotmcil, are gradually rendering the same service even more completely. But, in spite of the excellent example set by lesser towns, there is, as far as I know, no immediate prospect of the Repertories of the City of London, which form perhaps the richest store- house of material for the history of industrial regulation in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, being made more accessible to the student. The records of the Livery Companies are a very uncertain quantity; but it is probable that of the seventy-odd surviving companies a third at least possess records of considerable value, whilst the published histories of individual companies which give any satisfaction to the economic historian can be easily reckoned on the fingers of one hand. One of the main purposes with which this book was written was, by attempting to indicate the place occupied by the Livery Companies in the course of industrial development, to enable those interested in their records to do fuller justice to their value as material for the economic history of England during a very im- portant period. I am encouraged to hope that this purpose will not entirely fail of fulfilment by the sympathetic readiness with which I have been assisted by the three companies, the Feltmakers, the Haberdashers, and the Clothworkers, whose records I had selected for special investigation. I am PREFACE Vll especially grateful to Mr. Peachey, Clerk to the Feltmakers' Company, whose kindness did much to smooth the difficult path of a beginner ; and to Sir Owen Roberts, who cour- teously placed at my disposal the exceptionally interesting records of the Clothworkers' Company. Mr. W. E. Carring- ton of Stockport has supplied me with some valuable docu- ments relating to the history of feltmaking. My thanks are also due to the Library Committee of the City Council for permission to make some extracts from the City Repertories ; to Mr. J. R. Dasent of the Board of Education, and Mr. J. C. Ledlie of the Privy Council Office, for free access to the Privy Council Register ; and to Mr. J. C. Tingey, Honorary Archivist of Norwich, and the Rev. W. Hudson his predecessor in that office, who did all in their power to assist my somewhat cursory examination of the admirably arranged records on the basis of which they are about to make an important contribution to the history of that famous city. In conclusion I wish to express my indebtedness to Mr. L. L. Price, Bursar of Oriel College, and to Mr. Joseph Owen, Fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford, who took the trouble to read some of the earlier chapters in manuscript, for much timely encouragement and helpful suggestion ; and to Mr. J. C. Dore of Cardiff, and my wife, for valuable assistance in getting the book through the press. Chelsea, May 7, 1904. NOTE AS TO REFERENCES The edition of M. Levasseur's Histoire des classes otivrihres en- France referred to in this book is the greatly enlarged one just published of the first two volumes dealing with the period before the Revolution. The references to Dr. Cunningham's Growth of English Industry and Commerce are taken from the third edition. The two divisions of the work, Early and Middle Ages and Modern Times, are referred to as i and ii respectively. The third edition of the latter portion is in two parts, but is paged as one volume. The Jahrbuch fiir Gesetzgebung, Verivaltung und Volkswirthschaft im Deutschen Reich, and the Staats- und socialwissenschaftliche Forsch- ungen, both edited by Professor Gustav Schmoller of Berlin, are referred to as Schmoller's/a^riSwirA and Schmoller's Forschungen. CONTENTS PAGE Introduction • • " Chap. I. The Amalgamation of the Crafts • • • 'o II. Differentiation of Classes within the Craft Gild . 41 III. Industrial Capital v. Commercial Capital . 70 IV. The Elizabethan Company . • • • 103 V. The Stuart Corporations of Small Masters . 126 'VI. Joint-Stock Enterprise and Industrial MoNOPOi-Y 148 ^/VII. Protectionism under James I . . • .172 VIII. The Antecedents of the Trade Union . .196 Appendix A. I. Extracts from the Clothworkers' Court Book, 1537-1639 228 II. Classification of Woolgrowers and Clothiers, 1615 234 III. Charles I and the Pin Monopoly . . .236 IV. The Feltmakers' Joint-Stock Project, circa 1611 . 240 V. ' The Case of the Feltmakers truely stated ' . 242 VI. Extracts from Feltmakers' Ordinances and Court Book, mainly illustrating the Dis- pute OF 1696-9 245 VII. The Statute of Apprentices set aside . .252 Appendix B. List of Manuscript Sources for the History of the Industrial Companies of London during THE Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries . 253 Appendix C. List of Books and Articles Consulted . . 263 Index 271 INTRODUCTION To the eye of the scientific observer, human society, as industrial 1 it lives and moves at the present day, embodies an endless survivals at variety of survivals from almost every age since the dawn j'^j^ P"^^^*^"' ' of history ; and nowhere is the past more closely inter- mingled with the present tlian in the complicated and world-wide ramifications of modern industry. As a con- ' Crete illustration of this truth it will suffice to take the case ( of any English town of average size — ^with a population of, say, between 50,000 and 100,000 — and to enumerate the ■ main industrial channels through which the primary wants of the inhabitants are supplied. In the first place a part— though a much smaller part Home-pro- than formerly — of what is worn by the members of each ductjon a household is produced by the domestic labours of the from\he family circle. Home-knitted stockings, home-made under- village '^' wear, and home-contrived children's garments, though not community common in large cities, are still worn to some extent in ij provincial towns. Most working-class families do some )! home tailoring, and not a few, even in London, repair their ij own boots. With the natural progress of the division of ,. labour, these domestic activities, along with others, such as baking, brewing, and preserving, tend to be replaced by the labours of the workshop and of the factory. The frag- ments that remain may be considered as survivals from the 'li domestic economy of the primitive village community, in if which every household supplied almost all its own wants, and the only professional craftsman was the smith ^. When Dr. Johnson made his famous tour of the Hebrides with his feithful Boswell, he found this simple mode of life still prevailing in some of the western islands of Scotland ; and „the modern traveller who ventures his life amongst the ''Albanians describes them as employing no craftsman but the alien and wandering smith. J^ ' K. Biicher, Die Entstehung der Volkswirthschaft, translated by S. M. Wickett, under the title Industrial Evolution, pp. 15577- The later village community, survivals of vi^hich are still found in India, ijiembraced often a variety of artisans, such as potters, shoemakers, barbers, who were not 'free craftsmen,' working for their own gain, but officials of the community. See H. Maine, Village Community, p. 125 ; B. H. Baden-Powell, Indian Village Community, pp. 16, 23. uNwm B 2 INTRODUCTION The handi- The nearest source from which the labours of the nouse- oHnduT ^°^'^ '" °^^ typical modern town can be supplemented or o in us ry j.gpj^j,gj jg ^^ ^^ found in the small tradesman — the baKer and the butcher, the working- tailor and the cobbler of the immediate neighbourhood. The characteristics of this class are — that its members deal directly with the consumer; that they work with their own hands, though sometimes assisted by an apprentice or a journeyman ; and that they possess a very limited amount of capital. Sometimes indeed they work upon material supphed by their customers. This used to be the case even with the baker, to whose oven the household sent its daily bread and its weekly joint. Now- adays it is no doubt more general for the small tradesman to furnish his own material, but the amount of his circulating capital is often restricted to a week's supply — a side of leather, a few sacks of flour, or a beast for slaughtering — which in some cases may be obtained on credit. It is to work carried on under these conditions — only removed by one degree from the simplicity of household production — that the name of handicraft has been applied i- And just, as home-production is a survival from the period of the village community, so handicraft represents the industrial conditions of the later period when civilization took a step forward from the village to the town. is a survival There had been very little division of labour in the from the village community. Nearly all its members had been me^aeva gjjg^gg^j \^ directly Supplying their own elementary wants, or in assisting- to supply the similar wants of their lord. The town arose as a centre in which the surplus produce of many villages could be profitably disposed of by exchange. Trade thus became a settled occupation, and trade prepared the way for the establishment of the handicrafts, by furnish- ing capital for the support of the craftsmen, and by creating a regular market for their products. In the mediaeval town, therefore, it was possible for a great many bodies of crafts- men—the weavers, the tailors, the shoemakers, the butchers, the bakers, the carpenters, the masons, &c., to find a liveli- hood, each craft devoting itself to the supply of a single branch of those wants which the village household had attempted very imperfecdy to satisfy by its own labours 2. represented In respect of their relations to a wider economic en- by the poor vironment, there is of course the greatest possible difference hold ofTo"- between the position of the mediaeval craftsman and that ^^ 1 Biicher, Industrial Evolution, pp. 168-71, 188; G. SchmoUer Grundrisse der allgemeinen Volkswirtschaftslehre, i. 419 (igoo). ' ^ Cf. Ashley, Economic History, Pt. II, p. 99. INDUSTRIAL TYPES OF THE PAST 3 of his modern representative, the working tailor or shoe- maker of our back streets. The mediaeval craftsman was a pioneer engaged in opening up the virgin soil of industry ; whilst the modern craftsman is a poor gleaner in a field which has been already swept by the machinery of larger systems of production. But in the more immediate conditions of his employment, in the smallness of the capital invested, and the directness of the relation between producer and consumer, the modern craftsmen preserves for us the features of the earliest stage of industrial development. If we wish to assist our imaginations to form a conception of a mediaeval town by a reference to existing facts, we must set aside the trading centre of the modern town, with its large shops, its railway station, post oflSce, and public buildings, and take as our starting-point some poor neighbourhood in the town, inhabited by the working class. Such a neighbourhood has often an individuality and a name ,of its own. It has its parish church, its life- long residents, its centres of gossip, its familiar characters, its customs and traditions not shared by the rest of the town. These things supply the social setting to which the lingering element of handicraft in modern industry properly belongs. But the inhabitant of such a neighbourhood looks beyond The do- its limits, not only for almost all the higher interests of his ™estic or life, but also for the supply of the greater part of his material ^^^^ system needs. If he wants a new suit of clothes, if his wife desires a new dress or new furniture for her parlour, these are generally obtained at the large shops in the centre of the i town. Here we are brought into contact with a more 1 advanced phase of industrial development. The tailor ! with the large shop and an extensive stock of materials, I who supplies the suit of clothes, is not so much a craftsman ( as a trader. His business is to elicit an order. He probably i sets a workman to measure the customer, and when the J materials have been cut out he hands them over to be made i up by one of a number of workmen, whom he keeps em- 1 ployed in their own homes. The advantage of this inter- 1 position of the trader between the producer and the ■ consumer is that the producer obtains a larger market for I his work, and the consumer a wider choice in the satisfaction » of his wants. No very satisfactory name has been found 1 for this method of employment. It has generally been called the domestic system.^ because the work is carried '' on in the home, but this does not sufficiently distinguish it from the handicraft system. Another proposal is to B 2 4 INTRODUCTION call it the commission system. ', which applies well ^".°^^ to cases like that already described, but is not so apphca-ble to other cases where the 'small master,' instead of waitmg for a commission, produces at his own risk articles oi a type in common use, and then endeavours to dispose of them to a dealer. If, for instance, the inhabitant of our typical neighbourhood should decide to invest his savings in furniture rather than clothes, it is not improbable that the sideboard or the wardrobe, which is henceforth to adorn his house, will have been made in the domestic workshop of a Shoreditch cabinetmaker, sold to a dealer in Curtain Road, and sent by him to replenish the stock of the shopkeeper in our provincial town, belongs to The last illustration helps to explain the place of the the period domestic system as a stage in the historical development of national of industry. Tust as the rise of the handicrafts is associated unincation .,,-',-',.. , , .,i 11 with the subordination of the village to the larger economic unity represented by the town, so the appearance of the domestic system was part of a later development by which the town was subordinated to the still larger economic unity of the nation at large ^. The mediaeval town had aimed at being nearly as self-contained as the primitive household. There was, of course, division of labour between the town and the country round about it. The country people brought their foodstuffs, their wool and hides, to the town market, and were supplied in return with the various products of the town handicrafts. In addition to this, as the population of the town increased, there was further division of labour amongst its workers, leading to a multiplication of separate handicrafts. But of that division of labour between distant centres of industry, by virtue of which SheflSeld makes cutlery for Northampton, Northampton makes boots for Burslem, and Burslem makes pottery for Sheffield, there was exceedingly little in mediaeval times. So free an interchange as now takes place implies the existence of many social and political conditions which have been of slow growth. But considered merely as a matter of industrial development, it was first rendered possible by the transition from the handicraft system to the domestic system. From the fifteenth century onwards, bodies of craftsmen in the various industrial centres were enabled, through the agency of the trading ' Bucher, Industrial Evolution, p. 171. The word in the original is Verlagssystem ; cf. SchmoUer, Grundrisse, i. p. 424. "^ Ashley, Economic History, Pt. II, pp. 8, 42, 220 ; Bucher In- dustrial Evolution, pp. 83-149. ' THE DOMESTIC SYSTEM 5 middleman, to find a market for their wares in distant parts of the country. With such a machinery of distribution at his command the producer did not need to remain within reach of the consumer. Secure of a national market industry was free to concentrate in the most favourable localities, and by this process the more important industries lost their local limitations, and acquired a national character, during the period between the Reformation and the Re- volution. We may therefore regard the cases already cited from the tailoring and furniture trades as survivals exemplifying the type of industrial organization which predominated in the days of Shakespeare and Milton. But all the three sources of supply, so far enumerated, The taken together probably fail to account for more than factory half the commodities regularly consumed by our typical ^^g^^^j-n working-class family. Their hats, and boots, and ready- form of made clothing, the sheets and blankets on their beds, the "dnstry beds themselves, and a score of other things were made in factories by wage-earners organized in large numbers imder the immediate direction of capitalist employers, and generally with the assistance of elaborate and expensive machinery^- This is so universally recognized as the normal method of modern industry that the instinctive tendency would probably be to overrate rather than under- rate the proportion of wants which it supplies. The couple of centuries which have elapsed since England gave birth to the factory system have not sufficed, as our survey has shown, for the elimination of the earlier methods of pro- duction. In every manufacturing town, craftsmen, who preserve the industrial type of Chaucer's day, and small masters, whose status resembles that of Shakespeare's Bottom the Weaver, are to be found in considerable numbers side by side with factory workers of the modern type. It is not superiority of numbers but superiority of organization which gives the factory-worker the leadership of the working-classes. The survival of the handicraftsman is rendered a familiar The sweat- fact to most people by the daily contact into which he is ing system brought with the customers whose wants he supplies. But sodai'^'"^ the case of the small master working for a middleman is problem not obtruded upon the public notice. Numbers of this class are hidden away in the unexplored regions of our great cities. They are exempt from the visits of the factory inspector, and most of them belong to no organization. Probably few of those who read the evidence given before ' Biicher, Industrial Evolution, pp. 173-8. INTRODUCTION the Lords' Committee on the sweating system had bee aware how extensive and various were the industries still The domestic system in modern England carried on in domestic workshops, and fewer still are i y to have realized that the evils then brought to light were the lingering traces of what constituted the great mdustrial problem of Tudor and Stuart times, just as the contlict between organized wage-earners and their employers con- stitutes the great industrial problem of to-day. . , The great survey accomplished by Mr. Charles Idooth and his assistants has not only shown that the 'domestic system,' i. e. the employment of workers in their homes or in larger domestic workshops under small masters, is the predominant method of employment in the East^ End of London, but has also supplied us with a vivid picture of the conditions under which the typical industries of this class, the tailoring and shoe-making of Whitechapel, the silk-weaving of Bethnal Green, and the cabinet-making of Shoreditch, are carried on ^ More recently a careful German observer has enumerated a list of English industries in which the domestic system prevails, including the cutlery trade of Sheffield, the pottery and the chain and nail- making of the Black Country, the lace-making and hosiery of Nottingham, the straw-plaiting of Bedford, the glove in- dustry of Worcester and Oxfordshire, the smallware trades of Birmingham and the silk-weaving of Macclesfield ^. In some of these cases — at Nottingham and Sheffield, for in- stance — an arrangement is found which is half-way between the domestic workshop and the factory. The small master continues to undertake the work upon his own account, but he hires from a larger capitalist, not only the room in which his occupation is carried on, but also the power necessary to keep his wheel or his loom in motion. And if in England, the birthplace of the factory system, continental the amouut of industry carried on under the older form of countries organization is still so considerable, the proportion is even greater throughout the rest of Europe. In the cotton and woollen manufactures, in which England remains unrivalled, the factory system has long been completely triumphant ; whilst the handloom of the small master still lingers in many parts of France and Germany, and is much commoner in Eastern Europe '^. Most of the domestic industries' spoken ^ C. Booth, Lz/e and Labour of the People of London, vols, i, ii. ^ W. Hasbach, Zur Characteristik der englischen Industrie vci Jahrbuch fur Gesetzgebung (ed. Schmoller), 1902, pp. 1032-52. ^ E. Helm, British Cotton Industry in ' British Industries,' edited by Professor Ashley, p. 88. and in THE TRANSFORMATION OF THE GILD 7 of as existing in England are to be found in the other countries of Europe, and most countries have industries of this kind peculiar to themselves. Such are, for example, the production of articles of fashion in Paris, of toys in the Black Forest, of watches in Switzerland, and of samovars in the Russian villages. The Russian village industries carried on in this way are most varied and extensive. Some twenty years ago it was estimated that the population so employed numbered seven and a half millions^. It must be remembered that in the brief history of Russian civiliza- tion that development of town life, which did so much to forward the social and political and economic progress of Western Europe, has no place. The production carried on by the village community for the satisfaction of its own wants has been directly converted, without passing through the handicraft stage, into a number of domestic industries, which are provided with a distant market by the enterprise and capital of the merchants in the trading centres ^. The scope of this book is confined to England as repre- It is here sentative of West European civilization. Its purpose is to considered r ^1 • J- 1 J i- • • as a modi- give some account of the rise of the domestic or commission fication of system, not as springing out of the home-production of the handicraft village community, but as displacing the handicraft system of the town. The Craft Gild was the institution in which the handicraft system found its social embodiment. The transformation of the gild with which we are concerned is the process by which a social institution called into exist- ence by one set of economic conditions, was gradually adapted and remodelled from within and from without to meet the requirements of another and more complex set of economic conditions arising out of the progress of civilization. The new type of organization which was the result of this transformation has left behind no name by which it can be clearly distinguished ^. In England it was generally called a company, and the London Livery Com- panies, as they existed in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, have supplied this book with most of its examples. But the term company does not distinguish the industrial organizations, with which this book is specially concerned, from the purely commercial companies of the same period ' Conrad, Handworterbuch der Staatswissenschaften, article Haus- industrie, ^ Biicher, Industrial Evolution, p. 171. ' SchmoUer's article Recht und Verbdnde der Hausindustrie in his Jahrbuch, vol. xv, gives the best account of similar French and German organizations. 8 INTRODUCTION engaged in home or foreign trade, or from the joint-stock companies of the present day. The COD- In the absence of a distinctive name it is important to nexionbe- make our conception of the thing signified as clear as anrxrade possible ; and perhaps the best way to do this is to set out Union is from the two kindred conceptions that have acquired dis- leal. tinctive names— the Handicraft Gild and the Trade Union. The uncritical attempts that have sometimes been made to bring these two widely different forms of industrial associa- tion into some sort of historic connexion have had a sound instinct behind them. However erratic they may have been in result i, they have been animated by a dim recognition of the truth that a social institution needs to be explained by a reference to antecedents of its own kind. Economic conditions will not of themselves produce a trade union, nor religious convictions a church. Nor is it sufficient to say that those conditions or convictions taken together with the social nature of man are the causes of these institutions. Man is no doubt everywhere a social animal, but there is nothing in which the races of mankind and the separate branches of those races differ so much as in their aptitude for free association, and in the forms which that aptitude takes. It is a divergence not so much of religious con- victions as of social characteristics, which makes the Christian Church such a different institution in Germany and in England, in Scotland and in South Africa. And social character of this kind must not be thought of as innate and as springing up spontaneously in each fresh generation. To a large extent it is transmitted through conscious imitation of the older generation by the younger, of the class which has already achieved organization by that which has not. There is no harm in calling this the in- fluence of environment, as long as it is realized that mere environment cannot produce social progress without the co-operation of willing and congenial subjects. The maxim omne vivum ex vivo, 'no life without antecedent life,' which has recently been transferred from the sphere of biology to that of the higher life of the soul, is a truth that certainly holds good in the intermediate domain of that science which deals with the growth of the social mind. And if we cannot always detect the kindling process of living contact, it is our business as students of social science to arrange the kindred forms of social life as nearly as possible in the order of their natural succession. ' Cf. S. and B. Webb, History of Trade Unionism, p. ii. DESCENT OF THE TRADE UNION 9 In this sense then the Gild is to be regarded — not indeed bnt must as the parent but — as the ancestor of the Trade Union, as it 'f traced was also the ancestor of the modern Employers' Association, temediate' and of many other existing forms of social organization, links To attempt to find an immediate connexion between the Gild and the Trade Union is like attempting to derive the English House of Commons from the Saxon Witanagemot. In the one case as in the other the two institutions were separated by centuries of development, and the earlier one , was dead before the later one was born. In both cases / a connexion undoubtedly exists which is real, significant / and vital, but it needs to be traced through intermediate links. To supply the links in the first of these cases, and thus to bridge over — however tentatively — the chasm that separates mediaeval from modern industrial history, is the chief purpose of this book. The Gild belongs to the earliest and simplest, the Trade The differ- Union to the latest and most complex, phase of industrial ^{"^"f j°" °^ society. In what direction then, we may now ask, are we division of to look for the significance of this change from simplicity to labour complexity ? It is to be found mainly in the constantly widening application of the principle which Adam Smith was content to describe as the Division of Labour ^. Sub- sequent investigators have discovered so many aspects and varieties of this principle in its application, not only to economic but to physical and biological phenomena, that a whole vocabulary has been found necessary to express them. But the older and simpler term will serve our pur- pose here. Three different stages in the progress of division of labour have already been noticed. There was division of labour first between the town and the country round about it, then between different towns or other industrial centres belonging to one nation, and finally between the various nations of the world. In the first of these stages there is a town market or town economy, in the second a national market or national economy, and in the third a world market or world economy. And corresponding to the advance of division of labour between whole communities, there is similar advance of the same principle within the communities between the classes that compose them, leading to the adoption of a different industrial system at each stage. Thus the handicraft or gild system is asso- ciated with the ^owM economy, the domestic or commission 1 For an admirable discussion of the variety of meanings which have been covered by this phrase, the reader is referred to Biicher, Industrial Evolution, pp. 282-314. lO INTRODUCTION The numerous functions combined by the gild craftsman Very gradually separated system with the national economy, and the factory system with the world economy. The general truth that underlies this development is expressed by Adam Smith in the 5''' f ^ his third chapter—' that the Division of Labour is limited by the extent of the market.' Robinson Crusoe had no market and therefore no division of labour. In the early village com- munity there was not much division of labour beyond that which was effected between the members of each household. In the mediaeval town it might seem at first sight as if the principle had been carried out to quite a considerable extent/ especially when the handicrafts come to be as many as fifty. But when we compare this number with the ten thousand occupations which, according to the census of 1895, are now' carried on within the German Empire \ we see that, in the mediaeval town, division of labour was still in its infancy. Let us look a litde more closely at this process of class- formation which has been so astonishingly prohfic in its results. On the small stage of the town economy the mediaeval magten craftsm^an contrived to combine quite a number of parts, each of which demands, nowadays, the concentrated attention of several classes of specialists. In the first place he was a Workman, taking part with his own hands in the more important operations of his craft. Secondly, he was a Foreman, superintending the labours of his journeyman and his apprentice. Thirdly, he was the Employer, who undertook the responsibilities of pro- duction and supplied the capital for materials, food, and wages. Fourthly, he was a Merchant, in respect of the raw material of his trade. There were no wholesale firms upon whose constant supply and regular prices he could rely, as the modern manufacturer relies upon the leather- merchant or the timber-merchant. The hides or the timber had to be bargained for with the producer in the local market, and sometimes they had to be sought for through the neigh- bouring country districts. The master craftsman had there- fore to devote some of his time and capital to the performance of the merchant's function, and he had to undertake some of the merchant's risks. And finally, his success in all the other parts was to no purpose if he could not, as a Shopkeeper, get his goods into the hands of the consumer 2. It was possible to combine all these parts in a single ' Biicher, p. 324 n. ^ Since writing the above I have found a similar analysis of the craftsman's functions in Der moderne Kapitalismus by W. Sombart (1902), i. p. 35. The same work contains an elaborate discussion of the subsequent distribution of those functions, see i. pp. 25-72. INDUSTRIAL CLASS FORMATION ii person because each of them, except that of the workman, was still, owing to the very limited sphere of its operations, in a very rudimentary stage of development. As soon as the sphere began to widen, the necessity of a division of labour among separate classes makes itself increasingly felt. But the process was slow and gradual, and displayed an undulating kind of movement. The first allotment of parts amongst the newly formed classes was by no means final. As the development of industry and commerce proceeded there was frequent redistribution. The first separation arose from the fact that as the The first master craftsman found more scope for his activity as sepaiatioa a foreman, an employer, a merchant, and a shopkeeper, he journey- left the manual labour entirely to his journeymen and man apprentices. Since the extension of these other functions involved the possession of more capital and more ability than are at the command of the average journeyman, only a favoured few could hope to become masters, and the rest came to form a separate body of workmen. As the interest of these journeymen was no longer represented by the master's gild, they sought to form an organization of their own, which in England was known as the Yeomanry. The development so far may be graphically represented thus : — Craftsman = Workman + Foreman + Employer + Merchant + Shopkeeper (Early Gild) Trading Master = Journeyman = fF F + E + M + S (Yeomanry Organization) (Later Gild) But this early separation of the workman's function was Rise of the not permanent. As the volume of his trade increased, the small further development of the master's activity as employer, '^^^^^ merchant, and shopkeeper, left him no time to act as foreman to his workmen ; and since the journeyman was now a married man and a householder, it was possible to save much of the labour of superintendence by giving him piecework to do in his own home. In this way the journeyman was raised to the dignity of a small master and in addition to the part of workman he now undertook the part of foreman to journeymen and apprentices of his own, who expected in due course to be small masters them- selves, and did not therefore form a separate class. The redistribution of fxmctions may be represented thus : — Merchant Employer = M + S + E Small Master = F + W 12 INTRODUCTION Beginnings The next stage of development was somewhat more of indus- complicated. In the first place some of the small masters Si'sm^^'" acquired capital enough to supply themselves with material . As long as this was only sufficient for a hand-to-mouth kind of existence they continued to be economically depen- dent on the trader who found them a market, but as their capital increased and they grew from srnall masters to large masters, they were able to deal with him on a more equal footing. The new capital thus built up was not employed primarily in trading, but in bringing together a greater number of workmen, belonging sometimes to different branches of a manufacture, and thus organizing industry upon a larger scale. In this way the function of the employer was passing out of the hands of the trading capitalist into those of the industrial capitalist. If the large master had covered the whole field of industry, the journey- man would now have been in the position of the modern wage-earner, restricted to the function of workman. But the class of smaU masters, whether employed by the large master or the trader, was still very numerous, and afforded a fairly easy alternative to the discontented or ambitious journeyman. When it is added that besides the trader, who had ceased to be an employer, there was also growing up a class of merchants who confined themselves to the larger operations of commerce, it will be seen that the range of classes at this point may be expressed roughly as follows : — Large Large and Merchant Large Small Merchant Small Shopkeepers Employer Master Master Journeyman M M-t-S M-l-E E + F F-l-W W Emergence The process of class formation so far described covered of the or- a period of at least four centuries, i.e. from the end of the w^a'^'e- thirteenth to the end of the seventeenth century. It is un- earner necessary for the present purpose to foUow the develop- ment further in detail. To indicate its broad results will be sufficient. The great inventions of the eighteenth century accelerated the movement already in progress towards the capitalization of industry, the final outcome of which was the modern factory system. In most of the leading in- dustries the small master was driven to enter the wage- earning class, whilst the large master was transformed into the modern capitalist employer, who leaves the internal and technical affairs of his business largely to the management of subordinates in order that he may devote himself more fully to its relations with the outer business world. Now- 1 In some cases this stage was reached earlier by a relative decline in the economic position of a portion of the master craftsmen. THE WAGE-EARNER'S PEDIGREE 13 adays the functions of employer, foreman, and worlcman belong to entirely separate classes ; and indeed, to say merely this is very far from expressing the degree of specialization that has taken place in the internal economy of the great industrial concern 1. In the accompanying diagram an attempt has been made, An in- not only to trace on the lines already suggested the pedigree '^"^•:"^' Craftsman (Early Gild) Trading Gild Master (Later Gild) Permanent Journeyman (Yeomanry Organisation) Fifteenth Century Livery Company with Yeomanry attached Shipping Merchant Merchant Employer (Livery) V Temporary Journeyman Elizabethan Company with Yeomanry Wholesale Trader Small Journeyman Master Shipping Merchant Wholesale Trader Capitalist Manufacturer Foreman (Employers Association) Board of Conciliation V Steel Trust Modern Wage Earner (Trade Union) of the modern industrial classes, but also to indicate the successive forms of association in which, at different periods, one or more of the classes then existing were united. But whilst we may rightly insist on the desirability of Beginnings ' Cf. S. and B. Webb, Industrial Democracy, vol. ii, pp. 654 et seq. 14 INTRODUCTION stock in- connecting the Trade Union with its sociological ante- ''"'"^ cedents, it must be freely admitted that the story of the transformation of the gild is even more concerned with the organization of capital than it is with the organization of labour. Here too we shall have to supply the links between the extreme simplicity of mediaeval business con- ditions and the extreme complexity of the present day. Perhaps the most impressive characteristic of modern in- dustry on its purely economic side is the enormous extent to which it is based on the use of collective capital. The joint-stock system in its present legal form is little more than a generation old, but its experimental beginnings are to be traced to the period with which we are concerned, and were indeed one of the numerous by-products of the transformation of the gild. And of a Finally, there is one other aspect of social experiment national ^j,(j transition which will have to be considered. It has industrial , . , 111 • r • t policy been pointed out that the domestic system of industry is merely one of the aspects of the achievement of economic unity by the nation. The attempt of the early Stuarts to restrict the newly-born national energies within a regulative and protective framework constructed on the mercantilist principles which were then in the ascendant, and the rejec- tion of the essential features of this pohcy by Parliament on behalf of the nation — these events have as central a signi- ficance lor the industrial England of that period as the passing of the Factory Acts and the adoption of Free Trade have for the industrial England of the nineteenth century. CHAPTER I THE AMALGAMATION OF THE CRAFTS I Edmund Burke in a passage of famous eloquence English celebrates the wonderful power of self- adaptation which '^1^*''^^ '° has given our political system so many centuries ofco^dtu- unbroken continuity. Our conservatism, he declares, is tionai due to a reverent imitation of the order of nature ; di^^s« 'wherein, by the disposition of a stupendous wisdom, moulding together the great mysterious incorporation of the human race, the whole at one time is never old, or middle-aged, or young, but in a condition of unchangeable constancy moves on through the varied tenor of perpetual decay, fall, renovation and progression.' However admirable for practical purposes may be the stability ensured by this method, there can be no doubt that it puts a serious difficulty in the way of the historical study of English institutions — to all of which, whether great or small, local or national, the dictum may be applied. A love of com- promise which prevents the latent issue from taking visible shape, a disposition to ignore transition and to disguise change — these are political virtues of the first order ; but they are apt to obscure the significance of history by concealing the working of those ideal forces by reference to which alone a progressive development becomes in- telligible. It is this peculiarity of national character, together with obscures the influence of a poHtical environment in the creation of faiVof^t^g*^ which that character has been a living factor, that makes < giia it difficult to mark the historical limits for England of system' that set of tendencies which is generally known as the gild or handicraft system. On the continent the rule of the crafts (Ziinfte) frequently corresponds to a definite period in the constitutional history of the towns, and the relation of this phase of economic development to the antecedent and subsequent phases is more or less sharply defined in terms of political conflict and revolution. In England the processes by which this body of tendencies rose to predominance and then gave way gradually to 1 6 THE AMALGAMATION OF THE CRAFTS other influences were comparatively gentle and noiseless. But the victory of one type of economic organization over another was none the less effectual because it was achievea in silence 1. To use a geological metaphor, we may say that the successive layers of economic strata are the same in both cases, but that in one case the forces of political upheaval have produced a ' fault ' which brings them more clearly to our observation. The interest of the social history of the town in Western Europe lies chiefly in the gradual differentiation of the classes within it. The accession to political power of one class after another was the mainspring of constitutional change ; and from a purely economic point of view this may be regarded as the replacement of one type of capitalist — one form of vested interest — by another. The aspirations of the unpropertied classes, though they may have added considerable weight at the moment of re- volution to one of the competing claims of vested interest, were incapable as a rule of supplying by themselves a direction to the course of development. There have been, it is true, abundant examples, in nearly all periods of industrial history, of conflict between capital and labour, but these represent as a rule the merely temporary disturbances of economic equilibrium. The more persistent and effectual, though often silent struggle, by virtue of which economic progress has been maintained, has been the rivalry of one species of capitalist with another. Of such a rivalry the earliest instance is the conflict between the Gild Merchant and the rising power of the handicraft organizations ". It is a commonplace of economic history that the organization of trade usually precedes that of industry^. It is true that the existence of trade pre- supposes the exercise of industry ; but the earliest objects of trade were the products of the agricultural or pastoral community, or were brought from distant centres of an earlier civilization. Thus as population increased and the industry of a town developed, it found itself in the presence of an already established trading interest*, the organization of which was so closely connected with the earliest form of ■" L. Brentano, introduction to ' English Gilds ' in Early English Text Society, p. cxii ; Gross, Gild Merchant, i. 1 14-17. ^ L. Brentano, p. cxxxvii. A recent summary of the views of the lead- ing English, French, and German scholars on the subject is to be found in Professor Ashley's Surveys Historic and Economic, pp. 167-212. ' Ashley, Economic History, Pt. I, p. 77. * Cunningham, Growth of English Industry and Commerce, Early and Middle Ages, "p. 21'). MERCHANT GILDS AND CRAFT GILDS 17 municipal constitution as to have made it possible to argue that constitution and the Gild Merchant were one and the same thing ^ But although the exclusive privilege of on the buying and selling thus acquired by the original burgesses continent was in most cases the same in principle, the consequences that grew out of it differed very widely under divergent economic conditions. In the early centres of a flourishing foreign trade, as in many cities of Italy and Flanders, of Northern France and Germany, the monopoly supplied the basis for the growth of a class of wealthy merchants^. The development of local industry opened a new and valuable source of profit to this privileged class, and it naturally opposed with all its might the claim of the craftsman to trade on his own account. In England, on the other hand, and in during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, the members England of the Gild Merchant were engaged for the most part in a purely local trade, and some of the strongest motives which elsewhere sharpened the class conflict between trader and craftsman were comparatively inoperative ^. The extension of foreign trade, however, which in England accompanied instead of preceding the development of the i handicraft organizations, gave a new life to the surviving ' forms of the older trading monopoly, and there is abundant ! evidence from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries that it 1 did not abandon its prerogatives without a struggle*. ! Indeed they were in some cases preserved in a modified j form until the eighteenth century. ; The general tendency, however, both in England and on corre- t the continent, was for the single organization, with a mono- ^P°'V!' '° r, poly of trade in general, to be replaced, whether by violent placement s means or in a peaceable, gradual manner, by a number of of trading 5 separate orsfanizations representing- the several trades and p^pital by j handicrafts *. The significance of this change lies, as already capital B suggested, in the advance in relative social importance of J industrial or technical capital as compared with trading li capital. If the element of labour assisted to procure the B ., ^ J. Thompson, An essay on municipal history ; controverted by Gross, Gild Merchant, i. p. 61, ' ^ A. Doren, Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der Kaufmannsgilden des Mittelalters (SchmoUer's Forschungen, 1893). * ' That conflicts between the trading interest and the craftsmen were , not unknown at this time in England is shown by the examples to be ; cited later, p. 27. '■ * Mrs. Green, Town Life, ii. p. 202 ; cf. below, ch. iii ; Gross, Gild Merchant, i. pp. 127-34. ^ Brentano, p. ex; Gross, Gild Merchant, i. pp. 116-26; Cunning- ' ham, Growth, &c., i. p. 343. UNWIN C 1 8 THE AMALGAMATION OF THE CRAFTS political triumph of the crafts, it was the element of <=^P^^^ that gave permanence to the victory and that securea me greater part of its fruits. Of the truth of this, the cases ot Illustra. Ghent and Florence may serve as illustrations - _ Jiacti ol t.onsfrom ^^^^^ ^^^ ^^t j^jties had become, by the begmning of dustry°'f the fourteenth century, a busy industrial centre ; and the Florence growing wealth of both was mainly denved from the du°stry°'f the fourteenth century, a busy industrial centre Florence growing wealth of both was mainly denved _ ^"<^ °f manufacture, out of foreign materials, of textile fabrics which Ghent '_ , o _ i i___t-^i „i — ._ found a market throughout Europe and doubtless also in Asia. In Florence it was the textile trades that headed the list of the gilds which furnished a new framework of government at the end of the thirteenth century ; and it was the weavers and fullers who thronged the streets of Ghent, who supplied the force by means of which the Van Arteveldes remoulded the constitutions of the Flemish towns, and struck out an independent commercial policy in defiance of their feudal suzerain. But the triumph of the industrial forces soon revealed, in each of these cases, a serious divergence of interest within their ranks. Through- out the fourteenth century the discontented master craftsmen and wage-earners of Florence kept up a struggle against the domination of the large employers, who along with the merchants monopolized the control of the gilds ; and whose rule they succeeded in replacing for a few months by a more democratic organization in the revolution of 1378^. So too in Ghent, a few years after the recasting of the constitution in the interests of the cloth industry, the weavers and the fullers came to blows in the streets, because the latter wished to have the rate paid them by the piece for their labour increased, which the weavers, their employers, were unwilling to grant ^. And speaking generally, it may be said that upon the attainment of a large share of political influence by the Craft Gilds in the ,' fourteenth century, there followed, as a natural consequence, ' the separate organizations during the fifteenth century of the wage-earners who were excluded from association with their employers, the industrial capitalists. The cause of the craftsman, like most other causes, bore within itself in the hour of victory the seeds of its own decay *. ' Cf. also the case of Aix-la-Chapelle, A. Thun, Dze Industrie am Niederrhein, pp. 12-15 (Schmoller's Forschungen, 1879), and a number of others cited by W. Sombart, Der moderne Kapitalismus, p. 100. ^ A. Doren, Entwickelung und Organisation der Florentiner Ziinftt im 13. u. i^.Jahrhundert (Schmoller's Forschungen, 1897), pp. 59-83. Cf. H. Sidgwick, The Development of European Polity, p. 301. ' W. J. Ashley, y^wi^j and Philip van Artevelde, p. 613. * Brentano, pp. cxxxvii-cliii. / RISE OF INDUSTRIAL CAPITALISM 19 From the fourteenth to the sixteenth century the history Transfor- of industrial organization in Western Europe is mainly mat'on of concerned with the process by which the economic in- org^ka- dependence of the mediaeval craftsmen gave way before tion along the widening of the market, the increasing employment ^^^^ ''"«*' of capital, and the development of a business faculty which was the necessary correlative of these new conditions. There are three lines at least along which we can trace the adaptation of the older forms of association to the larger needs of the time. In the first place the growing power (i) amal- of capital might be revealed in the rise of one of a group gamation of closely allied crafts to a position of predominance over °4ft'° "^ the rest. In other cases the trading function came to be exercised by a select body within a single craft organization, (3)differen- and the members who remained craftsmen fell into atiation condition of dependence. And lastly, the organizations "J^^^^^^j^ which had arisen to represent the purely trading class , . , absorbed in many cases the organizations of the handicrafts tion of over which they had acquired an economic control. It crafts by will be the purpose of this and the two succeeding- chapters ''■a'^'^s: to give some account of these three lines of development, tions In the first case we shall find ourselves mainly occupied with the fourteenth, in the second case with the fifteenth, and in the third case with the sixteenth century. II One of the best examples of a group of crafts so bound Drawing together as to favour the growth of economic dependence ''^^*^'^ in their relation to one another, is to be found in the leather industries concerned in the preparation and manipulation crafts of leather. An incident in the municipal regulation of the leather trades of London in 1378 presents this condition of things in its earliest stage. The officers of the cordwainers brought before the Mayor and Aldermen forty-seven tanned hides which had been exposed for sale by a certain tanner, and which they declared to be ' raw, false, and forfeitable.' The tanner claimed the right as a freeman of London to buy and sell all merchandise as he might please. He had bought the hides at the town of Rothewell to sell, not to the cordwainers, for whom they were not suitable, but to the other leather trades, and he requested to have his case tried by a jury of saddlers, pouchmakers, girdlers, bottlemakers, tanners, curriers, and cordwainers ^. A jury ^ Riley, Memorials of London, p. 420. C 2 20 THE AMALGAMATION OF THE CRAFTS representing these various crafts of the workers in leather was accordingly appointed by the Mayor, and its decision was that the hides in their then state were of no service to any trade and should be forfeited. _ Its signi- The interest of this case lies in two points. On the one fnduswiT ^^"^' '^ s^°ws "^ ^^e '^'^^fts still preserving in their relations develop- with each other a large degree of independence and equahty; ment whilst On the other hand it reveals the beginnings of the change which undermined the gild or handicraft system.by ^ separating the trading function and the handicraft function from each other. The aim implied in the regulations of a typical craft was that each craftsman should have a like share in the trading function ; and to secure this he must buy his material from the producer and sell the product to the consumer ; but where there were a number of crafts representing a series of stages in production, this condition of autonomy was not hkely to be long maintained. Along with the division of employments which had given rise to the separate crafts, there had proceeded a gradual widening of the area from which the raw materials were collected, and a similar widening of the area over which the finished products were distributed. Just as we find the London tanner importing hides from the Northern counties, so we find the traders of Bremen and of Lubeck exporting cargoes of shoes ^ ; and in this way the craftsman at each end of the chain of production might naturally become a merchant. Moreover the enterprising master in each of the crafts would wish to secure, if occupied in the finishing processes, a supply of material, if engaged in the earlier stages of production, a market for his wares, and thus in either case he tended to become an employer of members of the other crafts. That this tendency was a general one is shown by an Act which had been passed in 1363, ordaining 'that handicraft people hold them every one to one mystery ^ ' ; and an Act of 1389, the first of a series of similar pro- visions, forbidding tanners to be shoemakers, or shoemakers to be tanners \ proves that the tendency was by that time specially felt in the leather trades. Parallel Fuller evidence of the working of the same economic Paris°^ forces is afforded in the early history of the leather industries leather °^ ^^"3. In the fourteenth century the Czh^ Metiers, as crafts they were called, of the tanners, baudroyeurs, curriers, * Hegel, Stadte unci Gilden, i. p. 407. M. Stieda, Die Entstehung der Haustndustrie, in Schriften des Vereinsfiir Social-Politik, Bd. xxxix. p. 116. " , » 37 Edward III, c. 5. » 13 Richard II, sect. i. c. 12. CRAFTS WORKING IN LEATHER 21 cordwainers and sewers, were still united in an external way by subjection to the common control of an hereditary oflSce, created by royal grant two centuries before. The reality of this control was passing away, and the crafts had each their separate officers and organizations^; but in 1345 they were still dealt with in a single set of ordinances ; and throughout these ordinances there are abundant signs of the progress of the development already characterized. After provision has been made that all leather tanned in Paris and three neighbouring towns shall be duly inspected and marked, an ordinance follows dealing with the import of leather from a distance. A number of Parisian merchants, it appears, such as baudroyeurs, cordwainers, sewers and others, were in the habit of buying tanned leather outside the city at various fairs and markets, not only within the kingdom but also without it, and since such leather might be false and badly tanned, it was to be inspected and sealed by the officers of the tanners before it was sold or put to use ^- Many of those engaged in the finishing processes had thus by an extension of their trading operations ren- dered themselves independent of the supply of the local tanner. The next step towards the disintegration of the handicraft Separation system, the employment of members of other crafts on the °V^^' ^ material thus provided, had also been taken in Paris. In craftsmen the list of crafts within which a merchant class had arisen it will be noticed that the curriers are omitted ; and it was the masters engaged in this intermediate process who most naturally fell into a state of dependence on the capital acquired by men of other crafts. A number of ordinances are devoted to the relations between the curriers and the ' merchants or cordwa pets.' who employed them. The ^ latter were to supply not merely the leather, but also a sufficient quantity of grease and other materials used in the currying process ^. If the currier discovered any defect in the leather, he was to return it to the merchant uncurried* ; and a time was fixed varying from ten days to three weeks within which he was to deliver the work given out to him ^ As far as the curriers of Paris were concerned the auto- leads to nomy of the handicraft system, if it had ever in their case ^J^]^^*" been realized, had broken down. Such a breakdown might ^aft have one or two results. On the one hand the craftsman system ' Lespinasse, Les metiers et corporations de la ville de Paris, iii. P'-3°3. . "^ Ibid., p. 310, Art. 15. ' Ibid., p. 313, Art. 30. * Ibid., p. 312, Art. 27. "■ Ibid., p. 313, Art. 32. 22 THE AMALGAMATION OF THE CRAFTS might continue, as the currier did, to work in his own home, using in part his own capital, although dependent for con- stant employment on the larger capital of others. Un tne other hand he might become a mere wage-earner m tne workshop of a capitalist master, who combmed several cratts under one direction. The domestic system was_ the result of the adoption of the first of these alternatives. Ihe second contained the germs of the factory system. Both forms of change were resisted by the craftsmen whose m- dependence was threatened; but whilst the opposition _ to the second was backed by a strong public opinion embodied in persistent legislation \ the first proved, in the case of the more important industries, to be an inevitable necessity of progress. This was probably due to the fact that it offered a practicable compromise with the still powerful handicraft traditions, and that whilst providing sufiicient scope for the development of industry by larger appUcations of capital, it caused the least possible direct disturbance to existing organizations, and left the employed craftsman, to begin with, on a footing of something like constitutional equality with his employer. The A situation of this kind is clearly set forth in an account ^^1°" °^ ^ dispute which occurred in 1327 between the saddlers dominate on the One side, and the joiners, painters, and lorimers on three the Other, and which led to an armed conflict and the' auxiliary shedding of blood 'in Chepe and in the street of Criplegate.' The three last named trades were employed in different branches of saddlemaking, and they charged the saddlers with having 'ordained and established and thereunto among themselves made an oath that no one of the trades aforesaid shall be so daring as to sell any manner of merchandise that unto their own trade pertains either to freemen of the City or to other persons but only to themselves.' They also complained that when they went to ask for payment ' The English statutes relating to the leather industries afford the most striking illustration of this. The Act of 1389, forbidding tanners to be shoemakers or shoemakers tanners, was renewed in 1397 (31 Richard II, c. xvi), suspended in 1402 (4 Henry IV, c. xxxv), and again revived in 1423 (2 Henry VI, c. vii). In 1485 (l Henry VII, c. v) tanners were forbidden to curry or curriers to tan; and in 1 503-4 (19 Henry VII, c. xix) curriers and cordwainers were prohibited from interfering with each other's trade. Under Elizabeth and James I the limits of each trade were marked more precisely and its technical operations minutely regulated. But these laws were found so irksome that Elizabeth empowered a favourite by letters patent to grant exemptions ; and in i6i6 the London Cordwainers and Curriers after much litigation had come to a mutual tacit agreement to ignore them. THE SADDLERY CRAFTS 23 for work already delivered, they were abused and maltreated by the saddlers. The saddlers on their side charged the three auxiliary trades and the gilders with having made a compact to strike work in common, by closing their stalls in case any member of one of the trades had a dispute with the saddlers ; and also with insisting that such disputes should be referred to two of each trade. They further declare that the lorimers 'have made an ordinance among themselves, out of their own heads, that if any strange workman of the same trade shall come to the city he shall not be received on any terms until he shall have made oath to conceal their misdeeds ' ; and ' that the painters and joiners do set every point of their trade at a fixed price . . . by reason whereof they are making themselves kings of the land.' If we put these two accounts together we find our- selves in the presence of two opposing forces. There is the purely economic tendency, on the one hand, of the three or four auxiliary trades to become dependent on the saddlers, who had absorbed the trading function of the whole group ; and on the other hand, there is the force of resistance which lies in the handicraft tradition of equality. The joiners, painters, and lorimers remind the Mayor and Aldermen ' that they have always been free of the City, in bearing their charge of tollages and other contributions as equals and commoners according to their powers.' What the saddlers describe as an ordinance made out of their own heads they claim as a right belonging to every craft, that no strange workman of their trade ought to work among them, if he be not admitted and sworn ' among them and have not done that in the presence of the Mayor and Aldermen which unto the franchise of the City pertains ^' The manner in which the dispute was finally settled by reference to a body of six saddlers and eight craftsmen representing the four auxiliary trades, shows that the latter, if united, were capable of holding their own ^. The neces- sity for unity seems to have been recognized as the moral to be drawn from the dispute. Immediately after the account of the settlement there follows a petition of the four crafts of the joiners, painters, and the lorimers in copper and in iron, that all new comers of their trades might be admitted in the presence of the Mayor -by_eightjnen chosen to represent all the crafts*. It does not appear whether or not this petition was granted ; but such amal- gamations became subsequently, as we shall see, a common ' Riley, Memorials, p. 157. ^ Ibid., p. 159. ' Ibid., p. 160. * Ibid., p. 162. Similar position achieved by Paris saddlers The cut- lery crafts controlled in London by the handle- makers 24 THE AMALGAMATION OF THE CRAFTS feature of industrial organization. Although their original purpose was often, as in this case, the protection ot the handicraft system, they are one of the chief symptoms ot its decay, and they passed almost always in course of time into the hands of that trading interest the encroachments of which they were founded to resist. In the case of the London saddlers we see the power of a trading craft over a group, held in check by the main- tenance of a handicraft organization. The history of the Paris saddlers carries us a step further, and shows us the forms of organization in process of modification under the pressure of the same economic forces. There was the same division of employments in Paris as in London amongst the crafts employed in furnishing gear for horses ^ but the saddlers were not alone in developing the trading function. The lorimers, who possessed ordinances in 1320 forbidding members of their craft to go to work with or sell their wares to any but master lorimers ^, were their rivals in this respect till 1370, when the two crafts were amalgamated', apparently upon an equal footing. But this amalgamation had nothing in common with the one proposed by the four London crafts. It aimed at a consolidation, not of the handicraft, but of the trading interest. By uniting in one body the masters in each craft acquired the right to combine both branches under one direction ; the amount of the entrance fees was doubled, and the masters claimed the exclusive right of buying to sell again. But the best evidence that the new organization was essentially a body of traders and employers, is to be found in the way in which it subsequently extended its control over other crafts. It acquired powers of search in 1379 over the trunkmakers ^, and in 1405 over the harnessmakers ^, without these crafts gaining any reciprocal rights. The amalgamation was dissolved in 1482", but was soon after re-established; and in 1678 it possessed exclusive rights over all branches of carriage-making ''. Another trade in regard to which London and Paris supply interesting parallels is that of the cutler. A depu- tation of London cutlers to the Mayor and Aldermen in 1408 explained that the making of knives was divided ' Lespinasse, Les metiers et corporations de Paris, iii. p. 437, \ Ibid., p. 447, Arts. 16, 18, 19. ' Ibid., pp. 450-1', Arts, i, 10, 14. * Ibid., p. 451, Arts. I, 2. » t, • , Ibid., p. 456. Ibid., pp. 453-4, Arts. 2, 3. ^ Ibid., p. 462. Cf. Sombart, Der moderne Kapitalismus, i. p. m for evidences of a similar expansion in German saddlery at an early date. THE CUTLERY CRAFTS 25 between three different crafts, the bladesmiths who made the blade, the cutlers who fitted the handle, and the sheathers who supphed the sheath ; but that it was the cutler who sold the completed article and upon whom the blame and scandal of bad workmanship felL The making of sheaths, which it seems was combined by some of the cutlers with their own craft, was, it was complained, inadequately in- spected ; and the cutlers obtained authority on the strength of their twofold interest as traders and employers, to institute a scrutiny, along with two master sheathers, of all sheaths made in England or sold in London ^ A few months later in the same year, the bladesmiths complained to the Mayor that country makers were in the habit of selling blades with trademarks resembling their own to the cutlers; and an arrangement was made under which the cutlers agreed not to take such wares, and the bladesmiths were bound not to increase the price of blades except by advice of the two masters of each craft jointly ^. By virtue of these two ordinances the cutlers' organizations acquired an authority over the other crafts in the group, correspond- ing to the economic control secured by the absorption of the trading function. Seven years later, in 1415, it was raised by the grant of a royal charter to the rank of an incorporated company ^. In Paris, as in London, the cutlery trade was already in in Paris by the fourteenth century supplied with blades of country ti^e bude- manufacture. The capital required for this enterprise had been in part supplied by the mercers, who gave out blades to the handle-makers to be finished. But in 1367, the trading interest which had grown up within the industry itself obtained authority over it. The two handicrafts con- cerned — the cutlers (who in this case were the bladesmiths) and the handle-makers, who had been competing for the control of the trade, received joint rights of search ; and as in the case of the London cutlers, a representative of the goldsmiths was authorized to share in the supervision of work done in the precious metals*. Two years later the two crafts are dealt with in a single set of ordinances which reveal the existence of two classes of masters. No handle- maker is to be a cutler nor to follow the trade of a blade- smith xonless he buys the right to the craft as the bladesmiths do from theltfa ig ' b Maibh gJ^but if the handle-makers wish ' Riley, Memorials, p. 567. ' Ibid., p. 568. ' Herbert Livery Companies, i. p. 105. ' Lespinasse, Les metiers, ii. pp. 380-1. Amalga- mation of the Ruhia cutlery crafts 26 THE AMALGAMATION OF THE CRAFTS to confine themselves to their own branch they need not buy the privilege 1. In the ordinances of 1565 the cutlers appear as possessing- full authority over both branches ot the industry, the mercers are forbidden to act as employers , and the separate organization of the handle-makers has It will be worth while in this instance to supplement the examples already given by one which takes us almost to the Eastern limit of Western Europe, and carries us for- ward into the eighteenth century. By that time the cutlery of Ruhla in Thuringen was carried to markets as distant as Stockhohn and Riga ^ In the seventeenth century the bladesmiths and the handle-makers were organized as separate handicrafts ; but as in London, the handle-makers had monopolized the trading function and had become the employers of the bladesmiths. Moreover there were, as in Paris, a number of masters privileged to combine both crafts ; and the mercers, in spite of prohibition, acted as merchant employers to the industry. In 1695 the friction between these various interests led to the intervention of the authorities, and to the amalgamation of the two organi- zations with equal rights to all members. This only served to give economic forces freer play. By the eighteenth century the working masters had become entirely depen- dent on a class of entrepreneurs, in which the privileged masters, the richer handle-makers, and the merchants had merged their interests. Ill industry The In the earlier annals of industry, the textile crafts, and making of especially those engaged in the manufacture of woollen first a^' cloth, fill a more prominent place than either the metal widespread workers Or the workers in leather, and it is this group home vphich Supplies the most striking and detailed examples of the influence of economic development on the mutual relations of handicraft organizations. Before, however, we consider these examples, it is desirable to take into account certain special conditions which from the beginning have tended to divert the textile crafts to some extent out of ^ Lespinasse, Les meters, ii. p. 382, Art. 2. ^ Ibid., pp. 387-8, Arts. 20, 27. * E. Sax, Die Hausindustrie in Thiiringen, ii. Ruhla und das Eisenacher Oberland. Cf., for similar cases in Germany, the account of the groups engaged in the making of swords and of knives at Solingen, M. Stieda, Die Entstehung der Hausindustrie, p. 121. s EARLY TRADE IN HOME-MADE CLOTH 27 the common course of development. There was a con- sideraJDle trade in cloth long before the industry was organized on a handicraft basis. Even at the present day, in many parts of Europe the spinning wheel and the hand- loom are kept busy in the peasant's cottage, not only for the supply of his own needs, but to help out the scanty profits of his land. Down to the fourteenth century this surplus produce of the home-worker was still very probably the trader's main source of supply 1. Three or four centuries later the country districts had become once more the chief seat of the woollen industry, owing to the spread of the domestic system. But this did not involve a recurrence to earlier methods, and subse- A great economic and technical advance had in the mean- l^^^ly time been achieved^. From the middle of the twelfth on^ahandi- century onwards the towns, many of which had acquired craft basis their first importance as cloth markets, began to be centres of the industry. Gradually the processes of the manufacture were specialized, and as each was appropriated by a separate body of trained workmen, there grew up side by side the several handicrafts of the weaver, the fuller, the bureUer, the shearman or finisher, and the dyer. The drawing to- gether of these crafts, owing to the efforts of industrial capital to fit them into the framework of a larger system of manufacture, was analogous to the process already described in the case of other groups. But the passage of the clothing industry through the handi- Bnt the craft phase was effected on a background of large survivals earlier from earlier conditions peculiar to itself. mJrftTf On the one hand it was in many cases only after a long trade in struggle with the unorganized home-workers, whether in=l°*' town or country, that the weaver's craft could succeed in imposing its authority on the industry; and in this way the establishment of the weaver's fuU status as a craftsman was retarded. On the other hand the extent of the trade that had grown up under earlier conditions made capital an important factor from the outset. The handicraft weaver was seldom employed in directly supplying a merely local demand. He was often indeed prohibited, in the interests of the local trade monopoly, from directly supplying any demand ^, But in seeking to overthrow that monopoly his ^ Cf. above, p. 6. ' SchmoUer, Tucher- und Weberzunft, p. 443. ' For English cases see Liber Custumaricm, pp. 130-1, with regard to Winchester, Beverly, Marlborough and Oxford ; Pladtorum Abbre- viatio, p. 65 , with regard to Lincoln ; and Thompson, History of Leicester, p. 84 ; also W. J. Ashley, English Woollen Industry, p. 20, and Gross, 28 THE AMALGAMATION OF THE CRAFTS ambition, or rather the necessity of his situation, ws^_ that he should dispose of his wares at a more or less distant market, prevented Thus it happened that the rise of a class of trading theindns- masters within the industry, instead of following upon the Issnm°ng a Struggle which secured the handicraft status of the working completely master, went on simultaneously with it ; the cohesion of handicraft the two divergent classes being secured by a common character oppogj^jon to the local trading monopoly and to the rivalry of the country industry. The ' handicraft system ' can there- fore be said to have been> a stage j n the developm ent of tlTe_te-)ftilp rjaftSLgnly in a mod ified^ense^ Like the other town industries, generally indeecT^iT^advance of them, they formed organizations in defence of their vested interests, which established and maintained for the workman the dignity and privileges of a handicraft. But the type of working and trading master independent of external capital, to which the phrase ' handicraft system ' more properly applies, was probably at no period common in the various branches of the woollen industry. The members of these crafts were, as a rule, either employed on materials given out to them by others, or if they succeeded in trading on their own account, they went beyond the limits of the local market and were apt at the same time to becomeemployers of other masters in their own and other crafts ^. The The progress of this twofold development is clearly London indicated by the position of the clothing crafts in London org^aLTzed ^""^ their relation to each other at the beginning of the as a handi- fourteenth century ^. There were by that time separate craft organizations representing the burellers (burlers .'') ^, the weavers, and the fullers and dyers, besides a body of cutters or tailors who sold cloth to the public. The weavers (con- cerning whom we have most information) were in possession of the full privileges of a handicraft. Their ordinances, confirmed in 1300 but claiming to be derived from a much earlier period, gave them authority to enforce membership Gild Merchant, i. 108. For continental cases see Schmoller, Tucher- und Weberzunft, Kap. II ; and Ashley, y" '529 six names, out of which they were to select two to be choosers of the wardens on their behalf Whereupon three representatives of the ' young men,' with whom a great number of the rest were confederated, demanded of them 1^hat authority they had to choose wardens after this manner. And when they were told that ' it was the old custom used in this fellowship, they answered they would see their authority, or else they would choose none after that manner.' After that they departed with their sup- porters, and the wardens, when they had attempted in vain to persuade them to conformity, proceeded to the election without them, and subsequently appealed to the Lord Mayor to reduce them to obedience. From the petitions and counter-petitions that ensued, a full account of the situation is easily gathered. The ' poor artificers,' who form the commonalty of the company, complain that some persons by usurpation naming themselves to be of the same company (though they were but merchant's gold- smiths, and had little knowledge in the science), with a view to enrich themselves, had devised certain means to change the election of wardens, so that the wardenship was now confined to sixteen or eighteen of the head men only. Their claims are : — that they may take part directly in the election of wardens ; "that they may receive an account of the charitable endowments of the company ; that the common seal may not be used, nor ordinances made, with- out their consent ; that they may share the use of the tall; and that a proper oversight may be exercised over the handicraft. The wardens in their reply assert that the method of election employed has been customary time out of mind; they deny the rights of the commonalty altogether, and claim to rule with the assent of the majority of the livery. The controversy went on for a year and a half, after which the three representatives of the artificers, as they still adhered to their position, were expelled for ever from the company. In this account there is no mention of a Court of Assistants under that name, but the existence of a select body within the livery is placed beyond doubt by a reference of the artificers to the ' wardens and those who have been wardens \' 1 Herbert, Livery Companies, ii. pp. 145-54- 44 CLASSES WITHIN THE CRAFT GILD Parallel The control established by the merchants over the develop- Goldsmiths' Compatiy, and the entire subordination of the other™ artificers, finds a close parallel in every one of the twelve handicrafts, great companies which had originated in a handicraft, or included a handicraft element. To the latter class belonged hatters andjtfij Haberdashers' Company, which after absorbing the cappers, organizations of the cappers and the hatter merchants, in 1500, received the title of Merchant Haberdashers'. The former class included, in addition to the goldsmiths, the merchant tailors, the skinners, and the clothworkers. The tailors, fij-gt of these had been ' anciently denominated tailors and " linen armourers," . . . but many of the members of the com- pany being great merchants and Henry VII a member thereof, he, for his greater honour,' reincorporated it under the skinners, name of Merchant Taylors in 1503 ^. The Skinners' Com- pany had long before fallen into the hands of a class of traders and employers ^, and in Elizabeth's reign the artisan skinners petitioned the Crown for a separate charter on the grounds that their interests were entirely unrepre- sented *. cloth- In the case of the Clothworkers' Company, which was workers ^^ j ^^ ^^ j^g included in the twelve, it is possible to trace illustrate , ^ . . t , , • r process of the process of transition, and to observe the operation of transition, the motives that led to the change as well as the effects that followed from it. By the year 1507 each of the two crafts, the fullers and the shearmen, which were united later to form the clothworkers, had attained incorporation ; so that it is highly probable that there was included in '/ """L f both of them a well-to-do trading element. But they fullers and Were Overshadowed by the superior prestige of the Drapers' shearmen. Company, which contained most of the larger cloth merchants, and which tended to draw away from them the very members who were most needed to support the dignity and the burdens involved in their new status as incorporated livery companies. In 151 5 a member of the Shearmen's Company, who had prospered in his calling, was elected an alderman of the city, whereupon he took occasion to be translated to the Drapers' Company, as being more ancient and one of the twelve great companies. His brother shearmen declared the new alderman to be ' Herbert, Livery Companies, ii. p. 537. ^ Ibid., ii. p. 383. ' Riley, Memorials, p. 330. The lawyers are described in 1365 as the servants of the pelterers or skinners. In 1564 they were amalga- mated with the Skinners' Company on the understanding that the skinners were to employ them alone. ■* Livery Companies Comtnission, ii. p. 388. THE GREATER LONDON COMPANIES 45 a perjurer. He had sworn, they said, to live and die a shearman, and their indignation rose to such a pitch that some of them proceeded to inflict a public insult upon the deserter, for which they were punished by fine and im- prisonment^. The amalgamation with the Fullers' Company, which took place about a dozen years after this incident, was followed by the rapid rise of the new corporation to the rank of a merchant company, and the clothworkers but soon could soon boast of aldermen within their own ranks. In became a 1537 we find them lending, at nine per cent., two sums ^^pany of a hundred pounds and one of fifty, to members who must have been dealers in cloth, and one of these borrowers, the famous merchant, Sir William Hewett, rose, in 1559, to the dignity of Lord Mayor. In the meantime the records of the company supply Conflicting striking evidence of the conflict to which this development interests of had given rise between the industrial and the mercantile craftTmen interest. The craftsmen had procured the passing of an Act of Parliament which restricted the exportation of cloth iQ_an— unfinished, sta^e ; but it was obvIouslyTiot to the interest of the merchants to enforce the observance of this statute. In 1 540 a certain craftsman, named John Draper, had been bitterly complaining before the Court of Assistants that the law was evaded altogether by some of the wealthy trading members of the company. It would seem that his words had been repeated and that they had done him harm with the merchants who employed him ; where- upon, he indignantly told the Court that any person Jjvho shuld o pen or declare abro dgggQgSords owte of t jiis "House, yt were almost his iied were worthylo be set_onTIondon Br ugge.' There~were, he saidpalreadyTnanyTieads on the bridge, and if there were three or four more it would make no matter. Being called to account for this language he boldly justified it, saying that it was better that three or four more should perish than that twenty or forty hundred should ; so that if the heads of the six or eight, who stole and conveyed away the living of the king's poor subjects, were chopped off as a warning to others, no great harm would be done. When Draper was further charged with having said of the Master that the head of the Assistants of the company was under his girdle, he admitted it, but declared that he had meant to say no more than what was the fact, that the Master, being an Alderman, was looked up to by the Assistants and the whole craft as their head and ruler, and ought to use his authority to reform the ' Herbert, Livery Companies, ii. p. 647 n. 46 CLASSES WITHIN THE CRAFT GILD parallel develop' ment in Paris, evils complained of i- The whole of this incident sets in the strongest light the connexion between the constitutional development within the London companies and its under- lying economic causes. The transformation of the craft gild by the separation of its members into two distinct classes representing the mercantile and the industrial interests, was as strongly marked a tendency at Paris as in London. The presence of the merchant employer within the gild is shown, by many regulations, as early as the fourteenth century ^. The satchel- makers in 1344, and the felt hatters in 1387, forbid their members to give Qutj?TOrkto3nx_except__members of^theirjeyeral crafts ^ ; and the Hosieii^rdinances of 1367 in like manner provide that ' no one of the craft may work for any one who is not a master of the craft . . . except that all those who have been of the craft and shall be merchants, shall be permitted to give out their wool to be worked in the dwellings of the said workmen and not elsewhere *.' In ' metiers ' the course of the fifteenth century this tendency to a diffe- become rentiation of functions became common, and was so fully marchan- recognized as to lead to an alteration of the style and title dises' in the of many organizations. In place of the word 'metier 'or fifteenth craft, the ordinances adopt the phrase of ' metier et mar- chandise.' This change had been effected by the pewterers (1382)^, the coppersmiths (1420)', the fullers (1443)', the potters (1456)*, the breeches-makers (1474)', and the saddlers and lorimers ( 1482) '", within a period almost exactly identical with the one covered by the incorporation of the greater London companies ; and it may be further observed that the three groups of crafts most influenced by the development of a larger industry, the metal trades, the textile and clothing trades, and the leather trades, are all represented in this list ^^ II Many of the Parisian handicrafts, however, which had been equally transformed by the increasing employment of ' Clothworkers' Court Book, Nov. 27, 1540. ^ Lespinasse, Z^^j «//z>r^, iii. p, 407, Art. 12. ^ Ibid., p. 277, Art. 2. * Ibid., p. 245, Art. 2. ^ Ibid., ii. p. 530, Art. 15. ' Ibid., ii. p. 501, Art. I. ' Ibid., iii. p. 97. * Ibid., ii. p. 766. ' Ibid., iii. p. 222. "> Ibid., iii. p. 456. " Cf. also Fagniez, Documents, ii. p. 220, where the skinners and furriers of Arras adopt the same style: also Thierry, Monuments di I'histoire du Tiers Etat, vol. ii, where there are many examples in the ordinances of Amiens during the fifteenth century. century These changes due to a growth of capital in the crafts POORER MASTERS EXCLUDED 47 capital, did not adopt the change of style, and others only did so casually and at a later period. Amongst the latter were the tailors 1, who had originally been a body of crafts- men working on their customers' materials 2, but who, in the sixteenth century, had become, like the merchant tailors of London and of Bristol, a community of wealthy traders. At the beginning of the fifteenth century we can observe the development in process of being realized. In 1405 the Paris tailors protested against a tax which had been levied upon them as traders in various trimmings which they made use of in finishing garments. They admitted that they kept a stock of such articles in order to prevent delay and consequent annoyance to their customers ; yet as they did not, like the doublet-makers, 'cut and make all manner of garments and expose them publicly for sale to all comers,' but only made goods expressly to order, they claimed that they could not be considered as carrying on a trade in the accessories used in the fexercise of their craft ^. However much they might deprecate being classed as The poorer merchants for purposes of taxation, the masters engaged masters are in the ' bespoke ' branch of the clothing trade must have required considerable capital for the successful conduct of their business ; and they differed only from the employers in the ' ready made ' trade in the methods of applying their capital. In either case it is evident that as the_aniQunt required to supply the necessary stoc]^i_n_ trade increased, a largeFpropoiFtioirdfTnaster craftsmen wouTdlEnd them- selves^ without suflScient means fO'cafry^n business on their own account. This result had been produced amongst the breeches-makers of Paris as early as the thirteenth century. An article in their first set of ordinances claiming that and become a member should not be taxed for merchandise unless heJo^^^y™*^" bought a whole piece of cloth, shows that they had already become a body of tradesmen ; while another article gives a list of thirty- two former masters who have fallen into the position of journeymen through poverty, but who are to be allowed to resume their old status whenever they are able, without paying another entrance fee *. In the struggle to or take to maintain themselves upon an independent footing, a number hawking of masters were driven to hawk their wares about the streets, which led the crafts to make ordinances in the interest of those who paid rent for stalls and shops, for- ^ Lespinasse, LesmMers, &c., iii. p. 197, Art. 15. ^ Lespinasse, Livre des Metiers, p. 116, Titre LVI, Art. 5. * Ordonnances des roys de France de la iroisiime race, ix. p. 90. * Lespinasse, Livre des MMers, Titre LV, Arts. 9, 10. 48 CLASSES WITHIN THE CRAFT GILD bidding or restricting this mode of competition. The armourers of Paris, for instance, procured an ordinance in 1296 ' that no one__may h awk armour jhrough the streets of Paris . . . exce£t thejpoor mem be rroTt he craft who live in fofeigrfstreets, who "cannot selTlri their workshops, and who must take an oath that they have made it in their own houses with their own hands 1.' Examples of the same development are to be found in the London ordinances of the fourteenth century. Difficulty But if the natural operation of economic conditions was of attaining making it impossible for many of those who had become mastership jjj^gjgj.g ^.q maintain their status, those conditions were still more effective in shutting out the majority of those apprenticed to a trade from attaining that position, because in the latter case they were assisted by the spirit of mono- poly and privilege which grew up within the craft gilds, and which obtained a decided expression in the course of the fifteenth century '. Not only was the entrance fee raised by degrees till it reached a formidable sum, the aspirant was also required in many cases to bear the cost of a dinner or a " drinking ' ; and on the continent the custom became all but universal of demanding the production of an elaborate masterpiece, which embodied in some cases the work of several months, and involved the use of expensive material^. It should be added that the sons of masters were generally exempted from most or all of these conditions *. gives rise As a result of these combined causes, there grew up in to a perma- every industrial centre of Western Europe from the middle onoumey- °^ ^^^ fourteenth century onward, a body of workmen in men every craft who had no prospect before them but that of remaining journeymen all their lives, and who were there- fore bound together by an increasing consciousness of a class interest which separated them from their employers. This development was especially characteristic of the various branches of the cloth manufacture. At Chester in ' Lespinasse, Les mMers, ii. p. 318, Art. 11. ' Schanz, Gesellenverbdnde, ch. ii ; Inama-Sternegg, Deutsche Wirthschaftsgeschichte, 3, II, p. 71 ; Brentano, p. cl. ' 'S..Y.\itx'sXz.diX, Das franzosische Gewerberecht,-^T^.'iA,i,-c). For early instances of ' masterpiece ' see Fagniez, Documents, ii. pp. 87, loi, 185 ; Thierry, Documents inMts, ii. p. 151 ; Levasseur, Histoire, &c., second edition, ii. 108. ■* Schanz, Gesellenverbdnde, pp. 131-4. The masterpiece was not unknown in England. It was required during the seventeenth century by the feltmakers, joiners, broderers, and clockmakers of London, and by the feltmakers of Bristol. See Index to Remembrancia, p. 99 1 Latimer, Annals of Bristol, p. 26; and Livery Comp. Comm. III. 202. SEPARATION OF JOURNEYMEN 49 135^ ths master weavers, shearmen, challoners, and walkers had reached such a pitch of exasperation with the conduct of their journeymen as to make a murderous attack upon them, during the Corpus Christi procession, with ' iron- pointed poles, baslards and pole-axes ^.' As to the differ- and to a ences which miefht produce such a deeree of antagfonism, '^^our we may get some light from a complaint made in the very ^ same year to the bailly of Troyes by the master clothiers and weavers against their journeymen. As it is the duty of the journeymen, say the masters, to work throughout the day without a break, they should bring the bread for their meals with them, and if they want soup, their wives should carry it to the workshops. Instead of this they insist on an hour's stoppage that they may go home to dinner; they abandon their work in a body to attend a mass or go to a funeral, which means a day lost, ' car apr^s convient aller boire ' ; and finally they demand four times the wages they used to receive ^, Instances of similar dis- putes in the latter half of the fourteenth century at Paris, Amiens, Chalons, and Rouen, concerning hours and wages and other conditions of labour, are recorded in abundance ; and they find a close parallel in the difiereuGes-wbich arose dimngjt^e_samfi4ieriod_between_ihe-masters and journey- men of the shearmen, the weavers, the cordwainers, the saddlers, and the tailors of London ^ So far, however, as is yet known, the journeyman class Separate in England and in France did not attain anything like so ^^ir°f "" widespread an organization as was achieved in the case of journeymen the German cities. The custom of wandering from city in German to city, combined with the want of a central government '=*"^^' which could bring the area thus covered by the individual workman under a uniform authority, may have contributed to this peculiar development. Whatever the cause, it remains a fact that the conflict of organized bodies of masters and journeyman was one of the main features of German industrial life in the fifteenth century. The cities were drawn together into groups, and opposing federations, representing the masters in a single trade on the one side, and the journeymen employed by them on the other, fought over the labour question in all its aspects, with results that varied widely in the different trades, and from one period to another *. ^ R H. Morris, Chester, p. 405. '^ Ordonnances des roys, v. p. 595. ' » R -Eberst^dt, Das franzosische Gewerberecht,'p^.27Zr-Zi ; Fagniez, Documents, ii. p. 148 ; Riley, Memorials, pp. 250, 307, 495. 542, 609, 653. I * Schanz, Gesellenverbdnde, ch. v ; Brentano, p. cxlvi. «f 50 CLASSES WITHIN THE CRAFT GILD the ten- But although the difference in political conditions may dency have prevented it taking such an active form, the tendency in"Fran!;e° °^ ^^^ journeyman class towards separate organization was and Eng- by no means absent from France ^ and England during the land, same period. In the closing years of the fourteenth century the journeymen of the saddlers, the cordwainers, and the tailors in London were struggling to maintain fraternities which they had set up in defence of their interests ; and sub- sequent cases of journeymen's associations reported of Coventry (1406 and 1424) ^, Bristol (1429, 1458 and 1590)^, /Exeter (1481)", Hereford (c. i50o)«, Oxford (1512)", Wisbech (1538)', Gloucester (1602) ^, Plymouth (1643) ^, and Chester (1652) 10, are sufficiently widespread both in regard to place and time to justify the assumption that many more would be discovered by a careful examination of local records. But [ in nearly all these instances it is clear that the journeymen's /organization had fallen under the Supervision and partial ' control of the masters' gild. In regard to this development it will be of interest to compare parallel cases in France, Germany, and England. but is It seems that the journeymen doublet-makers of Paris counteract- had a custom that on the arrival of every newcomer his poiiJy'of fellow workmen should oblig e him to pay a ' bonne venue ' employers, of two Or threS sols; "A. body ol mastefdoublet-makers, e. g., Paris resldiHgTnthe Rue aux Lombars, complained to the king taiors, jj^ 1406 that the journeymen left their work on these occasions to drink in taverns, which was a cause of dis- turbance and dispute within the trade, and of loss to themselves. There existed already, they added, a brother- hood among the masters, workmen, bachelors and servants of the craft living and working in that street, and they requested that in place of the levy made upon the journey^ men by their fellows, a sum of eight deniers should be paid by each newcomer towards the support of two beds maintained by the brotherhood in a neighbouring hospital for the benefit of the poor of the trade ^^ ' Fagiiiez, Documents, ii. No. 76 and 136 ; Lespinasse, Les mttim et Corp., iii. p. 189 n. 2. '^ Hist. MSS. Report, Coventry, p. 118. ' Hunt, Bristol, p. 81 ; Little Red Book of Bristol, ii. p. 147. * Toulmin Smith, English Gilds, p. 332. " Hist. MSS. Report, Hereford, p. 304. * Records of Oxford, p. 7. ' Letters and Papers of Henry VIII, xiii. p. i, 1538, No. 1454, P- 537- ' Hist. MSS. Report, Gloucester (c. 6338-1), p. 416. » Hist. MSS. Report, ix. App. p. 270. i« Harl. MSS. 2054, 34. Ordonnances des roys, ix. p. 167. YEOMANRY ORGANIZATIONS 51 The second instance is supplied by the skinners of Stras- Strasbnrg burg. A religious fraternity, established by the journeymen skinners, of that trade in 1404, was threatened with dissolution by the authorities in 1428, most probably because it was re- garded as supplying the journeymen with a powerful weapon in their disputes with their masters, which had led to a serious strike two years before. The journeymen, however, saved their organization by an important con- cession. In future they were not to exercise jurisdiction over their members without the presence and assent of two members of the masters' gild. On the other hand, one of the masters, as a sign of amity, was to allow himself to be made a member of the journeymen's fraternity ^. A compromise very similar to this is represented by the London ordinance, articles and constitutions granted in 1434 to ^^^^^' their servants by the Blacksmiths' Company of London, which provide for the separate organization of the journey- men under officers of their own, subject to an appeal to the master of the company. The journeymen's representative is to be present at the making of all covenants between new- comers and employers. Half of all fines imposed is to go to the box of the masters, and halfjo_the--liox--of the yeomen ; and the two bodies areJto]B£unitid^t-^periodi^ dinners^. No~doubt a close knowledge of all the facts would reveal considerable differences between the cases of the Parisian doublet-makers, the Strasburg skinners, and the London ] blacksmiths. The fact, for instance, that the Strasburg ' journeymen could retire on the occasion of a dispute with their masters to a neighbouring city, where the political authority could only reach them through the medium of ' diplomatic negotiations, greatly strengthened their economic ' independence ; and probably tended to deprive the settle- ^^^ ' ment with the masters in 1428 of real permanence ^. But " the fundamental significance of the situation is the same in all three cases. The efforts of the journeymen after in- i« dependence were being in part sanctioned and in part counteracted by the policy of the masters in providing for them a subordinated form of organization in which any "' attempt at combined action was subject to oversight and control. This was the origin of the class oi yeomen or bachelors, This the '• who came to form a new rank below the livery in many °^^^^ 1 Schanz, Gesellenverbdnde, pp. 55-8. companies, p, 2 Ashley, Economic History, Pt. II, p. 117. ' Schanz, Gesellenverbdnde, p. 59. E 2 52 CLASSES WITHIN THE CRAFT GILD of the London companies during the fifteenth century, and whose status has been made a matter of dispute. On the one hand, it has been pointed out that the yeomanry organizations, which sprang up in connexion with the London crafts at the end of the fourteenth century, bore a strong resemblance to the journeymen's associations which arose at the same period in Germany ; and it has been further shown from the records of the London companies that those organizations, although falling more and more under the control of the livery companies, maintained a prolonged existence, extending in one case at least till the end of the seventeenth century ^. On the other hand, with a view to showing that these bodies of yeomanry cannot be regarded as forerunners of the modern trade union, conclusive evidence has been adduced from the same record to prove that early in the sixteenth century the yeomanry of the company referred to, the Merchant Taylors, was no longer composed exclusively of journeymen, and that at a later period it must have contained a number of which were weTrto-do masters and traders \ On a tulleflnvestigation gradually of th^TMattcr the truthr appcarS'wide enough to embrace Id^nto™ ^°^^ contentions. The transformation of the yeomanry organization is only another instance of the power of institutions to adapt themselves to the requirements of social evolution. It is not a process entirely peculiar to English industrial history. The term ' bachelors,' which in England is used as equivalent to ' yeomanry,' underwent a similar change of meaning in connexion with the Paris corps de -metier within an almost exactly identical period ; and the economic development which was the main cause of this change, the growing prevalence of the domestic system, was common to all the industrial centres of Western Europfe^ Of this general social movement, therefore, it will be well to make a brief survey before proceeding to consider the illustration of it, which is supplied by the change which took place in the composition of the yeomanry organizations. bodies of small masters III Formation With the increasing application of capital to industry, of class of ttig master craftsman who could not afford to keep a large Asters stock in trade and rent a shop in the business part of the town was obliged either to hawk his wares about the streets or to dispose of them to one of the wealthier trading ' Ashley, Economic History, Pt. II, pp. 107-16. 2 Webb, Hist, of Trade Unionism, pp. 4, 5, and note. THE YEOMANRY IN TRANSITION 53 masters. In this way, though he became virtually an em- ploye of others, he retained his position as a householder. But this formation of a new intermediate class, while it was due to a relative decline in the status of a number of master craftsmen, facilitated at the same time an advance in the status of a portion of the journeyman class. For such an advance the way had been prepared by the separate organizations which that class had been led to form when they were excluded from the prospect of full membership of the craft gilds. Those organizations did not aim at transforming the journeyman into a small master. Indeed, out of the it was natural that they should in many cases discourage emanci- jthis result. Yet it is certain that their action must have^^'^ contributed largely to bring it about, since a really in- men, dependent journeyman wanted nothing but a minimum of capital to make him a small master. The conditions under which work should be taken up or laid down had hitherto been dictated by the masters' gild. The new associations attempted, often with success, to formulate these conditions on behalf of their members, and even to assist in carrying them out. The journeyman had been paid, in addition to his board and lodging, a customary time-wage. He was now able to demand piecework, and to insist upon a rate which approximated more and more to that received by a working master. He had lived in a position of domestic subordination as a member of his master's household, but we now find him claiming to pro vide his own food, to marry- -a-ad— it gt up a lipartFi nniis .Qw n, to take horned his work,-and finally to undertake, work on his own account. When this last step had been taken the^emancipated journeyman and the. decayed master craftsmaji met, as far as econ o m ic status was concerned, upon common_grDund, atid were__pnly to be distinguished by the-^Mirety-fbrmal requirements of the gild. As a proof of this it is to be notedTthar-the Tiirfversa:l regulation forbidding unquaHfied journeymen to set up as masters begins to be balanced in the fifteenth century by ordinances which prohibit masters fi-om acting as jotorneymen ^- In England the earlier stages of this transformation are illnstia- clearly discernible in the relations existing between the J^""'^^^^"" London shearmen and their journeymen in the year 1350, 1350 when the masters of that craft complain to the Mayor ' that whereas in old time they were wont to have a man for threepence or fourpence a day and his table, the said men 1 Ordonnancesdesroys,^\\\.^.J,oi,^\y..V-('OT. Documents inedits:— Thierry, Monuments du Tiers Etat, 11. pp. 126-7. 54 CLASSES WITHIN THE CRAFT GILD Coventry, 1424 will not work otherwise than by the cloth, and then do so greatly hurry over the same that they do great damage to the folk to whom the cloth belongs \' The later stages of the same development are illustrated by a crisis in the cloth industry of Coventry in 1424. The journeymen weavers of that town organized a strike for higher wages, and took steps to prevent any one working on the old conditions. The town authorities intervened, and the matter was settled by arbitration. In future the journey- men were to have a third of the amount paid to their employers for weaving each piece of cloth, the masters were forbidden to fine the workmen more than threepence, and every cottager or journeyman might become a master on payment of twenty shillings^. That the small master of the ' domestic system ' was in tact replacing at Coventry the master craftsman of the gild system is further shown by the growing ascendancy of the class of merchant em- ployers. In a list, made in 1449, of living persons who had held municipal office, there are fifteen drapers and only two weavers ^. Strasburg, The situation in the cloth industry of Coventry at this '434 period finds a glose parallel at Su^asburg^-jcehere, as we have already seelir"a rfagg— 7Tf~fTr5ppi-.<; had arisen, in connexion with the woolbeaters' gildj_jipDn_j5diom the working woolbSterg andr-the~lreavers were becoming dependent for empipytnettt; — In 1434 an ordinance was passed to the effect that every journeyman woolbeater may set up a workshop in his house on condition that he gives notice of the fact and pays a shilling annually *. The same tendency maybe traced in therecords^of the clothing crafts of many German towns ; and also in those of other large and developing industries^. The journeymen skinners of Strasburg, for instance, whose organization has been already referred to, had acquired the right at the end of the fifteenth century to do work in their own homes, and were even claiming to make use of boy-labour ^. •404 In passing to France an example may be taken from an industry not hitherto mentioned, the importance of which ' Riley, Memorials, p. 250. ^ M. D. Harris, Life in an old English town, p. 278, and Cunning- ham, Growth, &c., i. p. 444. Both these authorities quote Coventry Leet Book, f. 27. ^ Harris, p. 241, n. I. * SchmoUer, Tucher- und Weberzunft, p. 420. ^ Schanz, Gesellenverbdnde, pp. 45-50 ; Gothein, Wirthschafts- geschichte des Schwarzwaldes, pp. 533-42. ° Schanz, p. 63. Paris, RISE OF THE SMALL MASTER 55 was rapidly on the increase throughout Western Europe in the fifteenth century. The ordinances of the silk-ribbon weavers of Paris in 1404 placed considerable restrictions on the attainment of the position of master or mistress, which included, in addition to apprenticeship and an entrance fee of forty ' sols,' the production of an elaborate masterpiece. Those who had passed through the period of apprenticeship, but were not able to fulfil the other conditions, were not allowed to manufacture on their own account ; but they were not held in the dependent condition of journeymen. The masters and mistresses of the craft were to give out {bailler) work to them until such time as they had made their masterpieces and paid the proper fees ^. Just at the time when, as far as purely economic con- The new ditions were concerned, it was becoming easier for a journey- <^J^=s out- man to set up for himself, the degeneration of the handi- ^j^^ ^ ° craft organizations into close corporations was hedging the mastership about with an ever-increasing amount of artificial restriction, which led of necessity to persistent evasion by those excluded from the corporation, and which gave rise to frequent adjustment from within and intervention from without, till finally it was dealt with by sweeping legislation both in England and France. Journeymen who could not afford the luxury of formal mastership took to working secretly in chambers*; or else they followed the more open course of retiring to the suburbs, where they were beyond the jurisdiction of the city corporation, whilst still within reach of employment by the city merchants ^. From this cause the suburbs, alike of Paris and of London, were becoming during the sixteenth century the main seat of the domestic industries. With the organization of this class of suburban small Legislation masters, and the attitude of the state in relation to it, we ^^j'.^^' \^- shall have to concern ourselves later. The earlier efforts of legislation were d irected to the remo val of the j gstric- tions_ impose d By the old er_organizatIoirs7''go as to"make the position of master wi thin them more acc g^blejo the Journeyman class. The motive power that produced the Tudor legislation This was a dealing with the gilds was not so much the desire to motive of remove old abuses as the necessity of meeting new m- p^u^y 1 Lespinasse, Les mdiiers, iii. p. 13, Arts. I and 6. ^ Clode, Memorials of the Merchant Taylors, p. 211 (cf. Lespinasse, Les mMers, iii. 225, n. i) ; Documents inMits .—1\i\errj , Mmuments du Tiers Etat, ii. p. 50 ; Art. 2, p. in ; Art. S, p. 194. = Lespinasse, Les mMers, iii. p. 396, Art. 26. 56 CLASSES WITHIN THE CRAFT GILD Issue be- tween old and new- industrial forces cul- minates, 1549-50 Fluctua- tions of national policy during transition dustrial conditions. The Act of 1503, for example, which transferred the supervision of gild ordinances from the Justices of Peace to the Lord Chancellor and the Judges of Assize \ is not to be regarded as an intrusion of the re- forming zeal of the Crown into the sphere of purely local institutions. The industries represented by many of the gilds had ceased to be confined to the supply of local demands, and had enlarged the scope of their production till they had become organs of a national economy ; and it was this fact that justified an attempt at national regulation. In the same way, the Acts passed in 1531 and 1536, which reduced the inordinate entrance fees demanded by the gilds to a small uniform sum ^, and forbade gild officers to require an oath from journeymen that_tlieyjwould_not set up for themselves^, are lo Tie understood as endeayours not so much to restore the gild fo its origrnaTcondition as to adapt it to the needs of the new development, which was trans- forming numbers of jo urneymen jnto small masters. During the reigns of Edward VI and'oTMary aimoiTevery year produced new legislation upon this subject. The social experiment of one session was not infrequently declared a failure in the next. The mind of Parliament or of those responsible for its action fluctuated rapidly between the desire of checking a too hasty abandonment of the old system and the necessity of recognizing and of regulating the new system. Examples of both these opposing ten- dencies may be taken from the legislation of a single year. An Act was passed in 1549-50 to forbid the adoption of those looser forms of contract which mark the transition from the journeyman to the small master. Masters in the shoemaking and tailoring trades, or in the branches of the cloth industry, were forbidden to hire unmarried journey- men to work by the day, or by ' taill work,' or ' by greate,' or for any term under a quarter of a year*. On the other hand, the Government found it advisable during the same session to repeal in the interest of the small master an Act of the previous year forbidding the wealthier members of the leather crafts to supply the poorer members with leather. Most of the artificers, it is said, are poor men, and unable to provide such store of materials as would serve their turn *. ' 19 Henry VII, c. 7. ' 22 Henry VIII, c. 4. ' 28 Henry VIII, c. 5 ; see Cunningham, Growth, &.C., i. p. 512. * 3 & 4 Edward VI, c. 22, presumably piece-work and contract-work. ^ Ibid., c. 6. A similar instance in the same year will be refened to later in connexion with the building trades. TUDOR LEGISLATION 57 These fluctuations of national policy — the necessary pro- reflected in duct of a time of industrial transition — find an exact counter- 'he life of part during the same years in the records of a London t'^^ation company, which serve also to supply the link between the earher and the later aspects of the yeomanry organizations. The Clothworkers' Company had, as we have seen, been This Com- formed in 1528, by the amalgamation of two crafts, the pany con- fullers and the shearmen, which occupied the final stages in traders^°™^ the manufacture of cloth". As these organizations had sur- vived the struggle for existence which marked the fifteenth century, and had, previous to their amalgamation, obtained separate grants of incorporation, we may take it for granted that in each of them there was already a trading element which would naturally be strengthened when they were united into one company. The case of the shearman who became a draper, and the references to considerable loans made by the clothworkers to several members, strongly confirm this assumption. Yet the records of the compan y tend to show th aLduring bnt a ma- the-£rst-twerLLy^ears^ofits history the^ulk^fltijmembers J°"*^y °f were_engaged as large oFsmallTHasters in the manufacture ^^^ of cloth, and that itspolicy wouldrin-theTHaiif be'determined by their interests. Most of the entries in the earlier years refer to the settlement by arbitration of disputes, not appar- endy between master and journeyman, but between one master and another ; although no doubt in many cases one master was the employer of the other. Many disputes are concerned with a ' reckoning ' or a debt incurred, and in these cases the settlement takes the form of an agreement to pay in small instalments. Sometimes these debts seem to involve the temporary return of the debtor to the jour- neyman class, as when we find that ' Davy EUys had com- mandement to worke with Humphrey Hitchcock or with Thomas Saunders untyll such tyme as they be both satisfied of their debts which ys due to theym by the said Ellys. And yf he work with Hitchcock, then h e to paye to _Saunders i ii'^ a week tyl l he be _ sati sfied] And vt_ h. e_sacQrk-with Saunder s, then he to paye Hitchcock vi i^_j^week_ tyll he be satisfied 1.' Other matters in dispuTelire'^ kersey negligettdy-iost,' ' the rent of certain tenters,' and a shop taken by one member over the head of another. That many of the masters were only in a small way is The acces- shown by the permission given in some cases to pay the ten ^^'jj^^^yp shillings fee for admission in quarterly instalments of twelve pence, and by the existence of several lists of thirty or 1 Clothworkers' Court Book, July 12, 34 Henry VIII. 58 CLASSES WITHIN THE CRAFT GILD forty masters who are in arrears for sums of from 2S. 6d. upwards. If we multiply these sums by ten so as to make them roughly approximate to modern values, the posi- tion of a ' householder ' will not appear to have been beyond the reach of the thrifty journeyman. We shall weakens probably, therefore, not be far wrong in assuming that the *^^ *^°f fh '^^ "°^- sm all masters o f this period was la rgely the out- journeyman growth of that class of journeymen who_weree.mployed in class 1350 on pfec^wo^fk^ j'iist~as'tlie^emplbyer of the earlier date had in many cases^developed Into the merchant of the later period. It was accordingly with the fortunes of the small master that the more ambitious journeyman of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries tended to identify his interests ; and the journeyman class as a class, beinj^ thus continu- ally drained of its most enterprising members, tended to sUp back to its earlier -state-^— dependence^ For ex- ample, an entry in the Clothworkers' Court Book for 1538 ordains that if a master has need of a journeyman, and the journeyman will not work withoutjiejnay be hired for a certain time, the master "fnay^ake Jiiin and set him awork as long as the work wiiriasljlahdlyt.be for a day or ii.'_ The journeyman refusing is to be imprisoned for the first oflfence, and to be whipped and banished for the second ^. Attempt of This brief account of the relations of the classes within the Cloth- tjjg Clothworkers' Company prepares us to understand the remodel various phases through which the yeomanry of that their yeo- company passed in the course of the sixteenth century, manry m -phg first mention of them in the records does not occur ^'*^' till 1543, and is as follows : ' Yt ys agreed that the wardeyns of the yomanry now beynge shall brynge yn their boxe w' their money, their clothe and their torches, and the master and wardeyns to choose iiij honest men beyng Jornymen, and they to be as wardeyns of the Jornymen onely, and they to have the clothe and torches yn their custodye. And that there be iiij Jornymen yerely chosen to the said Roome by the M' and wardeyns for the tyme beynge ^.' implies that Now several things may clearly be inferred from this itscomposi- entry. Firstly, that the yeomanry at that time was not tion was -' J -^ ' , .._--' ■' „ „ , . - then composed enurely of journeymen. Secondly, that it was changing partly, perhaps^ largely, so composed. Thirdly, that it w%s sought to weaken tne independence of the yeomanry, since they were to have no share in appointing their officers for ^ Clothworkers Court Book, Sept. 20, 1538. " Ibid., Oct. 16, 35 Henry VIII. THE CLOTHWORKERS' YEOMANRY 59 the future. Fourthly, that the element to be excluded was supposed to strengthen the independence of the organiza- tion. This element could only have consisted of small masters. The truth seems to be, therefore, that the now relatively depressed condition of the journeyman class rendered it incapable of retaining possession of the yeomanry organization ; whilst the small masters, deprived of all real power in the company by the growing predominance of the trader, found in that organization a useful rallying-point. Whatever the exact condition of things had grown to Vacillating be, it was found to be too firmly established to admit of the attitude to- proposed remodelling. Within a month after the ^^ove'^J^^J^"' entry we find ' yt was agreed that the wardeyns of the ganization yomanry shall chose new wardeyns as they have done yn times past and kepe their old order ^,' This old order was, however, one of entire subordination as far as financial matters were concerned. In 1546 it is recorded that 'the wardeyns of the yomanry brought yn vii li. ii s. iiij d. which they received the yeare before and xxxj s. iiij d. increased in their tyme,' for the custody of which there is to be a common box made with four keys. Twenty shillings is to be granted to the wardens of the yeomanry when they keep a dinner, and eight shillings when they keep only a drinking, ' and other ordinary charges to be allowed ^.' This arrangement did not last more than three years. In 1 549 ' yt waa.agreed that from hensfort h there sh albe no more wardeyns of the yomanry chosen, nor no more quarterage '^ gathered amongst the yomanry^.' Yet another three years later we find it ordered ' that certen ordinances shalbe drawen for the good orderynge of a yomanry to begyn at Xmas next, and to continue as longe as yt shalbe thought profytable for the house and for the worshipp of the company *.' The records of the Clothworkers leave us in little doubt explained as to the forces which underlay these fluctuations of policy, nfj^dchar- During this period the company was rapidly rising to its acter of the present rank as one of the twelve great companies, and the company control of its affairs was passing into the hands of the merchant class. Yet it could not very well be as entirely transformed into a merchant company as the Drapep or the Merchant Taylors, since its raz'son d'etre lay in its claim to represent the interests of the industry as against those of the merchants, and thus the small masters were able to 1 Clothworkers Court Book, Nov. 6, 35 Henry VIII. ' Ibid., Nov. 10, 38 Henry VIII. ' Ibid., May 8, 3 Edward VI. * Ibid., Dec. 8, 6 Edward VI. 6o CLASSES WITHIN THE CRAFT GILD Final re- establish- ment of yeomanry not to re- present the journey- men, but the in- dustrial element as a whole insist that the authority of the company should be used for their protection. We find, for instance, that a few months before the last -mentioned re-organization of the yeomanry the fustian sellers had warning not to put fustians to shear to any but those who had ' byn brought upp onely with the feate of shearynge ^ ' ; and, in the month after, an im- portant regulation was authorized, limiting the number of apprentices to be taken by a master fuller or shearman to two, and another forbidding the employment of boys unapprenticed over the age of twelve ^, regulations precisely similar to those adopted in other domestic industries for the protection of the small master and the journeyman. We cannot be far wrong, therefore, in taking the final re-establishment of the yeomanry as the result of a com- promise between the mercantile and the industrial elements in the company, by which the former retained possession ' of the governing body, whilst to the latter was assigned ' a remodelled but still strictly subordinate organization. The yeomanry had, as might be expected, emerged from the struggle a very different body from what it had been ten years earlier. It had then been thought possible to convert it into an organization for journeymen only. It Was now essentially an organization of small masters, as is clearly shown by the functions assigned to its officers. We find them soon afterwards administering a fund which had been raised to supply the ' teasels ' used in the finishing of cloth at cost price to poor householders ^. From the first they had the examination of apprentices * before they were made free, and gradually they acquired full control of the admission of householders. Thus in 1561 when a journey- man petitioned the Court of Assistants that he might be ' set a worke by the yeare,' or else admitted a householder since he could prove he was worth j^ao, the wardens of the yeomanry ' had commandment to provyde hym a master or eUs he should be admitted a householder forthwith*.' In 1566 it was ordered that 'there shalbe no householder admytted but such as shalbe viewed and allowed by fower of the assistents being of the handycraft and the fower wardens of the yomanry ^.' And finally the new set of ordinances, put forth in 1587, provide that no journeyman shall set up house unless he be adjudged to be worth ;^io on the credible report of the wardens of the yeomanry. ^ Clothworkers' Court Book, Oct. 21, 6 Edward VI. " Ibid., Jan. 11, 6 Edward VI. ' Ibid., July 29, 4 & S Mary. * Ibid., July 13, 2 Mary. ° Ibid., Jan. 13, 4 Elizabeth. ^ Ibid., July 10, 1566. THE PEWTERERS" YEOMANRY 6i These ordinances of 1587, which replaced those of 1532, provide that the master, wardens and assistants shall every year at their will and pleasure appoint four of the yeomanry to be wardens ' for the better regiment rule and govern- ment of the said yeomanry and Journeymen ^.' So that by this time it is clear that the journeymen are considered as a mere appendage to the yeomanry ; and indeed long before this they had ceased to express their grievances through the officers of the yeomanry, but presented them separately or combined in secret separately for their re- moval ^. The references thus drawn from statements in the Cloth- A similar workers' records have since received striking corroboration develop- in the admirably selected extracts from the books of the ^n^e/by Pewterers' Company recendy edited by Mr. Welch ^. The tlie yeomanry are first heard of in 1472-3, wh^ they coititributed pewterers' to the cost of the pewterers' charter ; and as far as these y«°™^°'7 records go they were alwa ys a subordinate body, b eing govefHe9~by^thTee wardens chosen out of the livery by the livery ; but there is distinct evidence of a change in their composition similar to that recorded of the clothworkers' yeomanry, and at exacdy the same period. In 1534-5 they had a variance with the livery, and extracted a promise, through the mediation of th e common" councilT'T that all idurnevinerTa ppren ticed in the~city ^hould be found work to do andTiave wageswell an d truly"paia^ Welnay infer, therefore^ that the journeyinEi formed an influential proportion of their number. In 1558-9, however, an order was made that none should come to the ' account ' of the yeomanry but such as were householders and others as should be thought meet by the master and wardens. IV The transformation of the inner structure of the gild, as Handicrafts hitherto dealt with, was the work of social forces following ""^j^^J'^^g'^. the main hues of industrial progress. But quite a consider- ^eiopment able amount of the industry by which the elementary needs above de- of the community were supphed remained comparatively scnbed unaffected by that progress, and continued in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries to be carried on under the limited but stable conditions of a purely local market. Even at the present day die butcher and the baker, the joiner and the builder, the working shoemaker and tailor of a small town are often htde removed from the simplicity of the ' Ordinances of Clothworkers' Company, p. 45. ^ See belovi^.p. 120. ' C. Welch, History of Pewterers' Company, pp. 36, 135, 202. 62 CLASSES WITHIN THE CRAFT GILD handicraft system. Capital and labour are both represented in the trading master craftsman who sells the product of both these factors direct to the consumer ; and the thrifty journeyman who wishes to start business on his own account does not meet with any insuperable obstacle. A little saving will provide him with the fixed capital he requires in the shape of tools and fixtures, and he will readily obtain on credit the leather or the timber, the flour or the beast for slaughtering, which form his first supply of circulating capital. Persistence There is, no doubt, a wide social distinction to be made of the local between the small tradesman of this class maintaining a type^^""*" hand-to-mouth existence in a back street, and the well-to-do shopkeeper in the centre of the town who has, perhaps, bought the goodwill of an extensive business, and has a large capital invested in the materials of his trade ; but as long as the latter has not become a mere dealer in ready-made goods there is no essential difference in methods of production. Both types belong to the handicraft system, the former representing its earlier phase, and the latter belonging to the period when th« gild had taken the form of a close corporation ; and while this later phase of the handicraft organization soon began to give way before the incoming of the domestic system wherever an industry expanded to meet the needs of a wider market, it tended to retain undisturbed possession of the trades that continued to supply a purely local demand. Tailors' The best examples of the persistence of this type of and shoe- organization are to be found among the shoemakers and j«Q irgT-g or- ganization : tailors. It is a significant fact that nearly all the cases their grow- of Enghsh journeyman organization, alreadyreferred to as ingexclu- existing in the sixteen th_ajid_seventeenth centuries, , belong to these^twp trades ^- Apart ffomT'the amount of capital now necessary for the conduct of his business, the position of master craftsman was closed to all but-the,more fortunate apprentices by the largeness of the entrance fee. The fine imposed upon new masters by the Shoemakers' Company of Chester ''^ in 1609 seems to have varied from £'& to £\2^ in addition to expenditure of from £2 to £e^ on a dinner and a drinking. Yet the shopkeeping shoemaker or tailor, although as a capitalist he was Ufted above jthe journeyman class, was very jealous of the encroacHment of^any larger form of business enterprise than his own. In this sense ^ Cf. Levasseur, ii. pp. 115-8, on the tailors and shoemakers of Bourges. " Harleian MSS. 1996, 64. TAILORS AND SHOEMAKERS 63 he preserved some of the gild member's spirit of equality, and if he would not admit to membership those who fell below a certain standard of vested interests, neither was he willing that any member should rise too much above that standard. Not only was any approach to the domestic S5rstem carefully guarded against by rules forbidding masters to have any goods made in the country or in any house but their own, members were also prohibited from opening more than one shop, from ' keeping standings on boards or tressells,' or from going out to work in the houses of their customers ^. The natural desire for independence could not be per- gives rise to manendy hemmed in by these artificial restrictions ; and ^ '=^*.^? °^ the working shoemaker and tailor, still to be found in the taUors"^ back streets of our provincial towns, are the survivors of a class which has doubtless never ceased to exist since the days when the growing exclusiveness of the gild left it outside. The journeyman without capital to set up a shop and without a master to employ him was bound to find work somewhere, with or without the gild's permission, and the obvious opening for him lay in the execution of repairs. The tailors of Hull, amongst whose ordinances was one forbidding work to be done in the customer's house, made an exception in the case of repairs ; and to prevent the poor master selling his labour too cheap they fixed the amount he was to receive per day ^. But it is in the rise of the co bbler's trade and its relati ons and to the to that of the ^Ko emakef'tEi F the best illustration is to be separate found of ^successtuLatteni pFto evade tlie £estrictions"orthe tT^ o?the later days of the gild, and to secure an outleFTbr the cobblers' ambitious journeyman of small means similar to that pro- "^t vided by the domestic system in other industries. The separation of the cobblers from the shoemakers received a formal sanction in London at the end of the fourteenth century — ^just at the time when an excluded class of jour- neymen was attempting to form organizations of its own in many of the crafts. The cobblers, who were partly English and partly alien workmen, were permitted to work on old leather or to execute repairs on condition of not encroach- ing upon the special province of the shoemaker. Thoug-h they evidendy possessed some kind of organization of their ' J. Noake on the Cordwainers' Company of Worcester in Gentleman's Magazine, 1857, pp. 317-9; Hist. MSS. Report, Lincoln, p. 53 ; Fox, Merchant Taylors' Gild of Bristol ; Lambert, Two Thousand Years of Gild Life, pp. 238-44. 2 Lambert, p. 245. 64 CLASSES WITHIN THE CRAFT GILD own, they were subject to the authority and inspection of the Cordwainers' Company^. Similar relations between the two trades were probably pretty general in the English towns from the time of Elizabeth onwards, since a very im- perfect survey yields evidence of them at Norwich (1533)^ Lincoln (1562)=', Winchester (1580)*, Newcastle-on-Tyne (161 7), Reading (1662), and Worcester ^ The ordinances of Shoemakers' Companies often contained a rule that shoe- makers should not mend shoes, nor cobblers make them. Sometimes the cobblers were admitted in restricted numbers by special licence on paying a small fe e every ye ar. It is Qear^thattfaey-eoas titutcd a dass^ of rnaster craftsmen with very limited capital, and served as a kind of safety-valve to mitigate the exclusiveness of the shoemakers' organization. With the introduction of machinery the shopkeeping shoe- maker has become a mere tradesman who has seldom served a practical apprenticeship to the craft; but amongst the cobblers there are still to be found a number of craftsmen who take a pride in being able to make a shoe from start to finish ; though it must be added that they generally succeed in becoming small capitalists and in combining the pursuit of their handicraft with a trade in machine-made boots and shoes. The build- The building trades, as it has been well pointed out by ing trades: the historians of Trade Unionism, have— always— worked liaTcondi'- "uder economic conditions -peculi ar to th e^mselves ^. The tioa mason, the tiler and the carpenter could not, like the weaver, the glover, or the pinmaker, produce large quantities-of- transportable^TXimmodities to_be_disposed of by the middleman at a distant-^market. Indeed, they could hardly be said to work for a market at all, so direct was their relation to the consuiner. In this respect they were on a level with the travelling tinker, or with the tailor who worked in his customer's house on material supplied by the latter. But a similar development to that produced in other trades by the widening of the market was brought about at an earlier period in the building trades by the extent * Riley, Memorials, pp. 539, 570-4. ^ Blomefield, Norfolk, ill. p. 206. ' Hist. MSS. Commission Report, Lincoln, p. 53. * Walford, Gilds, p. 128. ° J. Noake, in Gentleman's Magazine, 1857, pp. 317-9. " The Savetiers of Paris bore a similar relation to the Cordonniers, though they ultimately became an independent and wealthy corpora- tion, see Lespinasse, Z«j mMers, iii. p. 357 ; for Bourges cf. Levasseur, ii. p. 97. ' Webb, History of Trade Unionism, p. 8. THE BUILDING TRADES 65 and complexity of the single task. For the building- of a house there was required not only the co-operation of many crafts, but also in many cases the joint labour for a considerable period of a number of workmen of the same craft 1- Out of this situation there naturally grew up a class of produce a men who undertook the main responsibility for a piece distinctioa of work, and thus became for the time the virtual employers jobmaster of their fellow craftsmen. The articles of the London and masons in 1356 forbade any member to take work > in Jou^^^y™*" gross ' unless he were of ability to complete it properly ^.. Such a contractor was to produce four or six guarantors of his own trade, who were pledged to carry out the work if he failed. The class-distinction to which this system gave rise was not, however, so^ marked or so permanent_aa_that betweennierdiant£mployer and small master in the^omes- tic system The -masters J!dti£L__attempt^^ to ^ecurejthe position of middlemen through jwhom all employment must pass frequently did so, not so much on the strength of possessing a necessary equipment of capital and of business capacity, as by virtue of their local monopoly as gild members. The town authorities strenuously resisted this claim. The Municipal ordinances of Worcester in 1499 provide ' that no tylers . . . authorities within the city dwelling compell ... no tyler stranger . . . [ntervention to serve at his rule and assignment, but that he may take of local job- by the day with the partys that he workith, accordynge to masters' or- the statute or better chepe yf they two can agree, and that 8^°'^^*'°"^ the tylers of the citie sett no parliament among them . . . that no carpenter or mason take more by the day than the law wult, . . . that every carpinter not being a master of the said crafte may hereafter pache, clowt, or repare any old house . . . and make enything else so hit be no new framed work when he is called upon by eny cytisen without eny agreement made with the stewards of the said craft ^.' Similarly at Coventry in 151 7 the daubers and rough masons were forbidden to form a fellowship of themselves, but were tojte^ommon labourers and take such wages as werejjniited by statute^. ' Schanz, Gesellenverbdnde, pp. 67-8. ^ , , ,. ^ , , '^ Riley, Memorials of London, p. 281 ; Ochenkowski, Englands ■udrthschaftliche Entwickelung, p. in. Similar methods are still m vogue amongst the London shipwrights. ° V. Green, Worcester, App. XIV. p. liii. Cf. a somewhat different version in T. Smith, English Gilds, p. 399- * M D. Harris, Life in an old English town, p. 279. F UHWIN 66 CLASSES WITHIN THE CRAFT GILD An Act to These were not isolated cases. They were typical of the legalize situation in the building trades throughout the country. ployme"" Towards the middle of the century, when so many social of journey- and industrial problems seem to have come at once to an men, 1549, issue, ParHament attempted to deal with the question. By an Act passed in 1 549^ no journeyman in any of the building trades was to be prevented by the local craft from working in any town to which he might come for any inhabitant who cared to employ him ^. If this Act had been maintained the power of the local organizations would have been destroyed at a blow. But the London builders made a repealed prompt and effectual protest, declaring that they could not 155° be expected to bear their share of the local burdens if they were to be put on an equal footing with the wandering irresponsible journeyman. Within a year the Act was repealed, and the municipal authorities were left to fight the matter out with the building crafts on the old footing^. Regulations At Chester, in Elizabeth's reign, the situation described of building at Worcester a century earlier is repeated, with the differ- Chest^er ' cnce that the building -trad€S-^iew 'f6fni_ a, recognized cor- poration. The company of Wrights, sawyers, and slaters are complained of, in 1590, for at work and fetaininf are accused^so'cirgiving to their journeymen ' such wages they be^not able to liveon, and themselves taking such excesse wageS^as-harfrBeen a slaunder to the corporation.' The city authorities do not venture to deprive the building trades of their organization, but try to insist on a uniform rate of wages ^. So far the privileged members of the company might appear to be merely a superior caste of workmen, maintaining an exclusive position by means similar to those employed by some modern trade unions. illustrate But a glance at the ordinances of the company reveals relations of ^j^g existence of another class-distinction within it. Among master'^ and ^^^ ^^^ brethren who are permitted to work on their own journeyman account there are a certain number who contract for work on a larger scale, and these are not to employ more than two journeymen, but must call in some of the brethren to end the work *. It is no doubt the presence of these con- tracting employers which accounts for the amalgamation of the three crafts at Chester. A much larger combination of ten building crafts was confirmed by charter at Lincoln in * 2 & 3 Edward VI, c. 15. '^ 3 & 4 Edward VI, c. 20. ' R. H. Morris, Chester, pp. 389, 436, 453 ; Harleian MSS. 2O20, 16. Numerous parallels might be cited from French records. * Harleian MSS. 2054, 17 and 2020, 16. Xy VyX VV J. Jl-f I.XL.VJ* kJt.l> *V y «-''■ k.J* Lt.l.J.VA tJXC4.I.V>l.k> 590, for se_ttingunskilfuLfiasigners Hai'ly parf KmTpir ^jra^Q ^Tlipy THE ASSIZE OF VICTUALS 67 1565 ^- There is thus a tendency observable in the building trades which separates them from the trades carried on under what has been called the gild system, of which the master craftsman producing work on materials of his own and selling it direct to the consumer is the predominant figure. The master in the building trades is either a kind of entrepreneur or he is merely a privileged journey- man. In the victualling trades there was no divergence of this Victualling character from the gild type of industry. But one condition trades, in- which they have always shared with the building trades ^aturTof has served to remove their organizations somewhat from their local the normal course of development. The local monopoly monopoly which each of these groups, in common with all craft gUds, souglit to exercise was of a specially ihvidi6us""clmracter. Its abuses in their case were direcdy felt and immediately resented by the community, to an extent that was quite unusual in the case of the other crafts. The power of their organizations was therefore held in check by a strong force of public opinion acting through the authority of the local provokes magistrate and the law of the land. The regulation ofsp«<='a> prices by public authority, which in other trades could only ™^i""n°- have been a dubious and occasional experiment, had long trol been a regular procedure in the casejof^the^^jj^^ the butcher, and the brewer^. The same Act, which in 1549 aimed at abolishing the^ocal monopoly of the builders, attempted to prevent the victuallers from using their orgarrizatiofts" to raise Trherpriceixiflfeod; There was no question of suppressing these organizations, which had maintained a vigorous existence from early times, and were •now, along with the other crafts, in course of being re- modelled as companies under charters from the towns. But owing to their peculiar circumstances the bakers and the butchers of the sixteenth century are found moving in an atmosphere of illegal combination which marks them off from other incorporated trades. In the case of the bakers this condition of things was accentuated by the fact that the municipalities became dealers in corn for the purpose of obviating scarcity, and thus stood to the bakers almost in^the relation of merchant employers wlio^ c ould fi x the price of both material and producrSr ' "^ ' Hist. MSS. Report, Lincoln, p. 60. " Ashley, Economic History, Pt. I, pp. 187-92; Pt. II, pp. 33-8; C\mwi%V^m, English Industry, &.c.,hT?p.h. ' Brewer, Letters and Pdpers of Henry VHI, vol. iv. Ft. II, Nos. 2749-50. F 2 68 CLASSES WITHIN THE CRAFT GILD Conflicts Fully conscious as they were of this antagonism of in- of their or- terests, the authorities were only willing to lend a very wm^town qualified support to the claim advanced by the butchers authorities, and bakers to a local monopoly of their trade. If the tradesmen of the town refused to supply the community on the terms laid down by them, they were prepared to admit the outsider to their market. The mayor of Chester had at least three serious disputes of this kind with the bakers during Elizabeth's reign, and on one occasion twenty-seven of them had to be disfranchised before they would submit, A similar difference with the butchers in 1587 led to the committal of the whole company to prison^. Instances might readily be multiplied to show the constant limitation of the powers possessed by the organizations of these two trades, both by the local authorities and the central govern- ment ^, but cases from the two chief cities in the kingdom will suiHce as examples, who resist At London, in 1581, when the movement of the companies the grant of towards amalgamation had been proceeding unchecked porate'^"'^' for a century, jgn^ attempt made t o join the fo rces of the privileges white and brown bakers was opposedbyJie-Gity-aurtbori ties, to the on the grounds that the new corporation made it impossible bakers ^^ carry out the orders of the Common Council, which claimed to have full authority to deal with the sale of bread, and the letters patent were revoked^. Precisely similar was the case of Bristol in 1619. The mayor and common- alty compjajngd of the ab usgsjgoinmitt ed by t he bakers in giving short weight and in preventing foreigners from working — which were ascribed to a recent'grant of incor- poration by the Crown. The Privy Council, considering ' it inconvenient that any particular company should be exempt from the government of the city, especially in so necessary and useful a trade and of such consequence to the public,' at once recalled the charter *. Summary It will be useful, in bringing the somewhat lengthy survey of Chapter attempted in this chapter to a close, briefly to summarize its general results. In the first place it w as seen that the transformation of the craft gild by the^doptiorLof the con- ' R. H. Morris, Chester, pp. 417-22, 438-42; see also Harleian MSS. 1996, 16-22 and 2020, 9. * Hist. MSS. Report, Shrewsbury, pp. 18-20; Hereford, p. 340; Gloucester, pp. 448-53. The bakers of Chester made an attempt to obtain some control over the Wrexham trade in 1672, Privy Council Register, Charles II, ix. p. 321. ' Remembrancia, i. pp. 270, 287. * Privy Council Register, Oct. 27, Nov. 12, 1619, fols. 310, 3261 J. Latimer, Annals of Bristol in seventeenth century, pp. 58-9. THE BUTCHER AND THE BAKER 69 stitutional forms preserved for us in the London Livery Companies had been widely realized in London and Paris by the beginning- of the sixteenth century, and that this dhange was due to the differentiation of the gild members into traders and craftsmenTand'to the' assumption 57 cont rol by tne former class. The beginnings of the economic devetQpmeffTwlTich led to this result were found in the gradual exclusion, from the middle of the fourteenth century onwards, of the poorer members from the attainment of mastership, and in the consequent separation of a journey- man class represented by the yeomanry organi2ation. The handicrafts which supplied a purely local demand, as in the cases last considered, did not pass beyond this stage of development. But in the more progressive industries which began to supply a wider market the gild master was withdrawn by the expansion of his trading function from the superintendence of the workshop, and he became a merchant_emplo yer, whilst the journeyman regained a Ine^ure-of^iadipendencelMAsnial l marten — ThSTwcTnew classes formed the essential components of the typical, in- dustrial organization of .the sixteenth century, jhejnerchant employers being represented by the livery and the Court of Assistants, and the small'masters by' flS. yeomanry ot- ganization which they had taken over- from the journeyman class. CHAPTER III INDUSTRIAL CAPITAL v. CAPITAL COMMERCIAL Revival of the local trading monopoly due to the weakening of the ' crafts. It is a commonplace of historic science (of which Sir Henry Maine in his Ancient Law, and Mr. Bryce in his Holy Roman Empire-, have supplied impressive illustra- tions) that an idea which has once succeeded in materializing itself as a social or political institution does not wholly pass away when its first manifestation reaches a natural term, but hovers about the sphere of its former activity till, in the recurring cycle of human events, the conditions return which favour a new embodiment. There are many such instances of ' metempsychosis ' to be met with in economic history, and by no means the least striking is that of the local trading monopoly which in its earhest form was known in England as the gild merchant. Just as the tradition of political unity, which was the legacy of Roman rule, survived for centuries after the Empire had broken up into separate nations, and continued to play an important part in European history whenever events favoured its revival, so, in some towns the gild merchant maintained a shadowy existence behind the craft organizations which had very largely taken its place, and found during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries something like a new lease of life in a modified shape. The one feature which the town life of the seventeenth century had in common with that of the thirteenth was the weakness of the crafts. In the earlier period few of them had as yet attained a separate organized existence ; in the later period many of them had fallen into decay ^. The fourteenth and fifteenth centuries had been marked by an exuberant growth of handicraft organizations. A great number of new trades had sprung into existence for the supply of wants which, if they had previously been felt, had been met by the labours of each household on its own account. The production of food, dress, ornament, domestic utensils, was increasingly subdivided and speci- 1 Starkey, Dialogue (E.E.T.S.), p. 73. DECAY OF THE CRAFTS 71 alized, and as every district continued to supply the greater part of its own needs the whole of this extended range of industry was represented in the crafts of every considerable town ^. In the course of the sixteenth century the narrow limits by the coa- of this ' town economy ' were being set aside, and the centration comparative peace and security and uniformity of adminis- ^/les'in^" tration established under the Tudor monarchs encouraged suitable the development of a national economy. The towns were localities brought into freer competition with each other, and the country began to rival the town as a seat of industry. In localities with specially favourable conditions there grew up manufactures on a large scale, the products of which, distributed over the country, drove the wares of the local craftsmen out of the market ; and articles of fashion made in London or abroad were brought by the travelhng chap:- man or the local trader within the reach of all but the very poorest. ' I knew the time,' says a character in an imaginary increasing dialogue written about the middle of the sixteenth century, nnmber ' when men weare contented with cappes, hattes, girdeles °^ ^j^'| and poyntes, and all maner of garmentes made in the townes from a next adjoininge: whereby the townes then weare well distance occupied and set aworke ; and yet the money paid for the same stuffe remayned in the countrie. Nowe the poorest yonge man in a countrey can not be contented either with a lether girdle or lether pointes, gloves, knives or daggers made nigh home. And specially no gentleman can be content to have eyther cappe, coat, doublet, hose or shirt made in his countrey, but they must have their geare from London ; and yet many things thereof are not theare made, but beyond the sea whereby the artificers of our townes are Idle ^ '. The woollen caps, for instance, which had been among the The decay leading products of local industry in every large town, were °l^^^^- being gradually replaced, during the sixteenth century, by dppere o^f more fashionable headgear from beyond sea, or by the new Chester, felt hats which were beginning to be made in London. This change of fashion assumed the proportions of a serious social question, and no less than five statutes were passed between 151 1 and 1570 to mitigate its results ^ The effect 1 Ashley, Economic History, Pt. II, pp. 47. 75- , o ,. "^ Discourse of the Commonweal, ed. Lamond, p. 125; cf. Schanz, Englische HandelspoUtik, i. p. 469. '3 Henry VIII, c. 15 ; 21 Henry VIII, c. 9 ; i Mary § 2, c. 4; 8Eliz. c. 11; 13 Eliz. c. 19. 72 INDUSTRIAL v. COMMERCIAL CAPITAL of this typical social development on local organization is best seen by taking an illustration from a particular town. At Chester in 1520 the cappers, on being called upon by the mayor, in accordance with custom, to produce the play concerning King Balak and Balaam the prophet, complained that their trade was much decayed owing to the unfair competition of the mercers, who, not content with dealing in the more expensive foreign wares, were selling cheap caps brought from other English towns ^ An order was thereupon made, and re-enacted twice as the result of renewed complaints, that the mercers should not sell caps at, or below, the price of i6s. the dozen ^. Yet the cappers continued to decay, and in 1567 we find them making, conjointly with another company, the small con- tribution of 2,^. a week, as compared with is. 3^. from the Shoemakers' Company and 3^-. gd. from the Drapers' Company, towards the cost of the new haven '. It is to be noted that it is the competition, not of foreign wares, but of the products of other English towns, that is specially complained of by the cappers. The decay of the crafts was in fact due, not only to the growth of foreign commerce, but still more perhaps to the concentration of English industries in localities specially adapted to them. balanced If Chester, for example, was ceasing to supply itself by the with caps, it had begun to supply other places with gloves, rise of a Favoured by the proximity of Ireland, which furnished industry, the raw materials, the manufacture of gloves at Chester had e.g. glovers Outgrown the limitations of the gild system, and was of Chester organized as a domestic industry. The Company of Glovers contained two separate classes, the leather dressers or wet- glovers, who traded across St. George's Channel at their own risk for the skins, and the dry-glovers, who bought the skins by dozens and half-dozens and worked them up in their homes *. Towards the expense of the new haven the Glovers' Company in 1567 gave is. 'jd. a week, or more than six times the amount of the cappers' contribution ^ ; and in .the same year we find a glover, no doubt a wet-glover, sitting along with the leading shopkeepers, the drapers, ironmongers, mercers, &c. on a committee appointed to regulate the retail trade of Chester ^- ' Cf. the exact parallel in Paris given in Levasseur, Histoire des classes ouvriires (1901), ii. p. 107, second edition. ^ R. H. Morris, Chester, p. 435. ' Ibid., p. 461 n. * Harleian MSS. 1996, 40-1. ' R. H. Morris, Chester, p. 461 n. ° Ibid., p. 404 n. NEW SOCIAL DISTINCTIONS 73 In these two instances, which represent on a small scale Widening the two chief aspects of industrial history in most English scale of towns at this period, we see the decay of handicraft ^i™"°^5-° counterbalanced by the growth of three different capitalist tinctions, functions — that of the dealer in foreign wares, that of the trader over seas, and that of the industrial middleman or entrepreneur. A widening scale of class distinctions, due to economic causes of this kind, was a general characteristic of town life in the sixteenth century. An order put forth by the corporation of Great Grimsby in 1582 requires every labourer coming to the town to pay 2s. for his first admittance ; every shoemaker, tailor, cobbler, glover, smith, weaver, or tinker, 35. \d. if married, if unmarried ^s. ; every pedlar ^s. ; a mercer or draper loj. ; a merchant adventurer 20>r.^ The range of classes here represented — the hired workman, the master craftsman, the retail dealer, and the merchant — is exactly the same as was to be found within the ranks of one of the larger London companies ; and there is a remarkable similarity between the oligarchical develop- ment already described as taking place in those companies and the constitutional changes effected during the same period in the case of a typical town. Before the middle of the fifteenth century the government finds a like of Nottingham was in the hands of the mayor and a council constitn- of twelve, who acted like the wardens and twelve discreet pressjon^ln persons of the London company of the same period, with a corporate the consent of the commonalty. But in 1446-8, within borough a few years of the dates when most of the larger London London companies attained complete incorporation, Nottingham company received its two charters ; and by the end of the century it had become a close corporation based upon a self-electing oligarchy. The burgesses who exercised electoral rights had, by that time, dwindled to a select class corresponding to the livery of a London company. Indeed, we find the term 'the Clothing' actually in use in the Nottingham records, and it appears to be synonymous with the 'Burgesses.' Out of this class were elected the common councilmen, who correspond to the Court of Assistants, and the seven aldermen, who correspond to the four wardens of the London company. Both councilmen and aldermen came to be chosen, like the Court of Assistants, for hfe. The four wardens were, as we have seen, changed every year, but as three of them were chosen from those who had been wardens before, this annual election could not have done much to mitigate the closeness of the oligarchy. To 1 Hist. MSS. Rep., Gt. Grimsby, p. 278. 74 INDUSTRIAL v. COMMERCIAL CAPITAL Conflicting interests of traders and craftsmen Political expression of this avoided in England complete the analogy, it may be added that we find the jury of Nottingham protesting in 1527, precisely as the rank and file of the Goldsmiths' Company were to do in 1529, that the elections were illegal, 'the burgesses and commonalty not being made privy, nor thereunto con- senting ^.' It is characteristic of English social and political develop- ment that the economic forces, which were undoubtedly largely responsible for this narrowing of the municipal constitution, did not as a rule reveal themselves directly in the result. In Scotland the merchant and the craftsman almost invariably made the constitution of the burghs an open battle-ground, and the merchants' organization or guildry generally contrived to monopolize the functions of government to the exclusion of the crafts. As Dr. Gross has shown, constitutional conflicts were not so common in English towns, and, when they occur, the opposing parties are seldom to be clearly identified with the merchants and the craftsmen. But if the influence of economic develop- ment was more indirect and gradual, it was not less eifectual. By virtue of that development, the government of the English towns in the sixteenth century had everywhere passed into the hands of oligarchies of traders, and if these bodies established and maintained their rule without much opposition, it was because they kept an open door for the successful craftsman. An instance has already been given in the last chapter of the manner in which the twelve greater companies of London drew over into their ranks the more prosperous members of the minor companies. The city ordinances of Norwich for 1450 make a special provision for this kind of transference with the avowed object of strengthening the ruling class. It is enacted that if any person ' fortuneth be wisdom and good governance to growe to habundance of worldly godes and likely to here worshipp and estate in the said Cite, and oute of that craft in which that person . , . is . . . enrolled, a Mayre, Alderman, Shereve or Bayly never before this tyme accord- ing to the old Custom and ordinance in the Cite have be(en) chosen ; wherefore, that soche person . . . shall not be refused ... to be admytted and chosen to worshipp and estate, it is provyded . . . that it shall be lefull to the Wardeyns and comoun Councill of any crafte in the Cite of which . . . persones to worshipp and estate here beforn have been chosen . . . that person, . . . likely to here ^ Mrs. Green, Town Life in the Jifteenth century, ii. chap, xiii; cf. the conflict at Southampton in 1505, Mrs. Green, ii. p. 313. AN OPEN ARISTOCRACY 75 worshipp and estate in the Cite, in their crafte and to their clothyng [to] ablen, admytten, and receyven^.' Here we have the English principle of an open aristocracy, as pro- claimed in the laws of Athelstan, transferred to municipal government. But however much it was concealed by the effects of But the such a policy, the conflict between the interests of the economic traders and the craftsmen was one of the main factors of ^™f^}fg social development in the towns. It should not be thought less reaf of ^ a struggle between capital and labour, but rather as the competition of two forms of capital. This, as we have seen, is the true explanation of the struggle between the continental crafts and the older gild merchant; and a similar situation arose between the crafts and the later trading companies. What the Drapers' Company of London sought to gain by their charter in 1367 was that the weavers, the fullers, and the dyers might be excluded from competition with them as traders ^. It was the same motive that led the drapers and mercers of Coventry, who controlled the government of the town, to appeal in 141 5 to Parliament for the suppression of the dyers' organization, because the latter would not confine themselves to their occupation as craftsmen, but were also large dealers in cloth ^. As the trading function in the towns widened its scope The pure and became in addition the basis of a new local industry, Naders' it was natural that the purely trading occupations — the fo'^no- mercers, drapers, &c. — should attempt to secure what they poiize the considered as their rightful monopoly of it ; and equally expansion natural that the craftsmen — the tailor, shoemaker, or ° ''^ ^ carpenter — who were beginning to deal more largely in the materials they used, or the weaver and the dyer, who were putting their small capital into the cloth trade, should resist the imposition of an arbitrary restraint on the development of their several callings. It was not therefore a conflict between two classes divided like the modern employer and his workmen by a social gulf, but the rivalry of the two classes nearest each other on the social scale, stimulated by the larger opportunities opened up to both of them through the expansion of industry and commerce. Taken as a whole the expansion of commerce preceded that of industry, and it was the increasing foreign trade of '■ I am indebted for this reference to the great kindness of Mr. J. C. Tingey, F.S.A., Honorary Archivist of Norwich, who will, I understand, shortly publish an important work on the records of that city. ^ Report of Livery Companies Commission, ii. p. 170. ' Mrs. Green, ii. p. 208. 76 INDUSTRIAL v. COMMERCIAL CAPITAL the ports that first offered a general incentive to the spirit of exclusiveness. The retailers of the ports drew together into companies of merchants with the object of shutting out the craftsman more effectually from the privileges of trade, which had become the more worth protecting now that they included the right to make an occasional venture with a profitable cargo. The Hull This situation is set forth with especial clearness in the Com'^rn'^' o>'<^'"ances of the Merchants' Gild of St. George at Hull, exdude"^ which are dated 1499. ' Whereas the merchants,' says the craftsmen preamble, 'havyng non other science, cunning, ne crafftt from wherewith to get their Ijrving but only by the way and the ra mg meanes of buying and selling and by great aventour, hath gretly been hyndered ... by men of dyrers occupacions and of craft and as by tailyours, shomakers and other which presumptouously hath taken upon theym to by and to sell as merchauntts and in their howses, shoppes, and wyndowes opynly haff shewed much ware . . . which never wase apprentises to merchandises ... it is now ordeyned that fro this day furth no man of crafftt . . . nether by ne sell any manner ware or merchaundise, bot such as apperteyneth to the occupacon and crafftt wherto he wasse bounden as apprentice ^.' Similar In 1500 the merchants of Bristol, with a view to prevent- cases at jng the ' crafty dealing of burgesses in colouring foreign Newcastle goods,' obtained a new ordinance from the city council ' that York, ' there should be a company of fellowship of merchants Exeter separate and distinct from every other companies of handi- craftsmen 2.' A similar attempt, made by the traders of Newcastle-on-Tyne about the same time to exclude the craftsmen led to great commotions, unlawful assembhes, and confederacies, culminating in 1516 in an appeal to the Privy Council, and so left its mark, as in the case of the Scottish burghs, on the municipal constitution 3. In these three cases, and also at York, the Company of Merchants subsequently developed into a company of Merchant Ad- venturers, and the exclusion of craftsmen, which had been the motive of the earlier organization, survives in each case as the starting-point of the adventurers' charter*. The Merchant Adventurers of Exeter obtained a similar charter ' Lambert, Two Thousand Years of Gild Life, p. 158. "^ J. Latimer, History of the Merchant Venturers^ of Bristol, p. 26. ' Gross, Gild Merchant, ii. pp. 380-5 ; cf. Surtees Soc. Pub. xciii. p. xxix. * W. Hunt, Bristol, pp. 95-6, 134 ; Gross, Gild Merchant,\\.'^. 280;** Lambert, Two Thousand Years of Gild Life, pp. 158-60. COMPANIES OF MERCHANTS ^^ from Elizabeth, but soon after it had been granted the- craftsmen of the city, headed by the tailors, petitioned the queen, complaining that they had been interrupted in their former liberties. The only check on the power of the company lay in the hands of the mayor and aldermen, who were, and were like to continue, members of it. After two years of controversy a compromise was arrived at, by which the craftsmen were allowed to share the privileges of the company under certain conditions i. These instances reveal a predominance of the traders in the towns, which was just as effectual as if it had found direct constitutional expression. By the middle of the sixteenth century a further develop- wholesale ment is bbservable. As foreign trade became more im- merchants portant and produced a special class of merchants, an*''5"° attempt was made to exclude from participation in it, not retailers only craftsmen, but also retail traders. But the retail but fail traders were too powerful to allow themselves to be victim- ized by the spirit of monopoly which they had assisted so largely in fostering. The Merchant Venturers of Bristol Bristol had procured an Act of Parliament in 1 566 excluding the retailers ; but at the next election the members for the city, who had supported the measure, were rejected in favour of others who represented the retailers, and a Bill was carried revoking the monopoly, by which, it was said, prices had been much enhanced, and a great many wealthy inhabitants cut oflf from the trade of the seas ^- At Chester a similarly exclusive privilege, obtained by Chester the Mere Merchants in 1553, was contested at the expense of the city, and was finally modified in 1589 so as to admit any free citizen not of a manual occupation. On the other hand, it was provided that a merchant venturer mig-ht use a retail trade, such as that of a mercer, a draper, a vintner, or an ironmonger^. While the retailing merchants were thus struggling' to maintain their own right to foreign trade, they were using their power in the council to limit the trading operations of the craftsmen. In 1557 the joiners were forbidden to buy timber to sell again, or to export wood-work to Ireland* ; and in 1567 a committee of shop- keepers was formed to fix the limits of retail trade for all occupations in the city ^- * Devon Association/or the Advancement of Science, Trans, v. p. 1 1 7. The intrusion of craftsmen was again complained of m 1634, and their exclusion ordered by the Privy Council, see Pnvy Council Register, « j. '-La.\:\aie.x^ History of Merchant Venturers of Bristol, pp. 52-7. ' R. H. Morris, Chester, pp. 463-8. « Ibid., p. 405. ° Ibid., p. 404 n. i 78 INDUSTRIAL v. COMMERCIAL CAPITAL Arrest of The tendency thus produced by the growth of commerce, this de- tQ draw tog-ether the trading- occupations within the limits velopment: ^ . , ^ . . *» ^ , , j- ^- • of a Single organization, and so to make a sharp distinction between trader and craftsman, was only a passing phase in the history of the larger commercial centres so far dealt with. Other causes, and especially the expansion of industry, supervened to destroy the simplicity of this classification ; and it is only in one or two smaller towns that we find the earlier tendency completed and surviving surviving as a case of arrested development. At Carlisle ^, Alnwick '', examples ^^^ Preston ^ there were companies of merchants including all the trading occupations which continued to control the trade of those towns, on the lines of the Hull ordinance of 1499, throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the excluded crafts having in each case their separate organizations. The Mercers' Company of Lichfield *, which was incorporated in 1624, and that of Derby', dating from 1674, may perhaps have exercised similar powers. But, generally speaking, amalgamations of this kind — headed by the mercers — which remained as wealthy and influential bodies in many large towns, e. g. at Chester, Shrewsbury, Gloucester, Salisbury and Durham *, possessed no exclusive right to regulate trade, and were often confronted by other combinations more recently formed, and sometimes even more powerful. By the middle of the sixteenth century it was the draper or clothier, and not the mercer, who, in many of the large inland towns, such as Coventry', Shrewsbury ^, Worcester ^, and Hereford i", took the leading part in the local organization of trade. But the separation of the draper from the other trading occupations marks the transition from the predominance of one type of organiza- tion to that of another embodying quite a different principle. The leading motive of the Company of Merchants was to exclude the craftsman ; the organizations headed by the drapers aimed rather at controlling him. Here, therefore, ^ Ferguson and Nanson, Municipal Records of Carlisle, pp. 88-116. ^ Tate, Alnwick, ii. pp, 321-6. ' W. A. Abram, Memorials of Preston Gilds, pp. 41-2; cf. Gross, Gild Merchant, i. pp. 121, 130-3 ; ii. p. 199. * Trans. Royal Historical Soc, New Series, vii. p. 109. ' Derby Archaeological and Nat. Hist. Society' s Journal, xv. ° Gross, Gild Merchant, i. p. 129 n. and 139 n. These companies are to be carefully distinguished from another kind of Mercers' Com- pany -which vjfill be considered later. ' M. D. Harris, Life in an old English town, pp. 254 et seq. ' F. A. Hibbert, The influence of English Gilds, &c., p. 91, and 8 Eliz. c. 7. ' V. Green, History of Worcester, App. p. kvii. ^° See p. 87 n. I. MERCERS' COMPANIES 79 we pass from the consideration of the effects of a purely- commercial development on the forms of the gild to take into account a set of new and frequently hostile influences. II The process by which commercial capital was displaced Transition in relative importance by industrial capital was a very fro^.co™- gradual one lasting over many centuries, and the several i^dustrial° stages of it can be distinctly traced in the successive phases capital ; of organization represented by the various London com- three stages panies. The Mercers' and the Grocers' Companies, which were the earliest to acquire wealth and influence, represented purely commercial capital. Between 12 14 and 1222 the mayoralty was occupied seven times by mercers, and between 1231 and 1237 seven times by pepperers (the earlier name of the grocers) ^. The next stage is indicated by the charter which in 1367 gave the Drapers the monopoly of the trade in cloth made by English craftsmen, and by the later rise to importance of the Haberdashers, Leather-sellers, and Ironmongers, who performed a similar function for the makers of hats and caps, gloves, purses, pins, and hardware. The final stage, as far as the London companies are concerned, is represented by the Cloth- workers (1537), the Feltmakers (1604), the Pinmakers (1605), and the Glovers (1638), whose incorporation indicates an effort of the several industries to throw off the control exercised by the mercantile capital of the drapers, haber- dashers, and leather-sellers. But the most complete example of the earliest stage of First stage transition from commercial to industrial capital is furnished jjy"p^^'g^*^ by the mercers of Paris. Their corporation was the most mercers, influential of the six great corps des metiers^ and especially prided itself on its non-industrial character. In 1543 they claimed exemption from the royal ordinance suppressing the confr cries of the crafts, on the ground that they were not artisans but merchants, buying and selling merchandize without any manufacture^. And Savary's Dictionary of Commerce (1750) says of their company that it is con- sidered as the most noble and most excellent of all the merchant corporations, inasmuch as those who compose it perform no manual work except it be to embelhsh articles already made ; which is not the case with the other bodies, which are regarded as mixed because they contain both 1 Strype, Statue's Survey of London, ii. pp. 102-3. 2 Lespinasse, Les mdtiers, ii. p. 258. 8o INDUSTRIAL V. COMMERCIAL CAPITAL who from being mainly dealers in foreign goods gradually became employers of the crafts merchants and craftsmen, such as the drapers, the goldsmiths, the skinners, &c. ^ As a matter of fact the earliest ordinances of the mercers point to a closer connexion with the silk manufacture than these disclaimers would seem to imply ^ ; but there can be no doubt that, at the beginning of the fifteenth century, by far their greatest interest consisted in a wholesale and retail trade in foreign wares. The gold and silver thread of Genoa, the linens and fustians of Germany, the ironwork of Toulouse, the serges of Arras, of England and of Ireland, the worsteds of Auvergne, and various kinds of foreign cutlery are enumerated, amongst other things, in the ordinances of 1408 as articles of their commerce^. By the seventeenth century the list was very greatly extended, and the mercers in their numerous branches had become the ' Universal Providers ' of Paris. They had also established a claim to a trading monopoly, exactly like the one put forward by the English companies of merchants at Hull and elsewhere. One of the articles of their ordinances in 1 61 3 forbids artisans or members of crafts to expose for sale any merchandise which has not been manufactured by themselves or their servants in Paris or the suburbs*. The crafts on their part had been struggling for two centuries to establish their right to inspect all goods belonging to their several trades sold by the mercers. The first attempt in 14 1 3 was supported by the combined efforts of the glovers, the pursers, the pouch-makers, the girdlers, the cappers, the cutlers, the sheathers, the pinners, the needle- makers, the painters, and the lorimers * ; but on this and all subsequent occasions the mercers were successful in re- pudiating any kind of control by the crafts, though disputes on the subject were continually recurring down to the time of the Revolution ^- The later course of the controversy, however, reveals a gradual change in the situation. As Paris became the centre of the fashionable world, articles of Parisian manu- facture began to replace many of the foreign commodities formerly imported by the mercers, whose trade was thus ' Savary des Bruslons, Diciionnaire universel de commerce, ii. p. 1329. "^ Lespinasse, Le Livre des Mdtiers, p. 157 ; Les metiers, ii. p. 242. ' Ibid., pp. 250-1. * Ibid., p. 274, Art. 13. ^ Ibid., ii. p. 255. ' Ibid., ii. 277-82 n. The ' Collection Lamorgnon' in the archives of the Prefecture of Police contains seventy-two regulations dealing with these disputes between 1600-50; see Levasseur, Histoire, ii. P- 413- THE MERCHANT EMPLOYER 8i brought into a closer relation with the industries of the city and suburbs. Although prohibited by their traditions and their ordinances from becoming direct employers, as many as seventy of them were found, in 1687, to be engaged in the cloth manufacture, and were obliged to transfer themselves to the drapers ^ Without, however, overstepping their rights, the mercers were able to act as warehousemen to a large number of the crafts, and even to employ them upon commissions. In 1662 and i67o,forinstance,Parliament confirmed their right to sell carriages and furniture which had been made for them in Paris, as long as the work was done by authorized masters and not by workmen of their own ^. The prosperous example of the Paris mercers was closely Similar followed at Troyes and at Rheims ; and many of the Paris ^evelop- ordinances, including the one forbidding craftsmen to trade, ™ercers' were copied verbatim by the latter city in 1639 ^. At functions Amiens * and at Abbeville ° the connexion of the trading '^" Fraoce> organization with local industry was advanced a further Germany stage. The mercers in each of these towns obtained in the fifteenth century a control over several crafts, including the hatters and cappers, and exacted an entrance fee from new masters. This tendency of associations of mercers or other traders to absorb the crafts in whose wares they dealt was common to many German and Italian cities, e.g. to Ulm, Basle, Strasburg ^, Milan, and Florence ' ; and its significance will be sufficiently illustrated in the English examples about to be considered. In the earlier period, down to the days when the mercer. Parallel Sir Richard Whittington, was thrice Lord Mayor, the case of London mercers held much the same position as their jj°'Jjg°" contemporaries of the same occupation in Paris '- But dashers' to the later partial transference of the capital of the Paris Company, mercers from foreign trade to the support of home industry, it is the London haberdashers who furnished the closest parallel. At the beginning of the sixteenth century, whilst stiU trading largely in foreign articles of luxury, the haber- dashers were finding employment for a multitude of London craftsmen under the conditions of the domestic system. The serious disturbances of Evil May Day, 151 7, when ^ Lespinasse, Les MMers, iii. p. 1 75 n. "^ Ibid., ii. pp. 277-8 notes. ' Documents inddits, Archives U^islatives de Reims, 11. p. 560. * Ibid., Tiers £tat, ii. p. 243. ° Jbid., ly. p. 274. ' Geering, Handel und Industrie der Stadt Basel, p. 230. ' Poehlmann, Die Wirthschafispolitik der Flprentiner Renaissance, pp. 45-6. 8 Fox Bourne, English Merchants, pp. 37, 89, 82 INDUSTRIAL V. COMMERCIAL CAPITAL a number of aliens were killed by a mob of workmen and apprentices, is attributed by a contemporary writer pardy to the jealousy of foreign competition, and partly to the miserable social condition of the London craftsmen. ' Before May day,' he says, ' pore handycraft peple, which that were wont to keepe shoppes and servaunts and hadd labour and levyng by makyng pyns, points, girdells, gloves, and all such other thynges necessary for comon peple, had thereof sale and profit daily, unto a thirty yere agoo a sorte beganne to occupie to bye and selle all soche handycraft wares called haburdashers . . . whereby many riche men is reson upon the destruction of the pore peple. Which before May day pore peple perceyved theym self having no lyvyng and wer bownd prentissis in London not able to kepe no howsis nor shops, but in allis sitting in a poore chamber working all the weke to sell his ware on the Saturday, brought it to the haburdashers to sell . . . which would not giff theym so moche wynning for their wares to fynde theym mete and drynk saying : they had no nede thereof; ther shopps lay storydd full of byond see ^.' which This account of the part played by the haberdashers is ^h ^*h^t^ ' ^"*^i^sly borne out by what is known of their relations to and cappers' '•'^^ hatters and cappers. As they had absorbed the crafts organizations of these two crafts in 1500, they were the sole representatives in London of the industries ; and this position was confirmed by Act of Parliament in 1565 2. From the reign of Edward IV onward repeated efforts were made by legislation to protect the hatters and cappers from foreign competition ^, and in 151 1 an Act was passed forbidding any but nobles or knights to buy hats or caps of foreign make*. This legislation, however, did not prevent a large trade being carried on in foreign hats and caps, and it was the haberdashers who profited by it. In June, 1514, a London haberdasher obtained a licence to import French, Milanese and other caps, and in July of the same year another haberdasher received a similar licence to import a hundred gross of French, Milanese or other caps, and a hundred gross of French or Bruges hats in four years ^- It was not to the interest of the haberdashers to take advantage of the protection afforded to the English ^ Pauli, Drei volkswirthschaftliche Denkschriften, p. 33. ' 8 Elizabeth, c. xi. sec. 6. ° 3 Edward IV, c. 4; 3 Henry VIII, c. 15 ; 21 Henry VIII, c. 91 I Mary, sect. 2, c. 11. * 3 Henry VIII, c. 15. ° Brewer, Papers of Henry VIII, I June 1514, No. 5144. Ibid., 8 July, 1 5 14, No. 5239. AMALGAMATIONS OF TRADERS 83 industries by the law, since the profit accruing to them as merchant employers was only a secondary concern. They continued to find employment for hatters, cappers, pinners, and other London craftsmen, but only on condition that the wares thus produced could compete successfully with the foreign commodities which still formed the staple of their trade. Such a modified form of trading organization embodying These a number of subordinated crafts became common through- amalgama- out England in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, dominated It served as a focus to bring together very diverse elements^, by traders Besides members of the original trading occupations, like became the mercers and the haberdashers, there were found in- th™t™mis'" eluded in this type of organization the prosperous craftsman who had become a shopkeeper, the member of the decayed craft who was employed in repairing or supplementing foreign commodities, and the small master of the rising domestic industry. Exeter ^ and York ^ had Haberdashers' Companies, like that of London, controlling the hatters' and cappers' crafts. The Leathersellers' Company of London, Groups of which between 1478 and 1 5 1 7 had absorbed the whittawyers, l^^^^l the glovers, the pursers, and the pouch-makers*, found imitators in Lincoln^, Reading '', and other towns. The dealers and the craftsmen in the various metal trades were of metal drawn together into similar amalgamations at Bristol '', *" ^^^ Chester8,Lincohl^Salisbury",Hereford",and Gloucester 1-. 1 The Norwich ordinances for the crafts, circa 1450, provide for the amalgamation of several ' misteries ' in a craft, e. g. bladesnaiths, lock- smiths, and lorimers, to be included in the smiths. " R. F. Rowell, Ancient Companies of Exeter in Western Anti' quary, iv. pp. 187-9. • Privy Council Register, May 25, 1618. * Black, Leathersellers' Company, pp. 37-48. ' Hist. MSS. Rep., Lincoln, p. 57. ' Man, Hist, of Reading, p. 350. ' Little Red Book of Bristol, ii. p. 181. ' Harleian MSS. 2054, 6. » Hist. MSS. Rep., Lincoln, p. 57. "> Hoare, Modern Wiltshire, vi. p. 341- " //zV/.i1/55.^«/., Hereford, p. 319- ^ , , , " Ibid., xii. App. IX, p. 427. In the groups of metal-workers, the blacksmiths, who were the oldest of the crafts, appear sometiines to be yielding place to the trading interest. The blacksmiths of Hereford complained to the mayor in 1554 that, havmg admitted the goldsmiths, cutlers plumbers, glaziers, pewterers, and cardmakers to their company, these other members had elected two wardens of which, contrary to custom neither was a blacksmith. They were permitted to become once more a fellowship of themselves, but four years later they appear united to the cutlers {Hist.MSS.Rep., Hereford, pp.319-26). The same G 2 84 INDUSTRIAL V. COMMERCIAL CAPITAL The greater variety of classes to be found in this kind of company, as distinguished from the purely trading organiza- tion, is shown by the range of the entrance fees. In the Tanners' and Leathersellers' Company of Reading, for example, the well-to-do traders, probably merchant em- ployers after whom the company was named, paid £4., and the shoemakers ^^3, the glovers and the curriers £2, the saddlers and the cobblers £ i ; whilst the girdlers and the collar-makers, who were probably craftsmen employed by the traders, paid los. and 5^-. respectively. With such a mixed composition the character of this species of organization would, no doubt, vary somewhat according to the conditions prevailing in the locality, or in the set of trades represented ; but the trading element in one form or another must always have predominated over the handi- craft element; whilst, on the other hand, an organization embracing so many heterogeneous trades was not suited to represent the larger forms of industrial capital ^. Artificial Both these considerations are still more applicable to groups the similar but more artificial groups into which the trades raun'kiipal °^ ^ town were often distributed by the municipal authorities authorities during the seventeenth century. In towns like Reading and Dorchester, where there were as many as five such groups, it was possible to adopt a natural classification into mercers or merchants, clothiers, metal and building trades, victualling trades, and leather trades. Even here the shop- keeping interest must have been generally the presiding influence, and this must have been still more the case where there were only four such groups, as at Kingston, or three, as at Uxbridge and Devizes, or two (the Mercers and the Victuallers), as at Gravesend and St. Albans, or where, as at Faversham, all the fifty-two trades of the town were brought together in the one Company of Mercers ^- III A ciassifi- The writer of the Discourse of the Co-mmon Weal divides cation of ^11 artificers into three classes : ' Off the first, I reckon all trades ' made about process is observable at Chester where the Smiths' Company received 155°> into its ranks, in 1499, the members of nine other crafts. In 1583 it was found necessary to prohibit the cutlers from making blacksmiths' work, but they were still permitted to deal in it, whilst a corresponding liberty was not allowed to the blacksmiths {Harleian MSS. 2054, 6). ^ For similar restrictions at Bristol, cf. Little Red Book of Bristol, ii. p. 181. ^ Gross, Gild Merchant, i. 120-3. Parallels to these cases in the French towns might be abundantly quoted. Vire had one corporation embracing all traders and craftsmen to the number of 214; Cherbourg had also only one, that of the Mercers. Levasseur, ii. p. 746. A CLASSIFICATION OF TRADES 85 mercers, grocers, vinteners, haberdashers, milleyners, and such as doe sell wares growing beyond the seas, and doe fetch oute our treasure of the same. ... Of the second sort be these: Shoemakers, tailors, carpenters, masons, tilers, bowchers, brewers, bakers, vitailes of all sortes which like as they get their living in the country so they spend it ; but they bring in no treasure unto us. Therefore we must cherishe well the third sorte, and these be clothiars, tannars, cappers, and worsted makers, only that I know which by their misteries and faculties doe bringe in anie treasour 1.' This classification admirably illustrates the supersession illustrates of the gild system under the twofold influence of commercial divergent and industrial expansion. The artificers here placed in JJ^/jJ,^^?^^ the second class are those who continued to work under merciai and the old conditions of a town economy. The first and third indnstriai classes are contrasted as the representatives of commercial '^'^P'*^^ and industrial capital. At the time the Discourse was written these two interests had been drawn into conscious opposition, and the conflict between them was fast coming to an issue. But the distinction had been one of slow growth. The successful craftsman engaged readily in trade, and the trader as readily found employment for the craftsman who was less successful. No doubt there were still many cases, as late as the seventeenth century, like that of the wet-glover of Chester, who seems to have combined in one and the same person the functions of a merchant employer, a retail shopkeeper, and a trader over seas. But during the sixteenth century great progress had Formation been made in the separation of these functions, and the "[^^g^Pf "^'^^ appropriation of each of them by a special class. The industrial companies of merchant adventurers or ' mere merchants,' capitalists which had arisen in most of the large ports by the middle of the century, represented this tendency in regard to foreign trade ; and the later corporations of clothiers set up in many of the manufacturing towns indicate a similar specialization on the part of the industrial capitalist. And just as the expansion of commerce, in its earlier stages, led to a revival in another form of the old trading monopoly, so the later expansion of industry was associatedwith the re-assertion in a modified shape of the local industrial monopoly. That the industries which were producmg an ever-in- leads to creasing proportion of the national wealth should be a^rej^^ai of ' Lamond, Discourse, p. 91, 86 INDUSTRIAL v. COMMERCIAL CAPITAL monopoly of industry by the towns The town drapers at first strove for free trade in conntry produce in oppo- sition to the town weavers, confined as much as possible to the towns was a cardinal doctrine of the sixteenth-century pamphleteer and social reformer i, and the guiding principle of a considerable body of legislation. The larger commercial interests of the country, which were rapidly freeing themselves from local prepossessions, were undoubtedly opposed to such a re- striction ; and it could not have obtained the sanction of public opinion and of Parliament unless it had been favoured by an even stronger body of organized material interests. This support was furnished by the industrial capitalists of the town ; and the explanation of it brings us back to that conversion of trading capital into industrial capital which is the central theme of the present chapter. The draper, who in the fifteenth century acted as middleman to the weaver, had that primary interest in the prosperity of industry which was wanting to the mercer and the haberdasher, since the bulk of his capital was engaged in the trade in English cloth. But as long as the operations of the capitalist could be confined to the towns, it was to the interest of the town draper that the industry should be as widespread as possible. The produce of the country weaver, if it could be made to pass through his hands, might be an even greater source of profit than that of the craftsman of the town. By the beginning of the sixteenth century the greater part of the weaving industry had already migrated into the country^. A sermon writer of that time speaks of former days, ' when in London was 720 brode lomes to weef brode cloth. . . . Vitalle was so good chepe in London that tyme when people might liff with little money to make cloth in the cittie, when now vitalle is so dear and scarse that artificers cannot make artificialite good chepe ^.' The same causes were at work, and the same complaints were heard, in aU the old centres of the cloth manufacture *. The organized weavers of the towns naturally did their best to resist the change. Sometimes, as at Norwich in 1442 °, and at Bury St. Edmunds in 1477 *, they may have contrived to draw the country weavers into their organiza- tions ; but oftener they sought to shut out competition, as at Shrewsbury in 1470', where they obtained an order ' Lamond, Discourse, p. 131. ''■ At Bristol the fulling industry had also spread into the country as early as 1404. See Little Red Book of Bristol, ii. p. 78. ' Pauli, Drei volkswirthschaftliche Denkschriften, p. 43. * See note i on next page. ^ 20 Henry VI, c. 10. « Hist. MSS. Rep., Bury St. Edmunds, p. 133. ' Ibid., Shrewsbury, p. Ii. TOWN V. COUNTRY WEAVER 87 from the town authorities forbidding the drapers to bring in Welsh cloth. That the resistance of the weavers proved in the long run to be futile is shown by the wording of the very ordinances granted for their protection. The town authorities of Ipswich, to take one of many later examples, with a view of lessening the distress and finding work for the poor, made an order in 1 590 that no clothier should put forth into the country above half his work, if he could get it as well done within the town, without special leave of the bailiffs ^. The opposition of interest thus produced by the natural whose expansion of industry between the merchant employer ""'"''^^^ . and the urban weaver is observable in the French and England '° German cities at the same time as in England. At Stras- and on the burg the clothiers had been permitted by an ordinance of =°°''"*"'' 1474 to employ outside weavers ; and the records of the Strasburg, town weavers' organization, in the first and second decades of ^'*'^* the sixteenth century, show a great falling off in their numbers, and look back with regret, like the English writer already quoted, to the more prosperous times forty years before^. In 1475 the drapers of Paris received a special Paris, 1475 grant from Louis XI, in consideration of the great services they had rendered him in his wars, authorizing them to deal in cloth brought from every part of France, on the grounds that the cloth then manufactured by the craftsmen of Paris was quite inadequate to the drapers' demands^. A similar case on a smaller scale was brought by the merchants and weavers of Ulm before the Emperor Maxi- Ulm, 1513 milian*, when he was encamped with Henry VIII at Tournai in 1513. The merchants had built up a consider- able trade in the fustians made in the country districts and smaller towns around Ulm, which would be destroyed if the restrictions demanded by the weavers of Ulm were carried into effect. The compromise suggested by the city council on behalf of the merchants, fixing a maximum for the number of outside weavers, was approved by the Emperor, and the existing freedom was left undisturbed. The simple issue presented by these cases, between the The larger free trade policy of the merchants and the local privileges ^l^^^^^ ■ 1 Hisi. MSS. Rep., ix. Pt. I. p. 255 ; cf. Worcester Ordinances in between English Gilds, p. 383; Fox and '^^y^°J'f'S'"l''''G''H''f^'''''''''A^^v^T^r.i p. 49; English Gilds, p. 28s ; Hist. MSS. Rep., Hereford, pp. 327, Sy 335 ; Records of Nottingham (1494), i"- P- 26. weaver, " Schmoller, Tucher- und Weberzunft, pp. 501, 513-4. ' Lespinasse, Les Metiers, iii. p. 163. _ * E. Nubling, Ulms Batimwolleret im Mittelalter, pp. 155-7 (Schtiioller, Forschungen, ix). 88 INDUSTRIAL v. COMMERCIAL CAPITAL of the industrial organizations, was soon complicated by- other considerations. During the first half of the sixteenth century the rapid expansion of the manufacture of cloth and of the trade in it gave rise to several new develop- ments in the condition of both, and in their relation to each other, In the first place capital began to follow labour into the country, so that the country weaver was no longer dependent upon the agency of the town draper. Secondly, the large mercantile capitalist, in touch with the European market, became a powerful competitor against the local trader in the new field thus opened up by the country manufacture. And lastly, the technical improvements in the finishing and dyeing of cloth gave a new strength and importance to the skilled handicrafts occupied with these processes in the towns. Briefly stated, the result which these three developments combined to produce was that the town draper was driven by the competition of larger mercantile capital Operating from a distance to fall back upon the protection afforded by local privilege, and to seekj in conjunction with the finishing crafts, to reinstate the town as the regulative centre of the industry, and the Before turning to follow the course of this development draper jn the history of the chief manufacturing towns of England, Mu™rkf " it is worthy of notice that the fustian trade of Ulm, the capitalist last continental parallel referred to, furnishes in its sub- sequent history a complete illustration of the same changes. Soon after the settlement of the dispute between the merchants and the weavers, the Fugger family, who were the great international capitalists of the period, contrived through the exercise of influence in high places to with- draw some of the territory round Ulm from the control of that city. The country weavers, thus placed on an in- dependent footing, were then employed in supplying a large export trade carried on by the Fuggers in competition with the traders of Ulm and other cities. During the latter half of the sixteenth century the council of Ulm, like many English town councils in Elizabeth's reign, was straining every nerve to maintain by protective measures the in- dustrial position of the city ^, Tudor From the earliest years of the reign of Henry VIII to protection the accession of Elizabeth a constantly increasing amount * of legislation was devoted to the protection of the town manufacture against the competition of the country. The first step in this direction is to be found in the acts for- bidding the exportation of unfinished cloth, although these 1 Niibling, pp. 159, 165. of town industries LOCAL MONOPOLY REVIVED 89 acts were passed in pursuance of a wider national policy, and were only indirectly meant to be a benefit to the towns. During the previous three centuries England had stood in the same economic relation to the cities of Flanders and of 1 Italy as that in which the country, in Western Europe generally, stood to the towns. In the thirteenth and four- ' teenth centuries, the wool, the hides, and the tin of England had supplied materials for the more advanced industries of Ghent and Bruges, Cologne and Florence^. During the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries the relation between town and country underwent a change ; the country became the seat of a considerable manufacture, but the cloth woven in the country was generally finished and dyed as well as sold in the towns. A similar change took place at the same period in the relation of England as a whole to the chief industrial centres of the continent. The most important export of England, as late as the reign of James I, was still the white cloth, which had to be finished and dyed abroad to meet the taste of the foreign consumer. The only real remedy for this condition of things was that subsequently exemplified provided by the gradual improvement of the industrial arts ™ tl^.^ . in England. The statesmen of that time, however, urged ^^ export on by the pamphleteer and the political theorist, were con- of un- stantly attempting to achieve the same end more speedily finished by artificial means. The export of raw materials, or of ' half-manufactured goods, was regarded as the loss of so much potential treasure to the realm. The restriction which had been placed on the export of woollen yarn and unfuUed cloth in 1467^ was extended in 1487^ to cloth which had not been ' rowed and shorn.' The prohibition was re- enacted several times during the reign of Henry VIII, and special administrative measures were taken for its enforce- ment ; but the lower qualities of cloth, which formed the bulk of the exports, were always exempted from the operation of these laws*. For the purpose of realizing the connexion which these attempts to regulate the export trade have with the industrial competition between town and country, it will be instructive to place side by side two statutes passed in the year 1523. The preamble to the 'with a view first of these Acts is a forcible statement of one of the views ^ ™°'^f universally prevalent in the sixteenth century on the subject pioyment ' of foreign trade. It is declared that ' Merchaunt Strangers 1 Cunningham, Growth, &c., i. pp. 197-8. ^ 7 Edward IV, c. 3. '3 Henry VII, c. 11. ♦ q Henry VIII, c 7 ; 5 Henry VIII, c. 3 ; 14 & 15 Henry VIII, c 1-27 Henry VIII, c. 13 ; 33 Henry VIII, c. 19. 90 INDUSTRIAL v. COMMERCIAL CAPITAL The coun- try weaver sells to the London merchant The town draper throws his capital into town in- dustry Studying and imagynyng the policies, wayes, and meanys to set aworke the people inhabited in forren Countryes and Regions with and by the commodities of the Realme and to bryng the Kynge's naturall subjectes from occupation to idleness, Do dayly convey transporte and carie out of this Realme of England for theire own singuler lucre a great nombre of Erode White WoUen Clothes to be coulored dyed and wrought in dyvers and sondrie partes beyond the Sees to the great encrease comforte profitte and advantage of the people inhabited in the said outward and forren regions, and to the utter ruyne decay impoverysshyng and undoyng of a great nombre of the Kynge's owne naturall Subjectes ^.' This indirect statement of economic doctrine is all the more worthy of attention as it is largely gratuitous, since the provisions of the Act are not directed against the export itself, but only against the manner of it, and against the methods of the merchant strangers, who are accused of selling large quantities of cloth direct from the makers on credit ' by fayr promyses and subtyle adulacions,' and then failing to meet their engagements. Henceforward no in- habitant of the realm is to sell cloth to the foreign merchants except in the ports or at fairs. The aliens may, however, continue to buy for ready money or wares certain kinds of white cloth, and especially that made in several industrial villages of Essex. These and other provisions of the Act make it clear that the country manufacturer had been accus- tomed to dispose of his cloth direct to the foreign trader, and that it was now sought to divert this trade into the hands of the London merchant, who might bargain for the cloth in the localities where it was made, and who, if it was brought up to London, had the first eight days' refusal of it at his head quarters in Blackwell Hall. It will thus be seen that, whether through the alien merchant or the London draper, the country maker was being brought into direct con- nexion with the larger channels of commerce; and it is obvious that, in proportion as this outlet for country cloth was more utilized, the town drapers' sphere of operations must have been correspondingly encroached upon. The tendency of this rivalry was to lead the town draper to make common cause with the finishing industries still carried on in the towns, and to take advantage of the prevailing opinion against the export of half-manufactured goods. The second of the two statutes already referred to as having been passed in 1523 supplies the earliest illus- tration of this result. The Act is concerned with the ' 14 & IS Henry VIII, c. I. PROTECTIVE LEGISLATION 91 organization of the worsted industry, which had its centre at Norwich. The weaving of worsteds had been spread for more than a century through Norfolk and Suffolk, and since 1444^ the country weavers had chosen four wardens to act with those of the city. As Yarmouth and Lynn, where a flourishing industry was carried on, were corporate towns, they were now to have wardens of their own, authorized to search and seal cloth, but subject to the supervision of the mayor of Norwich and of the original eight wardens for the city and country. It is, however, the provisos, with which this grant was safeguarded, that specially demand attention. The last two clauses were to the effect that none of the worsteds woven outside Norwich were to be shorn, dyed, or calendered except in that city, and that no worsteds were to be exported that were not shorn, dyed, and calendered 2. There can be little doubt that these provisions for the protection of the shearmen and dyers of Norwich were promoted by the Norwich drapers, with the intention of keeping the final stages of the manufacture under their own control, and thus exclud- ing the competition of the country capitalist. That the struggle between town and country was at this and pro- time due primarily to the rivalry, not of the craftsmen, but ?^p^ J?^!^" of their employers, is clearly shown by the language of the protection, Act, which, in 1533-4, gave a monopoly of the cloth manu- facture within Worcestershire to the clothiers of Worcester, Evesham, Droitwich, Kidderminster, and Bromsgrove. The two conflicting interests are, on the one hand, that of the town capitalists, who have ' sett aworke the pore people of the same citie, borowes and townes, and of the Countre adjoinyng to them dayly, as in spynnyng, cardyng and breakyng and sortyng of woUes, and the handcraftes there inhabytynge as weavers, fullers, sheremen and dyers ; ' and, on the other hand, that of the country capitalists ' dwelling in the hamletts, throps and villages adjoyning to the seid Citie borowes and townes within the seid Shire,' who ' have not only engrossed and takyn into their handes dyverse and sondre fermes, and become fermers, grasiers, and husband- men, but also doo exercise, use and occupie the mysteries of cloth-makyng, wevyng, fuHyng, and sheryng^.' It was evidently the influence of the town clothier, rather than that of the town craftsman, that secured this prohibition of the country manufacture ; and this surmise is strengthened by the speedy breakdown of an Act passed in 1551 in the sole ' 2% Henry VI, c. 4- ^ 14 & IS Henry VIII, c. 3. ■^ ^ '25 Henry VIII, c. 18. 92 INDUSTRIAL v. COMMERCIAL CAPITAL interest of the craftsman, to the effect that ' no person should weave, or make, or put to weaving, or making, any broad woollen cloth' unless he had been apprenticed or worked at the trade seven years ^. This restriction struck at the position of the merchant employer in the town as well as in the country- ' Many good clothiers, dwelling in Wor- cester and other good cities and towns,' made their complaint heard in Parliament, and in 1554, three years after it had been passed, the Act was confined in its operations to the country districts ^. ciilminatv' The Weavers' Act of 1555^ in spite of an eloquent pre- ing in the ^mble setting- forth the grievances of the poor weavers and WC3.VGrS Act of their oppression by wealthy clothiers, shows, upon careful '655, examination, the same influences at work. This Act has been described by Froude ' as shining like a fair gleam of humanity in the midst ... of the cruelties of that melancholy time,' on the ground that it represents a benevolent attempt to put down the evils of capitalism in town and country alike, by rendering the craftsmen ' independent of masters who only sought to make their own advantage at the expense of labour, and enabling them which was to maintain themselves in manly freedom ^.' This favour- passed not able view is unfortunately based on the supposition that the theTnter-'° ^^^^ clause of the Act forbidding country clothiers to have ests of the more than one loom each in their possession, or to hire craftsmen out looms to Others, is followed by a provision Umiting weavers li-ving in towns to two looms ^. The fact is, however, that the second clause, like the first, distincdy appHes only to those ' dwelling out ^Citie, Burghe, Market Towne or Towne Corporate ' ; and this is also the case with the sixth clause, which limits the country weaver to two apprentices. It is true that the third and fourth clauses, which forbid weavers to carry on fulling or dyeing, or fullers to possess looms for weaving, appear at first sight to be of universal application. But the wording of these clauses distinctly implies that this limitation to one craft was to be removed if the weaver or fxaller became a clothier ; and the next clause goes on to provide that in future no person sjiall set up as a clothier except in a town or in a place where the cloth masufacture has been established for ten years*.' as in those Although, therefore, the Act may possibly have served of the town incidentally to protect some of the poorer craftsmen, its employer ■' ^ '^ ' 5 & 6 Edward VI, c. 8. ^ I Maiy, sect. 7, c. 7. ' Froude, History of England, i. pp. 55-7. * 2 & 3 Philip and Mary, c. 11. THE WEAVERS' ACT 93 main purpose was to keep the control of the industry in the hands of the town employers by checking the growth of a class of country capitalists ; and in this respect it supplemented the Act of the previous year, which forbade country dealers to sell cloth or other wares in towns except by wholesale, in which case it would have to pass through the hands of the town trader 1. The Weavers' Act re- presented in fact the general application of a policy which had been in course of adoption in regard to particular towns for the previous twenty years, and which found a further exemplification during the same session in an Act giving to Bridgewater, Taunton, and Chard the right to seal all cloths made in Somerset, IV That this body of protective legislation just reviewed was The same due, in the main, to the influence of the capitalists, who influences formed the ruling classes of the towns, is further shown by ^unjjpai the subsequent course of municipal policy. From the policy middle of the sixteenth century onwards to the middle of the seventeenth, the adoption of measures with a view to arrest the decay of the town industries became practically universaP. The town authorities were not content with the negative remedies furnished by protective Acts of Parliament. It was recognized that the economic advantages possessed by the country districts must be counterbalanced in a more positive way. The competition of cheap country labour might, it was thought, be met by utilizing the labour of the increasing class of dependent poor. General contributions were levied to provide capital for this form of municipal enterprise; and legacies left with the same object by local benefactors became quite common in the sixteenth century ^. The town council was not, as a rule, a direct employer. It lent out its capital on favourable terms to contracting clothiers, who were thus tempted to 1 2& 3 Philip and Mary c. 12. For much other attempted legisla- tion with the same object about this time see Bouse of Commons Journal, i. pp. 15, 22, 28, 60; and Cunningham, Growth, &c., third edition, ii. pp. 26-7 and notes, t " Lamond, Discourse, p. 129. o, t. ^ Hist. MSS. Rep., Lincoln, pp. 26, 97 ; Shrewsbury, p. 19; Leonard, English Poor Relief , pp. no et seq. ; R.H. Morns, Chester, DP ^62 et seq. ; Harleian MSS. 2046, 4-7 ; M. D. Harris, Life in an old English town, pp. 258, 313- . Th? most remarkable of these legacies was that of Sir T. White (founder of St. John's College Oxford), which supplied a fund for a loan to circulate amongst twenty-four towns ; see Clode, Merchant Taylors, ii. p. 178. 94 INDUSTRIAL v. COMMERCIAL CAPITAL Effects of municipal enterprise on status of workers, especially of the weavers ; case of Lincoln come from a distance and set up new branches of manu- facture. Sometimes the newcomer undertook for a con- sideration not merely to teach the children of the poor, but to feed them ^. These experiments were frequently failures. After a time one or both parties became discontented with the bargains that had been struck, and the arrangement broke down; but the old contractor was generally re- placed by a new one who had hopes, very often ill- founded, of better results ^. This interesting aspect of the subject belongs, however, rather to the history of English poor relief than to our special province ^- What we are directly concerned with here is the effect of this development on industrial organiza- tion. Undoubtedly it tended to pauperize some of the classes engaged in the cloth industry in the towns. The poor, mostly women and children, employed by the contractor, were in no position to benefit by collective bargaining. The only check on the employer lay in the town authorities who at one time fixed a piecework rate *, and at another time contented themselves with a vague stipulation that a reasonable wage should be paid^. An order, promulgated at Bury St. Edmunds in 1570, shows how completely some of the townworkers were deprived of their economic independence under these conditions. Every spinster is to have six pounds of wool every week, and to bring the same home every Saturday at night, and, if any fail so to do, the clothier is to give notice to the constable*. As, however, the spinning of wool had from the earliest times been carried on in the country, for the most part by women and children, it had never been a well- organized industry, and may therefore not have suffered much in status from such regulations. With the weavers the case was very different. Their gilds, which had been the earliest and most widespread of industrial organizations, were now being daily weakened not merely by the migration of the industry into the country, but also in many cases by the very measures adopted by ^ Hist. MSS. Rep., Plymouth, p. 268. ^ Ibid., also Morris, Chester, p. 365 ; Hist. MSS. Rep., Lincoln, p. 97 ; Miss Seller's article in Historical Review 1897, p. 438, on York in the seventeenth century ; J. Latimer, Annals of Bristol, pp. 40, 65. ' For an excellent account of the later developments, see Miss Leonards, Early History of English Poor Relief * R. H. Morris, Chester, p. 409. ^ Harleian MSS. 2046, 4. « Hist. MSS. Rep., Bury St. Edmunds, p. 159. MUNICIPAL ENTERPRISE 95 no the towns for their own protection. The towns could ..^ longer prohibit the country weaving, and if they were to compete with it successfully they must set aside the re- strictions imposed by the gilds, and offer every encourage- ment to new enterprise. In 1550 the city of Lincoln made over one of its disused parish churches, along with the churchyard and other land, to some clothiers for the making of a walk-mill and a dyehouse, on condition of their producing twenty broadcloths every year. The clothiers were to take all such young people as lived in idleness, for eight or nine years, giving them meat, drink, clothes, and other necessaries sufficient, and those who would not work were to have a month's warning to leave the city. Letters were to be given to the clothiers asking ' noblemen or worshipful men ' for help in their new enter- prise, and any lawful means found by any one for improving the trade were to be sanctioned. The mayor was to lend them his countenance by joining the fellowship. The weavers, upon whose trade this enterprise must have been a serious encroachment, were not able to exclude the new-comers. All they could do was to insist that, in addition to paying an ' upset,' they should make a yearly contribution as ' loom's farm ' to the weavers' fellowship, and should refrain from working any cloth but their own^. To a similar piece of municipal enterprise the weavers of Resistance Chester oflfered, in 1575, a more vigorous resistance. The °f weavers mayor had made arrangements for the introduction of ^' Chester a number of skilled workers to set up the making of Shrewsbury cloth ; but the attitude of the weavers was so threatening that the strangers were obliged to withdraw. The corporation, however, insisted on receiving the Shrews- bury men, but allowed a stipulation that the latter should confine themselves to their own branch of manufacture, and that they should carry it on in their own dwelling-houses or shops, and not elsewhere ^. But the time was come when none of the clothing crafts, Tendency and least of all the weavers, could longer hope to maintain of clothing an isolated independence. If they were to share in the ^^^^^^^^ benefits of the movement for the protection of the town amalgama- industries, it must be by accepting a subordinate position tion, 1 Jlzst. MSS. Rep., Lincoln, pp. 44-5- The meaning of the last provision is doubtful. It may have been intended to prevent the finishing of cloth woven outside the city. ' Morris, Chester, p. 408 ; cf. Latimer, Annals of Bristol, p. 40, for a similar struggle between the municipality and the weavers. 96 INDUSTRIAL v. COMMERCIAL CAPITAL in the larger and more complex forms of organization to which that movement was giving birth. In every town where the cloth industry was of any importance, the authorities were constantly exercised, during the sixteenth century, by the problem of reconciling the conflicting interests involved in it ; and the task of bringing these interests into some kind of agreement was lessened by the presence of a common enemy in the shape of a flourishing country manufacture, strength- In some towns an all-embracing system of public in- ened by spection served to link the various clothing crafts together, regulation, ^'^'^ ^^^ natural development of the industry brought its ' various branches into constantly closer relations^. The more prosperous masters in each craft could not be prevented from extending their business into the domain of the other crafts. The dyer became an employer of shearmen, the shearman an employer of dyers ; and there were even weavers who gave out their cloth to be finished before they disposed of it to the merchant. The various crafts were, in fact, engaged in a con- stant struggle as to which of them should secure the economic advantage of standing between the rest and the market I But in each craft there were generally a number of masters who were to some extent dealers in cloth. On the other hand, the drapers, as we have seen, had often acquired an interest in the prosperity of the crafts engaged in the finishing process. By this interlacing of the interests of dealer and craftsman the way was gradually prepared for a new form of organization, embracing both classes, which naturally sought to extend its authority as widely over the manufacture as possible, and sane- The System of municipal regulation had already supplied tioned by the framework for such an organization, and the enterprise p'^rlament °^ ^^^ town authorities furnished the initiative in its creation; but the grant of a monopoly by Parliament, which would shield trader and craftsman alike from outside competition, would naturally seem to afford the most encouraging basis for the experiment. It is, accordingly, in connexion with such a grant of exclusive right to carry on a species of manufacture, which they claimed to have introduced into England, that we find the mayor and aldermen of Norwich obtaining the first legislative sanction for the new species of corporation. The trading element which had supplied ' Cf. Regulation of clothing crafts in Bourges in 1579, Levasseur, ii. p. 100. '' Fox and Taylor, Weavers' Guild at Bristol, p. 70 ; Hist. MSS. Rep., Lincoln, p. 55. COMPANIES OF CLOTHIERS 97 the capital for the undertaking was to be represented by the mayor, six aldermen, and six merchant citizens ; whilst the element of handicraft was found in ' eight of the most discreet and worthy men of the mistery of worsted weavers^.' By this Act of 1554, which is one more of the many evidences of the stand then being made for the protection of town industries, the sanction of Parliament was given to a type of industrial organization which, by a gradual process of adaptation, had already come to prevail pretty generally amongst the livery companies of London. From the middle of the sixteenth century onwards, a steady progress towards the predominance of this type is to be observed in the organization of the cloth industry throughout the country. The two aspects of this development, the drawing to- This move- ofether of the several crafts into a singfle association, on the ""^"^ repre- one hand, and the gradual differentiation, on the other dispiace- hand, between the two classes of merchant employer and ment of small master, have been dealt with at length in earlier trading chapters. The numerous companies of drapers or clothiers, iiXstriaf which were the results of this twofold process, were by no capital : means uniform in their constitutions, or in the method of their sanction. At Coventry, for instance, a monopoly like that granted to Norwich was, in 1 568, vested in the town authorities ; but it was based, not on an Act of Parliament, but on a covenant with the Queen ^- In other cases, as at Shrewsbury and at Worcester, the grants made (by an Act in the former case, and by a charter in the latter) were not to the municipal body, but to a private association. Yet another form of sanction for the new type of corporation is represented by the ordinances which the authorities of Ipswich issued, in 1590, for regulating the company of clothworkers, shearmen, and dyers, and ' for promoting the industries of the said artisans, and controlling all persons living by the said vocation within the liberties of the borough 3.' Behind such differences of form, however, these cases have all one essential feature in common. They re- present the rise to predominance in many of the towns of organized industrial capital, as contrasted with the organized trading capital represented by the companies of merchants or of mercers. Sfrictly speaking, the difference implied by the use of these terms was only one of degree, A part of the mercers' capital was often employed^ as we 1 I & 2 Philip and Mary, c. 4. 2 State Papers Dom., Elizabeth, xlvi. 52. 3 Hist. MSS. Rep., ix. Pt. I. 255. H 98 INDUSTRIAL V. COMMERCIAL CAPITAL have seen, in the support of industry, whilst the drapers and the clothiers retained a considerable interest in trade. illustration The situation which served as the starting-point for this of this from rivalry is admirably illustrated by the case of Bristol. The "^'°'' company of merchants there, which had already had a flourishing existence of more than a century, sought and obtained in 1 568 exclusive privileges of trade as a company of merchant adventurers. A strong protest was, however, made by those interested in the cloth industry through the Mayor and the members of ParUament, and in the end the monopoly was withdrawn. The complaint of the tuckers or fullers on this occasion shows how much the sphere of activity of the merchant adventurer and that of the merchant employer overlapped each other. The merchant adventurers had declared that, owing to the decay of their trade, they had not been able to put the commons on work, and by this ' subtyl fetch ' they obtained the obnoxious grant. ' But what happened unto thee, O Bristow, by these means ? Bondage, bondage, and misery ! . . . A number of honest occupiers are cut off from occupying unto the sea at whose hands the poore craft of towchars earned more in a year than they do now by ii or iii c '' by the yeare. No man must medyl with merchants' craft, and yet they wyll entermedyll with other men's, for they have taken upon them to fold and tuche cloth by which the poore craft of towchars is impugned. . . . Some merchants use clothyers of the country so unhonestly that we have harde some of the clothyers swear that they wyll sell their cloth at London ^.' from At Shrewsbury in 1565 a similar situation had arisen, .Shrews- except that the spirit of aggression and monopoly were on ' the other side. The Mercers' Company had in the fifteenth century been the wealthiest and most influential trade organization in Shrewsbury, and included at that time the goldsmiths and apparently the drapers ^- But by the reign of Elizabeth the drapers possessed a powerful organization of their own. They had provided, at their common cost, houses and other necessaries for a number of poor people whom they kept employed, presumably as spinners and weavers, and they found work in addition for over six hundred shearmen. On these grounds they obtained from Parliament an Act granting them the monopoly of the trade of cloth in Shrewsbury^, which was, however, re- ^ Fox and Taylor, Weavers' Guild of Bristol, p. 91. ^ Shrewsbury Archaeological and Natural History Soc. Trans., iv. p. 195. * 8 Elizabeth, c. 7. DRAPER V. MERCER 99 pealed six years later because it had had a bad effect on the town, and the poor artificers complained that there were fewer persons to set them to work ^. Yet the drapers did not abandon their aims. They maintained a long struggle for the exclusion, not only of the rival traders of their own town, but also of the agents whom the London merchants sent to the Welsh markets^. In 161 9 a judicial committee of the Privy Council was appointed to consider the differences between the mercers and the drapers of Shrewsbury. The mercers claimed that they were entitled by custom and practice to carry on the trade in cloth which they had from time to time exercised with all freedom^. But the committee decided that ' the trade of a draper is a trade and mistery under 5 Elizabeth, and that the course of bying of clothes at Oswestry rawe and undressed, and working and dressing, sometimes dyeing them, is, and hath bin the greatest part of the drapers' trade . . . that the trade of draperie, by reason of the variety of clothes, requires men of experience, and that the mercers accordingly ought not to meddle*.' The monopoly thus restored to the drapers was two years later discovered once more to be inexpedient^, but the principle laid down by the Privy Council retains its value as a landmark in the development we are describing. One more illustration will serve to bring out more clearly and from the relations of the various classes involved in this conflict Chester of interests. At Chester, in 1602, one Thomas Sayers, who had set up business in an outlying district much frequented by the domestic industries, and who 'set many poor on work ' in making thread for the tradesmen of the city, re- ceived his freedom on the payment of ten pounds. He subsequently became a leading spirit of the Linendrapers' Company, and before long the mercers were complaining that several linen-drapers, including Sayers, were en- croaching on their trade. The dispute came to a head in 1634, when Sayers and the other officers of the linen- drapers were imprisoned for unfitting speeches. Evidence was given that they had spoken of suing for a charter from the Crown which would make them independent of the city authorities. By that time, in addition to the mercers, we find the weavers also arrayed against the hnen-drapers, ' 14 Elizabeth, c. 12. j c . ^ ^ Privy Council Register, May 2, 11, 16, Aug. 31, and Sept. 17, 1613 ; also May 23, 1619. ^ Ibid., June 12, 1619, p. 235, and Oct. 27, 1619, p. 310. * Ibid., Nov. 10, 1619, p. 321. ' Ibid., June 13, 1621, p. 52. H 2 loo INDUSTRIAL v. COMMERCIAL CAPITAL who were charged not only with retailing- silk and with monopolizing the trade in linen, but also with employing a number of women in thread-making. Sayers and his colleagues were ultimately released on a promise of sub- mission to the ruling of the council ^. Similar The history of the London organizations, to be dealt with develop- jn subsequent chapters, will reveal the same fundamental continent opposition as is manifested in these disputes, in a number of varying phases ; nor was it in any way a development confined to England. As we have already seen, the drapers of Paris succeeded in 1687 in compelling a large number of mercers who had engaged in the cloth manufacture to transfer themselves to the Drapers' Company; and a similar struggle is recorded of Rheims in 1705-8, in which the final victory seems to have been on the side of the mercers ^. IV Effect of these ten- dencies on national policy : In concluding this chapter it is desirable to return for a moment to a more broadly national aspect of the subject. Springing as they did from the interaction of economic forces operating beyond the narrow limits of local trade and industry, the tendencies that have been described found a wider field of activity than that supplied by the rivalries of merely local organizations. In falling back upon an alliance with a privileged local industry, the town draper became the rallying point of a national opposition to free trade. The drapers of Shrewsbury, for example, besides attempting to exclude the local mercers, engaged in a long but fruitless struggle to prevent the London merchants sending their agents into Wales to buy up the white cloth which would otherwise have passed into the Shrewsbury market and supplied materials for the finishing industries opposition of the town 3. Such a new combination of local trade and to free industry against the free development of a wider commerce provides a natural explanation for much that might seem mere ignorant prejudice or fanciful theory in the views of contemporary writers on social and economic questions; and especially serves to throw light upon their attitude to 1 Harleian MSS. 2354, 37-47. Cf. the case of John Grinder of Coventry, in 1424, Harris, Life in an old English town, p. 275. ^ Documents inMits, Archives legislatives de Reijns, ii. 570 n. A similar case in Languedoc is noted in Levasseur, Histoire des classes ouvriires 1901, ii. p. 272 n. 9 ; and one in Marseilles in 1744, ii. 455 n. 3. ' Privy Cotmcil Register, May 2, 11, 16, Aug. 31, Sept. 17, 1613, and May 23, 1619. trade RESISTANCE TO FREE TRADE loi the merchant class. The recommendations that the old handicrafts should be fostered, and new ones planted in the towns, and that the country industry should be placed under the due control of the town authority, found a per- fectly natural corollary in suggestions for Umiting the ill- advised activity of the merchant!, to which indeed the economic evils of the time were in no small degree attri- buted. It was not merely the ' merchantys which cary out thynges necessary to the use of our pepul and bring in agayn vayn TryfuUys and conceytys only for the folysch pastyme and pleasure of man ^ ' who fell under condemnation, the merchant staplers, who had been chiefly engaged in the export of raw material, were fast giving place to their rivals the merchant adventurers, who were largely con- cerned with the export of cloth ; yet the pamphleteer of the period looked upon the adventurer with feelings scarcely less hostile than those with which he regarded the stapler. Not only was the merchants' calling regarded as drawing Popular off the most promising artificers to swdl the ranks of an outcry unproductive class which made its profit out of the necessities m^erclfant and misfortunes of the rest of the country ^, it was actually class asserted that the increase in the number of merchants tended to lower the price of the cloth which they exported, and so inflicted a loss upon the manufacturer *. Such a statement becomes intelligible when it is reaUzed that a large number of the new merchants would naturally turn their attention to the profitable field presented by the country manufacture, and in this manner accentuate the competition already severely felt by the towns. It must not be thought, how- ever, that the merchants were attached to free trade as a matter of principle. In their larger sphere of operations they were as eager for privilege and monopoly as the local trader was in his more restricted sphere. The London merchants, for instance, made two unsuccessful attempts, in 1575 and 1638, to compel the Norwich drapers who came to London to bring their cloth to Blackwell Hall instead of selling it direct to the foreign merchants. But the Industrial very fact that their sphere of operations was a larger ^^P^'^^^1^^ one gave the merchants engaged in the export trade as demand a class an interest in estabHshing and preserving freedom protection of trade, both as against the maintenance of local privilege, 1 Lamond, Discourse of the Common Weal, pp. 125-31. 2 England in the reign of Henry VIII (E.E.T.S.), Starkey's Dialogue, p. 172. ^ ,. , ■^ Lamond, Discourse, p. 32 ; Pauli, pp. 69, 74- * Pauli, p. 33- I02 INDUSTRIAL V. COMMERCIAL CAPITAL and also against the attempt to force upon the foreign market the finished and dyed English cloth, for which there was little or no demand. At a time, however, when the artificial fostering of industry was an accepted maxim of state, and was supported by numerous and influential local interests, it was inevitable that mercantile capital should be found ready to exploit the protective policy if the Crown would grant the necessary monopoly. ' Ther be marchant men,' says Cardinal Pole in Starkey's Dialogue, which was written for the edification of Henry VIII in 1538, 'that by the helpe of the prynce wyl undertake in few yerys to bryng clothyng to as grete perfectyon as hyt ys in other partys, wych yf hyt were doune, hyt schold be the gretyst bunfyte to increase the ryches of England that might be devysed^' But a systematic attempt to carry out this policy was not authorized till the reign of James I, and this will be described in a subsequent chapter. ^ England in the reign of Henry VIII, p. 173. lions CHAPTER IV THE ELIZABETHAN COMPANY I We have hitherto been following-, as far as the latter half Craft gild of the sixteenth century, the gradual adaptation of the ^P^^''^'^ ^'y handicraft gild to the needs of a wider and more complex bethan environment. It is now time to examine in some detail company the structure and working of the industrial organizations which were the result of this process. The London hvery companies from the time of EHzabeth onwards will supply us with examples of a development which, as we have seen, was common to the larger industries throughout Western Europe, and which found perhaps an even more complete and logical expression in some continental organizations than in those of England. The essence of the new economic situation lay in the Productive separation of the distributive from the productive function. ^°4 '^'^''''" The business faculty which was needed to keep the larger function; industries in touch with a distant market had been increas- begin to ingly specialized by a distinct class of traders, whilst the separate master craftsman had been left to confine his attention to the management of production. Each of these functions required capital for its performance,but the larger capital and the fuller opportunities of utilizing it were generally to be found on the side of those who exercised the distributive function. This differentiation of classes was, however, a very gradual This process. The former craftsman, who had become a merchant ^'^^"^^ . deriving his main profit from dealing in other craftsmen's in the wares, often continued to keep journeymen and apprentices gradual of his own, as he was entitled to do by his practical ^f o^^^"°" experience ; whilst the small working- master, who was ganiza-"' dependent for the most part on the business faculty of the tions merchant to provide him with a market, did not willingly abandon the right of occasionally trading on his own account. It was to these two transitional types, which, while repre- senting opposite tendencies, had spheres of interest and of activity which largely overlapped each other, that the bulk of the members of the larger industrial organizations of the sixteenth century belonged. Though the two functions were in process of separation I04 THE ELIZABETHAN COMPANY But is revealed in the con- stitution of those newly created which recognize separate classes of traders and craftsmen, e.g. town clothing corpora- tions : Chester, London skinners, 1564, Toulouse silk- weavers, 1552 from each other, the mere trader and the mere craftsman were still the exception rather than the rule. In the majority of cases both functions were combined in every variety of proportion ; and the proportion varied not only from one individual to another, but in the same individual from year to year. Between two interests so closely intertwined it is not surprising that the conflict was slow to come to a clear issue, nor that the expression which it had effectually found by the middle of the sixteenth century in the constitutions of the older industrial organizations was of an indirect character and easily eludes casual observation. If, however, we take some of the organizations which were newly created or entirely recast about this time, the results effected elsewhere by silent and cumulative changes are presented at a glance. The new clothing corporations erected by Act of Parliament or royal charter in the towns are examples of this class ; but precise details of their internal economy are too often wanting. At Chester, how- ever, in 1579, the Drapers' and Hosiers' Company obtained a charter from which it appears that there were two distinct classes within the corporation, the clothiers who made the cloth, and the drapers who had the sole right to sell it by retail, and that neither was to be allowed to meddle with the other's trade ^. A still clearer case is that of the Skinners' Company of London. In 1564 the grey tawyers, who had long been employed by them, were amalgamated with the Skinners' Company upon terms which exactly reflect the differentiation of function already described. The tawyers were to be free of the Skinners' Company ; and no skinner was to put out work to others who were not freemen. The tawyers were to be paid for their work within thirteen days of delivery, in accordance with a price list which was embodied in the articles of the agreement ; and no tawyer was to act as a middleman between other tawyers and the skinners. Finally, two tawyers were to be appointed to take part in the search of the trade ^. An illustration from France carries us still further along the path of regulated differentiation. The silk-weavers of Toulouse, who were incorporated in 1552, were governed by regulations based on the inquiries of a commission sent to investigate the methods followed in other towns, a pro- cedure, it may be observed, not unknown in England at the same period ; and not only were the rates to be paid for work given out fixed as between merchant and small master, but it was likewise determined what proportion the ^ Harl. MSS. 1996, 9. ^ City of London Repertories, 15. fo. 432. A NEW TYPE OF ASSOCIATION 105 masters should pay to their journeymen and to the women who were employed in various subsidiary processes ^. Before inquiring- to what extent the new type of associa- The tion revealed in these examples was represented in the London London companies at the time of Ehzabeth, it is necessary ^""P^"^' to take into account a circimistance which materially limits of diminished the control over industry possessed by the i'^ control companies at that period. By the custom of London they °ndustry, could claim no exclusive right to the trade they represented. As a general rule it was impossible to prevent a citizen who was free of any company from carrying on the trade of any other company ^, if it seemed to his interest to do so. The master and wardens of each company claimed the right to search all who occupied their trade, and had a real power of annoying those who resisted their authority ; but the limits of that authority were vague and shifting, and might be frequently ignored by a powerful or persistent outsider. Against this state of things the handicraft section of the various companies were constantly protesting. They wished to bring all those who exercised a trade under the control of a single company representing that trade. But the indefiniteness of the existing- system, with the outlets it afforded to free enterprise and the facilities it offered for the transfer of capital, was too convenient to the mercantile interest to permit of any decided alteration. We cannot, therefore, expect to find in the companies illustrated a compact and exclusive representation of the several ''y "^^ . trades whose names they bore. At the time of Elizabeth, |^°t^resteT for example, no less than three of the greater companies in cloth, had a large interest in the cloth trade. The Clothworkers' Company, which had originally been founded to maintain the manufacturing interest as against the trading interest of the Drapers' Company, had itself gradually fallen under the direction of the merchant class, but its exclusive right to regulate the industry was challenged by the Merchant Taylors' Company, which contained a large body of mer- chant employers. The famous Sir Thomas White, founder of St. John's College, Oxford, who made his fortune in the cloth trade, and perpetuated his memory in twenty-four English towns by an endowment for the encouragement of ^ A. du Bourg, Tableau de rancienne organisation du travail dans le midi de la France, p. I2i-S'i- , .r,, , 2 See Cunningham, Growth, &c., 1. p. 620. The case there quoted does not of itself establish my point, as the weavers were admittedly on a special footing ; I give the impression derived from a pretty wide inspection of records ; cf. Index to Remembrancia, p. 103. [o6 THE ELIZABETHAN COMPANY and from the history of the haber- dashers Barriers between traders of different companies tend to disappear the leading national industry, was a member not of the Clothworkers', but of the Merchant Taylors' Company i, and the two companies continued to be more or less rivals during the whole period of their industrial importance. Another instance showing how little the natural mobility of capital was restricted by the traders', membership of a particular company is to be found in the history of the haberdashers. Originally dealing, among other articles of foreign luxury, in imported hats and caps, the haber- dashers came by a natural transition to find employment for the home industry in these articles ; and this led to the absorption of the hatters' and cappers' crafts by the Haberdashers' Company, in 1500. But the small master required the assistance of capital, not only in disposing of his product, but also in procuring his material, and accordingly the haberdashers began to import large quan- tities of the Spanish wool of which the new felts were made, and to sell it in small quantities to the feltmakers. From dealing in Spanish wool to dealing in English was but a short step to take. In 1577 a great outcry was raised by the cloth trade against the excessive exportation of wool. No one was allowed to buy up wool for export without a special licence, and the holder of such a licence was accused of abusing his position by appointing a number of deputies, among whom there were mentioned a haberdasher, two merchant taylors, and two leather-sellers ^. This incident serves to illustrate the process by which the members of the merchant class in the various larger companies were brought, by the natural expansion of their business, upon common ground. Through the intermediate link of the cloth-making industry on the one hand or of the felt-making industry on the other, the merchant taylor and the haberdasher came together as competitors in the wool market ; nor was the connexion of the two leather-sellers with the same branch of trade a mere accident. That the trader who gathered the skins from the sheep-owners should take to bargaining for the wool was an obvious economy, and as a matter of fact it was the country glovers, amongst whom the development of industry had produced a class of merchant employers, who were specially accused of engrossing wool. In this way the barriers which separated the merchants engaged in one trade from those engaged in another were constantly tending to disappear, and were only preserved by the force of the vested interest ^ Clode, Early history of Merchant Taylors, Pt. II, passim. ' Slate Papers Dam., Elizabeth, cxiv. 37-9. LONDON EXAMPLES 107 in the partial monopoly enjoyed by the companies, backed by the natural conservatism of the small master who could not so readily change his occupation. Another drawback to the stability of these larger forms Loose of organization lay in the looseness of the economic relation relation of between the two classes brought together by them. In ^j^f"^\„ some cases, no doubt, the small master had only to deal within with one set of capitalists, who delivered to him the the com- material, and paid him for the labour bestowed upon it, P^°''^^ and under these conditions the problem of regulation was simplified ; but in many other domestic industries the small master himself bought the materials and sold the finished article ; and, as he generally required the assistance of a middleman in each of these transactions, there were two sets of capitalists, upon either or both of which he might become economically dependent. Thus the glovers and the parchment-makers had become subordinated to the leather-sellers, upon whom they de- pended for the supply of their material ; but they are also spoken of as being the workmen of the haberdashers and the stationers who took their wares wholesale. Bearing these reservations in mind, we may regard General most, if not all, of those London companies which were prevalence connected at the time of Elizabeth with the larger in- °oose^type dustries as approximating to the type of organization thus exemplified by the Skinners' Company, which was almost qualified as far removed from the pure handicraft system on the one hand as it was from the factory system on the other. The governing bodies of these companies, if not ex- clusively composed of traders, were dominated by the trading interest; but they were bound by their charter and ordinances to maintain the protective regulations which were the product of the handicraft tradition ; and these were further safeguarded by the representation ot the industrial element in a yeomanry organization, which, if it failed to secure the attention of the corporation to its grievances, might appeal with more effect to the watchful and increasingly active authority of the Crown. It may be well to recall the cases already met with Recapitu- of companies that had entered upon this phase of J_^^'^>°° "f development. The Drapers' Company, which had been ^ amongst the earliest to do so, and had controlled the ^ ' cloth- finishing crafts before they obtained separate in- corporation, had probably by this time relinquished the greater part of its industrial interests and occupied itself mainly with commerce. Of the other greater companies io8 THE ELIZABETHAN COMPANY skinners, gold- smiths, haber- dashers, cloth- workers, merchant taylors, iron- mongers, sadlers, cutlers, leather- sellers New- cases : black- smiths. girdlers, jomers, pewterers Stationers' relations to printers we have had unmistakable evidence in regard to the Skinners, the Goldsmiths, the Haberdashers, and the Cloth- workers; and we shall shortly have similar evidence concerning the Merchant Taylors. The Ironmongers may very probably be added to the same group, which will thus include seven of the twelve greater companies, the other five not being directly concerned with industry. Amongst the lesser companies the Saddlers and the Cutlers had, as we have seen in a previous chapter, begun to pass under the new conditions before the close of the fourteenth century ; and in the latter half of the fifteenth, the Leathersellers, by the absorption of a number of leather crafts, became a body of merchant employers and small masters exactly similar to the Haberdashers. But now that we are approaching the end of the sixteenth century the list may be considerably extended. The Blacksmiths' Company absorbed the spurriers in 1571, and this fact, taken with their attempt a little later on to get control of the rising industry of the clockmakers, proves them to have become conformed to the new type ^- The Girdlers, with whom the pinners were amalgamated in 1568, may certainly be taken as an example of the same development ''■ \ and so very probably may the Joiners, who obtained in 1 61 2 rights of search over quite a number of crafts working in wood ; and who were about the same time successful in repudiating the claim put forward by their yeomanry, that the executive functions of the company ought not to be undertaken by any but craftsmen '^. The steady progress of the Pewterers' Company in the same direction, during the sixteenth century, is amply demonstrated by the change in the character of the yeomanry already referred to, by the frequent mention of work given out by one member to another, by the determination of piecework rates, and by the formation of special bodies of craftsmen dependent for employment on the traders, such as ' spoon-makers,' ' lid- makers,' ' hammermen,' &c. *- But perhaps the most interesting example of all is furnished by the newly incorporated Company of Stationers with its dependent craft of printers. ' In the time of Henry VIII,' says Barker the Queen's printer, in an account drawn up in 1583, ' there were but fewe Printers, and those of good credit and competent wealthe, at which tyme and ' W. Hazlitt, Livery Companies, p. 372. '^ Ibid., p. 511. ' Index to Remembrancia, pp. 95-6 ; Hazlitt, p. 544. * C. Welch, History of the Pewter er^ Company, i. 289-90. PARALLELS IN PARIS 109 before there was an other sort of men that were writers, lymners of Bookes, and dyvers things for the Church and other uses called Stationers ; which have and partly to this daye do use and buy their bookes in grosse of the saide Printers to bynde them up and sell them in their shops. . . . In King Edward the Sixt dayes Printers and Printing began greatly to increase ; but the provision of letter and many other thinges belonging to Printing was so exceeding chargeable that most of those Printers were driven through necessitye to compound before with the Booksellers at so lowe value as the Printers themselves were most tymes small gayners and often losers.' After referring to the grant of a charter to the stationers by Queen Mary, giving the members of their company a monopoly of printing, and its confirmation by Queen Elizabeth, Barker declares that 'the Booksellers, having growne the greater and wealthier number, have nowe the best copies and keepe no printinge howse neither beare any charge of letter or other furniture but onely pay for the workmanship ; ' whilst on the other hand he sees ' the artificer printer growing every day more and more unable to provide letter and other furniture requisite for the execution of any good work 1.' The cases enumerated represent a very considerable pro- We ought portion of the London industries of that period ; and there P™'^??^'' can be no doubt that the list would be more extensive if others our knowledge of the economic history of the companies were not so limited. All that we do know of such com- panies as the Weavers ^, the Founders, and the Carpenters ^, weavers, supports the presumption that they too were examples '^^""^^f^'j., of the development which has been described. We are '^^'^^^'^ "^ justified therefore in taking this new species of association, which in so many cases had displaced the craft gild, as the typical form of Elizabethan industrial organization. Before we proceed to examine its working in detail, it Parallel will be instructive to glance for a moment at the conditions ^^'^^5'°" existing, in the Parisian corporations during this period. We have already had occasion to point out the close simi- larity exhibited by the cutlers', the saddlers', and the drapers' cutlers, organization in the fourteenth century to that of the con- ^adkrs^ temporaries of the same trades in London ; and we have ^ ' seen that the Paris Company of Mercers, like the haber- mercers, ' Lansdoivne MSS., xlviii. 82, reprinted in Archaeologia, xxv. p. 100. 2 See below, pp. 204-10. ■, a t,, zr ■ u- , ' Williams, ^M«a/J of Founders, p. 24, and Ashley, Economic History, Pt. II, p. 180,' note 160. no THE ELIZABETHAN COMPANY dashers and leather-sellers of London, had come to perform the function of merchant employer to a number of handi- crafts, without, however, absorbing their organizations as in the case of the London companies If we examine the situation at the end of the sixteenth century we find the skinners, parallelisms no less striking. The ordinances of the skinners of Paris in 1583, for instance, like those of the London skinners in 1564, recognize the existence of the two distinct classes of merchants and craftsmen in their ranks ; and they concede to the craftsmen, what the working skinners of London were at this very time seeking to secure for them- selves, the right of electing one of the two wardens annually breeches- choseu ^ The brceches-makers of Paris, to take another makers, example, who corresponded to the merchant taylors of London, had apparently acquired like them a large interest in the cloth manufacture, and this led in 1575 to their amalgamation with the drapers^. The joint organization thus formed had the same control of the cloth manufacture in Paris as the merchant taylors and the clothworkers shared between them in London. The purely mercantile character of the governing body of the Clothworkers' Company led in 1559 to their appointing eight assistants to search the handicraft on their behalf; and precisely the same cause was assigned in 1583 for the appointment of the same number of assistants by the Paris company to perform the girdlers same function. The girdlers of Paris, like those of London, were a mixed body of merchant employers and craftsmen, and their ordinances of 1595 provided that of the three oflScers to be annually elected, two should be shopkeepers engaged in the merchandise connected with the girdlers' trade, and one should be a working householder engaged in forging and filing the ironwork of the girdlers ^. Examples from other industries might be readily multiplied to show that the type of organization with which we are concerned was as prevalent at Paris as in London. Parallels Nor need the examples be confined to Paris. Every 1™" "^f,"^! frssh contribution to the industrial history of the French, German, and Italian cities furnishes additional illustrations of a development which was as widespread as the progress of industry itself It will be sufficient to cite two instances, furnished by localities which still maintain a European reputation for Lyons their wares. The silk industry of Lyons, known formerly in France as La grande fabrique, had come to be of great continental towns silk industry ' Lespinasse, Mitiers de Paris, iii. p. 376, Art. 8. 2 Ibid., p. 171. ^ Ibid., p. 396, Art. 28, LYONS AND SOLINGEN m importance in the seventeenth century, and had received an elaborate body of regulations from Colbert in 1667 ; but the distinction between merchant and craftsman was not form- ally recognized in its constitution till 1 700. By that time there were three separate classes engaged in the industry, the merchant employers, the small masters who worked on materials dehvered to them, and a dwindling class of masters who still worked on their own account; but the merchants had gradually monopolized the direction of the organization. The ordinances made in 1 700, and subsequently, recognized the separate classes, and attempted to give each its due share of representation. During the eighteenth century the central government was frequently called upon to readjust the balance between the contending interests; and the disputes between the craftsmen and the merchants, accentuated by the political crisis, furnished some striking episodes in the revolutions of 1789 and 1830 1. An interesting German parallel to this is supplied by Solingen the sword and cutlery manufacture at Solingen in the cutlery Duchy of Berg. The products of this industry had been *™ ^ famous in mediaeval times throughout Western Europe, and a class of merchants had sprung up in connexion with each branch of the manufacture, but especially in connexion with the finishing processes, to manage the export trade. Without being clearly separated from the craftsmen, these trading members were acquiring a predominant position in the gilds during the seventeenth century. In 1689 a determined stand was made with the support of the govern- ment for the preservation of the handicraft status. The merchants were separated from the craftsmen, and excluded from holding oflSce in the gilds. Their relations with the industry, and their management of the export trade, were carefully restricted with a view to preventing the exploita- tion of the small master ; but they had reserved to them, on the other hand, the first right of buying swords or other cutlery for export. The struggle of the traders and the master craftsmen, over the vital issue of the piecework rates, was constantly renewed during the eighteenth cen- tury ; and the efforts of the authorities to devise a per- manent basis for mutual arrangement lasted through the Napoleonic wars, and well on into the century following ^. ' Levasseur, Histoire, ii. pp. 470-1. 64S, 687, 740-3-9.1 and Schmoller, Recht und Verbdnde der Hausindustrie, pp. 15-19, m his Jahrbuch ^ A. Thun, Die Industrie am Niederrhein, ii. pp. 7-43, in Schmoller, Forschungen for 1879. 112 THE ELIZABETHAN COMPANY The Cloth, workers' Company of London a typical example Three classes within the company : (1) the craftsmen, (2) the merchant employers, (3) the exporters II The records of the Clothworkers' Company, together with numerous references in the State Papers, supply a fairly complete illustration of the constitution and working of a typical London company at this period. Of its origin and of the early phases of its history a good deal has been said in a previous chapter, and it was there seen that by the middle of the sixteenth century the livery and the yeomanry of the company had come to be identified respectively with the trading and industrial elements. That is the broad essential feature of the situation ; but it will now be desirable to take a closer view of the composition of the company ; and fortunately the details which lend substance and life to a description can be supplied from an account which, though it belongs to the succeeding reign, can doubtless be applied with little modi- fication to the time of Elizabeth. According to this document there were three principal classes to be distinguished amongst the members of the Clothworkers' Company actually engaged in the cloth trade. The rank and file consisted of master craftsmen, the fullers and shearmen. These were generally set at work by the other members ; but when this kind of employment failed, some, who had a little money or credit, would ' buy a cloth or more to set their people on worke and sell the same again . . . unto drapers and merchants.' Another sort made it their sole business to buy unfinished cloth from the country clothier, and to employ the fullers and shearmen in finishing it, after which they sold it to the merchants for export. This class was ' needful to help the clothier at a dead market, the handy trade to Worke at a bad time, and the merchant upon his present occasion.' ' The next and last sort,' continues the account we are quoting, ' are those which mantle, fould, put in buckram, and pack all such clothes as are dyed and dressed in London, as also those which come out of the Countrie ready dyed and dressed, of which sort are all Suffolk clothes, Stroud waters, Coventry, and some others. In thees people very great trust is committed both by the clothiers and marchant, for the clothier sendeth upp his clothes to the hall where he payes his duetyes and himself cannot stay untill the market serveth him best, but leaveth his clothes to the care and order of thees clothworkers who have in their charge some tymes 6 monethes or 12 monethes for a markett five hundred or a thousand clothes. . . . And the marchant THE CLOTHWORKERS' COMPANY 113 giveth order to him likewise to cause the clothier to make such and such clothes to dye such and such collours. . . . Also if the clothier at any tyme want money, the Cloth- worker is the instrument to furnish him, and if the marchant be unknown to the clothier and would have credit, the clothworker doth advise him of his sufficiency. . . . Gen- erally the merchant payeth the Clothier himself or giveth him bills, if it be for tyme, so that theis people gett only for their work 1.' This classification does not exhaust the membership of Diversity the company. Apart from the members who followed ?^ ^°'"^='^ entirely different trades, there was a considerable body of company retailers. On one occasion we learn that twenty-four of the householders who ' occupied buying and selling of fustians and silks ' were called together at the request of the Lord Mayor and advised to endeavour to sell better penny- worths. But, to confine our attention to the part played by the company in the wholesale cloth trade, it is evident firom the above account how varied were the interests which had to be balanced against each other in its counsels. The interests of the agents who supplied the export trade were almost identical with those of the merchant adventurer. They evidently derived as much profit from the country cloth industry as from that of London ; and, as the trade in finished cloth was much less extensive than that in unfinished, it was natural that they should transfer their attention to the latter when the market for the former was dull. It was probably therefore not without reason that these Conflict wealthier members of the Clothworkers' Company were ^^^^^^^g"^^^ suspected of evading the law which limited, in the interest handicraft of the artisan clothworker, the exportation of unfinished elements cloth. Even in the early days of the company this antagonism of interest had led to the expression of blood- thirsty sentiments. On this question of policy the other class of trading clothworkers, who bought the country cloth for the purpose of getting it finished, must have largely shared the feeling of the small masters whom they employed, although their differences with them on other matters might at times be even more acute. Not that the line between employer and employed could have been very sharply drawn. Apart from the fact that both shearmen and fullers occasionally bought cloth to set themselves at work we learn from the Clothworkers' Court Book that UNWIN 1 State Papers Dom., James I, cxxxiii. No. 36. I 114 THE ELIZABETHAN COMPANY many of the shearmen ' made prices ' with the merchant for both the finishing processes, so that the fullers were placed in the position of receiving employment from them. Between the smallest master and the largest capitalist engaged in the industry there must have been many intermediate degrees in which the functions of merchant and manufacturer were blended in varying proportions. At the end of the sixteenth century we still find some of the wealthy members of the court of assistants and of the livery spoken of as being of the handicraft. represented But it is clear that long before this the ' handicraft ' element by the had become almost completely identified with the small ye^omaiixy meters who formed the rank and file of the yeomanry, and respectively who were no longer able to secure officers of their own class. In 1543 it had been proposed to confine the yeomanry to the journeyman class, and to choose four journeymen annually as wardens. Sixteen years later we find it recorded that, ' forasmuch as this yere the fower wardens of the yomanry be merchaunts and not skylfull yn the handycrafte,' eight assistants are appointed ' to execute their authority concerning the handycrafte'.' The great change which had taken place in so short a time was an indication, not only of the rapid increase of wealth in the company, but also of the complete triumph of the ' domestic system." The upper ranks of the company, which had been formerly filled with well-to-do master craftsmen who were also traders, were now monopolized by commission agents and merchant employers who had little or no practical knowledge of the industry. This The extent to which this separation of the handicraft separation element from, and its subordination to, the mercantile illustrated element, had proceeded, is made evident by the tenor of some negotiations which were carried on between the Cloth- workers' Company and the Merchant Taylors in 1566. The Clothworkers' Company were promoting a measure in Parliament which would, among other provisions, have given them authority over all those engaged in the London in- dustry ; and as the merchant taylors had a number of merchant employers in their livery and of small masters in their yeomanry engaged in cloth finishing, they offered a strong opposition to the Bill. In the ' Commons' Committee ' it was proposed that both companies should have full powers by the of Search over the handicraft. Whereupon the master and offer of the wardens of the Clothworkers' Company ' offered rather to ' Clothworkers' Court Book, Jan. 22, 2 Elizabeth, 3. A STRANGE NEGOTIATION 115 surrender and deliver upp all the poore handycraftes men cloth- of the clothworkers to the company of the Merchant workers Taylors.' The Lord Mayor, on the matter being- referred to '° '^ him, commanded that ' the said handycraftesmen's opynyon thereon shulde be knowen and answer brought to the gilde hall.' All the householders of the handicraft were there- fore warned, and the most part to the number of seven score and upwards having appeared, they were asked 'whether they wold be contented to be sett over to the Merchant Taylors or not, at which mocion some of them semed to be skante well pleased, but yet notwithstanding yn the end the said householders together with the assistents now present fully agreed and consented to stande to such oifers and other orders as the Master and Wardens have offered and shall conclude and agree upon ^.' The offer having therefore been formally communicated, to hand the merchant taylors came before the Lord Mayor three °^*'^ ^^^ days later and made answer that ' they were contented to to^hT^" take and receive all the handycraftesmen of this company, merchant so that they maye have a competent some of goods and taylors landes to relieve them withall, and that no person within the citie of London or within thre myles compasse shall from henseforth worke any cloth, but onely they, and that from hensforth the said company of Merchant Taylors be not taxed or sessed at higher and greater impositions than they yn time past have been^.' A number of articles drafted by the Lord Mayor and Court of Aldermen to serve as a basis for the transfer were considered by the Clothworkers' Court to be drayra ' too streit.' The com- pany's counsel were directed to draw up another set more satisfactory to them, and the master and wardens were authorized to conclude the matter if the substance of these articles were conceded ^. A week later there was a com^ mittee appointed, consisting of four members from the upper rank of each of the two companies, and six repre- sentatives of the handicraft clothworkers, to consider the points in controversy, but after three days' deliberation they failed to come to an agreement*. In the end the Cloth- workers' Company seem to have reconciled themselves to the first proposal for a mutual search, on condition that it extended to retailers as well as to craftsmen ; but the matter continued to be a subject of lively dispute at intervals for more than a century afterwards. 1 Clothworkers' Court Book, Nov. 13, 1566. 2 Ibid., Nov. 16, 1566. ' Ibid., Nov. 23, 1566. * Ibid., Nov. 29, 1566. I 2 ii6 THE ELIZABETHAN COMPANY Probable It IS difficult to tell what motives prompted the cloth- motives workers' offer, or whether they seriously intended so o°ffer ^ complete an abandonment of their control over the industry as that asked for by the merchant taylors. But the point upon which the incident leaves no room for doubt is the separability and dependence of the handicraft element. The responsibility for the relief of the poverty of the artisan class seems to have been one of the main considerations, and it was bitterly asserted among the rank and file that the company had been willing to give five hundred pounds to get rid of them ^. Perhaps also the merchant employers of the clothworkers were desirous of exchanging the obliga- tions laid upon them by the handicraft traditions of their company for the coipparative freedom hitherto enjoyed by the employers in the Merchant Taylors' Company. The cloth- At any rate, after the negotiations had broken down, workers things remained as they were ; and in the course of the the regula- following year the ruling body of the clothworkers showed lion of the themselves quite prepared to take their relation to the handicraft industry in earnest. They inquired of their legal advisers whether they might, ' by force of their corporation, appoint six, eight, or ten persons of their company to view and search all clothes wrought within the company . . . such persons to take for every cloth a penny ; also whether the Master and Wardeyns may make an order among them- selves to bynde evry person of their owne companye not to presse or to deliver to their workemasters any clothe before every such cloth be searched and sealed.' The answer of the learned counsel was that the master and wardens 'should call before them all the handycraftesmen and take their consent and their handes, which consent would bind them^.' Accordingly at the next meeting of the Court the 'whole companye of the handycraftesmen' were summoned and the articles concerning the search read to them. ' And they all with one voyce consented to evry of the said articles, and made humble request with wyllyng hertes, as they professed, that these said orders may be forthwith put yn execution with diligence, affirm- yng the same orders to be profitable to them all.' A hundred and five members of the. handicraft set their hands to the new regulations on this occasion, and the signatures of the rest, to the number of forty-two, were obtained a couple of days later. In addition to this, the names of fifty persons were set down ' who freely offered themselves to travayle ' Clothworkers' Court Book, Dec. 13, 1566. "^ Ibid., Nov. 25, 1567. A SYSTEM OF INSPECTION 117 and take paynes to see the saide orders duely put in execution without anything takyng for their paynes 1.' The unanimity with which this system of inspection of all Corporate work done (not to be confused with the haphazard and "^ity often perfunctory procedure of the ordinary search) was by^trTders agreed _ upon marks a distinct epoch in the history of and crafts-' industrial association. The implicit aim of the new type men of organization, the harmonious co-operation of the two classes concerned in the domestic system, was in this in- stance realized. At a time when, as will shortly be seen, a number of similar combinations were on the point of breaking down, the merchants and the craftsmen of the Clothworkers' Company were achieving a basis for some- thing like corporate unity, and in the course of the following century the two classes never entirely lost touch with each other. The capitalists of the company, as represented in the mechanical ruling body, showed no desire to encourage larger methods '"prove- of production. In the second year of Elizabeth's reign the rejected Court of Assistants had been waited upon by a Venetian inventor, who exhibited a labour-saving machine for the fulling of broad cloth, and offered to teach the company his ' feate of workmanship ' for a consideration. But the opinion of ' certain of the company, being the most expert men,' who were brought in to see the device and allowed time to think it over, was that ' it wolde be a grete decay unto the companye, whereupon the M'. and Wardens gave the said stranger grete thanks, and also xx' in money towards his charge, and so parted^.' The question as to the number of apprentices was always The one of crucial importance in the domestic industries. As apprentice- a member of his class the small master was in favour ofjjJP^"^^" limitation, and the interests of the journeyman ran strongly crucial test in the same direction. But there was always a tendency of ooity amongst the more prosperous and pushing masters, partly arising from a desire to extend their business and partly from a wish to secure cheap labour, to keep more than the permitted number of apprentices, and even to employ boys who had not been bound. When the small masters of any trade were strongly organized, the rule, limiting each master to two apprentices, was usually enforced. But where the final authority lay in the hands of the tradmg dass this restriction, along with others made in the interests of the artisan, was often ignored by the larger employers. ' Cloikworkers' Court Book, Nov. 29, 1567. ' Ibid., June 21, 2 Elizabeth. ii8 THE ELIZABETHAN COMPANY Journey- men's objections to an increase, supported by a majority of masters The wages question divides journeymen and mas- ters The attitude of the Clothworkers' Court of Assistants in regard to this matter affords therefore an excellent criterion of the extent to which the various classes composing the company felt themselves bound together by a real unity of interests ; more especially as it was the journeyman class, now deprived of all definite representation in the company, which was most deeply concerned. As the journeyman was not allowed to set up for himself till he had acquired an amount of capital equal to two years' wages, it was natural he should object to having the available amount of employment lessened by the creation of an unlimited number of apprentices. The justice of the principle un- derlying this objection was implied in an order of the Court of Assistants made in 1 568. Whilst on the one hand no journeyman was to keep an apprentice as long as he remained a journeyman, the householder on the other hand was limited for the first three years to one apprentice, after which he might keep two, or if he had been warden, three ^. In 1574, the journeymen petitioned the Court against a number of the masters who were transgressing this rule, complaining that, for want of employment in their trade, some were constrained to carry a basket, tray or shovel, while others were driven to beg or steal ^- Three years afterwards, when there were renewed com- plaints, some of the masters desired to have the number of apprentices allowed to each increased from two to three; apparently instancing the example of some of the Merchant Taylors' Company. All the company of the handicraft was therefore called together, and the matter tried by show of hands, when it appeared that the whole company, except four or five at most, were of the mind that ' the keeping of two apprentices only and not above was most best and reasonable ' ; and two of the leading members of the com- pany promised to bring the Merchant Taylors to consent to the same rule. The Court of Assistants proceeded to give force to the agreement by taking in hand the offending masters, who do not appear to have formed more than a seventh or eighth part of the whole number, and most of them proved amenable to friendly remonstrance ''. In so far then as the interests of the journeymen were shared by the ' handicraft ' at large, they might still look for some degree of protection to the authorities of the company. The apprenticeship question was a case of this kind. Whether the regulation of the contract made between ■ Clothworker^ Court Book, Oct. 1568. ^ Ibid., April 23, 1574. ^ Ibid., Sept. 20, Nov. 5, Dec. 10, 1577. APPRENTICES AND JOURNEYMEN 119 master and servant came under the same category is at least doubtful, especially as we find the company exhibiting most anxiety in the matter at a time when the demand for labour appears to have exceeded the supply. In February and March, 1559, ^ number of journeymen had been brought to book for taking service with persons of other companies, when members of their own were in want of workmen. In April, all the journeymen of the company 'were warned and had exhortation given them to be of honest behaviour and to have regard of their selves and respect to the welthe of the company, and to beware with whom they dyd make any covenante for their serviced' And in December of the same year all the householders ' had warning to hyer their journeymen ageynst the next yere ensuinge yn due tyme while they maye have them, and that all such covenants as any of them' shulde make with their saide Journeymen, to cause yt to be regestred yn this house that yt maye evydently appare to all tymes hereafter who be yncon- venient and who be not^.' In aiming thus at securing uniformity in the conditions of Eliza- employment, the company was anticipating the course of J*^*?" . national policy as embodied only four years later in the aims at Statute of Apprentices. By that epoch-making piece of uniformity legislation, Parhament, or Elizabeth's ministers^ sought to give fixity to the status of the various classes of the working population, to ensure greater regularity to the course of employment, and to bring wages into a steadier and more equitable relation to prices. Leaving aside the important questions as to how far these objects were practicable, and whether the means adopted were likely to secure their realization, it is interesting to note the immediate and definite effects of the Act in a particular case where the previous conditions are tolerably well known to us. The first clause of the statute following the preamble provided that servants in certain employments, amongst which were included the various branches of the cloth industry, should be hired by the year; and a subsequent clause required that the rates of wages should be yearly determined by the magistrates in each locality. At the command of the Lord Mayor, therefore, the master and wardens of the cloth- workers called the whole company before them to inquire what wages they gave their journeymen, and what wages they thought meet to give in future. It appeared from the statements of the masters that the rates then paid varied 1 Clothworker^ Court Book, April 17, i Elizabeth. 2 Ibid., Dec. S, z Elizabeth. I20 THE ELIZABETHAN COMPANY and masters : considerably. Some journeymen received two shillings a week ' broken and whole ' ; others two shillings and sixpence a week ; whilst of those paid by the year some received four pounds, some five, and some six. But now, the report concludes, ' in respect of the Act of Parliament lately pro- vided, they have agreed to give every Journeyman for his wages by yere v", yf it shall please your Lordshipp and mastershypp to allowe the same ^.' The effect therefore of the Statute of Apprentices in this the^handT^ case, if the masters' report is to be trusted, was the enforce- of the ment of a uniform average rate of wages throughout the trade, although it is to be noticed that there were inore rates levelled down than there were levelled up. The elimination of unfair competition by this means might benefit the worst paid workmen, as well as the general body of the masters ; but as long as the opinions of the latter only were consulted by the authorities, the rate fixed upon could not be expected to give satisfaction to the journeymen as a whole. In short, wherever the interests of the masters and those of the journeymen were divergent, the new legislation tended to strengthen the hands of the masters, who had all the advantages of organization on their side. The journeymen had lost all efifective share in the yeo- manry organization, and the only modes of common action open to them were either to appeal over the heads of the masters to the Court of Assistants, or to form an iUegal combination and to strike. The second of these methods was ineffectually resorted to as early as 1565, when a number of journeymen ' having unlawfully consulted and assembled themselves together and absented themselves from their masters' service,' four of their ringleaders were arrested and committed to ward, ' and after they had lyen there iiij dayes, upon their humble submyssion were dis- charged ^.' The comparative helplessness of the journeymen in the hands of an organization in which they had no real share was equally displayed when they appealed, as they did in 1577, for the intervention of the Court of Assistants. They had complained of lack of employment, but they were sharply told that ' the greatest faulte and lett was in themselves for neglecting of their dueties in their duetifuU service, both in comynge to worke, and in doinge their worke for their meate and drinke. Therefore they were moved if they woulde be contented to come to their worke ' Clotlfworkers' Court Book, June 9, 1563. "^ Ibid., July 7, 1565. the jour- neyman class is reduced to depend- ence; THE SMALL MASTER 121 at such time as they ought to do by the ordynance of this house, and to do their work justly and truly as they ought to doo, and to be content with such reasonable fare, so it be sweete and holdsome for man's bodie, as the householders . . . shall provide for them.' When the journeymen had expressed their willingness to comply with these terms the householders were in their turn privately called in, and after long debating of the matter a committee was appointed ' to peruse the company through for the placing of the said journeymen upon such bonds and conditions as is above recited, and upon such wages as they canne^.' So far then as the regulation of industry was concerned, small the small masters had little to complain of in the rule of ™^^"^"'^' the Court of Assistants, although probably the only repre- impa?- ' sentatives of industry on that body were the merchant tially con- employers. Cases of friction between these two classes ^idered occur, of course, from time to time, but the interests of the craftsmen seem to have generally received a fair amount of consideration. A difference of this kind, for instance, was constantly recurring between the fustian shearers and the mercers dealing in fustians who were accused of disregard- ing the ordinances regulating this branch of the industry. A number of special orders were issued for the protection of the handicraft. No master was to keep more than two pair of shears ; and no workman was to follow that branch of the trade who had not been brought up to it ^- Markers of fustians were appointed ; and measures taken against the use of irons and ' other deceiptful instruments or engyns ^.' In 1 59 1 matters came to a crisis, and the whole question concerning the validity and force of the statutes for fustians and the ordinances of the house was debated with ' longe argimients and great reasoning ' before the Court of Assist- ants, both parties being represented by learned counsel. The counsel for the workmen argued ' that although the saide Statute (being made long since) and soe in tyme things and devices are altered, and not suche stricte and apte wordes are therein as might have been ... so that in some parte for that purpose it is thought imperfect. Yet the said ordinances . . . were very good and available to bynde all the companie. ... Yet the other counsel did somewhat inpugne the same. Whereupon it was thought meete that the same shoulde be putt in practize by some of the Offenders ... if they may be met withall *.' The result » Cloth-worker^ Court Book, Oct. I, 1577. 2 Ibid., July 27, 1563. ' Ibid., Nov. 3, 1590. * Ibid., April 19, 1591. 122 THE ELIZABETHAN COMPANY Real dividing line in company- was be- tween commer- cial and industrial interests, as to the export of unfinished cloth The handi- craft petitions Privy Council to appoint a Packer of the appeal to the law courts, which was evidently intended, does not appear, but the glimpse thus afforded of the inner working of the organization cannot be said to leave the impression that it was entirely one-sided or oppressive. The division which most seriously threatened the unity of the company was not perhaps that between the different classes concerned in the industry, but that between a com- bination of these various interests on the one hand, and the purely mercantile interest on the other. Many of the most influential members of the company were, as we have seen, commission agents engaged in supplying the export trade ; and as the foreign demand for white or unfinished English cloth was much greater than that for the finished article, it is very improbable that they ever confined themselves to deahng in the latter. While therefore as leading members of the Clothworkers' Company they were bound to do their best to secure legislative protection on behalf of the in- dustry, they were not likely to be over zealous in carrying out any law which hindered the free course of their own trade. The Bill which had led to the negotiations with the Merchant Taylors' Company was composed of two sections, one dealing with the regulation of the industry, and the other requiring that one cloth in every ten exported should be finished, and that no Suffolk or Kent cloth should be exported unfinished. Although the attempt to carry the first portion through Parliament had broken down, the clothworkers still persevered with the second ^, and it be- came law in 1566 ^. In February, 1568, six of the London handicraft were petitioning the Privy Council on behalf of all those using ' the manuell occupation of clothworkyng within this realm of England ' for further powers to search all warehouses. ' The Act passed last Session,' they declare, 'cannot be duly put in execution because the merchants , . . doo in their own warehouses privilye packe up their clothes^.' In 1575 the grievance still remained, and had become a source of serious difference of feeling in the company. Four members of the handicraft were brought before the Court of Assistants for having, without the consent of the Court, presented a petition to the Privy Council, ' wherein they have very slaunderously touched and complayned of this companie as touching their rulers and superiors.' This time the handicraft desired a new oflScer called a Packer to be appointed, to have the oversight of the packing of th^ ' Clothworkers' Court Book, Dec. 7, 1566. ' 8 Elizabeth, c. 6. = Ibid., Feb. 17, 1567-8. SEARCH AT THE WATERSIDE 123 cloths by the merchants. Such an appointment would, the Court considered, be to the great prejudice of the city, and for this reason and because the Privy Council was following- the Queen on one of her progresses through the country, the handicraft members were requested to drop their petition for the time being, and in the meanwhile ' to sue to the Merchant Adventurers by gentle means and ways for their help and relief 1.' A compromise was subsequently arrived at which took The com- the form of a search at the waterside of all cloth about to P^^y <=°"- be exported. In April, 1591, ' the Wardens Assistants and search^at" divers other of the handicrafte ' (here clearly identified with the water- the yeomanry) made request, ' for that there is great sus- ^'"^^ picion of the negligence of the searchers at waterside in doinge their dutie there,' that there might ' be fower other honest men chosen out of the yomanry to oversee the other searchers in their busyness,' The yeomanry gained their point, and in the following July not only were four mem- bers appointed to oversee the London search, but also two others to do the like in Kent and Suifolk ^. The zeal of the new officers soon brought them into conflict with the merchants, and in October the Court issued a declaration that although it was prepared to support all such seizures of cloth as were justly and orderly done, it could not make itself responsible for action taken upon surmise or presumption '. In this manner the industrial interests and the commercial Contrast interests within the company continued through the next 'f 'Y^™, half-century to be balanced against each other, but on the ^i^f^. whole with a decided preponderance on the side of the workers latter. The London company presents in this respect a and com- significant contrast with most of the companies of cloth- pro^,icki workers in provincial towns. We have seen in our earlier towns survey of the development of the town organizations that by the end of the sixteenth century the interests of industrial capital were displacing those of commercial capital in many towns which had long been centres of the cloth trade. As the activities of a larger commerce radiating from the metropolis began to make their influence felt in every part of the country, the local trader, unable to compete on the same footing with the London merchant, largely trans- ferred his capital to the cloth finishing industries springing up in the towns where he still enjoyed some of the advan- tages of a local monopoly. But this concentration of com- • Clothtuorkers' Court Book, June 13, 1575. 2 Ibid., April 28, 1591 and July 14, 1591. ' Ibid., Oct. 7, 1591. 124 THE ELIZABETHAN COMPANY mercial capital at the national centre, whilst it strengthened the relative position of industrial capital in provincial towns, tended naturally at the same time to keep the industrial capital of the metropolis in a condition of subordination to wider commercial interests. The governing body of the London Cloth workers' Company was always more concerned to promote the interests of the national cloth trade as a whole than those of the cloth-finishing industry in London. illustrated This was to be shown during the next reign by their by their attitude towards Alderman Cockayne's scheme for pro- CockaWs moting the finishing and dyeing industries, with the wider scheme aspects of which we shall have to deal more fully in a in 1614, subsequent chapter. In Cockayne's scheme the somewhat reactionary ascendancy of the organized interests of indus- trial capital, assisted by a partial resuscitation of local monopoly, reached its culmination. Not only was the export of unfinished cloth, mostly the product of the country districts, to be replaced in a short time by an equivalent foreign trade in cloth finished and dyed in England ; it was likewise promised that the trade of cloth- ing would be set up in forty cities and boroughs, which was The artisan clothworkers of London were of course supported enthusiastically in favour of the project. Indeed, it would h d'* ft s^^^ '^o have arisen out of a petition which they along with but op- some of the Dyers' Company addressed to the King. The posed by governing body of the Clothworkers' Company, on the mer'hante °^^^'' hand, regarded the idea from the first as an impractic- able one. When they heard of the petition they called before them the wardens of the yeomanry 'to know whether they were the begynners and procurers of the said suite, which they disclaimed, yet some of them did acknowledge to have had intelligence thereof. Whereupon the saide Wardens of the Yeomanry were advised and required by this Court, that howsoever they wished or required success to that suite, yet the same being difficult to be obteyned or the success doubtful, they wolde not hereafter bee scene in that business in such sorte that the bodie of this companie may anie way be reproached or the credit and reputation thereof brought into question^.' and almost The persistence of the artisan clothworkers with the leads to project seemed at one moment on the point of leading to oTformer their Secession in a body, and the formation of a separate company. And when after a year's trial the experiment had proved a hopeless failure, and the Privy Council were ' Clothworkers' Court Book, Mar. 8, 1612-3. A CONFLICT OF INTERESTS 125 contemplating- its abandonment, there was a tumultuous scene in the Clothworkers' Hall. Some of the King's advisers, supposed to be in favour of dropping the project, had been assailed by remonstrances in the shape of libels cast in at their houses by the indignant artisans. The wardens of the Clothworkers' Company, by direction of the Court of Aldermen, called an assembly of the artisan clothworkers, and gave them to understand how distasteful the scattering- of such libels was to the King-'s Majesty and to the State. The craftsmen were in such an unrepentant frame of mind that they had brought one of their ' libels ' with them, which, when the clerk of the company had obtained possession of it by subterfug-e, was found ' to contayne matter tending to no good, nor fit to be passed over in silence.' One of the assistants therefore demanded ' whether any of that assembly had privity or were acquainted with the said petition.' Whereupon ' the whole multitude cryed out All ! AU ! with such confused noise as struck terror and amaze- ment to the Master Wardens and Assistants here assembled in general ^.' The results of this survey may now be briefly summed Summary : up. The Clothworkers' Company is a typical example ^°^^^j. . of the new species of org-anization which replaced the Craft Company Gild, in the sense that it embraced the two distinct classes typical, of traders and of craftsmen. But the special interest of y^'^l**^ the clothworkers' organization lies in the unusual degree of features equilibrium in which the interests of these two classes were maintained for a considerable period. This was due to exceptional circumstances which prevented the complete predominance of either interest. The commercial interest was held in check by the fact that organizations represent- ing that interest, the Drapers and the Merchant Adventurers, already held the field. The industrial interest was prevented from taking possession of the Clothworkers* Company, as it had done of similar companies in provincial towns, by the predominantly commercial character of London as the focus of national trade. Thus a compromise was effected of a peculiarly English character. The protection of labour was combined with the freedom of trade. The merchants were induced to sanction the regulations designed to pre- serve the status of the craftsman ; and the craftsman was not permitted to hamper unduly the purely trading opera- tions of the merchant. 1 Clothworkers Court Book, Jan. 27, 1616-7. CHAPTER V THE STUART CORPORATIONS OF SMALL MASTERS The small We have already seen reasons for thinking that it was the^'rota- ^'^^ ^^^ journeyman but the small master who bore the gonist of main stress of the economic conflict of classes during the industrial sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The associations of democracy journeymen which had played so prominent a part in the teenth and industrial Organization of the earlier time seem to fall into seventeenth the background after the close of the fifteenth century, and centuries ^Jq jjqj emerge tiU the end of the seventeenth century, from which period the modern trade union can trace a continuous history. Associations of journeymen stiU existed, and in some eases may even have maintained an unbroken con- tinuity from the earlier to the later period. But for the most part the interest which attaches to the struggle of the journeyman with the master craftsman within the gilds during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, is transferred during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries to the struggle between the small master and the merchant employer. His posi- Not only had the class of small masters increased very tion ana- largely at the expense of the class of permanent journey- thatof'° men, the position of the small master in regard to journeyman Organization at the end of the sixteenth century bore a in four- striking resemblance to that of the journeyman at the end fifteenth" °^ ^^^ fourteenth century. The small masters, like the centuries journeymen, had been gradually excluded from the benefits of the existing organizations; like them they had formed themselves into unauthorized associations of their own, for which they were endeavouring to obtain recognition ; and in the one case as in the other, the organizations thus sanctioned tended to pass into the hands of a select body formed out of the more prosperous members of the class which had struggled for their establishment, and so failed to serve the purpose for which they had been originally intended. UNAUTHORIZED COMBINATION 127 In following therefore the evolution of industrial organi- He sup- zation, it is to the efforts of the small masters to form P''es '^e associations for the protection of their special interests that ['^^e^ Qiid we must look for the links with which to connect together and Trade the phenomena of the mediaeval craft gild and those of the Union modern trade union. In doing this, however, we must con- sider those efforts rather in their intentions than in their results. Looked at from the point of view of results, the organizations we are considering appear in later times to have become chiefly representative of the larger manu- facturer, a new industrial class which their success had largely assisted to produce. But the circumstances of their earlier history make it clear that the intention of the move- ment that caUed them into existence was to preserve and strengthen the status of the small master, and to secure his independence in face of the growing power of larger capital We may, in fact, distinguish three stages in the develop- His efforts ment of this class of association. The first of these was ',°^^''^ '°" the stage of unauthorized combination, presenting many organiza- interesting parallels to the early history of the trade union, tion The second, which we may call the experimental stage, was marked by the attempts of the small master to use the newly granted charter of incorporation as a means of safe- guarding his economic independence. The third stage was reached when the organizations settled down into the conservative grooves of a recognized livery company. The history of the first of these stages, which is our are a immediate concern, is largely identical with the history of ^^^P*?™ ^ the disintegration of some of the larger industrial com- „p ^f ^-^^ binations belonging to the type whose composition and amai- working have been described in the last chapter. gamated The leather-sellers and the haberdashers remained of*^°'"P*'"^'' course, and still remain, amongst the most prosperous of livery companies, but early in the seventeenth century they were obliged to relinquish the functions which they had assumed a century before in relation to domestic industry. This was not due to any special defect in their constitutions, but to peculiar conditions which distinguished their case from that of the clothworkers. In the first place, they had lost whatever handicraft traditions of their own they had possessed, and were relatively too strong to be much affected by the traditions of the decaying crafts which they had absorbed. In the second place, instead of a stable connexion with a single industry, their economic basis con- sisted of a loose rektion to a number of heterogeneous 128 CORPORATIONS OF SMALL MASTERS assisted by the migra- tion of the crafts concerned to the suburbs The case of the leather crafts for separation industries, some of which were, while others were not, included within the scope of their corporate authority. And thirdly, all these industries were representatives of that more independent variety of the domestic system, in which the small master works upon his own materials and sells the product. Closely connected with this last condition was the fact that most of the trades concerned had ceased to be carried on within the limits of the city. By the end of the sixteenth century the makers of felt hats and the various workers in leather had migrated across the river, and had already taken up their abodes where they are stUl to be found, in Bermondsey, Southwark, and Lambeth. In part this was owing- to sanitary precautions. The main body of the leather-dressers had been removed outside the city by public order in the time of Edward IV. But a more general and potent cause was the search for lower rents. Since the working craftsman was no longer a shopkeeper, he did not need, and could not afford, to live within the freedom of the city\ In the year 1619 it was stated that there were not above forty members of the leather trades, and those glovers only, residing within the freedom of London, whilst there were glovers, leather-dressers, vellum and parchment-makers outside to the number of 3,000^. This migration widened the breach already made between the trader and the craftsman, and made it impossible for both to combine satisfactorily in a single organization. It placed great difficulties in the way of the exercise of effective authority by the companies over the industries they were supposed to regulate. It made the nominal share of the handicraft members in the company's freedom less and less of a reality ; while at the same time it lent increasing force to their demand for a separate incorporation. When the workers in leather were petitioning James I in 1 6 19 for a charter, they asserted that the leather-sellers, ' having promysed them they should ever be esteemed of their body, yet having once translated them by this order from the local circuit of their jurisdiction, they have in process of time wormed them out of their freedom, allowing none of the breede and posteritie of those workemen to be free to whom they made so large a promise, there not being at this day a leather-dresser free of the Leather- sellers' Company.' The leather-sellers, they declare in ' Strype, Stowe's Survey, ii. p. 32, and Add. MSS., 12504, fol. 1 1 5. * State Papers Dom., Charles I, ccdxxxvi. p. 90 ; and Privy Council Register, Apr. 29, 1635. THE CASE FOR SEPARATION 129 another place, ' having injuriously driven us from our seates within the city and liberties are like chaungelings in our cradle alienated from the nature or knowledge of our trades, and soe incapable to governe us through ignorance.' It is not merely of the displacement of their craft organiza- tion by the Livery Company that the workers in leather complain. This process, they admit, was not peculiar to themselves, but it was not usual, they contended, for the ruling class of traders so completely to lose touch with the craftsmen who were nominally attached to their company, ' For whereas in all other trades, though the shopkeepers growing riche doe make the workemen their underlings, yet they suffer them according to their increase of ability to become like themselves, and in the meantime to exercise the favour and privilege of their company and society ; and though in some trades the shopkeepers sell to the worke- men their materials, yet they take them again from them wrought and manufactured at reasonable rates, as Gold- smiths, Skinners, Silkmen and divers others. But the Leathersellers who pretend themselves to be of the same trade with the Glovers, Pointmakers and White Tawyers, if once they put their griping hands betwixt the Grower and ( = or) the Merchant and any of the said Trades they never parte with the commodities they buy till they seU them at their owne pitched rates without either regard or care whether the workeman be able to make his money thereof or no^.' In a later document arising out of the same agitation, the The traders men of the leather crafts endeavour to show that the ^'=<="f'^ °/ 111 ' r monopoly company is no longer the natural representative even 01 the trading interest. It had originally been composed of ' such as made, drest, and sold wares of tanners leather.' ' But as the manner of London is, the sonne being free by the fathers copy, the company is long since changed to those that know not leather, for generally the Master and Wardens and Body ... are men of other trades as braziers, hosiers, etc' In the meantime the leather trade had been passing under the power of a new class of capitalists who in many cases were members of other companies. These were the traders who bought leather and sold it again 'without altering the properties of it.' The craftsmen declared that fifty years before (the actual period was probably much longer) such a class had been altogether unknown in London ; and it was still not to be found else- where in the kingdom ; yet matters had gone so far that 1 Brit. Museum, Add. MSS. 12504, fol. 112. K I30 CORPORATIONS OF SMALL MASTERS something of the nature of a ' ring ' had been formed in one branch of the trade. For nearly twenty years there had been generally no goats' or kids' leather to be found, save in the hands of three merchants, one of whom was free of the Leathersellers' Company, whilst the other two were members of the Haberdashers, though stationers by trade. It was this small class of capitalists together with their numerous agents, who were using the name of the Leathersellers' Company to hinder the granting of a new charter which might weaken the economic control they possessed over the master craftsmen ^. The crafts- The leatherworkers had begun their agitation about the i^corpor^'" year 1612 — a time when, as we shall shortly see, a similar ation. movement was very widespread amongst the London crafts- men. In 1 6 1 9 they complained that they had, in consequence, like the Israelites, been doubled in their tasks, the prices of their materials being enhanced to a great proportion, and humbly implored that they might be assisted ' to pass the Red Sea of their troubles ' ; if not, they must ' prepare their necks to the yoke of the Egyptians, and their hearts to the intolerable servitude they had hitherto endured^.' At last in 1 638, by the use of court influence, the workers in leather obtained their charter and were incorporated as the Glovers' Company, just at the moment when the favourable oppor- tunity presented by the personal government of the Stuarts was about to pass away. II Importance The evidence in our possession concerning the Leather- of the felt- sellers' Company and the crafts which it had absorbed, case serves, in spite of its scantiness, to cover the whole history of the combination. It reveals the conditions of its forma- tion, and illustrates, briefly yet intelligibly, the process of its decay and the manner of its dissolution. As historical evidence it is, however, marked by two serious defects. It consists largely of a retrospect made more than a century after the earliest events referred to, and it is derived chiefly from the statements of one party to a bitter controversy. The evidence in the parallel case of the Haberdashers' Company and the Feltmakers is not only free from these defects ; it supplies also a much fuller account of the relation between the merchants and the craftsmen during the period of the combination, and it derives moreover a special * Siate Papers Dom., Charles I, ccclxxxvi. 90. ^ Brit. Museum, Add. MSS., 12504, fol. 104. HABERDASHERS AND FELTMAKERS 131 interest from the fact that it was the success of the felt- makers In achieving- independence in 1604, which stimulated the efforts of the leather-workers and supplied their claims with a precedent. The subordination of the feltmakers to the haberdashers The had not, however, been brought about in quite the same ^^^^' way as had been that of the glovers and the leather- workers having ab- to the leather-sellers. The Haberdashers' Company, it is sorbed the true, in its sixteenth-century constitution was based like hatters and the Leathersellers on an amalgamation ; but neither the '^^PP^"' cappers (Hurrers), nor the hatter merchants, who were both absorbed in 1 500, can be identified with the feltmakers ^. It is sig-nificant that the hatters, even before they were united to the haberdashers, were known, not as craftsmen but as merchants. The rough caps worn by the lower orders had been made in England from the earliest times ; but the more luxurious headgear of the wealthier classes had been imported from abroad. Chaucer's merchant wore 'Uppon his heed a Flaundrisch bevere hat,' and it was with the caps and hats of France, of Bruges, and of Milan that the London hatter or haberdasher suppUed the fashionable world. Felt hats were not extensively made in England before "po° J^c the sixteenth century. The tradition of the trade is that fgifmakers' they were invented on the continent in 1456, and first made industry, in London in 1510 ^- The art of felt-making had, however, been discovered at a much earlier period, and the event approximately marked by these dates was an improved industrial application of it which resulted in bringing felt hats into general use. The new manufacture was set up in England early in the reign of Henry VIII, largely through the instrumentality of immigrants from the Netherlands and from Normandy 3; and it soon proved a formidable rival to the capping industry. In 1576 the native-born feltmakers in and about London were said to number above four hundred householders. The relation of this body of craftsmen to the Haberdashers' Company was at that time still a matter of uncertainty. The feltmakers repeatedly spoke of themselves as a company 'although having no government of themselves as other companies have'; and they petitioned to be ^ Herbert, Livery Companies, ii. p. 537- ^ See below, p. 15. » See list of immigrants given by W. Page in Huguenot Society s Publications, viii. K 2 control over it 132 CORPORATIONS OF SMALL MASTERS incorporated by the Crown, that they might regulate the trade with authority ^. gain a The haberdashers, on the other hand, claimed that the partial control of the new manufacture belonged to them. An Act of 1565, which had been passed with the object of protecting the capping industry against the too rapid advance of the feltmakers, had given authority to the haberdashers to search both industries with the assistance of a craftsman chosen from each '^. On the strength of the position thus conferred upon them the haberdashers were able to defeat the main object of this petition, but a com- promise was arrived at and an order set down in the Star Chamber which directed the haberdashers, in conjunction with representatives of the feltmakers, to make ordinances for the regulation of the trade ■^- The spirit of this order was, however, easily evaded by the haberdashers, and in 1579 the feltmakers were seeking a remedy for their grievances along other lines. The felt- It appears that the management of their previous petition makers' had been entrusted to two of their number who had a gift complaint f^j. organization, and that a collection had been made to merc"hants^ enable them to devote themselves to the agitation. These two men now put themselves forward once more, claiming to speak on behalf of more than three thousand feltmakers in London and elsewhere, who, they complain, are ' daily urged to buy great quantities of Spanish, Easteridge and French wools that is brought into this said Realm unwashed and so full of May wool and other evil wool, dross, filthy dust and sand as in most of it your said poor Orators do lose the one half or the third part and in the best of it they do usually lose a fourth part.' The remedy proposed is that an officer should be appointed to see that the wool is cleansed and sorted before it is sold. The petitioner hints, however, that there will be strong opposition to this scheme, ' since the wool is now brought in most by knights, merchants, and aldermen . . . who for their own private gain will hinder the same all that they may *.' The mer- The chief interest of the merchants' answer to these chants de- allegations lies in their attitude towards the feltmakers' fe°tmakers^ representatives. ' Bradford and Caunton, the parties that delegates make this complaint, are two of very slender credit and of the worst sort of felters, haunters of taverns where they enter into devices, not to do any good to the commonweal, but to maintain their idle life with other men's goods. And * Lansdowne MSS., xxiv. 7. ^8 Elizabeth, c. II. * Lansdowne MSS., xxviii. 29. * Ibid., xxviii. 31. 'PAID AGITATORS' 133 to that end heretofore they went about to sue to make themselves a corporation and . . . gathered contributions of poor men to maintain their busy labouring therein . . . Like- wise at this tyme they have made like collections to set themselves on worke in suit and have gathered names and associate themselves with a few of the worst of that trade and (as it is thought) some names are marked and sub- scribed without the parties' assent . . . and so they make clamorous show of a multitude of 3,000 which is wholly untrue . . . The best and honestest sort of feltmakers who live by their true labour and skill make no such request '.' In a lengthy manifesto set forth in reply to these charges, The dele- Bradford and Caunton declare themselves ready to answer gates de- and purge themselves of any crime or evil dealinp-. Thev ^'^^^ ^^"^ admit levying the first contribution, though they deny the tion second, and they add: 'And as the said Bradford and Caunton at that time were and yet are thought meet and put in trust by a number of the feltmakers for all suits that concern the said science . . . therefore the following of such tedious suits is neither any idle life nor the enriching of such suitors by the sweat of other men's brows as they untruely allege.' Their first suit for a corporation, they continue, ended in a compromise, and ordinances were drawn up by learned counsel of both parties, and confirmed by the Lord Treasurer and the two Chief Justices ; in the first of which it was ordered that the master and wardens of the haberdashers with five of the feltmakers yearly chosen should search all manner of foreign wools, ' which search the haberdashers have not used because the chiefest and most part of the merchants that bringeth in and the ingrossers of the said wools are haberdashers.' It may be that some of ' the richest feltmakers, which the and de- aldermen and merchants account the honestest, do some- ^*^"^^j*^^ what hold themselves contented ... for that they with ^j P^° j^j^'i'' ready money and part credit, do buy much . . . and so have makers the choice and best.' But the poorest sort of feltmakers, to whom the aldermen sell the worst refuse at the price of the best wool, 'are daily and lamentably undone and are grown to such poverty as they dare not show their faces, and now since your Orators made complaint sundry of the said aldermen . . . have come unto and sent unto sundry of the feltmakers that owe them money to know if they com- plained and such of them as said yea were checked, and taunted, and such of them as said they did not were 1 Lansdowm MSS., xxix. 25. 134 CORPORATIONS OF SMALL MASTERS persuaded to set their hands against the said complaint which they refused to do . . . and now the said aldermen . . . will sell no wool to the said poor feltmakers but in scorn, answer them they will sell none till it be garbled \' The last word on the side of the merchants recommends that strong measures should be taken against the agitators ' for otherwise they have so settled their idle living upon such devices and vexations that they will never make end thereof^.' Feltmakers From the Court Books of the Haberdashers' Company, haber- '° which have been preserved from 1 583 onwards, and from dashers to the records of the Court of Aldermen, we are enabled to protect trace the further development of the situation until 1604, their status ^^gn the feltmakers obtained their charter. On several occasions, deputations of working feltmakers, who were free of the haberdashers, invoked the support of the company in defence of the interests of their craft ; and in their efforts to set the Statute of Apprentices in motion against the country workers, or to exclude the competition of aliens, they obtained a certain amount of sympathy and assistance. But another grievance seems to have touched the interests of the haberdashers too nearly to find redress at their hands. In June 1585 'Certeyne poore workmen of the Company complayned of the great abuse of dyvers as well freemen of the company as of others that are work- men as themselves be, who do kepe greate numbers of apprentices and instructe wenches in their arte . . . and do sell great quantity of wares unto chapmen altogether un- trymmed, whereby they sale a multitude might be sett on worke and relieved, if the same might be done here as heretofore.' To this complaint the feltmakers received the somewhat evasive answer that they should put their griefs in writing that they might be better considered ^. Reasons Here was a cause of difference similar to that which we wL*of ^3.ve seen to exist at the same time within the Cloth- response workers' Company. But the feltmakers had not the same effectual representation in the Haberdashers' Company as the handicraft clothworkers possessed in their yeomanry organization. Not only were some of the feltmakers (as was the case with the clothworkers too) attached to other companies ; a still larger number pursued their calling outside the boundaries of the city. Nor were the felt- makers the only craftsmen to whom the haberdashers stood in the relation of merchant employers. These causes ' Lansdowne MSS., xxviii. 28. ^ Ibid., xxix. 26. ^ Haberdashers' Court Book, June 26, 1585. SEPARATION OF FELTMAKERS 135 account for the loose connexion between the craft and the company. As late as 1590 the order made by the Privy Council Attempt to i"^ ^577' that five of the feltmakers should be chosen to take 5«™'^« ■'e- part with the haberdashers in the control of their industry, '^ionim' seems not to have been carried into effect. A committee feltmakers appointed by the Court of Aldermen in that year to con- sider what course was best for putting the order into execution, recommended that three of the five feltmakers should be chosen by the haberdashers and that the other two should be freemen of London, but not free of the Haberdashers' Company ^. After this, five feltmakers began to be regularly appointed to act as assistants to the wardens of the haberdashers' yeomanry in matters relating to their trade ; and for several years the quarterage levied from the feltmakers was granted to their representatives to use in furtherance of their suits ^. But the divergence of interests between traders and Further craftsmen was not arrested by this concession. 'In i^g^ complaints divers poorer workmen once more petitioned the Company separation for redress touching the sale of untrymmed hatts to Chap- men in the country which is now done dailie by wholesale men ^.' Next year they declared their intention of carrying their case before the Lord Mayor*, and in 1601 their resolution had been wrought up to the pitch of promoting a Bill in Parliament itself, in which enterprise they boldly invoked the assistance of the Haberdashers' Company^. The reply to this piece of audacity is probably to be found in an order made shortly after, that the feltmakers be sued for ;£'io or thereabouts owing to the Company unless they make speedy payment ". The feltmakers were at this time in need of all their available resources. In 1604 they not only obtained a charter from the King but procured the passage of an Act of Parliament. Some indignation was caused in the House of Commons by a statement that Mr. Typper, one of the members, had received £100 for getting the Feltmakers' Bill through the House; and the explanation ofifered was that the ;£^ioo had been paid for getting the charter passed under the great seal '. JVi>/g. The tendency of the industrial element in the older companies towards independent organization will receive further illustration in sub- ' Ci'iy of London Repertories, xxii. fol. 51. •^ Haberdashers' Court Book,^ov.,ll()■2.,0<:^.,\lchxno\\tr'& Jahr buck, 1897; R. Eberstadt, Das franz'dsische Gewerberecht, in Schmoller's Forschungen, 1899, PP- 309. 358-61. LETTRES DE MAITRISE 137 the supplementary ordinance of Henry IV in 1597, which occupy a place in French industrial history corresponding to that of the English Statute of Apprentices (1563), gave to the same principle a still more universal application. All the masters in every trade were required by these enactments to take an oath before a Crown oflScial, and to pay an entrance fee to the royal exchequer; and upon fulfilling these conditions the suburban master became qualified, after three years' service, to exercise his calling in the town, which had been hitherto closed to him by the trade corporations ^ Many and important as are the differences of method Elements revealed in the French and English attempts to codify and °^ ^j™'^^"^' nationalize industrial law, the fundamental distinction is to English be found in the fiscal motive which everywhere underlies situation the French legislation, and which is conspicuously absent from the Enghsh. But it must not be forgotten that in the one case we have to do with a royal edict, in the other case with an Act of Parliament. Although, therefore, there is no indication in the Statute of Apprentices of an attempt to turn the opportunity to a fiscal account, it must not be assumed that such an attempt was never made in England. Devices of this nature are apt to form part of the common stock of contemporary nations which share the same civilization. It is not in the mere presence or absence of this or that element of statecraft, this or that method of social organization or principle of constitutional law, that such a group of nations find their characteristic distinctions ; it is rather the proportion which these elements bear to one another, and their manner of group- ing round some predominant feature, that determine the poHtical individuality of a nation and seem to make its character unique^. For this reason it is not surprising to find that within ten Project to years after the passing of the Statute of Apprentices, ^^™=^^'*^/ proposals were made to the English Government, which Appren- bear a considerable similarity to the system embodied tices eight years later in the French edict of 1581 ^. The projector was one of that class of volunteer statesmen who were encouraged at this time by the growing adminis- trative activity of the Crown to offer their schemes for the 1 Levasseur, ii. pp. 138, 156 ; Eberstadt, Das franzdsische Gewerbe- Techt, p. 309. 2 Cf. H. Sidgwick, Development of European Polity, p. 232. ' A corresponding policy adopted by the Prussian Government in the eighteenth century is described by SchmoUer, Umrisse und Unter- suchungen, p. 41 9- 138 CORPORATIONS OF SMALL MASTERS benefit of the commonwealth (and the increase of the Queen's revenues), with an accompanying prayer that they might be chosen as hximble instruments to carry out the good work which they had recommended. Prefixed to the proposal, by way of explanatory introduction, is a brief commentary on the Statute of Apprentices, in which the motives which might have been supposed to have actuated the legislative mind are set forth clause by clause, so that the whole affords a valuable clue to the opinions as to class Social mo- relationship prevalent at that time. The reason why the ttatute in*-^ Country artificers, who combine domestic industry with terpreted the occupation of husbandry, are not allowed to take apprentices is that this would lead to ' the gathering of divers men's livings into one man's hand.' The master in most occupations is required to dwell in a city, town corporate, or market town, because ' cities and great towns are only or for the most part to be maintained by manual arts and occupations.' The father of the apprentice must be an artificer not occupying husbandry nor being a labourer ; because 'it is a more easier thing for the children of husbandmen and labourers to become artificers than for the children of artificers to become husbandmen and labourers, and therefore when husbandmen and labourers do put their children to learn occupations, the artificer's children are driven to be rogues and vagabonds.' The property qualification required in the case of parents who wish to apprentice their sons to merchandise ' seemeth to be enacted that gentlemen . . . might have some convenient means to bestow and place their younger sons in the commonwealth to live in a reasonable countenance and calling; the want whereof causeth many to be more mindful to gather for their children than to regard the state of the commonwealth '.' The statute The great measure, of which these were some of the marks the leading provisions, which was enacted the year before meiit of a ^^^ birth of Shakespeare and remained on the statute national book till the beginning of the nineteenth century, presents economy, ^^q Very different aspects to the historical student. Looked at firom one standpoint, it is a monument of the progress which had been achieved at the time when it was passed in the direction of national unity. Earlier statutes had dealt with particular localities, e. g, the Eastern Counties or the towns of Worcestershire ; or with particular industrial sections, as in the case of the Statutes of Labourers, or the Weavers' Act of 1555 ; or with particular institutions as in ' Sia/e Papers Dom., Elizabeth, xciii. 26. STATUTE OF APPRENTICES 139 the case of the Acts passed to regulate the gilds ; but the , Act of 1563 was an attempt on a grand scale to bring i every locality (with one or two important exceptions) / under the operation of a single code, to regulate the/ relations of all classes of the working population, whether f ng^ged in agriculture, industry or commerce, by assign- ing to each class its proper place in the framework of a uniform system ; and finally to provide machinery for maintaining this system in equilibrium by the periodical adjustment of the conditions of employment. The idea of a national economy finds in this great piece of Elizabethan legislation its most notable expression ^. But from another point of view the Statute of Apprentices but at- represented a vain endeavour to give fixity and permanence t«™pts to to a condition of things which already, in great part, obsokt?^ belonged to the past ^. During the preceding century conditions England had experienced the beginnings of that develop- ment which was to make her predominantly an industrial and commercial country. Labour and capital were acquir- ing a new mobility ; and the population was leaving its settled abodes and customary forms of employment in order to meet the requirements of a wider economy of production. Henceforward the manufacturing interests of the country were to show a steady relative increase, and the agricultural interests a steady relative decline. In the end this process involved a corresponding gain of the town population at the expense of the country ; but the immediate effect was not of this character ; indeed, in many cases it was exactly the opposite. England's greatest manu- facture was leaving its older seats in the privileged cities and boroughs for the freedom and the cheapness of the countryside ; and the great urban industrial centres of the future were to be looked for in a number of prosperous villages and unincorporated market towns. AH these changes were regarded with distrust and even Natural with dismay, not only by the average conservative English- [^!^^=™'^^°' man, but by the earnest reformer of higher aims and deeper ^^^^^^j^^ insight. Nor is this surprising in view of the social dis- organization which invariably characterizes such processes of transition, the want and disorder inevitably arising amongst floating masses of population, and the_ moral evils which accompany the break-up of old habits and observances. Deeply moved by his meditation on these things. Sir Thomas More would willingly have turned his 1 Cunningham, Growth, &c., ii. pp. 6, 25-31. » For a different view cf. ibid., p. 32. I40 CORPORATIONS OF SMALL MASTERS The economic forces too strong for legislative restriction countrymen back to an idealized form of a more primitive economy, preserving agriculture as the essential basis of social life, placing a severe restraint on the development of the industrial arts, and preventing all the evils arising from the division of labour by compelling every member of society to take a share by turns in the activities both of the town and of the country. The Statute of Apprentices presents a touch of literal coincidence with More's romance in the clause authorizing magistrates to compel artisans to assist in the harvest-field ; but the Elizabethan statesmen were not idealists, and would have been content to keep things as nearly as possible as they found them. The countryside, the market towns, the corporate boroughs and cities, each represented social elements which it was the duty of the legislator to keep within the limits of their separate spheres. The intention underlying this and many subsidiary pieces of Tudor legislation, was that whilst the distinctions created by local privilege between different sections of the same class were to be as far as possible removed, the distinctions ,' between the several classes themselves as horizontal sections of the whole nation were to be preserved, and their exist- ing relations to each other maintained in something like equilibrium. But the maintenance of such an equilibrium was impossible. No Act of Parliament could permanently restrain the forces making for a fundamental redistribution of economic functions, and for the establishment of a freer, but more complex and more divergent, system of social relations ^. It is pro- Of the truth of this the nature of the proposals already posed to referred to is sufficient evidence. Ten years after the inevitable passing of the Statute of Apprentices, it was declared to change have been very largely disregarded. It is true that this is attributed to the want of special machinery to enforce the law, ' without which it is nothing but a vain and dead letter, scarce known, and if known yet not regarded, neither by the officers to whom the execution thereof pertaineth nor by the people to whom the observation of the same belongetii.' At the same time it is argued that it would be impossible, or at any rate very impolitic, to disturb all those who were already exercising a trade in contravention of the Act, and whilst one of the proposals was for the ' Cf. SchmoUer, Studien iiber die wirthschafiliche Politik Frie- drichs des Grossen, xii. p. 34, in JahrbKCh, xi ; for an account of a similar situation at a later date in Prussia ; also SchmoUer, Umrisse und Untersuchungen, pp. 374-6. FISCAL DEVICES 141 establishment of a compulsory registration of all apprentices, journeymen and masters, with a view to the better observ- ance of the law in the future, the other was to provide those^ who had already oifended with an opportunity of legalizing their offence by compounding with the Queen's representatives for a lump sum 1. In this way the money wasted in ruinous lawsuits started and to turn by informers would flow into the Queen's exchequer, and i' '° ^^'^^^ a large and striving class would be restored to the status of ^'^'^°'^''* law-abiding subjects. It is curious to find almost the same language used and the same motives invoked in the case of the small masters of the sixteenth century, as would naturally suggest themselves nowadays to any one who wished to convince unorganized workmen of the advantages of a trade union. The ' unlawful artificers,' it is said, must recognize the benefits of the scheme, because it must be obvious to them that, just as their unauthorized competition has reduced the earnings of the lawful artificers from a shilling to ninepence, so their earnings in turn are liable to be beaten down by further intruders from ninepence to sixpence ^. There is nothing to show that the proposals made in Subsequent 1573 were authorized by the Crown; but in 1619 a com- ^"^"P'^" mission on similar lines was issued to Sir James Spence j^ga and others, and after a short experience recalled into the King's hands as being too important to be held by subjects \ A new attempt was made under Charles I by Sir Alexander Gordon. The two Chief Justices approved of Sir Alexander's scheme, but Attorney-General Noy felt some scruples, and the King himself suggested modifications. Later on Sir Alexander ' moved for a commission to treat for pardons to such offenders as of their own accord should desire the same ; whereunto His Majesty condescended, uttering these words : — " volenti non fit injuria." ' As, however, the final authorization was still being sought for in 1638, when the time for such undertakings was fast coming to an end, it is probable that the proposal was never carried into effect *. 1 This method of raising a revenue by allowing persons, who had infringed some generally neglected law, to compound for their offence by payments to a royal patentee became common. For its application to the tanning industry see Lansdowne MSS., xxiv. 71-6. Five such grants for compounding were revoked by Charles I in 1632 ; see Privy Council Register, Mar. 31, 1639. 2 State Papers Dom., Elizabeth, xciii. 26-35. » \\i\i.., James /, cv. 78-80; cxx. 61 : see also xxiv. 73. * Ibid., Charles 1, ccccviii. 16. The same policy is indicated by the establishment of a new corporation of retail traders in London, which 142 CORPORATIONS OF SMALL MASTERS Mixed mo- tives of Stuart in- tervention It is wel- comed by craftsmen, but op- posed by merchants IV In the light which this constantly recurring project casts upon the general tendency of the industrial policy of the Stuarts, we are better able to realize the significance of such grants of incorporation as those made to the felt- makers and the glovers. It was, in fact, the same policy applied with greater success in the narrower field of a par- ticular industry. In conferring the new charters, just as in the proposed grant of pardons, the Crown was supporting the struggling outsider against the power of existing vested interests. In neither case were the motives entirely disinterested. Mingled with the idea of encouraging the weaker forces of industrial capital against the stronger forces of commercial capital, was the need of new sources of revenue, and the desire to conciliate a growing class of the community. This class interest has been somewhat overlooked. The interference of the Crown with trade and industry at this period is not thoroughly comprehensible, unless it is con- sidered in relation to the undoubted demand for such interference. In Elizabeth's reign, as we have seen, the feltmakers petitioned for the appointment of a Crown official to regulate the sale of wool ; and the clothworkers asked for a Packer to oversee the export of cloth ^ In both cases the craftsmen wished to restrict the merchants' freedom of trade, which was, they alleged, exercised to their dis- advantage. But the difference between the attitude of the merchants and that of the craftsmen to the exercise of the royal prerogative, is best illustrated in the case of a patent granted to a certain Mr. Darcy in 1592, for searching and sealing leather ^. The grant of this patent was supported by many of the workers, as a means of procuring them a better supply of material. The leather-sellers, on the other hand, asserted that the patent was contrary to the laws of the land, and involved ' the unnecessary taxing of all the commons in the Realm, especially the poorer sorte whose chief wearing leather is,' and boldly declared that the people would be in bondage if they could be taxed without consent of Parliament ^. For holding this language some of the leading merchants suffered fine and imprison- was to provide a status for those who were not freemen out of the city; see Privy Council Register, May 6, 1638. ' See pp. 122, 132. ' Strype, Siow's Survey, ii. p. 205. " Lansdowne MSS., Ixxiv. 42 ; cf. Harleian MSS., 6850, fol. 157. ROYAL INTERVENTION 143 ment. At a later period when the glovers were on the point of gaining their charter, the leather-sellers declared their fears that the new corporation ' would turn to a plain monopoly and to a confederacy ' ; whereupon the glovers retorted that this was equivalent to taxing with monopolies and confederacies the Lord Chancellor and Chief Justices of both benches, whose sanction would be necessary to make the King's grant legal \ That the idea of protecting the interests of the poorer The pro- industrial classes was a real motive of Stuart policy, is't^eCTaftl- shown by the royal intervention in two cases where men a real a grant of incorporation was not held to be expedient, motive, The calkers of ships and the printers both appealed to the Government with success against their employers, the ship- wrights and the stationers. In each of these cases there were reasons of state which counteracted the prevailing tendency to favour the independence of the small master. The Government deemed it necessary to exercise a strict supervision alike over the building of ships and over the printing and sale of books ; and it was much easier to fix responsibility upon the capitalist than upon the craftsman. Large securities were required from the shipwright that he would not build for foreign powers, and from the stationer that he would not publish seditious books. But although these considerations induced the Crown to maintain the authority of the capitalist employer, regulations were granted to the subordinated crafts, to serve instead of those which a royal charter would have empowered them to make for their own protection ^. The records of the Privy Council during the period when Charles governed without a Parliament leave no doubt as to the sincere desire of the King or of his ministers to promote the interests of the working classes. The Privy Council made frequent efforts to prevent a decline, or even to effect a rise, in the wages of the workers in the country cloth industry, and its intervention was constantly being invoked by the small master craftsmen of the metropolis ^. The artisan pewterers * and armourers = 1 Add. MSS., 12504, fol. 105 ; State Papers Dom., Charles J, ccclxxxvi. 90. 2 State Papers Dom., Charles I, cci. 105 ; ccci. 105 and ccclxxix. 27 ; cxxvi. 26 ; cccliii. 87. s Leonard, Early English Poor Relief, p. 160. In 1637 a Colchester clothier was imprisoned in the Fleet for giving low wages and paying in truck ; Privy Council Register, May 10, 1637. < Privy Council Register, Jan. I, 1639. » Ibid., Apr. 3, May 22, June 4, 1635. 144 CORPORATIONS OF SMALL MASTERS appealed to it over the heads of the traders who ruled their companies. The Cutlers' Company received a warrant to put down unauthorized merchant employers ^. The freemasons obtained, through the 'Commissioners for buildings,' an order forbidding the plasterers to overlay rotten stonework ^. The plumbers ^ and the glaziers * applied for a remedy against the supply of bad materials by the merchants ; and the ropemakers and hempdressers obtained an inquiry into a ring which they alleged had been formed in the hemp market ^. but easily If we wish to See how this more respectable aspect of gave way (-j^g Stuart policy blended with, or degenerated into, the motivS'^ aspect of trading monopoly established from fiscal motives, we have only to turn to the petition of the Playing-card makers to the Long Parliament in 1641, asking that their charter might not be taken away. Foreign playing-cards, they explained, had been prohibited by Act of Parliament since the time of Edward IV ; but as a large quantity con- tinued to be imported. King Charles had granted them a charter in 1628, for the better protection of their industry. Want of capital, however, had prevented them from taking full advantage of the monopoly thus conferred. The haberdashers still managed to get supplies of cards from abroad, and the poor playing-card makers, so ran the pathetic story, ' compelled to sell at low rates could scarce e.g. King's get bread for their fainting bodies.' In this extremity they monopoly gg^j ^,^3^ themselves at the foot of the throne, and in 1637 carf^^' ' His Majesty had graciously covenanted, under the great seal, to buy a constant weekly proportion of good cards at specified rates ; and to such of the Company as were poor widows, aged men past labour, or not able to maintain themselves, his Majesty out of his princely goodness had allowed a maintenance of his profits, . . . for which the petitioners praised God and blessed his Majesty.' In con- sideration of which contract they had most willingly sub- mitted to the sealing of all playing-cards made by the Company, and that thirty-six shillings should be raised to His Majesty on every gross of fine cards made and sold in the kingdom, which they were confident would amount ' Privy Council Register, Mar. 5, 1632. ^ State Papers Dom., Charles I, ccclxvii. 88. ' Privy Council Register, Apr. 25, 1632 ; see also bibliography of Plumbers' Company. In this case the supply was in the hands of a monopolist. * State Papers Dom., Charles I, ccclxxviii. 58. ^ Ibid., Charles I, cci^'xx. 14; Privy Council Register,Ma.rchi^, 1633-4. STUART MONOPOLIES 145 to ^5,000 or £6,000 per annum constant revenue to the Crown for ever ^. Although this was not the only instance of a monopoly General being supplied with capital, either directly or indirectly, by tendency the King 2, most of the numerous monopolies of this period °ention to were in the hands of private persons, who were of course create charged with periodical payments to the exchequer. But monopoly, what the case of the playing-card makers renders quite clear is the almost inevitable tendency of industrial privileges vested in bodies of craftsmen to fall into the hands of speculating capitalists, who could attempt to exploit the industry somewhat on the lines of the modern trust. Failure in these enterprises was quite as frequent as success, and the breakdown of one projector afforded the Government the opportunity of issuing another patent covering the same privilege ^. In this way one monopolist took the field against another monopolist, and the interests of the craftsman, which were the supposed motive of the grant, so far from being forwarded, were not even considered. An example of this is supplied in the experiences of the illustrated feltmakers during the later years of the reign of Charles I. ^^j^^^^^^r^'" Both James and Charles had supported their efforts to company make themselves independent of the haberdashers, and to gain the recognition of the city for their corporation *. But when the increasing vogue of the beaver hat was beginning to open up to the feltmakers new possibilities of profitable employment, the temptation to acquire an additional source of revenue by turning this branch of the industry into a separate monopoly proved too strong to be resisted. A new Company of Beaver-makers was in- corporated, at whose hall every beaver hat was to be stamped, and to pay a tax of one shilling «. Both the haberdashers and the feltmakers resisted the authority of the new company. No hats were taken to the hall. The ' Staie Papers Dom., Charles I, cccclxxvii. 64 ; see also dv. 62 and dxxxv. 18. j ^ r i_ "^ Cf. the case of the pinmakers in the next chapter, and that of the gold and silver thread monopoly, for which see Gardiner, History of England, iv. p. 13. James the First also took over the alum monopoly ; see Lansdowne MSS., clii. . , ^ j- ,,- ^ ' State Papers Dom., Charles I, Ixxxix. 12 ; cf. Gardmer, Hist, of England, iv. pp. 8 et seq. ; Cunningham, Growth, &c., ii. p. 306. * City of London Repertories, xxxiii. fol. 354 ; l"'- fol. 60 ; State Papers Dom., James I, 1619-23, p. 442 ; ibid., Charles I, cxcvii. 16. » Ibid., Charles I, cccbtxxii. 53; ccclxxxix, May 1,1638; ccccxvii. 2 ■ ccccxviii. 72 ; and Rymer, Foedera, O. xx. 230. L 146 CORPORATIONS OF SMALL MASTERS searchers appointed by the monopolists were treated with contumely. All the parties concerned continued for many months to besiege the King- with petitions ^ ; and at length, in September, 1639, he sat in solemn judgement on the dispute, and proceeded to mark out felt-making and beaver- making as separate callings, which were henceforth never to encroach upon each other. The difficulty arising from the fact that a considerable trade was done in hats of a mixed kind, worn by those who could not afford pure beaver, had been already disposed of by prohibiting these mixed hats altogether as deceitful nondescripts, injurious to the public morals ^. Monopoly Without discussing the advantages conferred on the was not an consumer, we may ask what was the effect upon the to the small Craftsman of this royal manipulation of industrial interests, master Only those can be supposed to have benefited upon whom the new monopoly of beaver-making was conferred. But within the same year the rank and file of the beaver-makers complained to the King that the formation of the new company had been their ruin. They had previously carried on as small masters a considerable trade in the mixed hats, combined with a small manufacture of pure beavers. The eight capitalists who had promoted the monopoly had induced them to join the new company by threats of excluding them from beaver-making, and by promises that their trade in mixed hats should not be interfered with. Now that the mixed hats were prohibited, they were deprived of their principal means of employ- ment. The demand for hats of pure beaver was too small, and the material too expensive, to permit of their confining themselves to this branch of manufacture, and indeed they asserted that the eight leading monopolists had by that time got it almost entirely into their own hands ^. To the great majority, therefore, of those engaged in the manu- facture, the abolition of the monopoly by the Long Parlia^ ment, which assembled in the following year *, must have come as an unmitigated relief The history of the Beaver- makers' Company illustrates the tendency of the Stuart corporations to become merged in the general mass of monopolies granted by the Crown, some forty of which, including eight corporations, were '■ State Papers Dom., Charles I, ccclxvi. 68; ccccix. 126; ccccx. 144-5 i and ccccxxii. 5, also Calendar for 1638-9, p. 411. ''■ State Papers Dom., Charles I, ccccxxviii. 2, 43, 77. ' Carew Transcripts at the Record Office, p. 52. * Hist. MSS. Rep., House of Lords' Calendar, Nov. 25, 1640. A COLBERTIAN POLICY 147 revoked by Charles I in 1639, with a view to conciliating public opinion'. By this time most of the companies incorporated were, like the other monopolies, under the control of one or more capitalists, who paid a lump sum down for the concession, and charged themselves in addition with an annual rent to the Crown. The preservation of the independence of the small master, which as we have seen was the original aim of the movement towards in- corporation, was almost entirely lost sight of To consider in some detail the process by which this was brought about will be the business of the ensuing chapter. Note. — This chapter has dealt only with London corporations. How far the companies chartered by the Stuarts in other industrial centres presented features corresponding to those above described, is a problem that could only be solved by extensive and intensive local research. But the clothing corporations established at Bury St. Edmunds {Hist. MSS. Report, Bury, p. 141), at Ipswich {State Papers Dom., James 1, cxii. 62-3, 105), at Colchester (ibid., cxv. 28), and at Leeds {ibid., l6s6,cxxxi.7), were complained of as exhibiting the abuses of monopoly. Considerable light is shed upon Stuart policy by the projects for industrial corporations which were never carried into effect. Foremost amongst these was a frequently recurring proposal to set up in every city, corporate town, or county where the manufacture of the new draperies was carried on, a clothing corporation with officers nominated by the local magistrates or justices, and thus indirectly under the control of the Crown. This project, which anticipated the most ambitious aspects of the policy of Colbert, was first brought forward by a certain Hugh Morrell in 1616, was the subject of frequent con- sideration by the Privy Council {Privy Council Register, Mar. 27, 1616; 18 Feb. 1618; II Feb., 10 May, 1620; see also State Papers Dom., James I, cxxxi. 34-6), and, upon the accession of Charles, actually received the royal sanction in an elaborate form applying to thirty-two counties, but was set aside owing to the pressure of foreign concerns {State Papers Dom., Charles I, i. 24, 62 ; x. 66) and only seems to have taken practical shape in the case of an experiment, which proved unsuccessful, in Hertfordshire {State Papers Dom., James I, cxv. 13). See article on Hugh Morrell in Diet. Nat. Biography. ' Privy Council Register, Mar. 31, 1639. The companies are the Comb-makers, Hatband-makers, Gutstring-makers, Butchers, Tobacco- pipe-makers, Homers, Spectacle-makers, and BnckmakerS. L2 CHAPTER VI JOINT-STOCK ENTERPRISE AND INDUSTRIAL MONOPOLY Experi- ments of the new corpor- ations of small masters in joint- stock enterprise, origins of joint-stock principle in Gild Merchant, The last chapter was mainly occupied with an account of the economic conditions which gave rise to the move- ment amongst the smaU master craftsmen towards the formation of separate industrial organizations to protect the interests of their class ; of the political circumstances which favoured the success of that movement ; and of some of the more general consequences of the Stuart policy of incorporation which resulted from it. We may now turn to follow in greater detail the inner history of one or two of those corporations, more especially during what has been spoken of as the experimental stage of their development. That stage follows immediately upon the grant of in- corporation, and is occupied with an attempt to use that privilege as a means of securing the objects aimed at in the previous agitation. The industrial monopoly conferred by the charter had the same kind of potential value as a modern patent granted for a new invention ; and upon the guarantee thus afforded, the small masters who formed the main body of the new corporation hoped to raise a common fund, which would relieve them of the dis- advantages, arising from the smallness of their individual capital, under which they had laboured both in buying their materials and selling the products of their labour. The experiment did not involve the adoption of an entirely new idea; it sprang rather from the gradual adaptation of a method which was as old as the gild form of organization itself In the Gild Merchant of the thirteenth century a member who had secured a large quantity of an article of common need, was obliged to share his bargain at cost price with the other members who desired to do so ^ ; and at a later period this principle in ^ Gross, Gild Merchant, i. p. 49. SURVIVALS FROM THE GILD 149 some cases was developed into the form of the ' common town bargain,' under which the purchase was made by the town officials on behalf of the members of the merchant company ^. The Craft Gild frequently adopted a similar arrangement and in the as a means of securing the economic independence and '-^^^^ ^^^^' equality of its members. Regulations forbidding the wealthier craftsmen from acquiring large stocks of materials, or compelling them to share their bargains at cost price, or even making it incumbent upon all members to obtain their materials through the officers of the gild so that rich and poor might be served alike, were not uncommonly made by the French and German crafts in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries ^. The tendency, which these regulations were intended to further de- check, of the small master to fall into dependence upon the veloped in capital of the wealthier member of his own craft or on that p^rati^ons of the outside trades, became much more general in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. In the new ordinances obtained by the incorporated handicrafts of Paris during Paris the latter half of the sixteenth century, the attempt to leather overcome this tendency by measures similar to those above described is all but universal. Ordinances were procured, to take the leather trades alone, by the curriers^ in 1567, by the cordwainers* in 1573, by the saddlers in 1577 ^, by the skinners in 1586 ^, by the girdlers in 1595 '', and by the glovers in 1656*, the general purpose of which was to secure to each member an equal opportunity of supplying himself with such materials of his craft as were_ brought into Paris. No member was to intercept such imported merchandise before it had been inspected by the wardens, and these officers were to see that every master received his allotted share. ' All buckles and other ironwork,' says the ordinance of the girdlers, 'made use of in the said trade shall be inspected by the sworn masters of the craft, and marked with its mark in order that they may be allotted amongst the community of masters. No master is to share any allotment of foreign merchandise except for the purpose of making use of it in his shop. He shall ' Gross, Gz7^i1/^^irAa«^, i. PP- 135-6 and note. 2 Giercke, Das deutsche Genossenschaftsrecht, \. p. 392 ; G. Fagniez, ttudes sur I' Industrie et la classe industrielle d. Paris au XIIP et XI V siicle, p. 110. ' Lespinasse, Les metiers, iii. p. 323. . . , « Ibid., p. 350. " Ibid., p. 458. « Ibid., p. 377- ' ^^^^■' P- 397- * Ibid., p. 617. I50 JOINT-STOCK AND MONOPOLY not sell his share to any master girdler or other person for money ^.' Tudor In England it was a recognized principle of Tudor itoc'iTs'^n legislation that the artificer should have the first claim middle- on the raw materials used in his trade. Not only were men, restrictions or absolute prohibitions placed for this reason upon the export of wooP, hides ^, horn* and various metals ^ ; it was also the constant aim of the legislator to hinder any one from purchasing such materials who was not about to make immediate use of them in industries carried on by himself^. The inexpediency and the futility of these attempts to suppress the middleman by the negative process of parliamentary prohibition were coming to be recognized by the beginning of the seventeenth century. Experience had made it suflSciently clear that the function performed by the merchant and the entre- preneur could not, if industry was to be allowed its natural expansion, be undertaken by the individual craftsman on replaced his own account. But the hope was still entertained that ative'ex'-^'^' this increasingly dominant agency might be replaced by periments the common action and the united capital of an associated body of craftsmen. And this hope was now to be strongly reinforced by the germinations of an idea destined to play a part of immense importance in the future development of industry and commerce. More than two centuries were still to elapse before this idea, that of the Joint-Stock Company, was to succeed in groping its way to effectual realization in the sphere of industry, but its earliest erratic manifestations form one of the most striking features of the economic history of the reign of James I. The origin of the joint-stock company has been traced back to the formation of associations, in the twelfth century, amongst the holders of public debt in the Italian cities'. Out of these, at a much later date, grew up in several cases joint-stock public banks, which were the forerunners of the Bank of England*. But the Bank of England and the National Debt did not come into existence till 1694 ; and nearly a century before this, the joint-stock principle had ^ Lespinasse, iii. p. 397, Arts. pp. 35-6 ; cf. Savary, Dictionnaire du comfnerce, article Lotissement. '' 6 Henry VIII, c. 12. ' I Elizabeth, c. 10; 18 Elizabeth, c. 9. * 4 Edward IV, c. 8 ; 7 Jac. I, c. 14. = 21 Henry VIII, c. lo. « (Wool), 4 Henry VII, c. 11; 22 Henry VIII, c. i ; 5-6 Edward VI, c. 7: (leather), 3-4 Edward VI, c. 6; 5-6 Edward VI, c. 1 5 ; 5 Elizabeth, c. 8 ; 27 Elizabeth, c. 16. '' Goldschmidt, Universalgeschichte des Handelsrechts, p. 290. ° Macleod, Theory and Practice of Banking, i. pp. 289-95. ORIGINS OF JOINT- STOCK 151 received what was to prove the most famous of all its applications, in the case of the East India Company. The genesis of joint-stock enterprise in foreign trade, of which this company furnishes the leading example, has been accounted for by Professor SchmoUer by reference to three pre-existing forms of business organization. The basis was suppUed by gilds such as the English Merchant Adventurers, which grew up in the fifteenth century amongst those who carried on trade in the same foreign ports or markets. These bodies received royal grants of privilege, they possessed the power of regulating the activity of their members, and they acquired property for use in common ; but each member traded with his own stock at his own riskf. The second element was contributed by the form of partnership known as ' Commenda,' much used in early Mediterranean trading, by which a merchant remaining at home was enabled to entrust his goods to a skipper or agent, who received part of the profit. This system in its later developments, along with the ' loan on bottomry,' i.e. mortgage of a ship and its cargo, gradually opened a way for the investment of the capital of persons not professionally engaged in trade ''■. If to a combination of these two elements there is added the principle of equal transferable shares and of management by representative shareholders, we have something that corresponds fairly closely to the joint- stock trading company of the seventeenth century ^, This construction is hypothetical. The elements com- bined and the result achieved are in each case historic facts, but the connexion between them remains to be substantiated by further evidence. The assumption, how- ever, that the earlier gild of traders supplied the basis for the later joint-stock company rests upon solid historical ground. In the case of the East India Company the transi- tion may in fact be clearly traced from the one form of organization to the other. An element of joint-stock was already to be found in the collective property of the gild of traders. The tendency of the members to form them- selves into groups, each pursuing a common venture, marked another stage of development. Next, all the members are found uniting their resources in one purse and common stock for the purpose of a single voyage ; then for a number of voyages; and finally the stock » Cunningham, Growth, &c., i. a 41 7-^ « Ashley, Economic History, Pt. II, pp. 412-22. » Schmoller, Die geschichtliche Entwickelung der Uniernehmung, xiii. p. 3, injahrbuch, xvii. 152 JOINT-STOCK AND MONOPOLY becomes a permanent fund made up of transferable shares, and the management falls into the hands of a select body of the largest shareholders ^. Such success as was achieved by early joint-stock enter- prises in foreign trade (and there were a great number of failures) was due to the measure of monopoly secured to them by the support of the State. Writing in 1776, Adam Smith held that the only trades which a joint-stock company could carry on successfully without an exclusive privilege were those that could be reduced to routine, such as banking, insurance, making and maintaining canals, and water-supply^. And it was not till the middle of the eighteenth century that the technical and economic con- ditions came into existence, which made it practicable to apply the methods of joint-stock enterprise to industry at large ^. The lateness of this development has tended to obscure the fact that the earliest joint-stock experiments were as much concerned with industry as with commerce. It will be seen by what follows that the industrial organiza- tions of the sixteenth and seventeenth century supplied a basis to those experiments of exactly the same kind as that furnished by the merchant companies. Corporate adminis- tration of charitable beqnests, leads to business invest- ments of corporate capital II The starting-point of the new development is to be found in the rights of corporate ownership acquired by the older livery companies in the course of the fifteenth century. Property in land was then the natural, and indeed the only safe form of collective investment, and almost as soon as they were empowered by charter, the companies began to acquire by legacy or by purchase those estates which form the basis of their present wealth. The income derived from this property was mainly devoted to purely charitable purposes, the relief of the poor or the infirm, the support of widows and orphans. But as time went on, it became not uncommon for a successful merchant, remembering his own early struggles, to make a bequest with the object of supplying loans without interest to young tradesmen in want of capital *. Apart from the property thus held in trust for a specified object, the companies often possessed a stock of cash in ' Cunningham, ii. p. 255 et seq. ^ Smith, Wealth of Nations, v. c. I. ' Cunningham, ii. p. 816. * Leonard, Early History of English Poor Relief, p. 233. See also above, p. 93, n. 3. COLLECTIVE PURCHASE 153 their strong boxes, derived from entrance fees, fines, and other sources of income, which might also be employed in benevolent loans ; but which was sometimes put out at a substantial interest to the more enterprising and pros- perous members ^. In this way a transition was gradually effected from an investment in land to one in industry or commerce. As, however, the money lent for business purposes passed under the control of the borrower, it was, so far, only the investment in land that was actually administered by the corporation itself. A considerable step forward in the process we are tracing and to was therefore made when the company began to employ collective its stock in the purchase of materials for its members. As mYteriafs° early as 1482, the Pewterers' Company is recorded as having as in ' bough t xi pieces of tyn^ weighing xxxj<= xiij"'^ att xxiiij" Pewterers' the C,' the total cost being i^ 3 7 ys., and the profit on the ""^P^^^ sale to rnembers amounting to £4^ is. id., or more than II per cent.^ This transaction does not represent an attempt to replace the usual agencies of supply, but simply arose from the desire to find a j)rofitable employment for t he c apital which the company happened to have at its disposal, whilst at the same time perhaps serving the convenience of poorer members. That the individual members continued as a rule to supply themselves, is evident from a regulation of 1555, forbidding any one to buy Cornish tin without demanding a certain allowance on every piece for ' scrap '^. In 1 560-1, however, it was agreed that ' four honest men of the Company shall have the buying of all such bargains of tynne as hereafter shalbe by any manner of means come to any of the Company by Brokership or any other shift, and the party shall send the broker or other party to one of the said foure, and they by theire good advice shall make bargain in the name of the Company, and the tynne shall be kept in the hall to be sold . . . and none to buy other tyn till it be sold*.' Even this arrangement for collective bargaining appar- The rise of ently only related to exceptional opportunities. Most of ^^^'^"^^ the tin used in the trade was probably stiU obtained by "°"°P° ^ individual dealings with the London merchants. The haberdashers, who acted as middlemen to so many of the London handicrafts, appear to have supplied the pewterers with their materials in this way ^ But towards the end of ' See above, p. 45 ; cf. Herbert, Twelve Great Li-very Companies, i. p. 286 ; ii. pp. 272, 630. 2 C. Welch, History of the Pewterers' Company, i. p. 55. ' Ibid., i. p. 194. * Ibid., i. p. 217. '' Ibid., i. p. 268 ; ii. p. 10. 154 JOINT-STOCK AND MONOPOLY Elizabeth's reign the trade in tin fell into the hands of monopolists, to whom the Crown farmed out its prior right of purchase (pre-emption) ; and this condition of things continued, with brief intervals, down to the time of the Civil War i- In face of this monopoly the kind of bargain- ing contemplated in the ordinance of 1560 no longer served any purpose. Unless the pewterers could procure the suspension of the monopoly, the only alternatives left to them were either to get it into their own hands, or to establish their right as manufacturers to a portion of the material of their trade on special terms. And as a matter of fact they tried each of these three methods in turn. leads to A temporary suspension of the monopoly was brought the forma- about by the reforming zeal of James I on his accession ^. sTOdicafe ^^^ although the pewterers' records speak of their now of rich being free to buy their tin as they had previously done, pewterers, they go on to deal with the necessity of raising three or four thousand pounds for the contentment |Of the tinners ^. The reason of this was that the monopolistshadJafienJn the habit of advancing money to the tinners . to _cover wages and other costs of production ; and, if the pewterers were to deal in tin to advantage, they must be prepared to do the same. As, however, the Pewterers' Company did not possess a collective capital adequate to so large a transaction, the speculation had to be left in the hands of a small group of wealthy members, who formed a co-partnership for that purpose with the approval of the executive *. who deal It is obvious that such an arrangement differed very in tin as widely from the collective purchase of materials for the mercTal general use, which was the object of the previous regula- specuia- tions. The merchants who advanced the capital for this tion speculative enterprise would not feel bound to reserve the tin for industrial purposes, if it should prove more profit- able to export it as raw material, or in a semi-manufactured state. Conflicts naturally arose between the trading masters and the working masters on this point. As a concession to the latter, a tax was levied on aU the tin ^ Lansdowne MSS., vol. 121 5, fols. 226-30. '^ State Papers Dom., James I, ii. 4, 5 ; ix. 75. The grant of monopoly was renewed in 1606 in spite of the protests of the pewterers ; ibid., xxiii. 56, 57. ^ Ibid., James I, vi. 78 ; also Warrant Book, p. 105, Feb. 29, 1604. * C. Welch, Pewterers, ii. p. 37 ; State Papers Dom., Sept. 25, 1604, (vol. 1603-10), THE PEWTERERS' SYNDICATE 155 exported by the traders, the proceeds of which were to be applied to the benefit of the poorer members ^ ; and on several occasions a mandate was obtained from the Govern- ment by the craftsmen, requiring a certain quantity of the tin to be put to industrial purposes ^. In the year 161 1, when a new term of monopoly was Artisans about to be granted, and the merchants in the Pewterers' ?^5"^ . , /-> ° ' . . ... ... indnstrial Company were negotiating to maintain the position they use of had acquired in the tin market, a counter petition was material presented to the King by a body of workmen pewterers, headed by the son of a former beadle of the company, asking that the farmers of tin ' should deliver forth four- score thousand weight of tynne to be wrought into pewter by the workmen of the company and the same by them so wrought to be taken back by the farmers to be trans- ported or otherwise sould at their pleasures^.' Such a proposal will seem less extraordinary when it is com- pared with the similar schemes, to be considered later, of the feltmakers, the clothworkers, and the pinmakers. It supplies a striking illustration of the strength of the pre- valent opinion in favour of the protection of national industries by the Government. The petition of the work- men was not granted, but its efectjs seen in the answer made to the application of the trading pewterers. They were to have at a fixed price from the ' farmers ' as much tin as they could work, but if any were found to be secretly exported, the price was to be raised ; and none were ' to fetch up such tin but such as were shopkeepers and those which worked it either themselves or by their servants and workmen *.' On this occasion there is no mention of a purchase of tin Further out of the corporate stock, for the use of its members '^'^^^^f^^ generally. But in 16 15, the company agreed to venture ^y^^e^^^ i^8oo, along with ;^7,ooo which had been raised amongst compaDy a dozen of its members, for the purpose of securing the monopoly for five years = ; and the portion of tin repre- sented by this sum was presumably allotted to the poorer members at cost price. The company continued to purchase a stock of tin with this object. A committee, on which both livery and yeomanry were represented, was appointed in 1620 to superintend the allotments. From the year » Welch, ii. pp. 35, Si- " Ibid., ii. p. 55. ' Ibid., ii. p. 58. * Ibid., ii. p. 58. Further complaints were made in 1622 ; see S^aie Papers Dom., James I, cxxviii, ill. " See Ibid., Jan. 19, 1615 (vol. 1611-18, p. 270). ' Welch, ii. p. 78. In 1621 the pewterers promoted a Bill in 156 JOINT- STOCK AND MONOPOLY But the enterprise is quite distinct from this 1635 ^^ account was kept in the company's books of the amount of tin received by each member ; and to the cost price was added 6d. or is. per cwt., which went to the profit of the company ^ It is necessary to distinguish carefully between these '^otnt^Itock smaller purchases of tin made out of the corporate funds ■'° ^ *^ for the use of the members generally, and the larger venture which, though made with the approval of the company, was nevertheless a private speculation. The adventuring pewterers all belonged to the ruling class within the corporation, but they could not be legally identified with it. They constituted a separate partnership of a new kind, the uncertain legal status of which is illustrated by the fact that, before the term of its joint action had expired, the majority were engaged in a lawsuit with their leading member. The Joint-Stock Company had in fact gradually separated itself from the organization which had brought it into existence, but it was as yet unconscious of the diflSculties involved in the attempt to walk alone ^- Felt- makers' capital III The historical association between these two species of social organization will be stiU more clearly indicated by inTerprise ^ome account of the inner development of the feltmakers' appeals to corporation during the reign of James I. There are two ontside respects in which the history of the feltmakers serves as an illustration to supplement that of the pewterers. In the case of the latter company, which received its charter as early as 1473, we have seen the gradual upgrowth of the joint-stock principle during a period of a century and a half The Feltmakers' Company, on the other hand, was not incorporated till the tendency to joint-stock enterprise was already in the ascendant. Indeed that tendency may have been one of the strongest of the forces that brought it into existence. At any rate it provides an illustration of an attempt to apply the joint-stock idea immediately and completely to a newly formed industrial corporation. The other point is perhaps of even greater importance. Whilst the holders of the pewterers' stock were all members of the Parliament with the object of securing the pre-emption of tin, the right of casting tin into bars and of preventing its export, but it was rejected ; Hisi. MSS. Rep., iv. p. 121. ^ Welch, ii. p. 91. ^ For the further history of the Pewterers' Company, see Biblio- graphy. AN EARLY PROSPECTUS 157 company, and were probably almost identical with its governing body, the feltmakers, by appealing to the outside world to share in their enterprise, took an entirely new step in the direction of the modern joint-stock company. The interest of this experiment is enhanced by the fact The felt- that it is clearly presented to us at two distinct stages. We "'^''^'^s' have first the draft of an ambitious and thorough-going schemes scheme which, as it would appear, although put before the puHic, was soon after abandoned as impracticable ; and secondly, we have the history of a simpler plan which was actually attempted, but which after a number of years' trial, ended in ignominious failure. The first of these schemes supplies valuable evidence as to the ideals of the small master; and the second and more practical stage of the experiment illustrates in a lively manner the difficulties wWchhindered the realization of even a moderate instalment of those ideals. XUFthe^dbcuments relating to the earlier scheme the most Prospectus important corresponds in almost all essentials to the pro- g^i^J^g spectus of a modern company ; and is addressed in like origin and manner to the investing public at large. The preamble, motives which is worth quoting in full, runs as follows : — ' The Company of Feltmakers London thereunto moved by simdry mischiefs and miseries they have endured by the Company of Haberdashers of London have resolved for remedie thereof and for Government of the poore of their trade and profytt of such as wiU come with them therein to buy a Stock or bank of money for the takeing in and buying up of all the wares they make into their own handes which Stocke is projected to be .^15,000 to be raysed by themselves and such as will adventure with them.' The management is to lie mainly in the hands of members Direction of the company, on account of their experience in the^*^_ business and because their corporation forms the ' ground taking of the stock'; but of the twelve or more directors or ' committees whose office will be to view the accompte of the Stocke, and to make lawes and actes for the same,' some are to be chosen from the largest of the outside shareholders, and these may send agents to inspect the company's books from time to time. The method employed for securing the safety of the stock illustrates the material hindrances to an enterprise requiring an accumulation of capital in the days before modern banking with its elaborate machinery of credit, and serves at the same time as an example of a survival from the earlier days of the gild. The strong box secured by a number of keys, a feature Business methods Legal status 158 JOINT-STOCK AND MONOPOLY which the modern trade union and the friendly society have also inherited from the gild, was to be the main depository of the company's cash, and the keys were to be ' kept by such as the Company and the other adventurers should mutually allow of.' The staff of paid officials to be employed by the company in the daily management of its business is described with some particularity. There are to be a number of ' agents or warehousemen, able and experienced, to take in the wares which are to be bought at reasonable rates and to sell out the same againe to the profytt of the Stocke ; . , . a Cashiere to receave the money that comes in weekly by debts etc., to answer the same to the Stock chest upon account every week, to imprest money to the warehouse- men to be issued upon hatts,' and a ' Register or Clarke of the Stocke whose office will be to keepe just and true account of the Stocke and of all wares bought and sould and to keepe Court book and entries of Acts and orders for the managing of the said Stocke.' The authors of the project appear to have been fully conscious that their proposal invplvfid, ajaew-departurejn the forms of industrial association ; and to have had some doubts as to the legality of usifig the cbfpoi-ation as a security and as a working basis for their undertaking. ' That this may be lawfully undertaken,' concludes the prospectus, ' and that the freemen of London may joyne with the Company, yt hath binne resolved by learned Counsell yt may . . . Yf therefore any man be desyrous to joyne with them in adventure here is security sufficient for his Stocke and an assured profytt for his principal^.' Economic More important, however, than the formal constitution of aims j.j^g project are the economic results which it was intended to produce. The feltmakers complained that all the dis- advantages of an imperfectly organized market fell upon their shoulders. Felt-making has always been a ' season trade,' i. e. subject to regular fluctuations of demand. In a hat factory at the present day, there is probably nearly twice as much work actually completed for sale in a busy month as in a slack month ; and the capital of the manu- facturer only partially serves to equalize the rate of pro- duction by keeping a number of work-people engaged in making half-finished goods for stock. To the master felt- maker of the early seventeenth century even this partial remedy was not open. When the demand slackened he was obliged to dispose of his goods to the merchant on ^ British Museum, Cotton MSS., Titus, B. v. 319. THE FELTMAKERS' PROJECT 159 credit, or if he was too poor to wait for his money, to take the best price he could get from the wandering chapman who suppHed the wants of the country-side. The aim of the new project was to provide a market where the craftsman could always dispose of his wares for ready money, and where the merchant could obtain a supply on credit if necessary, from a large and varied stock of guaranteed quality. It is very unlikely that such an ambitious scheme could have been put forward without the suggestion and co-operation of the company promoter, and the activity of this new class in the business world is a marked feature of the period. But the acceptance of it by the majority of the new corporation, who, according to the prospectus, had agreed to bring in their wares to the stock, shows that it provided expression for the hopes they had formed of securing their independence of the capitaUst by co-operation. The economic defects of such a scheme lie so clearly on Difficnlties the surface that it is scarcely necessary to point them out discussed in detail. But that they were not entirely overlooked at the time is sufficiently proved by the following imaginary dialogue, put forward by the projectors in answer to objec- tions raised by the merchants. As it presents a livelier picture than could be afforded by any formal description of the relations subsisting between the small master and the merchant during this period, it is here given in full. ' Haberdasher. I pray you let me be somewhat better informed of those projects you have layd in bringing of all the hatts you make to the hall. ' Feliinaker. In what particular ? '■Haberdasher. Namely what benefit yt should be to our company to fetch their wares at the hall. Yt should seem that the Trade being open to buy where wee will and what wee will should be better than restreyned to one place. Alsoe hereby all Country Chapmen shall have as much priviledge as wee. ' Felimaker. Where you now goe daily yourselves or your servaunts into J. R. South Wark, Bri dwell and Puddel and cannot get above 6 or 12 in a howse, where att the HaU you may have 100 or 200 douzens at a tyme, yf you please, and your servaunts restrayned of that libertie they have, where, under couller of goeing to those places, they wast your goods in lewd howses and in ill company. And I take this to be good for your company in this respect. For your second demandeth answere that yt cannot be denyed but as now yt is Many Chapmen and those of the best and greatest dealers in England doe buy i6o JOINT-STOCK AND MONOPOLY wares in all thees places and at those rates you cannot buy them att. For many of our people toe take money will sell it under valew to their men and hold them upp to you. But when all is brought unto the Hall, there shall not one Country Chapman buy a hat there ; soe that upon necessity they must be driven to buy of your Company, Which, as now yt is, will never be brought to pas, neither is theer sence for yt that men will buy of you when they may buy of the same men as cheape as you can. But hereby is helpe, yf you can perceeve ytt. ''Haberdasher. How can you compas itt that all the hatts which shalbe made shalbe brought to your HaU ? Will you or can you give money for all ? ' Feltntaker. Wee thank God and good friends we hope to be able for to paie money for all unto all that are not able for to beare and unto those that be able at tyme to their good content and ours to(o). ' Haberdasher. But what assurance shall they have which be able to give credytt ? Who must undertake to see them satisfied ? ' Felttnaker. Who but the Company and particularly the Stockmasters for the tyme being ? Doe not you think that we may as safely put our moneys thus, as formerly we have to dyvers of yotu: Trades ? Of some I deny not but truly confes wee have byn both honestly and well dealt withall and of others as badly, which hath byn the overthrow of many feltmakers yett living, whome you know. But I will forbeare to nomynate them for in soe doing I must also name them of your Trade which were the cause of their fall. Unytie we desyre, therefore I will rub no old sores. ' Haberdasher. I deny not but indeed thereby the felt- makers shall not run soe great a hazard, as formerly they dyd, and your distrust is that the gayne made by the good men of our Trade will not beare out the losse which may arrise by the badd, is yt not ? Which to prevent you hould this more secure. ' Feltntaker. Itt is true indeede, that is my meaning. ' Haberdasher. But in what manner can you manadge this ? Yt is not an easie matter to keep such a multitude of Wares in good order without good meanes and good helpe from such as are of our own Trade and have insight therein, neither will the chardge be small to keep men that will be carefuU in taking in, honest in delyvering out, circumspect in their accompte. There cannot be lesse than some four or six to doe this which will arrise to chardges, Therefore I pray tell me how this chardge will be raysed. AN AMBITIOUS SCHEME i6i ' Feltmaker. All chardges of officers ys to be defrayed by the stockmasters for the tyme being. ' Haberdasher. I deny yt not, yett methinkes they that shall serve our Company out of the Hall will be shrewdly pusseled, and besydes how every man should have content, unlesse that very upright dealing may be had, much wronge may be. For whomsoever they favor shall have the choyse of the Wares, which wilbe to the wronge of the other haber- dashers and in the end to the Company of stockmasters. 'Feltmaker. All they that take in and delyver out shalbe sworne to lett noe man have his choyse, but to take them as they arrise. ' Haberdasher. Why soe, you will force me or any man to buy that wee have noe neede of. For some fashions that will serve other men shall I of chance never sell while wee live. I see Uttell reason for this. ' Feltmaker. You mistake me. I meane that all hatts of one pryse shall stand together, but every fashion of that prise by themselves, so that it shalbe lawful for you to choose your fashion and refuse what you dislike. But having chosen your fashion and nomynated what number you will have, you shall then make no choyse but take them as they rise ; and so of every sorte in like manner which you wante. For you shall not be pressed to take any but what you want. ' Haberdasher. Soe you will take in Wares hand over head, all that comes good and badd, and as at the Lottery our Company must take theer lott as ytt falls, some worth the money (yt may be) non better, but many worse. What reply you to this .' ' Feltm.aker. Such dilligent care and honest regard shalbe had by the takers in that those wares which are not worth the money and answerable to others of the same sorts shalbe abated and sett with other of a lower prise, and alsoe for any open fault which you fynde that the takers-in have not scene, allowance shalbe made with Reason. ' Haberdasher. This may do well, yf promise be kept. I remember that when wee last mett you tould me that your project should be for the good of the Haberdashers, of your selves, the Country Chapmen, and the whole comon- wealth — a faire glosse yf the coullor hould, but yett I feare yt (will) not. ' Feltmaker. I have not denyed to answere any question you have demanded as yet, neither will I this, but first I pray you lett me oppose a little and doe you answere. ' Haberdasher. Doe soe. I am ready. UNWIN M 1 62 JOINT- STOCK AND MONOPOLY '■Felim.aker. You complaine and saye that our Company- serves Chapmen in the Country at as reasonable rates as you or better, and that those men dwelling neare to some of your customers eate them upp, by which occasion they breake, and you have the losse. ' Haberdasher. It is true we doe soe, and not without cause. "■ Feltmaker, Then note, by our bringing all to the hall and excluding the country chapmen, the cause of the breach of your customers which dwell by them is taken away, soe all may sell alike and the countrey chapmen buy alike, and men live in Company together as Brethren, and not like great fishes in the sea which eate up the Lesser, and also the Commons shall buy with equallytye whereas now of the decayed men they have the worst and paie dearest for the most parte. And a comfort it must be to all men when they may in market be bould to stand upon yt that his neighboure can doe as hee, and neither better then other. ' Haberdasher. You have given me satisfaction. I would the rest of our company would be soe persuaded. And I pray God that all may turne to the best, and soe I ende wishing good to him that well thinketh and shame to him that evill doth. ' Feltmaker. Amen say all honest men unto yt.' ^ Second To the economist or business man of the present day the scheme objections put forward by the haberdasher wiU appear dkection of ™°''^ convincing than the buoyant optimism of the felt- separate maker's answers. And in fact, the difficulties seem to have 'Stockers' been great enough to prevent the project ever getting beyond this prospective stage. It was, however, almost immediately followed by another of a less ambitious kind. To take over and dispose of the whole of the varied product of the felt-making industry in London was an undertaking of unprecedented scope and complexity. But there were precedents enough for the simpler scheme of raising a stock to supply the small master with materials; and an enterprise with this object was set on foot in i6ii,with a capital of ;£^5,ooo, or only one third of the sum which had previously been sought to be raised. The new project was marked by a further difference of essential importance. In the former scheme the feltmakers' corporation was to have supplied, not only the framework for the administration of the undertaking, but also the security for its solvency. The stockers and shareholders in the wool-buying venture were to constitute an entirely separate concern. Some of them, ' Cotton MSS., Titus, B. v. ii8. Cf. below, pp. 240-2. THE PERILS OF INVESTMENT 163 no doubt, were members of the Feltmakers' Company. They were to hire the feltmakers' hall for the transaction of their business ; and even to allow the Company a penny in the pound of their profits. The feltmakers as a body, however, did not consider themselves responsible for the undertaking, and at a later period they sought to prove that they had no share whatever in its transactions ; although, unhappily for them, they failed to establish this to the satis- faction of the Court of Chancery. It appears that when the new enterprise was started, the But the feltmakers being anxious, like the pewterers on a similar feltmakers occasion a few years later, to embark some capital in it for money the collective benefit of their corporation, and having no with the available funds of their own, borrowed .^500 from Lord stockers Harrington, who appears in public several times as their patron and protector. Soon afterwards this loan was recalled, and some means had to be found of replacing it. The feltmakers at this time were in want of a clerk, and the expedient was hit upon of offering the post with a salary of ;£'30 a year as an inducement to some one with ;^5oo to invest ^. The clerk who was appointed on these conditions subsequently declared that his loan of ;>? 500 was made to the feltmakers in their corporate capacity ; whilst the feltmakers argued that he had invested it in the wool-buying concern as one of the stockers. The matter of the appointment and of the investment was managed by members of the feltmakers' governing body who were also stockers, and it is not improbable that the clerk was intentionally misled by them. The feltmakers admitted that they had allowed the stockers to use the name of their corporation ' in trust for raising of the stock,' and that, in consideration of this, they had received a dividend out of one year's profits. What is at any rate certain is that the confusion between the feltmakers' corporation and the joint-stock enterprise came very near involving the former in the ruin of the latter. The undertaking collapsed within three years, and when and are the fehmakers' clerk failed to get any satisfaction out of the ?°"oived stockers more immediately responsible, one of whom died jn their in prison, he entered a fresh suit against the company, and collapse in 1623 obtained a verdict in Chancery to the effect that the master, wardens and feltmakers had borrowed the five * It seems to have been not unusual for City Companies to make some such arrangement with their clerk; see State Papers Dom., James I, xli. 56 for an agreement made with the Farriers' Company in 1617. M 2 i64 JOINT-STOCK AND MONOPOLY hundred pounds ' in their poHtique capacity as a corporation and did imploy the same in stocke with the stockers as their particular stocke,' and that they must therefore repay this sum with interest at 5 per cent., making a total of ;^76o. Imprison- The effect of this verdict was to render the individual felt- ment and makers, many of whom were poor men, Hable to imprison- feitmakers ment for debt, so that they could not carry on their trade for fear of arrest. When the Master of the Feltmakers ventured to the House of Commons to prefer a Bill for the relief of the Company, he was arrested in the precincts of Parliament and thrown into the Fleet. The Commons, indignant at this invasion of their privileges, ordered that the feltmakers under arrest should be set free to prosecute their Bill which passed the lower house, but was blocked in the Lords ^ The Feltmakers' Company survived this crisis as we have already seen, to meet with further trials in the following reign, but the experience they had under- gone appears to have effectually quenched their aspirations towards joint-stock enterprise. IV Connexion At first sight it may seem as if there could be little between connexion between the co-operative experiments we have enterprise been considering, and the industrial monopolies which were and mono- in the hands of individual capitalists, or were taken over, poly as was sometimes the case, by the Crown itself. In signifi- cance for the history of industrial organization these two sets of phenomena differ widely from each other. But they occupy common ground as being both attempts to solve, though in a different spirit, the problem of the inadequacy of the capital possessed by the small master. Since the failure of the joint-stock experiments was largely due to the want of the legal machinery and business organization necessary to secure the responsible administra- tion of collective capita], it might be supposed a more hopeful plan for a body of small masters to make a corporate agreement with an individual capitalist who could not only supply their needs, but represent their interests in his own ' person. Pinmakers' jjj tjjg history of the Pinmakers' Company, this principle tikTto"'' °f dependence upon a single person is gradually carried to exclude its logical conclusions. The importation of foreign pins imported pms 1 Hist. MSS. Third Rep., p. 33 (Lords' Calendar, May 20, 1624) ; House of Commons Journals, Apr. 14, 24, May 12, 19, 1624; Lords' Journals, iii. p. 393. THE PINMAKERS 165 had been prohibited by law since the reign of Edward IV ^, but as the EngHsh supply was far from equal to the demand, Dutch pins had been continually imported in large quantities, partly in defiance of the prohibition, and partly by virtue of special exemptions. The commercial interest, which as we have seen predominated in the London companies of Elizabeth's reign, was strongly in favour of free trade, and the industrial interest, which might have profited by the exclusion of foreign pins, possessed no organization capable of enforcing prohibition. On the accession of James I, however, the same influences whose operation we have already traced in the cases of the feltmakers and the glovers, led the pinmakers, who had previously been absorbed in the Girdlers' Company, to aim at establishing a separate corporation in defence of their interests. As they had not sufficient capital to cover the expense of obtaining a charter, they were induced to make a compact with the courtier who performed this service, to the effect that he should receive a toll of fourpence for every 12,000 pins made by the company for forty years ^. The advantage which the pinmakers hoped would more than compensate for the tax thus laid on themselves, was the exclusion of foreign pins. Sir Thomas Bardett, another courtier who had taken up The policy their case, had already commenced a prosecution against an °^^^^^l^^' English merchant named Ellis, for importing pins ; and out mussed of this test case arose a long controversy between the pin- makers and their friends at Court on the one side, and the Dutch merchants, the Haberdashers' Company and the City Council on the other ^. The pinmakers asserted that their trade found work for 20,000 impotent people (some even without legs), that the Dutch were flooding the country with the products of subsidized and pauper labour at a low price, with a view to crushing out the EngUsh industry and then securing a monopoly, and ' that it is and always hath been the policy of this nation (and as we take it of all others) to prohibit the invectiohofsuch forraigne made wares as arejnade Jn J2ut own country.' To which the merchants" replied that the English pinmakers could not supply more than a third of the demand, that to exclude the Dutch pins would cause a corresponding diminution in our exports to HpUand besides provoking retaliation, and 1 3 Edward IV, c. 4. 2 SiaU Papers Dom., James /, April 16, 1605, p. 21 1 ; Ibid., Charles I, cccc. 87. ' Index to Remembrancia, p. 521 ; State Papers Dom., xxvi. 22, 100. 1 66 JOINT-STOCK AND MONOPOLY Indnstrial movement towards protection and mono- poly Interven- tion of the capitalist Govern- ment fails that the prohibition asked for would be creating- a real present monopoly in order to avert a future and imaginary monopoly^. The Privy Council in 1608 put an end to the question for a time by a compromise. The merchants arranged to find a market for the English pins, and the foreign pins were allowed to come in on paying a duty of sixpence per 12,000^, So tame a solution as this was not likely to satisfy the temper of the time. The air was full of projects for encouraging national industries, in which the Crown was to bless ihe union of the aspiring master craftsman with the speculative capitalist by the grant of a monopDly. The working pewterers had been aiming at this kind of arrange- ment in 161 1 ; the joint -stock project of the feltmakers was set on foot in 1612; the year 161 3 saw the beginnings of ^Iderman Cockayne's syndicate to develop andmonopolize the finishing and dyeing of cloth ; "and in 1 61 4~SirThomas Bartlett was again busy in the cause of the pinmakers. The pinmakers had begun to realize that it was not enough for them to agitate for the exclusion of foreign pins. In order to gain full advantage of their monopoly, they must have capital enough to supply themselves with abundant material to pay for all their own pins that were awaiting a market, and to buy up the imported pins as well. A joint-stock scheme similar to that of the feltmakers had already been mooted amongst the craftsmen, and Sir Thomas was anxious not to be forestalled ^. As carver-in- ordinary to the Queen, he had amassed a fortune of ;^4o,ooo, for which he desired to find a profitable investment. On the last day of 1 614 he wrote to Sir R. Winwood, requesting his influence towards obtaining a royal grant to the pin- makers which would enable him to place his capital at their disposal, and he offered ;f4,ooo as a token of his gratitude if he obtained the favour *. He followed this up by starting a fresh prosecution against Ellis, and thus reopened the whole controversy '. In April 1616 the Privy Council made another attempt at mediation. The pinmakers were not to hinder the ' Lansdowne MSS., clii. 62. ''• Index to Remembrancia, p. J22. ' State Papers Dom., James I, Ixxx. 5. Bartlett afterwards speaks of his project as ' rendering to your Majesty the whole profit made by Commerce in that affair, onlie reserving to himself a small part of £3P'x> yearlie in respect of his former estate endeavour and long suffering.' * State Papers Dom., James /, Ixxviii. 81. ' Index to Remembrancia., p. 520. FINANCING AN INDUSTRY 167 importation of foreign pins ; but, as long as they followed to har- the patterns supplied to them and made the pins of as good j^^^^^^j^^j stuflTand for as reasonable a price as the foreign pins, the and com- traders were to take all they made week by week, and to merciai pay for them within the week. Two haberdashers were to i'>t«''ssts be appointed by the traders, and two girdlers by the pin- makers to settle disputes ^. This arrangement did not last three months. In June the pinmakers complained that the haberdashers had not carried out their part of the agree- ment, and received permission from the Privy Council to help themselves by course of law ^. Accordingly, in November, they placed themselves in The pin \ the hands of Sir Thomas Bartlett, who proceeded to buy monopoly out for ;£^8,ooo the other courtier interested in the business, by si^T. and devoted the rest of his fortune to the financing of the Bartlett monopoly. He agreed to supply the pinmakers with wire, and to take their pins from them at fixed rates ^. But of course the feasibility of the arrangement entirely depended on his ability to control the importation of foreign pins. To exclude them altogether was impossible, since the company was confessedly incapable of supplying the whole demand. What Sir Thomas aimed at, therefore, was to complete his monopoly by obtaining a grant of the sole right of importation. In the face of the natural opposition of the merchants this grant was not achieved till March, 1618 *, and in October of the same year, it was hedged about with considerable restrictions. The company was not to raise the prices of English pins beyond those pre- valent twenty years before, nor the prices of foreign pins beyond those of two years before. The monopoly was only to extend to London and its suburbs, and the merchants were to be free to deal in pins made in any other part of the kingdom. Even this limited degree of monopoly proved in a short proves a time to be impracticable. Although Sir Thomas was '^^'i"™ successful in obtaining a verdict against the importers who infringed his patent, the Government found it expedient, in the interests of friendly commercial relations with Holland, to forbid the judgement to be executed \ The pinmakers, > PHz'}' Council Register, April 21, 1616, fol. 234; State Papers Dom., James I, Ixxxvi. 146. 2 Privy Council Register, June 16, 1616, fol. 300. ' Ibid., Nov. 20, 1616, fol. 458 ; Index to Remembrancia, p. 522. * State Papers Dom., James I, vol. 1611-19, pp. 532, 557 (.Sign Manual, ix. No. 6, and Proclamation Coll. No. 58) ; xcvin. 34. e Privy Council Register, Oct. 23, 1618; Mar. 21, 1619. 1 68 JOINT- STOCK AND MONOPOLY but is revived under Charles I, in connex- ion witii the wire monopoly. and both are taken under the direction of the Kin thus deprived of the protection upon which the agreement had been based, were unable to carry out their part of the bargain ; and Sir Thomas, driven to desperation, made himself so troublesome to the Government that in the end he was committed to the Tower, and shortly afterwards diedi- After this collapse the monopoly remained in abeyance till 1635. About that time the Government of Charles I began to give to this discredited method of raising revenue an even wider application than it had received under James I. A certain Mr. Lydsey undertook on behalf of Sir Thomas Bartlett's heirs to recover some of the fortune he had sunk in the pinmaking business. A fresh grant was bestowed, in return for an engagement to pay the sum of ^^500 annually to the Queen ^. Three yearsJ.atgrJLydsey, who was entangled in a lawsuit with Bartlett's heirs Ibn a charge of breach of trust, professed to have sunk £f,6oo more in the fatal enterprise. This crisis led the King to assume a new relation to the undertaking. In March, 1640, following the precedent he had made previously in the matter of the playing-card monopoly, he accepted the role of entrepreneur^ It was not merely the interests of the pinmanufacture that called for intervention. Lydsey had taken in hand the pin monopoly because of his interest in the Royal Battery Works, another privileged industry, which supplied the wire. The pinmakers, if left to themselves, would have preferred foreign wire which made better pins. It was necessary to harmonize these two jarring monopolies by subordinating them both to a higher conception of mer- cantile policy. The possibility of maintaining a steady market for unsatisfactory English wire was dependent on the possibility of guaranteeing a regular demand for un- satisfactory English pins. It seemed a natural inference from this that the King, who alone had the power to exclude competition in each of these industries, should assume the function of regulating their mutual relations, and, in return for the protection thus afforded, should enjoy some of the profit due to the middleman and entrepreneur. Under the terms of a contract, recorded in the Privy Council Register, the King agreed to furnish the pinmakers with a stock of ;^ 10,000 to be deposited in the hands of g an agent, and to be employed in buying pins at the prices expressed in the schedule ; also to provide the company ^ State Papers Dom., Charles I, cccc. 87. '^ Ibid., cccii. 122. THE KING AS MONOPOLIST 169 with a hall, and to supply them with ' merchantable ' wire at ^8 a hundredweight ; whilst the pinmakers on their part engaged to use no other wire than that so supplied, without the permission of the King's agent. At the same time the King made a covenant with Mr. Lydsey to take off yearly from him for ten years so much wire as should be necessary for the use of the kingdom, and to pay for it in ready money at £6 12s. the hundredweight. An allowance of 10s. a hundredweight was to be made to Lydsey for all imported wire seized by the King to his own use. What the King undertook to do was, therefore, to combine the functions which Sir Thomas Bartlett had endeavoured to perform for the pinmaking inaiistfywith^a similar relation ta:ji ie"wir e manufacture. But the King had no intention of sinking a fortune in the business as Sir Thomas Bartlett had done. He was in great financial straits, and thej)nly assets w hich he had av ailable for investment were the royal credit and _the_xoyai, prerogative. "All the functions he had assumedwere therefore to be farmed out to a capitalist named Halstead, who was to, ,take x)ver-all -the -King's en^grements to the pinmakers and to the wire industry, andwEo after paying expenses of management and allowing himself 8 pef" cent, on his capital, was to pay £1,000 every year to the Exchequer. Out of what was still left of the profits when these payments had been made, the ;£■ 7,000 which had been sunk by Lydsey in the pin business was to be repaid with interest ; and any remainder was to go to the King. Halstead was to render a regular account to the Treasury, and at the expiration of his ten years' lease, the King was to have the right, on payment of the capital invested with interest, to take back the whole business into his own hands ^ The almost immediate outbreak of the Civil War must Fnrther have prevented this arrangement from having a serious attempts at trial ; but soon after the Restoration a similar plan received ™°^°°P° ^ the approval of Charles II '\ This time, however, it was Charles il thought necessary to have the contract confirmed by Parlia- ment; and the Bill introduced for that purpose in 1664 met with strenuous opposition from the representatives of both commerce and industry. The haberdashers and the ironmongers petitioned the House of Commons more than once against the Bill ^ ; and the wiredrawers held a meeting at which one of their members declared with great warmth 1 Frivy Council Register, Mar. i8, 1640, xvii. Pt. I, fol. 376. 2 State Papers Dom., Charles II, Ixxix. 120, xci. 95. » Hist. MSS. Seventh Rep., p. I79 ; Lords' Calendar, Jan. 28, 1664. 170 JOINT-STOCK AND MONOPOLY and under William III. Pin- makers' argument for free trade Effects of monopoly on tlie status of the work- that the last King lost his head by granting such patents '. The Bill was dropped, but the promoters of the scheme continued to urge their case with the Privy Council, where they were met once more by the objections of the traders. In 1675, the year in which Charles II prorogued Parlia- ment before the grant of supplies and bargained for a French subsidy, the Pinmakers' Company renewed the proposals which, they explained, ' had previously come to naught in consequence of the Great Plague and the Dutch,' and the acceptance of which would secure to the King a revenue of at least ;£'4,ooo a year ''■. A final attempt was made by the Pinmakers' Company in 1690 to gain the sanction of Parliament for their monopoly, which was now, of course, jq b e ma naged without the participation of the Kihg7 It is very significant of the progress that had been made by this time towards the practical recognition of the advantages of free trade, that the main opposition to the measure appears to have come from a body of the pinmakers themselves. They declared that the industry was in no need of such pro- tection, that there was a large export trade in pins, and that the manufacture was only to be improved by the free exercise thereof The Bill before Parliament would destroy this by setting up a gross monopoly, which must inevitably reduce the pinmakers to the same bad condition as the cardmakers had been brought to by a renewal of their monopoly under Charles II. It would serve, in short, to enhance prices, to perpetuate the small master with his bad conditions of employment and inferior methods of production, and to encourage the restriction of output ^. The language of this successful protest against the revival of monopoly is entirely justified by all we know of the history of the Pinmakers' Company. Although established nominally for the benefit of the craftsman, the monopoly had had the effect of undermining his status. Apprentices were multiplied without limit, as many as thirty to each master beintg suggested in 1617'' ; and a great number of women and children were employed, who were not apprenticed ^. The organizations which, in other cases like those of the feltmakers and the clothworkers, furnished ' State Papers Dom., Charles II, xciii. 60-1. = Hist. MSS. Ninth Rep., p. 451. ' The Pinmakers' Case in opposition to Mr, Killigew's Bill, 1690. British Museum, 816 m. 13/89. * Index to Remembrancia, p. 523. ° Harleian MSS., 6842, 69. STATUS OF WORKERS 171 through their handicraft traditions a protection to the workman, were dominated in the case of the monopolist companies by the influence of the speculative capitalist, who was as little inclined to maintain the best industrial con- ditions as is the modern shareholder when dealing with unorganized labour. The industrial monopolies, therefore, which had always been felt as a burden by the consumer, received an equally severe condemnation from the standpoint of the producer. It is an interesting coincidence to find this practical refuta- tion of mercantilist ideas coming from the industry which was presently to furnish to the greatest of economic theorists his most classical illustration of the advantages of free industrial development. CHAPTER VII PROTECTIONISM UNDER JAMES I Absoln- tism essen- tial to full develop- ment of mercan- tilism The views and policy of Bacon The ' mercantile system ' achieved its completest practical embodiment in the French policy as directed or inspired by Colbert during the latter half of the seventeenth century. In Germany it found a later exponent of equal genius in Frederick the Great ^ ; but the circumstances were no longer so apt, and the Prussian mercantilism leaves the impression on the historical student of something born out of due time. Of English mercantilism the opposite is true. Geographical situation favoured the ripening in England earlier than elsewhere of the idea of a self-con- tained and aggressive economic nationalism. But to the full reaUzation of this idea the essential political condition was an absolutist government, supported by an ubiquitous bureaucracy, and untrammelled in the formation of its plans by representative institutions, or in the execution of them by the recalcitrancy of local self-government^. This condition, which was satisfied in the France of Louis XIV and the Prussia of Frederick, was never fully attained in England. But there were moments when its attainment must have seemed almost within reach ; since nothing short of this was the dream of Bacon's political philosophy, and the strenuous aim of the policy of Strafford. It was therefore at the period when this political ideal seemed to approach its fulfilment, that English mercantilism became a force in practical aifairs, and it was with the overthrow of that ideal that it lost its golden opportunity. Of the closeness of the connexion thus indicated, the career of Lord Bacon wiU serve to furijish an illustration. The services of that great genius to the cause of science were not due to any new insight into nature's actual operations, but to the stimulating effect of his untiring curiosity, his largeness of conception and his boldness of ^ See Schmoller, Das Merkantilsystem, in his ' Umrisse und Untersuchungen.' "^ Cunningham, Growth, &c , 3rd edit., pp. 19, 247. BACON'S POLITICAL IDEAL 173 speculation upon the thought of his own and of succeeding generations. But these high gifts of imagination, which are of the utmost value in the theoretical sphere, are apt to involve grave perils when they are exercised in human affairs, unless they are constantly restrained by an inform- ing and a chastening sense of moral proportion ; and the lack of this sense was the fatal defect alike of Bacon's character and of his statesmanship. ' His thoughts were constantly occupied,' says Gardiner, ' with the largest and most sweeping plans of reform. . . . The union with Scot- land, the civilization of Ireland, the colonization of America, represent a the improvement of the law . . . were only a few of the vast ''"j^^g *^ ^ schemes upon which his mind loved to dwell. With such favour- views as these, it was but natural that Bacon should fix his able to hopes upon the Sovereign and his Council rather than Colbeitism upon the House of Commons. . . . He had always before him the idea of the variety of cases in which the Govern- ment might be called on to act, and he allowed himself to beheve that it would be better qualified to act rightly if it were not fettered by strict rules. . . . He left out of his calculations . . . the inevitable tendencies to misgovernment which beset all bodies of men who are possessed of irresponsible power. The very largeness of his view led him to regard with complacency actions from which a smaller mind would have shrunk at once^.' In the political atmosphere represented by this attitude of mind, Colbertism is a natural and almost an inevitable growth. Accordingly we find Bacon not only defending the royal prerogative of taxation, but giving as Chancellor the highest legal sanction to commercial and industrial monopoly, and taking a warm interest in the fantastic scheme, which we shall have later to consider, for forcing English manufactures on the unwilling foreigner. But this political atmosphere does not of itself afford an Other con- adequate explanation of the protectionist movement, which '/^^^["^^^ culminated in the middle of the reign of James I. There were at least two other important contributory causes of which account should be taken. The first of these was the development of organized interests in industry and commerce ; and the second was the relation of England to the international market, and the influence upon English opinion of the policy and the attitude of continental nations. . , , . , It need hardly be said that the ' national economy, which Snrvival of the sixteenth century had brought to completion, had '^I'^^^restric- > Gardiner, Hist, of England, ii. pp. 191-9. spirit, 174 PROTECTION UNDER JAMES I inherited a large measure of the protectionist spirit in the traditions of the industrial and commercial organiza- tions, which had been taken over from the narrower local economies now absorbed and incorporated in the national framework. The exclusiveness of these organizations had been modified in part by legislative action, and still more by the influence of purely economic forces ; but the power of vested interests and the dislike of competition are apt to linger long in the midst of a world quite different from that which gave them birth. The faculty of ready self- adaptation to changing circumstances is more naturally acquired in commerce than in industry ; and it is amongst the more enterprising members of the mercantile class that there is commonly generated the courage and the enlightened self-interest which dictate a policy of freer trade. We may therefore measure the power of the protectionist spirit by the degree of its survival in this class, illustrated The complaint of the merchants trading to Spain supplies ^^ "l^f " an example full of unconscious humour. They were much complaints troubled, it appears, by reason of a number of shopkeepers' of competi- and retailers' servants, never brought up as merchants, tion who were sent out as factors, and who ' by their unskillful practice much prejudiced the exercised merchant.' Besides these there were the Northern and Devonshire clothiers, the makers of the new drapery and the hosiers, who, instead of being content to serve the merchants as they used to do, had made it their business to be informed of the demands of the Spanish market, so that they could supply it directly. But unauthorized competition of this simple character was not the worst from which the Spanish merchants had to suffer. The linendraper, they said, having disposed of his best goods in England, ' sendeth his remainders over into Spain, seeking rather vent than profit^ Tobacco, again, as His Majesty well knew, was not only a needless but a hurtful commodity, and the Spanish merchants bearing this duly in mind had been accustomed to get it for next to nothing. But the tobacco merchants were now so eager to buy this noxious weed that ' they cared not almost what price they gave ' ; and what was still worse, they took out good Enghsh cloth in exchange, and in their blind desire for trade actually sold it at j6 or 20 ^ per cent, below cost price. And this strange conduct on the part of the tobacco merchants was said to be shared by the vintners, grocers, salters, sugar-bakers, and dyers of London, who, having turned Spanish merchants on their INHERITED EXCLUSIVENESS 175 own account, exported the native and best commodities of England at or below cost price, and then helped them- selves again by their returns of wines, fruits, oils, sugars, indigo, cochineal, and such-hke wares, on which they made a handsome profit. The conclusion which the complainants wished to enforce, by citing these sad examples of com- mercial immorality, was that the trade in which so much unlawful profit was being made by outsiders should be henceforth strictly confined to themselves 1. Such being the attitude of the merchants, we shall hardly Growth of hope to find the manufacturers alive to the advantages '°<^'?''^'»l of free trade. For a century past there had been a steady '^^^^^^ growth of the capital invested in the larger forms of industry. This had in part been effected by a transference of capital hitherto employed in commercial enterprise. In earlier times the capitalist of the towns was, as we have seen, mainly a trader. Such industrial capital as existed was distributed in small quantities amongst the masters of the various crafts. But as trade became national and even international in its scope, the local trader was often driven, by the competition of the larger merchant from a distance, to fall back upon an alliance with industry, and by identify- ing himself with the cause of local monopoly, to obtain a more profitable investment for his capital. Supported and its by the municipal authorities, and sanctioned by a central tendency to government alarmed at the threatened decay of the towns, monopoly industrial corporations were formed, with the object partly of exploiting the freer manufactures of the country districts and partly of hindering their further development. Similar companies, representing industries which had their chief seat in the capital, attempted to acquire a monopoly of the whole national production, or at any rate to procure authority to supervise and restrain any production carried on elsewhere ^. The natural tendency of such monopolies was towards a form of organization resembling the modern cartel or trust. In proportion as they approached a com- plete control of production, it was almost inevitable that they should seek to regulate, in their own interest, the cost of materials, the price of the product, and the volume of the output ^. The earlier Craft Gilds had sometimes entertained these An illustra- aims within their narrower limits. In the wider national *^??^[^^ field, to which the seventeenth-century corporation nowt^g transferred them, they did not, as a rule, achieve any 1 Lansdowne MSS., clii. 51. "^ See below, p, 204. ' Welch, Pewterers' Company, i. p. 250. 176 PROTECTION UNDER JAMES I considerable measure of success. But the tendency, which for the moment concerns us more than its results, was general throughout Western Europe. At Calw in Wiirtem- berg, for example, an association of dyers and exporters of cloth was formed in 1622, which bought the cloth for its members, and distributed the profits to them, whilst each member carried on the amount of production assigned to him by the company in his own separate establishment '. Close con- The close connexion between such forms of industrial thU teii°^ organization and a policy of protection need hardly be dencywith pointed out. As they had their origin in the narrower a policy of protectionism of the town economy, so they assisted to Protection, prQ^juce and tended to accentuate the national protectionism of the seventeenth century. The modern trust has no legal sanction; any monopoly it may enjoy has to be acquired by the power of an unauthorized combination wielding purely economic forces ^. The corporate monopoly of the Stuart period had been chartered as such by the Crown, and sanctioned by the Chancellor ; and it might ask with some show of reason that the industrial interest thus called into existence should be strengthened and safeguarded by a protective tarifif. shown in From the end of Elizabeth's reign to the beginning of the case of jj^g reign of William III, the pinmakers of London were pimnakers engaged, as We have already seen, in a constant attempt to make their monopoly a reality by securing a prohibition on foreign pins. The controversy between the London industry and the Dutch importers, the arrangements and re-arrangements of the pinmakers with the haberdashers and with the wire-workers, of one monopolist with another monopolist, and finally of all these parties with the financier who leased from the King the privilege of reducing this economic chaos to a profit-making cosmos, forms perhaps the most instructive record that could be found of the continuous application of the ' mercantile system ' to a particular branch of industry. Of all the medley of assertion and counter-assertion that form the staple of such a record, the one significant and incontrovertible fact appears to be the statement of the Dutch that the English pinmakers had borrowed this invention from them but had not yet learnt it thoroughly ^. ■■ Troeltsch, Die Kalwer Zeugkandlungscompagnie, p. 31 ; cf. A. Thun, Die Industrie am Niederrhein, ii. pp. 109-10. ^ The reader will find an excellent short account of The Trust Move- ment in Great Britain by H. W. Macrosty, in British Industries, edited by W. J. Ashley. ' Lansdowne MSS., clii. 62. INTERNATIONAL RIVALRY 177 There remains to be considered the influence of the Another attitude and the policy of foreign governments. As the ^^<^^°^- . mercantile, or, as some of its modern adherents prefer to temlSonal call it, the industrial policy, was beginning to be adopted rivalry by most of the leading states, and as the excess of exports over imports, which was its main criterion of prosperity, could not be universally realized, there was naturally kindled between the nations a spirit of watchful jealousy and of mutual exacerbation. This growing sense of international rivalry had its useful side in arousing a spirit of inquiry. Commissions were appointed ^ ; statistics were compiled ^ ; the evidence of experienced merchants was taken ^ ; the systems of regulation, of inspection, of subsidies, and of industrial organization prevalent in other countries were brought under consideration *. But the value of the inquiry was largely vitiated by its being too much directed to the discovery of the golden secret — how a country might impose its exports on other countries without suffering in turn from the infliction of imports. It was asserted that English exports to France had English considerably declined of recent years, and now consisted ^'^'^^ '"'"' only of the coarser fabrics, whilst the better qualities were '^^"'^^ largely supplied by the native manufacture ^. That a change in this direction had actually taken place is probable enough. It might indeed have been anticipated as a result, not of the adoption of any particular commercial policy, but of the working of more natural causes — the restoration of peace and order to a distracted country, and the resusci- tation of its productive forces. During the reign of Elizabeth, France had been torn asunder by a grievous civil war, which had continued to cast a fatal blight on agriculture and all other industries for a generation, and which only came to an end with the peace of 1 598. During all this time, with the momentary exception of the Norfolk rising in 1571, England enjoyed internal peace, and was not even involved in external conflict till the end of the period. The consequence was that the exports of England to affected the France were abnormally stimulated. The Notables con- '^[^]^^^ voked by Henry IV at"~R6uen, in 1596, to discuss the under national situation, complained bitterly of this dependence Henry IV on foreign supply as one of the evil consequences of the 1 See below, p. 185. ' Lansdowne MSS., clii. 29. ' Ibid., 45 and 50. * J. May, A declaration of the estate of clothing, in Tracts on Wool, p. 6. ^ Lansdowne MSS., clii. 45- 178 PROTECTION UNDER JAMES I war. ' It is well known,' they said, ' that before the present troubles, four times as much woollen cloth was made in France. Our neighbours send us every year from- England more than a thousand vessels in part laden with manufactured goods such as woollen cloth, etc. . . The English send into this kingdom such a quantity of their manufactures of all kinds that they fill the country with them even down to their old hats, boots and shoes which they export by the ship -load to Picardy and Normandy in contempt of the French and of the authorities ' {au grand inepris des Frangais et de la police) 1. In the reign of Henry IV much was done to strengthen the economic condition of France. The truce between the religious factions, established by the Edict of Nantes, provided the necessary basis of social tranquiUity; and the financial administration of Sully,. in removing a great burden of debt, in rendering taxation lighter, more equable and more uniform, and in giving a new security to property ^, supplied the essential conditions under which commerce and industry might recover the ground they had lost. Having regard to the working of such causes as these, of the efficacy of which there can be no question, we shall not be inclined, without the production of substantial evidence, to attribute the partial recovery of France at this time to those more questionable devices of policy which had then begun to come into vogue — the regulation, protection and subsidization of industry by royal authority. Mercanti- Prohibition of the importation of foreign manufactures hst pro- and of the exportation of raw materials ; entire reorofaniza- posals of . ^ J^ , . 1 ,1 ■■ c Barthilemy tion of commerce and mdustry under the supervision 01 Laffemas government functionaries ; the regulation of wages, inspec- tion of work, and settlement of industrial disputes through the instrumentality of this official machinery; and the establishment of public workshops for the employment of the poor ; these were some of the far-reaching proposals laid by Barthelemy Laffemas, a would-be social reformer who had gained the ear of the King, before a Royal Commission especially appointed to consider them, in 1601. Although the Commission was largely abortive, and much of the scheme laid before it was never even attempted, the influence of its underlying ideas is to be seen in a great number of industrial experiments which occupied the rest of the reign ^. ' Levasseur, Histoire des classes ouvriires, ii. p. 153. ''■ Ibid., p. 154' ' G. Fagniez, LVconomie sociale de la France sous Henri JV, p. 96. FRENCH INDUSTRIAL POLICY 179 The most notable of these was the attempt of the King The to establish the breeding of silk-worms throughout the scheme of length and breadth of France. Beginning with the planting i[^^"'^J^e of a few mulberry trees in the avenues of the Tuileries, he the cultiva- proceeded a few years later to make large plantations in tion of silk, three of his estates, to set up an establishment for breeding silk -worms, and even a factory for spinning silk. So far the undertaking had scarcely passed the bounds of harmless experiment. But in 1602, under the influence of Laffemas and others, and through the instrumentality of the Com- mission newly appointed to take charge of commerce and industry, the King gave the project a much wider and more questionable character. Contracts were made for the supply of large quantities of mulberry seeds and silk -worm's eggs, and these were to be distributed at low prices throughout the kingdom. Every parish was to have its breeding- house and nursery ; experts were to instruct the peasants in the necessary arts ; the clergy were to give the scheme their moral support ; and in this way the production of raw silk was to become as universal as agriculture itself. It is hardly necessary to account for the failure of so and his pro- ambitious an undertaking. The slackness and dishonesty tectionist of the agents, the ignorance and unwillingness of the ^cMeve^no peasants, the disapproval of the clergy, and, last but not solid sue- least, the unsuitability of the climate, were all contributory cess causes, and the close of Henry's reign found the cultivation of raw silk scarcely, if at all, more extensively carried on than it had been at the beginning K The general outcome of the King's other projects for the artificial fostering of the silk industry appears to have been equally unsatisfactory. A prohibition on the importation of silk manufactures, which he was induced to authorize in 1599, was speedily found to be premature, and was dropped within a year ^ ; the pro- hibition of foreign in favour of native dyestuffs proved a serious hindrance to the manufacturer ^ ; and very few of the privileged estabUshments, set up by the King in this or other industries, were to be found surviving in the foUowmg reign*, Henry of Navarre did not stand alone in his generation. The The cultivation of silk, as providing a remedy against the similar, ^^ infliction of a valuable import, was a favourite hobby ofp^^^y^f several contemporary rulers. In 1607 James I distributed wiirtem- -:rrD,ooo mulberry plants ^ ; and Duke Frederick of Wurtem- berg ' Fagniez, pp. 106-17, 129-33. \ Ibid., p. 105. » Ibid., p. 127. . Ibid., p. 137. « State Papers Dom., James I, xxvi. 6. N 2 i8o PROTECTION UNDER JAMES I berg-, when dispatching an emissary to France in 1603, proudly gave him five pounds of dyed silk to carry with him as a token of his master's prowess ^. Whilst the French proposals were still undergoing inquiry, Frederick had already set an ambitious industrial policy in operation, the main feature of which was, not the introduction of a new industry, but the exploitation of the existing manufacture of linen. The importation of linen and the exportation of flax were forbidden ; and a most elaborate series of regulations was devised for the industry which even included the provision of a monthly dance and two annual festivals for the work-people. In spite of the presence of these benevolent features, the new taxation, which was an in- evitable part of the scheme, gave rise to great discontent, and this was increased when it was found that the projector of this monopoly had contrived to make a ' corner ' in the raw material, so that it rose to double the price. The country soon became too hot to hold the projector, who fled to Nuremberg ; and on the death of Frederick, in 1608, the new taxation was abolished ^. Develop- These cases will suflSce to show that, to the existing meat of ex- influences of English political and industrial development m'EnffUsh which favoured the adoption of mercantilist and protective cloth measures, there was added the stimulus imparted by the provocative example of rival nations. More direct pro- vocation was given to England by Flanders. The Spanish Netherlands, as one of the earliest seats of the cloth industry, had had for several centuries the closest commercial relations with England: first as a market for her wool, and after- wards, when the weaving- industry had been well established in England, as a market for half-manufactured cloth which was sent to be finished and dyed in the Flemish towns. With the spread of mercantilist ideas such a contribution to the employment of other nations was conaTemned in principle and even prohibited by statute ; but as a necessary con- cession to the state of supply and demand, exemptions were granted, by Act of Parliament and by royal licence, which permitted a valuable trade in white cloth to be carried on ^. Attempt to By the commencement of the seventeenth century the '^d'^'^! Ih' ^'^ ^^^^^ °^ ^^^ English craftsmen had so far improved that the foreign ^ considerable trade in finished cloth was done with the market Mediterranean and the East. There must likewise have ' Wurttembergische Jahrbiicher, 1831, ii. p. 121. " Ibid., 1842, p. 242. ' See above, pp. 89, 122. THE POLITICAL CRISIS i8i been the beginnings of a trade with Flanders ; for, in 1612, the Government of that country, alarmed at the prospect of encroachment on one of the chief Flemish industries, prohibited the import of all but white cloths from England. Out of this prohibition arose the project started by- Alderman Cockayne, whichpresent ly gained th e_Jull support of theJCing and his^dyiserviequiring ihaFeYfiry cloth'expofted from England should be dyed and^finished before leaving the country ^. It is the supposed success of this scheme that Frederick The issues List assigns as one of the main causes of the subsequent involved prosperity of the English cloth trade 2. Unfortunately for this theory the scheme was a complete and disastrous failure. But before examining the actual results it will conduce to a better appreciation of the significance of the mercantile policy, briefly to consider the issues involved, what were the political and economic ideals implied in the attempt, and what were the opposing political and economic ideals that triumphed in its failure. II The year 1614 was not only the middle year of James's The reign, but its turning-point. It was a year of crisis in the pd'tical constitutional history both of England and of France. In 16°^"°° " France the States-General were abruptly dissolved before the complaints of the Third Estate had been answered, and they were not again summoned till the Revolution. In England the ' Addled Parliament,' which met in April, was dissolved in June with its grievances unredressed and the King's supplies ungranted. ' I am surprised,' said James to the Spanish Ambassador a few days after the dissolution, ' that my ancestors should ever have permitted such an institution to come into existence. I am a stranger, and found it here when I arrived, so that I am obliged to put up with what I cannot get rid of The Ambassador reminded him that he was able to summon and dismiss this formidable body at his pleasure. ' That is true,' said James, ' and what is more, without nay assent the words and acts of the Parliament are altogether worthless 3.' The cautious and conservative Salisbury.whose restraining Views of influence had served to moderate the effects of James's *,^fj°f ' quarrel with his previous Parliament, had lately been ' Gardiner, History of England, ii. p. 386 ; F. H. Durham, Relation of Crown to Trade under James I, in Trans. R. Hist. Soc. 1899. 2 F. List, A national system of political economy, translated by S. Lloyd, p. 13- ° Gardiner, ii. p. 251. i82 PROTECTION UNDER JAMES I removed by death. Those who now possessed the King's ear were for the most part men of Httle experience or capacity. There was one amongst them, it is true, who did not lack either qualification, but his ambitious and over-subtle mind, and his want of moral perception had led him to cast an entirely fallacious horoscope of the national destinies. In Bacon's views the wisdom of the King and of his chosen ministers was to be the supreme power in the constitution. The judges were to be the lions beneath the throne. Parliament was to serve as a convenient means of measuring and conciliating national feeling. But the King ought not to be dependent upon Parliament for his regular supplies, nor upon trial by jury for the punishment of those who resisted his authority i. Political In the latter half of i6i4,the abandonment of Parliamentary oahedo^r- government presented an opportunity for realizing some linishing of Bacon's ideals ; and the result was to be seen in the project revival of an unconstitutional form of taxation under the thin disguise of a voluntary contribution ; and in the con- demnation of a country gentleman by the Star Chamber, and the torture of an aged clergyman in the Tower for resistance to the imposition and for outspoken criticism of the Government ^. It was in the midst of these ill-omened proceedings that the plan for the protection of the cloth- finishing industry was brought to maturity. A proclamation was issued, in the month following the dissolution of Parhament, forbidding the export of unfinished cloth ; and as the Merchant Adventurers' Company declared their inabihty to carry on the export trade on such terms, a charter was granted, in February, 1615, transferring their privileges to the new company promoted by Alderman Cockayne, which undertook to export a gradually in- creasing quantity of the dyed and finished cloth. The King's advisers assured him that the work was feasible in a little time, and very profitable to the state ^. Tarallel That this project was not an isolated phenomenon will cases in have been made sufiiciently clear by the facts presented dustries ^^ ^^^ *^^° preceding chapters. In many other industries the spirit of monopoly was not, indeed, called into existence — it was everywhere latent already — but provided with a golden opportunity by the fiscal necessities of the Govern- ment. Protection had nominally been afforded to the leading English industries by statute for more than a century ; but in order to render this really effectual, there ' Gardiner, ii. p. 192, iii. p. 2. ' Ibid., ii. pp. 270-5. ' F. H. Durham, Relations of Crown to Trade under James I, p. 216. A NEW BASIS OF TAXATION 183 •was required in each case an organization backed by ample capital, and strong enough to secure a monopoly of the home production whilst enforcing prohibition on the im- porter. To achieve this end, efforts had already been made by several industrial groups. In 1611-12 the feltmakers and the pewterers had attempted to obtain control of the whole production in their several trades ^, and though they were unsuccessful in this, the feltmakers procured, in 1613, and again in 162 1, special proclamations against im- portation ^, whilst the Pewterers' Company, or a syndicate ot its'leading members, farmed the tin monopoly in the years_i6i_5_-20 ^. At the very moment of the grant to the clothworkers, a capitalist, who was aiming at a monopoly in the pin trade, was offering the Government large sums for its support, which was tiltimately secured. A few months later a prohibition was laid upon the importation of glass in the interest of another set of industrial monopolists *. But the closest parallel to the case of the clothworkers is to be found in the grant made in the following year, for- bidding skins to be exported till they had been dressed by the London skinners, and here too a monopoly was formed to exploit the prohibition *- That a close connexion existed between the policy of Royal Mm- industrial protection thus indicated, and the fiscal needs of positions' the Government cannot admit of any doubt. The King's |^"^'j^jj^_ claim to levy impositions_at^Jiis__pwii_discretion_on_thement of import and export trade of the country, which was, of retaliation course, the main subject of his disagreement wtthT^^afnent, had been Tor the most part argued on the ground of right. But as the controversy proceeded, the advocates of the King's cause began to see the wisdom of basing their case more upon grounds of expediency. The King, they argued, ought to be allowed the power of taxation in order that he might be free to negotiate for the protection of national commerce and industry. At the close of a long and learned remonstrance addressed to the King, in 16 10, this argument is forcibly dealt with. ' The last assault made against this Right of the Kingdom was an objection grounded upon poUcy and matter of estate, as that it may so fall out that an imposition may be set by a foreign prince that may wring our people, in which case the counterpois is to set on the like here upon the Subjects of that Prince, which policy, if it be not speedily 1 See above, pp. 155-62. " ^roc. Coll, No. 26. 3 See above, p. 155. * ^roc. Coll., No. 42. 6 See below, p. 203. 1 84 PROTECTION UNDER JAMES I executed, but stayed untill Parliament, may in the meantime prove vain and idle, and much damage may be sustained that cannot afterwards be remedied. This strain of policy maketh nothing to the point of right. Our Rule is in this Commonwealth of ours " oportet neminem esse sapientiorem legibus." If there be an inconvenience it is fitter to have it removed by lawful means . . . And it is more tolerable to suffer a hurt to some few for a short time than to give way to the breach and violation of the right of the whole nation, for that is the true inconvenience ^.' Bacon In 1610 the argument thus disposed of had been quite supports subsidiary to the main issue. But in the meantime the quick protection'- "lind of Sir Lionel Cranfield had carried the idea of jst pro- retaliatory duties to its logical conclusion, and was ready posals ^th a plan for solving the difficulty by giving taxation as a whole a more acceptable character. ' I do well allow,' says Bacon, addressing the King, in 1615, as to the desirability of calling a Parliament, ' the proposition of Sir Lionel Cranfield, being more indeed than I could have looked for from a man of his breeding' (Sir Lionel had been a mercer's apprentice), ' which is that the revenue by the late Impositions raised be turned without diminution and perhaps with increase, into raising of rates, not upon the same things, but where it shaU be best for the advantage of the Kingdom and the disadvantage of the stranger ; and that it may be so handled that it be not done directly as a laying down of the Impositions, but in respect of ad- vancing the exportation above the importation.' In other words, it was proposed to replace a number of duties imposed for revenue purposes only by a protective tariff. This policy. Bacon argued, would have four great advantages. It would stop the grumbling at Scotch participation in the benefits of English trade by diverting men's minds to the evils of foreign imports ; it would provide a revenue that could not be legally questioned ; it would meet with less objection from the commercial classes ; and last, but not least, it would ' indeed and de vero mend the trade of the country ^.' Adoption In the end it was not deemed prudent to call a Parlia- ofthis ment, but the suggestion of Sir Lionel Cranfield was Sie'King adopted by the King and his advisers on their own responsibility. It was, however, considered advisable to recommend the new policy to the nation by representing it as the application of the ancient laws of the kingdom ' Lansdowne MSS., i.Z'i , 13. ' Spedding, Bacon, v. p, 187, A TARIFF COMMISSION 185 to the exigencies of a pressing- situation. It had been found, it was declared, ' that there is imported of latter tymes communibus annis by merchant strangers unto this realm, of foreign commodities to an exceeding great value more than is exported by them of the native commodities of this Kingdom, by means whereof the money and coyne of this realm is exported, which in short tyme will wholly exhaust the Treasure of this Kingdom.' In order to meet this grave crisis, the Privy Council, on December 19, 1615, thought fit to issue a number of plain and short articles, in which were summarily collected the remedies provided by existing statutes against the impending evil. The gist of these articles is embodied in the first of them, which declares,' that all marchant strangers and denizens ' (includ- ing as afterwards appears the merchants of Ireland, Jersey, or Guernsey) ' which bring any marchandise into this realm ought to employ the money which they shall receive for the same on the marchandise and commodities of this Realm.' To the due execution of the laws thus sum- marized, the King, it was said, was forced to have fecourse out of inevitable necessity and for the preservation of the safety of his realm, yet at the same time it must be insisted upon that he was taking a course warranted by ancient and just laws still continuing in use ; and similar laws, it was added, existed in Ireland and Jersey'. In the following month a royal commission was appointed, A commisj with Sir Lionel Ctanfield as chairman, to frame a protective ^'"".^^"j tariff, ' whereby an ease will follow to his Majestys subjects Reform the . . . yet without overmuch losse to his Majestys revenue.* tariff ' Sir Lionel Cranfield,' says the royal letter, ' hath taken paines . . . and is able to give you much light. ... It shall much facilitate the business if you proceed upon the lines he shall lay down. . . . For the rest I leave it to your good discretion ^.' With the endless difiBculties arising out of the new Constitu- policy, of with the way in which the Privy Council was J^'j^^^^j^^^^f kept busy during the following year in dealing with each "hese events case of import and of export ' on the merits,' in granting special permits to the harassed merchants for the exporta- tion of pipestaves, or the importation of wine andsugar, we need not here concern ourselves further ^ It is already sufficiently evident that the cloth- working project was only part of a wider policy of indirect taxation of a protectionist character, and that this policy was relied upon as a means 1 Privy Council Register, Dec. 19, 1615, fol. 21. 2 Ibid., Jan. 5, 1616, fol. 132. ' Ibid., Mar. 7, 1616. 1 86 PROTECTION UNDER JAMES I of freeing- the Crown from dependence upon the House of Commons for its regular supplies. If it had succeeded, it might ultimately have rendered the same service to the Stuarts as the industrial policy of Colbert rendered to the absolutism of Louis XIV. Ill Economic The economic issue had a scarcely less important bearing issues in- on the future of the country than the constitutional one, the^cloth- though it is perhaps one less easy to realize. The contest finishing here was between the vested interests, which were en- project deavouring to retain the advantage derived from a surviving element of local monopoly, and the larger and freer, but less concentrated and less organized, forces of commerce and industry, which were seeking to meet the problems of production and distribution along the lines of least resistance. The claims A clear illustration of this situation is furnished by a case of local which was being argued at this very time before the Privy monopoly CQu^cil, between the Shrewsbury drapers and the London merchants, as to the right to trade in Welsh cloth. In the Welsh uplands there had long existed a flourishing domestic industry similar to that carried on in the West Riding of Yorkshire. In earlier days, when the activities of commerce were not so far-reaching, the drapers of Shrewsbury, and other neighbouring towns, enjoyed a natural monopoly of the trade in the product of this industry. But in the course of the sixteenth century the London exporter found his way into Wales, and supplied a fresh outlet for the produce of the country weaver's loom. At the same time the local drapers began to embark a good deal of capital in the finishing processes. The drapers of Shrewsbury had declared in 1 566 that they kept more than six hundred shearmen employed in dress- ing cloth before it was sent to the London market, besides building houses and finding work for the poor of the town ^ They now argued that the Privy Council ought to support their efforts to set up a new industry and to provide the town population with employment, by prevent- ing the London merchants from carrying the Welsh cloth out of the country unfinished, opposed to The country weavers, on the other hand, took their the free ex- stand On the principle of free trade. They were many national" times more numerous than the shearmen of the town, and indnstry ' 8 Elizabeth, c. 7. THE ECONOMIC ISSUE 187 they declared, what indeed was undeniably true, that if they were restricted to the supply of the local market, they would have less employment and a lower price for their wares ^. This situation, with the economic issues involved, was by no means peculiar to this locality. It had, in fact, arisen in every part of England where the cloth industry was extensively carried on. The exclusive rights, which Shrewsbury, Oswestry, and Whitchurch attempted to establish over the Welsh district, had been claimed by Norwich for the Eastern Counties, by the five chief towns of Worcestershire for that county, and by Bridgewater, Taunton and Chard for the county of Somerset ^, All these instances show a distinct development in the Parallel of direction of the ' territorial economy,' which was exemplified the German at this period by some of the smaller German States, and economy ' which served as a halting-place half-way between the 'town economy' and the' national economy.' In 161 7, at the very time when the Shrewsbury drapers were being authorized to shut out the London merchants from the Welsh district, the Nuremberg merchants, who had been carrying on a prosperous trade with the weavers of the Saxon Voigtland, were excluded at the instance of the Saxon traders of Plauen ; and in this case there was no national legislature with sufficient authority to overrule the exclusion, and to give free play to the development of industry and the employment of capital ^- That the maintenance of such restrictions was not rendered in France, impossible by the existence of a strong national govern- mercan- ment is shown by the case of France, which retained many f^Jf^e^ of its internal customs' barriers down to the Revolution, internal It is true that Colbert sought to remove those barriers, and restrictions it is generally supposed that their continuance was due to the triumph of local prejudice and self-interest over the wiser purposes of a great statesman. But when it is borne in mind that the industrial poUcy of Colbert was in its aims essentially the same as that of the Stuarts, and differed only in the abihty and consistency with which it was pursued, it will not seem improbable that the obstacles to national unity which he was seeking to remove with the one hand, he was unconsciously strengthening with the other. There can be little doubt, for example, that the planting of privileged manufactures in the towns > Privy Council Register, May 2, 11, 16; Aug. 31, Sept. 17, 1613 ; May 23, 1619. » See above, pp. 91-3- . , .. , . , rr • .,7 j o » Louis Bein, Die Industrie des sachsischen Votgtlandes, p. 38. PROTECTION UNDER JAMES I Similar effect of English policy at this time The mid- dlemen as agents of national unity by Henry IV and Colbert, with a view to fostering the growth of national industry, was largely responsible for the fact that it was not till the days of Turgot that an attempt was made in France to allow that free develop- ment of country industry, which had already for more than a century been the mainspring of the productive power of England'. But the fact that the local privileges of the Shrewsbury drapers were maintained by the Privy Council under the personal government of James I, and removed by Act of Parliament in 1624, is not the only evidence that the inter- vention of a strong central government may retard instead of promoting the economic unity of a nation. As an essential part of its policy of industrial protection, the Government was urged to enforce a statute, which to the great advantage of the nation had come to be generally disregarded, forbidding growers of wool to sell to any who were not manufacturers. The arguments of the middlemen in defence of their calling were incontrovertible : — ' There is in England 39 English shires, and of these but 12 that use any quantity of clothing, and of these 12 but 5 that have any store of woolle of their own breeding . . . The places of the growing and the places of the converting are as farre distant as the scope of this kingdom will give leave. The woolles growing in the countyes of Worcester, Salopp and Stafford are spent partly in Worcester, and a great part of them in the countyes of Gloucester, Devon and Kent, and much of them in Southampton. The woolle of the countyes of Lincoln, Northampton, Rutland, Leicester, Warwick, Oxon and Bucks are thus dispersed. One sorte of it is carried into the North parts to Leeds, Wakefield, Hallifax, Ratsdale, etc. Another sorte of it is carried parte of it into the East parts to Norwich and soe wrought by the poore people inhabiting aboute that coast as farr as Yarmouth, and parte of it into the west parts to Exeter, and from thence it is sould to the poore people of the Country thereabouts as farr as Plymouth. Some of these woolls are carried to the farthest parts of Essex and Suffolk as to Coxall, Brayntree and Maiden. ' Some woolles growing in Norfolk are brought threescore miles or more to London, and from thence carried eight score miles and more into North Wales and there draped into cloathe and soe sent back again and soulde in London. ' Levasseur, Hist, des classes ouvriires, l^"^" ^^''■' 2nd edit., ii. p. 752. INTERNAL FREE TRADE 189 ' Thus by the endeavour of the wooll merchant . . . the woolles of the severall countries are bought and, being sorted, are from thence carried six or seven score miles before they be used, because in those places those sorts of wooUe wilbe improved to the greatest advantage for the King and comonwealth ^' The Privy Council manifested some hesitation about The interfering with this beneficent freedom of intercourse, but Govern- the pressure of the manufacturing interests, to the support ™ibits'di° of which the Government was committed, was too strong to middleman be resisted, and a provisional order was made, prohibiting f™™ ^'^^'^- the activity of the middlemen between the May sheep- ^"^ '° ^°°^ shearing and Michaelmas. At the same time, as the fact could not be ignored that the majority of the small masters engaged in the important manufacture of the new draperies could not afford to travel in search of their material, letters were sent to the Justices of the Peace of the districts con- cerned, instructing them to inform the Privy Council how much wool would be required, and the Privy Council was prepared to grant special licences tolerating the middlemen and carriers to that extent^- Within a month or two of this order, country gentlemen were being dealt with in the Star Chamber on the charge of buying and selling wool. Nor was the attack upon the middlemen confined to the wool trade ^. Informers were also busy prosecuting similar charges against the traders who helped to supply the ever- growing population of the metropohs with butter and cheese *. It would be impossible to find a more instructive refuta- Parliament tion of the prevalent fallacy that national unity has been ^o'Jk^o/'"' mainly achieved by the strong hand of autocracy, than is Royal mer- provided by a comparison of the mercantilist industrial cantilism policy of the EngHsh and French monarchies with the part played by Parliament in the same sphere of activity. The great advances towards economic unity made by England at this time were not the result of brilliant statecraft. They were the fruit of the victories of English common sense, achieved almost in silence, and only preserved from oblivion by a cursory mention in an obscure corner of a repealing statute. At the very time, for instance, when Henry IV was setting up privileged industries in every part 1 SiaU Papers Dom., James I, Ixxx. 13. « Privy Council Register, June 23, 1616, pp. 321-2 ; see aiso Apr. 26, May 12, June 2 : cf. Cunningham, Growth, &c., li. pp. 29S, 504. » Privy Council Register, Sept. I, 1616, p. 389. * Ibid, May 9, 1616. I90 PROTECTION UNDER JAMES I of France, the English Parliament was declaring- it ' to be lawful for every Clothier of what towne or countie soever ... to make . . . any true woollen cloth . . . albeit the same kind of woollen cloth doe beare specially the name of some other county, city or towne within this realm ^.' And the same Parliament, which in 1623 expressed its condemnation of the industrial policy of James I by passing the Statute of Monopolies and abolishing the restrictions imposed on trade in Welsh cloth, performed an even greater service in the cause of national unity by repeahng a great number of Acts, passed under the Tudors or earlier, with a view to regulating trade, fixing prices and rents, and inflicting restraints and disabilities on Welshmen. Some of these enactments were no doubt already obsolete, but in two cases at least the repeal was of vital importance to the future development of the cloth manufacture in England. One of these was a provision in a statute of Philip and Mary forbidding weavers to set up outside the towns ; and the other was that Act of Edward VI which had so lately been made an instrument of reaction, forbidding middlemen to deal in wool or yarn ^- IV Actual re- We have now seen with what evil auguries for the ^'ts of political and economic future of England the greatest of scheme"^ ^ ^^^ experiments of James I in industrial policy had been initiated. We have likewise seen that the foreign examples, which probably suggested, or at any rate seemed to justify it, carried within them the seeds, if indeed they had not already borne the fruit of failure. It is now time to con- sider the actual effects of the English mercantilist experi- ment in its twofold aspect, as a policy of retaUation, and as a scheme for securing the prosperity of national industry, it leads to As a policy of retaliation it was marked by a fatal a disastrous arrogance. It retorted upon the partial exclusion from with ^^^ ^ single foreign market, not by corresponding measures foreign of exclusion, but by an attempt to force open all foreign countries, markets, not merely to English goods, but to English manufactured goods of a particular kind. In view of the universal prevalence of mercantilist ideas, it is no wonder that such a procedure was strongly resented. The Dutch, who had supplied the English with one of their best ^ 4 James I, c. 2, sect. 12. '21 James I, c. 28. FAILURE OF RETALIATION 191 markets, closed tlieir.„porta to EngiisJl. cloth, whether finished or unfinished. The English Government there- upon prohibited the export of wool to Holland, not only from England, but also from Scotland and Ireland, where the wool export was more important. Yet the wool, it was asserted, cqntinuedja^jass__aYeii_tp jlqlland under the d isguise of beer. Then it was proposed to exclude the import of Dutch provisions, and to make shift with supplies from Ireland ; to prevent the Dutch fishermen from fishing in the open seas, and to compel every Dutch vessel that put into any of our ports to take away the finished and dyed cloth as a quarter of its cargo ^. Other countries followed the Dutch example, and so there was stirred up a ' tariff war,' which continued to rage with evil effects for all concerned, and for England in particular, long after the unfortunate scheme which originated the trouble had been abandoned ^. When we turn to investigate the effects of the scheme and proves upon the condition of national industry, our task is a simple faii°J|^^\^*' one. The almost immediate result was a disastrous failure, home The new Merchant Adventurers' Company proved from the first incapable of fulfilling its engagement to find a market for the finished cloth, and before the year was out they were seeking permission to fall back upon the export of 'whites.' Bacon wrote to the King, in February 161 6, to suggest that ' he ought not to rest and build this great wheel of your kingdom upon these broken and brittle pins, or try experiments further upon the health and body of your State.' It was not that he had now come to disapprove of the policy involved in the plan ; but that he thought the new company incapable of carrying it out, and considered that it might be more profitable to throw them over and make a fresh contract with the original merchant adven- turers '^. In the meantime the export trade in white cloth had JJ^^^^°^^- come almost to a standstill, and from the country districts in^„s°ry where there was a large population of weavers dependent at a stand- on this trade for employment, there were heard loud and still bitter complaints. In September of 16 16, Bacon writes again to the King. ' I perceive the cloth goeth not off as it should a nd th at Wiltshire is now come in with complaint as T^JTasTGloucestershii-e and Worcestershire; so that this 1 Lansdowne MSS., 152, fol. 278. ^ F. H. Durham, Relations of the Crown to Trade under James I, p. 218. ' Spedding, Bacon, v. p. 257. 192 PROTECTION UNDER JAMES I Doubts of the King's advisers Remedies suggested gangrene creepeth on.' Bacon's suggestion now is that a proclamation should be issued forbidding for six months the wearing of any stuff made wholly of silk ^without mixture of wool. He thinks that by this bold stroke of statecraft 'Your Majesty shall blow a horn to let the Flemings know your Majesty wiU not give over the chase ^.' But there were doubters at the Council-table who were inquiring ' how after Easter this work is like to last, and whether this company of dyeing and dressing will not enforce other countries to make cloth and so take work from 100,000 workers, whilst they now set on work only 10,000 dyers and dressers^.' And as a matter of fact the Dutch had already begun to give a bounty to any one who set up a loom. The task of describing at further length the unhappy conditions to which things had been brought by the pursuit of the new industrial policy, and the desperate expedients which the Government were driven to consider by way of remedy, is rendered unnecessary by the survival of some notes in the handwriting of Sir Julius Caesar, which were prepared for the consideration of the King in Council in September, 16 16. The extracts which follow are full of unconscious irony, and require no comment. ' Means to avoid the present stand of cloth. ' (i) Commissioners honest and substantial and sufficient for skill to be presently appointed for the viewe of the cloth brought weekely to Blackwell Hall, and the faulty cloth to be returned uppon the clothier with imprisonment till he put in security" to answer It in tEe laWe-j— aad-the good to be justly valued according to the usual prFces for these two years past and the new Merchant Adventurers enforced to buy the same. ' (2) So many of the new Merchant Adventurers as shall refuse to lay out for cloth such sommes as they have subscribed for to bee presently committed to abide the censure of the Star Chamber for abusing of his Majesty and the State in so desperate and dangerous a case as this is. ' (3) The fines of them to be employed in the buyeing of cloth for the riddance of the market. ' (4) So many in London as are thought worth iJ' 10,000 to be moved by my Lord Mayor to buy up clothes for ;£'i,ooo at the least; especially all woollen drapers of half that worth, viz. ;^5,ooo. ' (5) Expresse commandement and present example of King's Counsellors and Courtiers and all their servants to ' Spedding, vi. p. 74. ' Lansdowne MSS., 152, foL 271. MERCANTILISM IN STRAITS 193 wear nothing but broad cloth in their gownes, clokes, girthes, robes or breeches till Easter next, to the end that woollendrapers may be encouraged to buy the cloth made or to be made before that day ; or else on paine of imprison- ment not to come into Court. . . .' '(10) And if it bee doubtful whether these proceedings agree with law, the answere is that they doe, for the law giveth place to parlous cases of State and leaveth them to be provided for by the wisdom of the King and his Counsellors and '■'■ Salus reipubh'cae suprema /ex est" which is a sufficient answer to all cavillers and peevish lawyers ^' In January, 161 7, the new company surrendered their Abandon. charter, and the old company was reinstated. Later in the "^"* °^ '^* year the King in a public proclamation made a complete recantation of the whole design ; but it may be added that this repentance, however salutary, did not save the nation from the penalty already incurred by the rashness of its rulers. The cloth industry did not wholly recover from the ill effects of the disturbance till the end of the reign. Nevertheless some words of royal wisdom are well worthy of quotation. ' We declared our desires,' he said, ' to have brought to A royal re- passe as a principal work of our times the manufactures of "^^ ^ dying and dressing of broad cloth within this realm . . . but finding that time discovereth many inhabilities which cannot at first be seen ... we intend not to insist and stay longer upon specious and faire showes which produce not the frut our actions do aim at . . . perceiving that the former groundes proposed to us by the Undertakers of that Worke consisted more in hopes then in effects, and finding the work itself to bee too great to bee brought to pass in a very short time ^.' It has been the aim of a certain school of economic Jhe in- writers, of whom Frederick List is perhaps the best known, ^^^^^°^ to emphasize the dependence of a prosperous economic conditions development upon a consciously adopted and strongly on econo- directed national policy. The historical facts as to the™'^^"^^- manner in which commercial supremacy has passed in the course of centuries from city to league, and from league to nation, from the Italian to the German, and from the Dutchman to the Englishman, have been eloquently advanced in support of this doctrine^- What they un- ^ Lansdowne MSS., clii. 56, fol. 271. 2 State Papers Dom., Proclamations by King James I, Aug. 12, 1617. ' F. List, A National System of Political Economy, translated by S. Lloyd. 194 PROTECTION UNDER JAMES I doubtedly tend to show is that political circumstances have had a great share in determining the relative economic strength and prosperity of rival states. But that is after all a truth which, though it may have been unduly over- looked in abstract argument, has seldom been positively questioned. Is recog- That the growth within a nation of a sound political nized by organization, based on the mutual respect of classes and the economists |jj(,j.easing recognition of individual freedom, leading by a natural process to the achievement of organic national unity, under the influence of which the restrictions on internal intercourse fall gradually away, whilst the burden of unnecessary or arbitrary taxation is thrown off the shoulders of the producers of wealth— that such a develop- ment is a factor of vital importance in the attainment of economic efficiency and prosperity, and that the moral and intellectual energy generated in the process contributes in a high degree towards the same end, probably no economist would venture to deny. It would also be generally admitted that the more conscious policy by which wise kings or states- men have cleared the channels for the healthy flow of natural forces, which they might misdirect but could not create or annul, is to be reckoned among the favouring circumstances to which a nation owes its material power and wealth. Bnt cannot But of national policy in this restricted sense, little or mad^ ^\- "nothing has ever been consciously adopted as a mere means scions or to economic ends. Freedom, internal unity, pure and direct responsible administration have been sought as ends in themselves, and are never likely to be sought or gained from any other motive. Although therefore in looking back upon history we shall have to attribute very much of the trend of economic development to the working of underlying political causes, we must not expect to see much direct and conscious connexion between such causes and their effects. The political conditions which are most effectual are not at the beck and call of any statesman, however finely inspired or however completely clothed with the mandate of an aspiring people. They are slowly built up for the most part in silence and obscurity by the manifold operation of national temperament and national character, and only to long historical retrospect do they emerge in the bold outline of a constitutional system. The secret It has been said with truth that the foundations of of Eng- England's industrial ascendancy were laid in the centuries industrial ^^'^^ preceded her adoption of the principle of international supremacy free trade ; and it has been argued that England owed the ENGLISH 'LAISSEZ-FAIRE' 195 start she had already gained in competition with other nations to the successful adoption of a mercantilist policy of bold economic aggression. Something has been done in this chapter to dispose of some of the facts upon which this argument is based ; and it wiU be sufficient in conclusion to suggest another possible theory of English national progress, namely, that by the freedom of her internal intercourse and by the comparative absence of mercantile restrictions, ,En^and h ad "been, dTr ringiat: feast two-centuries, not only buiMitig_up those productive powers which were the admiration and the envy of continental theorists, but also making the one essential preparation for her subsequent adoption of the principle of a larger freedom of trade. O 2 CHAPTER VIII THE ANTECEDENTS OF THE TRADE UNION Industrial organiza- tions pass into the hands of large masters. as shown by felt- makers' develop- ment The struggle within and between the various trading and industrial organizations, which has been the subject of the preceding chapters, has presented itself in two main aspects. It was a conflict between the small capitalist and the large capitalist ; and it was also a conflict between in- dustrial capital and commercial capital. At the outset the interests opposed to each other were in both these two cases the same. The industrial capital was mostly in the hands of the small capitalist, whilst the large capitalist was generally a mere trader. But as the development pro- ceeded this identification ceased to be valid. Industrial capital was so far victorious as to win for itself an equal place as an organized interest alongside commercial capital. The cause of the small master, on the other hand, so far as his share in organization was concerned, suffered in most cases irreparable defeat, for the simple reason that the greater part of industrial capital was passing out of his hands to assume larger forms in the hands of a new class of manufacturers, who might still be traders to some extent, but whose principal function it was to be employers and organizers of laboizr. The way in which the organizations set up to defend the small master against one kind of capitahst became the instrument of his subjection to another kind, is well illus- trated by the case of the Feltmakers' Company. We have seen how that company had its origin in the movement amongst the poorer feltmakers to rid themselves of their dependence on the capital of the haberdashers for a supply of their material, and how an attempt was made to use their newly acquired charter as a means of attaining that object. The disaster in which that experiment ended did not prevent the corporation from persevering in the more orthodox aim of obtaining its recognition by the city as one of the livery companies, and so acquiring authority to control the trade in London. So early as 1612 a com- mittee of the Common Council reported in favour of A COMPANY TRANSFORMED 197 admitting the new company, but on this and on several subsequent occasions, when the feltmakers' claims were supported by a special mandate from the King, the influence of the haberdashers, who still retained a large interest in the manufacture, was strong enough to procure their defeat. Little by little, however, in spite of many misfortunes, the real control of the trade passed into the hands of the felt- makers, and at length, in 1650, they attained by virtue of their own improved position that recognition which the royal authority had been powerless to secure for them 1. To realize the natiure of the change which had slowly Position of been efiected we must contrast the condition of the felt- ^„ ^^g^^^^ makers in 1650 with what it had been in 1580. At theMdm° earlier date the haberdashers could claim that many of the 1650 more prosperous feltmakers were on their side, and the small masters admitted this. ' It may be that some of the rytchest feltmakers ... do somewhat hold themselves con- tented . . . because that they with ready money and parte credit do buy much, and have the choice and best.' They themselves, on the other hand, were at the mercy of the merchants, who sold them the refuse of their wool, and since they complained had refused to supply them at aU^. In 1650 it is the poorer feltmakers dependent upon them for relief whose support is claimed by the haberdashers, since ' the Company of Feltmakers looke not at all at the pre- servation of their poore members, but at the upholding of their better sort.' In reply to this the feltmakers offer to take over the charge of the poorer members, and while they make the strict regulation of apprenticeship a strong part of their case, they add that ' many of the ti;ade employ ten, twenty or thirty persons and upwards in picking and carding of wool and preparing it for use, besides journeymen and apprentices ' ^ Thus at the commencement of the struggle the feltmakers Journey- were the ' workmen ' of the haberdashers, and the small master "^"^^^^ was scarcely, if at aU, divided by class interests from the g^aiT *^ journeyman and the apprentice. Incorporation was sought master for as a means of freeing the master from his dependence on the capital of the merchant, and of securing at the same time the status of the journeyman. In the face of a common enemy this sohdarity was maintained till both objects were achieved. But in proportion as the masters became capi- talists, the journeymen of necessity became a distinct class ' City Repertories, xxx. 245 and Ix. 193 ; State Papers Dom,, James I, 1619-23, p. 442. .. 3 d ^ . • i 2 Lansdowne MSS., xxviii. 28. ' Repertories, Ix. 193. Same de- velopment in yeo- manry of older companies The Cloth- workers' Company protects the status of its small masters, 198 ANTECEDENTS OF THE TRADE UNION with separate interests, inheriting, however, from the struggles of the past the advantages of a protected status and the habit of combined action. From 1650 onwards the haber- dashers disappear from the scene, and in the last quarter of the seventeenth century the conflict of the previous century between the small master and the merchant repeats itself in the relation of the journeyman to the master. And pre- cisely in the same manner as the earlier situation and the later are related to each other as two stages of an industrial evolution, so the seventeenth-century company, which was the issue of the one, is related to the eighteenth-century trade union, which was the issue of the other. Thus the disintegration of the small master type gave rise to the formation of the two classes most characteristic of modern industry, that of capitalist manufacturers on the one hand, and that of workmen without capital on the other. And it is not only the inner development of the new corporations of the seventeenth century that illustrate this process. The history of the bodies of yeomanry, which during the sixteenth century had come, as we have seen, to represent the class of small masters within the older companies, supplies evidence of the same character in greater detail. It shows how the small master was enabled, by a temporary identification of his class with the advancing cause of industrial capital, to defend his own status and even to secure a degree of privilege against outside workers ; and how subsequently in the concentration of the larger manufactures which naturally resulted from the growth of industrial capital, he was gradually replaced by the beginnings of the factory system. A clear case of this kind is that of the Clothworkers' Company. It has been shown in a previous chapter that the main line of cleavage within this company at the be- ginning of the seventeenth century was drawn, not between employers and employed, but between the mercantile interest and the industrial interest. The governing body was mainly composed of merchants engaged in the export of cloth from every part of the country, who had no special interest in conniving at the infringement of the regulations which protected the status of the London craftsmen. The larger employers, who would have been glad to get rid of those restrictions, required the support of the small masters in their attempts to prevent the export of unfinished cloth. The members of the industrial section united therefore in the twofold demand, that the company should assist in DECLINE OF THE SMALL MASTER 199 checking the unlawful exportation, and that it should take measures against the multiplication of apprentices and the tormation of industrial partnerships. But whilst the au- thorities of the company had every motive for evading the nrst demand, it was possible to arrive at something like unanimity in regard to the second. The records of the Clothworkers' Court during the first half of the seventeenth century reveal an increasing tendency on the part of the larger employers to ignore the restrictions on apprentice- ship; but at the same time they serve to show that the authority of the company was constantly used for the suppression of this tendency. The company lent its sup- port to the small masters, in their endeavours to bring aU the artisans of their craft attached to other companies under its supervision and control. It acquiesced in, if it did not promote, an Act of Common Council obtained in 1618, the sole purpose of which was to protect the status of the small master, and a bill framed upon the same lines was presented to Parliament, though it was not carried through, in the year 1624 1. In the course of the seventeenth century the conditions but they in the cloth-working industry underwent a development "^ era- similar to the one already noticed in the case of the felt- replaced by makers. When the grievances of the industrial section joumey- were once more formulated by the yeomanry at the time ^^^ of the Civil War, the specific aims of the small master seem to have dropped almost out of sight, and from the Restor- ation onwards there are increasing signs of the displacement of this class by a body of larger employers on the one hand, and by a mass of journeymen on the other. By the middle of the reign of Charles II, the interests of the in- dustrial rank and file are represented by a combination, not of small masters, but of journeymen, who complain of the employment of country workmen^. In 1682 we hear of journeymen taking the favourable opportunity of a shipping order to refuse to work under twelve shillings a week**. And simultaneously with the appearance of the modern type of workman we see the rise of the modern type of industrial capitalist. In 1689 a number of small masters complained to the Clothworkers' Court of ' some merchants that keep journeymen clothworkers, packers, pressers, dyers and others to work in their houses, and not only imploy them in doing their own work but also other merchants' clothes, ^ Hist. MSS. Comm. Third Rep., App., p. 30. ^ Clothworkers' Court Book, Dec. 10, 1675. ' Ibid., Aug. 16, 1682. 200 ANTECEDENTS OF THE TRADE UNION This de- velopment not a reversion to older conditions The trade union was bnilt up , out of the ruins of the small master which in the end will prove the ruine of many families in the working trade ^.' At first sight it might seem as if what had taken place in the two cases thus briefly outlined, was a mere reversion of the small masters into the journeyman class from which they had emerged in the fifteenth century. But to take this view is to overlook the essential element of progress, which gives the whole development its true significance. The position both of employer and of workman at the end of the seventeenth century was widely different from what it had been at the beginning of the fifteenth century. The small masters' organization had served as the training ground for a new species of capitalist, the modern ' captain of industry.' Its influence upon the rank and file of industry had been still more educational. Even if the whole class of small masters had been reduced by the introduction of larger industrial capital to the level of journeymen, the result, from the point of view of social progress, could not be regarded as an entire loss. The advantage gained is to be measured by comparing the unsteady, isolated and impermanent character of journey- men's combinations in the fifteenth century with the increas- ingly coherent, continuous and influential activity of trade unions since the beginning of the eighteenth century. In tracing backwards the spiritual ancestry of the organized skilled workman of the present day, the first link is undoubtedly to be found in the small master of the seventeenth century. It is in his efforts after organization, partly in their success, but quite as much in their failure, that the immediate antecedents of the modern trade union are to be sought. We have so far been following the history of these efforts along two main lines, the attempt to preserve an active share in the control of the older companies by means of the yeomanry organization or otherwise, and the attempt to secure economic independence through separate incorporation. The movement reached high-water mark in the second of these aspects under the personal government of Charles I, and in the first of them, under the Commonwealth. After that it began perceptibly to ebb. The small master was gradually ousted from his share in the older companies, and the political circumstances were no longer favourable to the formation of new ones. The secret of this retrogressive movement was that trans- formation of the small master into the journeyman which has already been described. And just as we found the ' Cloihworkers' Court Book, Aug. 14, 1689. EMPLOYER AND WAGE-EARNER 201 small master in the sixteenth century struggling to adapt and appropriate the traditions of the superseded handicraft organization, so we shall find the journeyman at the close of the seventeenth century endeavouring to build up a new status out of the ruins of the small master. With the clear emergence of this new class, conscious of its special interests and combining effectually for their promotion, our story ends. From that point onwards the reader will be able to place himself in abler hands ^ But in order to realize the conditions which shaped the later movement we must trace the decay of the constitutional position of the small master. II The significance of the development by which the Court Traders of Assistants came to be the governing body of the livery ^°<^ crafts- company, has been set forth in detail in an earlier chapter. ™ider com- This concentration of all executive and electoral power in panics a few hands, represented, in so far as it was due to economic causes, the dominance within the companies of the interests of the trader or merchant employer over the purely in- dustrial interests. The policy of industrial protection adopted by the Stuarts afforded a strong rallying point for resistance to the power thus exercised by the traders. The history of each of the new corporations, such as the felt- makers, the glovers, and the pinmakers, began, as we have seen, in the revolt of an industrial section against the governing body of one of the older companies, who were accused of usurping power without exercising proper con- trol, and of being, as the craftsmen said, like changelings in their cradle. But there were a number of other cases in which the movement assumed marked proportions without leading to a definite and permanent separation. The case of the clothworkers supplies a good illustration The of the influence of the Government's industrial policy on Govern- ment the constitutional relations of the classes withm a company, support the When the Privy Council was on the point of completely industrial adopting Alderman Cockayne's project for dyeing and ">'""' dressing all English cloth, the Clothworkers' Court received a letter from the Lord High Treasurer 'touchmg some better government to bee . . . established over the artisan clothworkers of this companie without the which his Lord- ship thought it wolde bee harde to effecte that great and honourable work intended to be established. Uppon the 1 S. and B. Webb, History of Trade Unionism. 202 ANTECEDENTS OF THE TRADE UNION Large and small masters not united The at- tempt to remodel the con- stitution of the Skinners' Company, readinge of which letters procured (as it is thought) by the meane of the artisan cloth workers of this companie of whom a good number being this daie here assembled, it was de- manded what it is that they required . . . whereunto they made answer that first they required that suite and meanes might be made for the reducing of all artisan clothworkers, as well free of the company of Merchant Taylors as of anie other company within this citie whatsoever, under the rule ... of this company. And next it was required by some of the saide Artisan Clothworkers here then present that the . . . government of the manuell artisan clothworkers might be wholly referred to the Wardens and Assistants of the Yeo- manry, but in this point they did dissente, for some and the most parte of them were of a contrarie mynde ^.' The reason for this division of opinion amongst the members of the industrial section is doubtless to be found in the fact that the small masters, whilst strongly in favour of the protectionist proposals to which the Company refused to lend its support, were at the same time unwilling to transfer the government of their trade from the hands of the merchants who composed the Court of the Company, to those of the larger employers, who were promoting the protectionist movement but who would be much less likely than the merchants to maintain the apprenticeship regu- lations which safeguarded the status of the small master. The result of this balancing of motives was that the unity of the company, although it underwent a severe strain, was preserved throughout the crisis. The Skinners' Company, in circumstances almost exacdy the same, was scarcely so fortunate and appears to have suffered a temporary disruption. The governing body of the skinners, like that of the clothworkers, had come to be composed of merchants engaged in foreign commerce, who were more concerned in developing the export trade in skins produced by the country as a whole than in fostering the London industry of dressing skins. The industrial section complained that they were excluded from the export trade and at the same time deprived by it of their raw material^. As in the case of so many other trades, an agitation begun in Elizabeth's reign met with conditions favourable to success under James I. The artisan skinners, like the feltmakers, managed to get an Act passed by James's first Parliament for the protection of their interests against ^ Clothworkers' Court Book, Dec. 17, 1 614. '^ Hist. MSS. Rep., Salisbury MSS., iv. pp. 91-4 ; Lansdowne MSS. Ixxi. 54. THE INDUSTRIAL INTEREST 203 the merchants \ They also obtained a grant from the King, but this, instead of separating them from the Skinners' Company by a fresh incorporation, proceeded to remodel the constitution of that company so as to secure for them equal rights within it. Every other year the master of the company and two of the four wardens were to be chosen from the industrial section, and in the alternate years when the master was a merchant, three of the wardens were to be practical skinners. In the same way the two interests were to have equal representation upon the Court of Assistants ^- As the Skinners' Company refused to carry out this arrange- ment, the London industrialists continued their agitation, and, under the influence of the protectionist movement then at its height, demanded a prohibition on the export of certain classes of skins until they were dressed. Capitalists were ready to finance the monopoly if it were secured. The King was willing to grant the necessary patent, but the Privy Council after hearing the merchants stayed it as inexpedient '^. The two sections of the Company continued their dispute under Charles I * ; and as late as 1 749 the artisan skinners were endeavouring to maintain the validity of the revised constitution before a court of law ®. In both the above cases the rising power of the capitalist and of the manufacturer is to be observed as the moving force, which Weavers gives an almost involuntary direction to the action of the tived— not rank and file of small masters. Alike in attempts to remodel by the the old corporations and in the formation of new ones, it is interest of his interest rather than theirs that tends to find predomin- master— ating expression. And especially where the element of monopoly was potent, the intervention of the royal power in favour of industry was a very doubtful advantage to the small masters or to the journeymen employed by them. The truth of this, as far as the setting iip of new corporations is concerned, has been already illustrated in the cases of the pinmakers, the playing-card makers and the beaver- makers^- Another instance, in addition to the two just cited, of the application of the same truth to the remodelling of an old corporation, is furnished by the case of the ^ 3 James I, c. 9. . ^ ^ Hazlitt, Livery Companies, p. 254; Livery Companies Comm. Rep., i. 388 ; Reinembrancia, ii. 282. ' Privy Council Register, Nov. 13, 1616 ; Jan., Feb. 26, 1617 ; also State Papers Dom., James L, Ixxxvi. ^^, xcvii. I02. * State Papers Dom., Charles I, cccxxix. 30. ° Livery Companies Comm. Rep., i. 388. ^ See also the complaint of the Clockmakers in Atkins and Overall's account of that Company, p. 60. 204 ANTECEDENTS OF THE TRADE UNION Weavers' Company. In 1638 Charles I sanctioned a most ambitious proposal for the enlargement of the powers of that company. The London weavers were to be amalga- mated with those of Canterbury, and to be empowered to appoint delegates in any town or city in the kingdom. All the silk weavers of London were to be brought under the company's control, and all the goods made there were to be viewed and sealed at its hall. In return for this grant of monopoly, the company bound itself to levy eightpence on every pound of silk wrought by an English weaver, and a shilling a pound from alien weavers \ A year later the Government received a petition from a great number of journeymen weavers who had been long out of work, and some of them abated out of their wages. They considered their distress to be due to the payment which masters of the Company of Weavers had to render to His Majesty, for certain privileges which they were able to perform ' by keeping four or five apprentices, and so sitting at little charge through keeping few or no journeymen, whereas those who employed the petitioners must either abate the price of their labour as they had already begun to do or else would be unable to sell at the same prices as others ^.' but by AU these facts, and many others adduced in previous those of the chapters, tend to show that the industrial protection move- indnstnal jugnj gf tj^g Stuart period, though it professed to champion the cause of the small master whose class constituted the industrial democracy of that time, and though it often enlisted his support and was carried to a successful issue with his assistance, was not animated mainly by a regard to his interests, and did not as a matter of fact tend to subserve them. But the victories thus won with his help and in his name, whilst they served in many cases to undermine his economic status, quickened his sense of his rights and kept his capacity for organization alert and vigorous. At the time when the Civil War broke out, the cause of the organized small master as such was to a great extent already a lost cause, and he was within measurable distance of being driven to take his stand with the journeyman class, and to furnish, by virtue of his traditions and of his capacity for social action, the nucleus of a new form of organization. Constitu- It is this prophetic significance which lends a peculiar tional ■^ State Papers Dom., Charles I, 1638, p. 454 ; see also cccxciii. 48) 56, 57; ccccvii. 79; ccccix. 202-3; ccccxx. 69; ccccxxi. i; ccccxxix. 2 ; ccccxxxi. 22. ^ Ibid., ccccxxvii. 89 ; for a retrospective view of the Weavers' history see Harleian MSS. 2262. THE SOCIAL COMPACT 205 interest to the last heroic stand made by the small master, straggle of under the inspiration of that ardent outburst of democratic *^ ^^^^ feeling which signalized the opening of the Commonwealth rdefthe period. Now for the first time his position in the industrial Common- organization, of which he was nominally a member, might ^^^'t'' be discussed, not as a matter of vested interest, but as a question of high abstract principle. 'All Legal Jurisdiction,' say the commonalty of the The weavers in presenting their case to the House of Commons, weavers ' oyer a number of people or society of men must either be thHodal primitive or derivative. Now primitive jurisdiction is un- compact doubtedly in the whole body and not in one or more members, all men being by nature equaJl to other and aU Jurisdictive power over them, being founded by a compact and agreement with them, is invested in one or more persons who represent the whole and by the content of the whole are impowered to govern by such rules of equality towards all as that both governors and governed may know certainly what the one may command and the other must obey, without the performance of which mutual contract all obligations are cancelled and that jurisdictive power returns unto its first spring — the people from whom it was conveighed. And doubtless whatever power our governors of the Corporation of Weavers may pretend and plead for, if they have any rationally, they had it at first from the whole body.' Having thus firmly established their rights, upon the sound as a basis basis of democratic first principle, the weavers proceed to °[ i^dus- dispose of the counter arguments based on royal grants, by ^"mocracy quoting the earliest charter to show that ' there is not any one liberty that is granted to them but what is also granted to the meanest member of the said Company So that it is clear this Grant was not to so many particular men but to the whole society and what power soever any person or persons were afterwards invested withall must of necessity be by the consent^ election and approbation of the whole body ; and if our Egyptian Taskmasters have any other Commission for their usurped power over us why do they not produce it ? Certainly if they could, they would, but having none, they plead custom and Presidents, both which they will find but broken reeds to lean upon, but rotten props to support their worm-eaten Soveraignty 1.' The commonalty of the founders in ' an addressment to The the worshipful master, wardens, and assistants ' of their fonnders ' The Case of the Commonalty of the Corporation of Weavers of London truly stated. Guildhall Library, 2o6 ANTECEDENTS OF THE TRADE UNION appeal to Company in 1651, assume a tone of Christian remonstrance, the law of ^nd clothe their argument in more pious phraseology, but "ju^gtu^^ their attitude is fundamentally the same. 'Whereas it is liutn most falsely and unjustly reported that we are those whose design it is to overthrow and bring into confusion the government of this company . . . we do for our parts declare that we are so tender of the reputation of you our Governors that we are in nowise willing to do anything of a disparaging reflection upon you, but to attend the providence of God for a reducement of ourselves to our primitive rights and privileges, and this we know is justifiable both by the law of God of Nature and of Nations, the motive being the consideration of the engage- ments that lieth upon you to preserve the liberties of these people over whom you rule. For very sensible we are of many things done in the exercise of your power altogether inconsistent with the laws of righteousness, the rules of safety, and our public good. Therefore seeing men in all ages have through their supine carelessness degenerated from the righteousness of their first principles . . . suffer us to persuade you to a recollection of all those things that are held up on corrupt customs. . . . Now we humbly desire you would let us have the Charter of the Company read — without which we are in no rational capacity to know our privileges — but we shall be led in a way of ignorance and blindness as we have been hitherto all our days, doing things we know not why for ends we know not what^.' The ruling There was not wanting similar high argument on the cloth- other side. A member of the Clothworkers' Court produced refute the crowning example of this method when in attempting democracy to confute the democratic opinions prevalent in his own out of company, he cited the instance of the concentration of light in the sun and moon as a precedent for the monopoly of power employed by the Court of Assistants. ' We doubt not to say that God in the beginning did not only give a resemblance of Political! power, when the Light created on the first, was on the fourth day contracted in those two great Rulers of the world, but that he did it according to Ordinances, for the Psalmist speaking of Heaven and Earth saith : They continue this day according to thy Ordinances (Psalm 119); and therefore called the Ordinances of heaven and earth. (Jer. 33). . . . And as God in the 2 Kings 17 complaineth. That they neither feared God nor did after their Ordinances nor after their customes : so (and not without cause) do the present Governours complain at this present ' W. M. Williams, Annals of the Founders' Company, p. 108. A DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT 207 of our dissenting brethren.' These, however, are but ornamental preliminaries to the main argument which is based, not without a considerable amount of sophistry, upon the charters and ordinances of the company ^. As a rule the possessors of power content themselves with appealing to the usage of the previous two centuries. The rulers of the Weavers' Company, it is true, had The a vague notion that their privileges had been confirmed by "^^^^^ Magna Charta, but they did not omit to provide their claims cite the with a much sounder legal foundation. They pointed out case of that ' this manner of electing the oiEcers of corporation by ^"5°" a certain select number of rank and degree (as is practised in London and other popular Cities) hath long been resolved in a case of Law by all the Judges to be good and agreeable with the Law for the avoiding of popular disorder and con- fusion (notwithstanding the word Commonalty specified in the Charter) as may clearly appear in the Lord Cooke's fourth report, fol. 77-78, touching Corporations ^.' It is highly probable that few of the companies containing Wide- a rank and file of craftsmen escaped the contagion of the ^^"^^j^^ democratic movement. Exceedingly scanty as the published ^f tjig records of the companies are, we have an account of a crisis movement of this kind in no less than seven : the Pewterers (1641)*, the ^^^-^^^^ Stationers (1661) *, the Saddlers (1646) ^ the Clothworkers sympathies (1647-51), the Weavers (1648), the Founders (1651), and the Clockmakers (1656)^. In several cases the inter- ference of the House of Commons was invoked on behalf of the craftsmen, not only on the ground of principle but because of the support they had rendered to the popular cause, to which they declared their rulers were unfriendly. ' At the beginning of the war,' say the Weavers, ' many of us and our servants engaged for the Parliament and in their absence they (the foreigners admitted by the Company) being generally malignant, staying at home ... by degrees got all the trading' with the consequence they add that hundreds of them have been driven to become ' Porters, ' The Government of the Fullers, Shearmen and Clothworkers of London as proved by their Charters and Ordinances. A co'^yoi this tract is to be found in the British Museum and Guildhall Libraries. The Clothworkers' Company reprinted it, i88i. '^ A Breviate of the Weavers' Business before the Hon'" Committee of the House of Commons in Star Chamber, 1648, p. 4- B^it. Mus. » C. Welch, Hist, of Pewterers' Company, 11. p. 105. * Petition of Master and Workmen Printers to the House of Commons, British Museum, 669, f T^. ,„ ,^ . « T W ShexviAl, Hist, of Saddlers' Company,^. 152. 8 Atkins and Overall, History of Clockmakers, p. 60. 2o8 ANTECEDENTS OF THE TRADE UNION , Labourers, Waterbearers, Chimneysweepers, Saltcryers and Small-cholemen i.' And the Commonalty of the Founders, after their claim ' to an equal power with the Court of Assis- tants in government and authority without distinction of persons,' had been denied by the rulers of their company, appealed against them to the House of Commons, declaring that ' the major parte of them are notoriously disaffected to the present Government and upon all opportunities have manifested their malignity in words and deeds and that they do countenance the Clarke of the Company who is a Mocker and Scoffer of all manner of godliness and holiness and goodness, in conniving at and passing over his unfaith- fulness ^.' Joint To such appeals the Long Parliament in its most revolu- committee tionary period could not turn a deaf ear. The commonalty workers of the weavers received permission to manage their elections discuss the by the choice of 140 representatives to act for the whole coastitu- body ^ ; and though the Court of Assistants forcibly kept "°" these delegates out of the Hall, some concession to the theory of popular government seems to have been made for a time. In the records of the Clothworkers it is possible to follow the history of the movement in that company in some detail, but it will here suflfice to indicate its main features and its result. On January 18, 1648, certain propositions made by the wardens and others of the yeomanry having been read by the Court of Assistants, ' the Yeomanry were called in and upon debate thereof at large ... it was agreed that for the conservation of peace and unity in the whole body of this Company . . . that six gentlemen of this Company and six more of the Yeomanry should joyne together as one Committee and debate the matters in question as well amongst themselves as by advice of Councell if need shall require*.' The At the first meeting of the Committee, the matter in yeomanry question being whether the election of oflScers were not in the onWersal master wardens and commonalty according to the letter of suffrage the Charter, the ' Case of Corporations ' as reported by Coke was cited as proving that elections by a selected number were good and allowable in law. Upon this point the representatives of the yeomanry desired to consult with their counsel. At the next meeting the yeomanry members presented the opinion of two counsellors that the right of ^ Case of the Commonalty of Weavers. ^ Williams, Annals of Founders, pp. 34, 35. ' Case of the Commonalty of Weavers. * Clothworkers' Court Book, of that date. UNIVERSAL SUFFRAGE 209 election was vested in master, wardens and commonalty. ' But it appeared,' says the record, ' that they had not stated the case right, neither informed them of the ancient custom of this company.' So there was nothing more done. The week_ after this, the committee for the yeomanry presented in writing to the rest of the committee a protestation made by the commonalty against the ordinances of the Company, ' and declared them invalid and no further to bind them.' The Court of Assistants refused to yield the points in dispute, but offered to refer them to the Lord Mayor, and then the matter appears for a time ^ to have dropped. At the end of the year, however, when another election Reference of officers was about to take place, the representatives of the '° ^°°'^'^ yeomanry demanded that a ' common hall ' should be called ^nd com!' for that purpose ^, and, on meeting with another refusal, at promise once appealed to Parliament. The ' Council for the advance of Trade ' heard both sides ^, and, two years later, was still hearing them at intervals*. At last in October, 1651, a compromise was struck. The wardens and assistants of the yeomanry were henceforward to retain the quar- terage and fines levied upon the yeomanry, they were to have jurisdiction in all disputes arising out of handicraft matters, and they were to choose the beadle and the in- former 5. It is to be observed that what was thus conceded was very The larger different from what was originally demanded. The wardens ™^!jj^a\^e"^ of the yeomanry were not elected by the rank and file of from the small masters and journeymen. They were nominated rank and firom above by the Court of Assistants out of the leading *'^= manufacturers. When the commonalty were insisting on their right to universal suffrage, the wardens of the yeo- manry then in office declared themselves against it '. They were in fact the representatives, not of the popular move- ment, but of the industrial interest; and the Court of Assistants had adopted the policy of making concessions to the industrial interest in order to take the sting out of the popular movement. Upon due reflection many of the employing class, who had a grievance against the exclusive- ness of the Court of Assistants, must have realized that they had more to fear than to gain from such a revolutionary movement as was in progress amongst the rank and file. 1 Clothworkers' Court Book, Jan. 29, Feb. 5, zo, Apr. 18. 2 Ibid., Dec. 19, 1648. ' Ibid., Jan. 23, 1649. * Ibid., Mar. 15, Apr. 17, Oct. 23, Dec. 7, 1649; Jan. 3, Feb. 11, Mar. 18, April 8-15, Oct. 6, 1651. " Ibid., Oct. 24, 1651. ° Ibid., Dec. 19, 1648. UNWIN P 2IO ANTECEDENTS OF THE TRADE UNION The jour- neyman class already making itself heard It was the day of the ' Levellers ' and of the ' Diggers \' and there can be no doubt that in the camp of the malcon- tents there were to be found, not only a mass of small masters fast sinking into the position of workmen, but also a number of that growing class of journeymen which within another twenty years was to be forming organizations of its own. The demand for universal suffrage included the journeymen, who in some companies at least were reckoned as freemen^- The leaders of the commonalty Of the weavers supplied their cause with funds by collecting the journeymen's quarterage ^ ; and the petition of the Printers to the House of Commons at this time refers to its promoters as ' the poore Freemen and Journeymen Printers oppressed and kept in bondage all their Hves,' and as ' made perpetual bondmen to serve some few of the rich . . . upon such conditions and for such hire, and at such times as the Masters think fit *.' It was undoubtedly at this epoch that the spirit of modern industrial democracy was born ; and Mr. Morley, in his recent study of Cromwell, displays nowhere more admirable insight than when, in describing Oliver's negotia- tions with the army at Saffron Walden in 1647, he says, ' the whole scene and its tone vividly recall the proceedings of a modern trade union in the reasonable stages of a strike ^.' III The prin- The democratic movement within the companies was the J'Pj! °^. rally of a dying cause. As far as its immediate object was craftsmen^ concemed, the practical results were very slight. After to form the Restoration they entirely disappeared, and the older influences resumed complete possession of the disputed ground. But there still existed the possibility that the excluded class should form itself into new corporations, and so gain the necessary legal authority for the defence of its interests. Attempts in this direction continued to be made, and it now remains to be shown how this door also was gradually closed on the industrial rank and file. The question as to whether an incorporation should be granted or not had hitherto been generally argued on grounds of prescription or of expediency. The objection was raised * G. P. Gooch, Democracy in the seventeenth century, chapter vi. ' The Government of the Fullers, Shearmen, and Clothworkers, Sr'C, pp. 4, 6. ' Breviate of the Weaver's Business, British Museum, p. 6. * An abstract of the general grievances of the poore Freefnen and fourneymen Printers, addressed to the House of Commons, in the Guildhall Library. ^ J. Morley, Oliver Cromwell, p. 221. corpora- tions NEW CORPORATIONS OPPOSED 211 as a rule by a corporation already in the field, that the proposed new grant would be an encroachment on its own privileges, and would weaken the authority by which the industry was controlled. Apart from these considerations, it was not claimed that the privilege of incorporation be- longed to one class of the community to the exclusion of another. The small masters who sought to protect them- selves by a charter were still master craftsmen with journey- men and appretjtices under them, and might seem indeed to be the nearest inheritors of the traditions of the old craft gild. But gradually as the functions of the craftsman and the expounded trader became more and more separate, as the latter gained ^^j^^^. control of all the older London gilds while the former sank sellers, into a position of subordination and dependence, the idea 1619 began to emerge that the incorporation of craftsmen was a dangerous innovation. Thus the leathersellers, when in 1619 they were opposing the glovers' petition, not only declared that the latter aimed at a ' playne Monopoly and a Confederacy,' but added : ' It will be a President to all the Mechanick trades about London to attempt the like, which wilbe such a Rent and innovation in the city as we may see the beginning, but can hardlie discerne what will be the end thereof.' The glovers in their reply did not venture to question the principle involved in this argument, but claimed that their case constituted an exception to the general rule, ' though in other trades the shopkeepers grow- ing riche do make the workemen their underlings, yet they suflfer them according to their increase of ability to become like themselves and in the meantime to exercise the favour and privilege of their company and society'; but the leather- sellers, they declare, ' having injuriously driven us from our seats within the city and liberties are like chaungelings in our cradle.' Between the date of this controversy and 1663 the forces contro- of criticism and of speculation had dealt boldly and freely J'^^'^^i^J with every aspect of social organization, industrial as well ters, 1663 as political. The manifesto of the printers, who made an attempt in that year to gain incorporation and so become independent of the stationers, does not hesitate to meet an objection similar to that of the leathersellers by an appeal to first principles. ' But let them ' (the prmters), it says, ' be supposed mechanics in this sense, that is, such as are below the dignity of Shopkeepers, must they not therefore have the management of their own affairs ? ' The printers go on to cite instances of the self-regulation of handicrafts such as weaving, painting, plastering, joinery, &c., tending to show P 2 212 ANTECEDENTS OF THE TRADE UNION The City Council opposes new incor- porations The wage- earning sawyers refused Incorpora- tion that 'the meanest have been put into distinct associations and impowered to make byelaws for their better subsistence.' Not content, however, with this defensive attitude, they proceed to carry war boldly into the enemy's country. Shopkeepers, they declare, are but accidental, like suckers springing out of the roots of the handicrafts. ' For without the clothier what were the draper, without the hatmaker where were the haberdashers, and without the printer where were the bookseller.' Yea, having the clothier what need (necessarily) is there of the draper . . . and having the printer there is no fear of wanting books though there were no bookseller^.' With these tendencies in progress it was not to be expected that the city authorities, representing in the main the interests of capital, would favour new attempts at incor- poration. When the Paviors' Company in 1673 subscribed money to obtain a charter, the city entered a caveat against their application^. Similarly in 1698, the basket-makers were refused permission by the Court of Aldermen to seek incorporation, though they had made acknowledge- ment of their error in previously petitioning the King for that purpose ^. The report of a Committee of Aldermen on a petition of the Carpenters' Company in 1681 gives a clear indication of the motives which underlay the policy of the city council. The carpenters had made a request that all apprentices to their trade might be compelled to take their freedom in their company. The committee reported that it could find nothing prejudicial to the City in the pro- posal ' for that sufficient provision is made against Combina- tions and confederacies for the manner and prizes of their work by the 2-3 Edward VI, c 15 and 5 Elizabeth, c4*.' But the case which best serves to illustrate the turning- point which has now been reached in the history of in- dustrial organization, is the attempt of the sawyers to gain incorporation in 1670. The sawyers were employed by members of the Carpenters', Joiners', and Shipwrights' Companies; and in 1655 the carpenters had obtained an order from the Lord Mayor's Court for the regulation of their wages. The movement of 1670 is a pretty sure sign of a previously existing combination, and their employers ^ State Papers Dom., Charles II, Ixxxviii. 133, 'A brief discourse concerning Printers and Printing.' ''■ C. Welch, Paviors' Company, p. 2, Guildhall Library. ° Cf. also a tract on the history of the Gardeners' Company entitled Adam Armed, British Museum, 712 m I (10). * E. B. Jupp, History of Carpenter^ Company, p. 315. ILLEGAL COMBINATIONS 213 declared that they had raised their price per load during- the past twenty-five years from 5^. to 6^. and then from 6s. to 8s. and 9^. The nature of the objections successfully raised by the carpenters and others against the sawyers' application, shows clearly how similar the objects of their proposed incorporation were to those of the eighteenth - century trade union. The carpenters in conjunction with the joiners and shipwrights state that the sawyers are labourers who work by the day for wages, or by the load, and that the material is in every case provided by the employer. If they are incorporated, the smallest com- bination amongst them will bring the building trades to a standstill, as experience has sufficiently shown in the past even without incorporation. Moreover their main object is to exclude ' all those sort of Labourers who daily resort to the city of London and parts adjacent, and by that means keepe the wages and prizes of these sorts of labourers att an equal and indifferent rate' and their success would be ' an evill president, all other Labourers, to Masons, Bricklayers, Plaisterers, &c. having the same reason to alledge for incorporation ^' Here we have a combination of workers endeavouring meeting- to appropriate the small masters' method of incorporation point of to the protection of their own status as wage-earners, f^^l^ Almost at the same moment, as we shall presently see, giid a body of wage-earners in another trade is found attempting and trade to use its inherited share in an existing corporation for the °"'°" same ends. By its failure along these traditional lines, the wage-earning class was driven into secret combinations, from the obscurity of which the trade union did not emerge tiU the nineteenth century. At this point then, it may be said that the latest phase of the transformed gild and the earliest phase of the trade union meet and blend. Noie. — A final example of an unsuccessful attempt to gain legal recogni- tion for an industrial combination may be appropriately taken from the closing year of the seventeenth century. In 1699 the coal porters on the river Thames petitioned the House of Commons that a bill might be brought in to establish them ' a Fellowship under such Government and Rules as shall be thought meet after the manner of the Watermen, Carmen, Porters, and Coachmen,' but the motion being made was passed in the negative. House of Commons' Journals, xiii. p. 69. IV Among existing trade unions there is probably none The silk- that better represents the older traditions of unionism than hatters' 1 Jupp, Carpenters' Company, p. 307. 214 ANTECEDENTS OF THE TRADE UNION union a that of the journeymen hatters of Great Britain and Ireland. persistent jj^ gpjjg ^f ^^^ changes which this national organization has organiza- j^g^j^^y undergone during its century of existence, its original features have to a remarkable extent been pre- served. This is the more striking in that the hatting industry has, during the same period, passed through a revolution in technique. The present members of the ' Fair Trade ' Union are makers of silk hats, and follow a craft which has scarcely a single process in common with that of their predecessors of a century ago. Felt-making, which was the hatters' original craft, has been largely taken over by machinery. It is carried on chiefly in the provinces, where new combinations among the workers have arisen, more adapted to the different conditions of employment. The silk-hatters have inherited the traditions of the old felt and beaver- makers, because, although the technical process of their craft is different, the economic conditions under which they work are almost precisely the same. There is practically no machinery, little division of labour, and the silk hat, like the old-fashioned beaver, is an article of fashion consumed by a limited class which is mainly resident in large cities, or at any rate prefers to make its purchases there. Cheapness is not sought at the expense of style and quality, and consequently the skilled workman, if backed by an efHcient combination, can command a high price for his labour. It is the continuity of these conditions which has given the Fair Trade Union so long a lease of life. This is clear from the fact that when the silk hat began to replace the beaver, the union was able gradually to transfer its control from the old trade to the new. Its members learned the new processes, and little by little the making of felts was left to be undertaken by the, perhaps, less skilled, certainly less efficiendy combined, workers in the provinces. Its activity We need not be surprised to find that a combination of i" "^^ such tenacity has even a longer history than it claims for century' itself. The union as a national organization dates itself from 1 798 ; but it had existed in London at any rate long before that period. A petition of the master hatmakers of London to the House of Commons in 1777 states that the journeymen have entered into a combination called a Congress, that they pass by-laws, inflict fines, and prevent the increase of apprentices ; and one of the masters declared to a committee of the House that he had been compelled on pain of a strike to discharge five of his fifty journeymen who had refused to pay the twopence a week levied by THE HATTERS' UNION 215 Congress \ The power which, according to this and other similar evidence, the men's combination had ahready acquired and which, through the trying times of the next half-century, it steadily maintained, could scarcely have been of very recent growth. But with the exception of a reference to a strike in the Annual Register for 1768, there seems to be no published evidence of the union's previous existence. To a certain extent this want may be supplied by the The records of the Feltmakers' Company. Some historic con^ traditional nexion between the union and the company is suggested ^""rthe " by the traditions of the journeymen hatters themselves. Felt- Amongst the Place MSS. in the British Museum there is makers' preserved a list of resolutions agreed to by the journeymen ^"'"P*"^' during a dispute in 1820. At the head of this document is a curious device representing a tramping hatter who has just arrived in town and is receiving the refreshment and relief due to him by the rules of the union. Around this device are printed several traditional or historic dates: — ' Hats first invented 1 456. First made in London 1510. The Feltmakers' Company were first incorporated in London 1604; and again by charter 1667. Blanks first instituted 1 798 V The appropriation thus implied of the traditions of the snbstan- company by the union is exceedingly characteristic of the 'Jfg^^onser- conservative temper of the journeymen hatters. One cannot vatism of read the hatter's evidence before the Royal Commission of the jour- 1824, without being struck by the relations of friendUness °eym^" and mutual respect which had evidently long prevailed between masters and men, The masters admit that the men's claims were generally reasonable and that disputes had as a rule been settled by compromise. And an appeal made by the men to the masters during the strike of 1820 is clothed in the language of dignified remonstrance. The men repudiate the charge of idleness and drunkenness, more in sorrow than anger. 'For are there not among you those who have toiled in our ranks who have been raised by providence above their fellows ? . . , We cannot suppose that the generality of our masters, from the generous manner in which we have been treated by them, could have engendered such evil against us. . . . Nothing can ultimately tend to beneficial purposes in long protracted warfare, as we consider the interests of the one connected with the interests of the other ; but that the sacrificing ourselves to an additional number of apprentices would be 1 S. and B. Webb, History of Trade Unionism, p. 46. 2 British Museum, Add. MSS., 27799, ^^. 2i6 ANTECEDENTS OF THE TRADE UNION Combined action of journey- men in 1667 They collect money for the con- firmation of gild regu- lations, entailing on our posterity misery and disgrace, and would in nowise be advantageous to you, as there has always been found by the antient laws and customs a sufficient number of men for every purpose connected with the trade. We re- main, Gentlemen, with respect, &c.^ ' The deferential tone of this remonstrance, the strong appeal to common traditions on the part of a trade union which had had an independent existence for at least half a century, and the evident shocl? which the prosecutions for combination subsequently in- stituted by the masters occasioned to the feelings of the men, justify us not only in assuming a long experience of mutual tolerance, but also in emphasizing the element of continuity between the later phase of industrial or- ganization and the one immediately preceding it. And it is a remarkable fact that from the very beginning of the extant records of the Feltmakers' Company, which date from the Charter of Charles II, we have clear in- dications of the combined action of the journeymen. The charter was granted in June, 1667. In October of the same year a committee of aldermen who had been appointed to consider a petition of the journeymen feltmakers against the master, wardens, and assistants, recommended a number of articles which were duly inserted in the by-laws of the company. No member is to employ a foreigner except he be admitted to the company ; and such foreigner is to pay twenty pounds for admittance. Journeymen are to give and receive a month's warning; and they are to make good spoilt work ; the damage in case of dispute to be assessed by two masters, one chosen by the journeymen. Finally ' that the journeymen may not by combination or otherwise excessively at their pleasure raise their wages,' a piecework list is to be fixed annually and presented to the Court ot Aldermen ^. In July of the following year the master and wardens were called before the mayor for neglecting to get their ordinances confirmed by the judges, when they declared that they were only hindered by want of money to defray the charge. Thereupon the journeymen present offered to contribute 2s. and 2s. 6d. apiece towards this object ; and it was ordered that the masters should make a liberal subscrip- tion as an example ^- The ordinances in question, so far as they regulate the industry, do so in the spirit of the mediaeval gild. While their main aim is to preserve the status of the ' British Museum, Add. MSS., 27799, 80. ^ Feltmakers' Court Book, Oct. 8, 1667. Ibid., July 7, 1668. GILD ORDINANCES ENFORCED 217 small master, they incidentally protect that of the journey- man. By strictly limiting- the number of apprentices and by forbidding all indirect employment (i.e. ' weighing out stuff to piece-masters ') they hinder the development of the 'large industry.' An ordinance of the same character, which gave rise subsequently to much dispute, forbids the employment of boys (as ' sindging boys ') after the age of eighteen unless they are duly apprenticed. It is very likely that these ordinances, which had no doubt been handed down from an earlier date, were already felt to have a cramping influence on the trade. What concerns us most in this connexion is the action of the journeymen in getting them enforced. That and the previous appeal to the Court of Aldermen reveal two facts as to the condition of the journeymen ; in the first place that they were capable of successful combination ; and in the second that, though excluded from any share in its direction, they had still an interest in the constitution of the company, and sought to attain their objects by its means. The first extant Court Book of the company which and try to extends firom 1676 to 1682 reveals an important develop- enforce ment in this situation. In the earlier years the journeymen ' q^^u^ still have recourse to the Court for the redress of their tions. grievances. In 1678 six of them appear and charge a certain master with employing foreigners and refusing Work to freemen ^ ; and in the same year a master is fined for omitting to give a month's warning ^. But the solidarity of the gild-relation is being gradually destroyed by the expansion of the trade. In November 1680 the journey- men petition against the number of sindging boys, and it is ordered that no person shall have above one at one time ^, The dispute, however, continues and in 168 1 the journeymen bring an action at the Surrey Assizes, with what result is not stated*. But it is significant that the countercharge with which the masters meet the action of the journeymen is that of refusing to pay their quarterage ^. The con- tributions of the journeymen were doubtless diverted into a common fund to meet their own legal expenses. The next ten years (for which the Feltmakers' records Immigra- are wanting) witnessed a most important crisis in the'j"'""^^^ industry. The French trade which had been the most Matters formidable rival of the Enghsh, and had succeeded largely in driving it out of the Spanish market, was almost de- 1 Feltmakers' Court Book, Dec. 3, 1678. " Ibid., Sept. 23, 1678. ' Ibid., Nov. 15, 1680. * Ibid., June 13, 1681. ^ Ibid., July 18, 1681. 2i8 ANTECEDENTS OF THE TRADE UNION leads to employ- ment of country journey- ' men The company finally decides against employing ' foreign- ers,' stroyed at a blow by the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685, and many of the French hatters came to settle in England 1. This act of supreme impolicy on the part of Louis XIV was, of course, of enormous benefit to English commerce ; and in no direction was the impetus more felt than by the hat trade. But to the company the event probably seemed an unmixed evil. Apart from the direct effects of competition, there was an indirect effect of more importance in the present connexion. The Frenchmen set up, some of them on a large scale, outside the city, at Wandsworth and Battersea ; and there they naturally formed centres of attraction to the country journeymen who had hitherto been jealously excluded from the benefits of the London trade. What rendered such exclusion practicable was, no doubt, apart from the im- mobility of labour in those days, the inferior character of the work done by the country feltmakers. But the force that really maintained the exclusion was the combined determination of the London men, using hitherto as its instrument the ordinances of the company. How great was the distance between the status of the London and that of the country worker is strikingly illustrated by a number of petitions presented to Parliament in 1698 by various feltmakers' companies in the north of England, praying that ' women and maids of inferior quality ' may be compelled to wear felt hats, and declaring that many poor people whom they had kept at work were become objects of charity ^. And the Committee of the House of Commons in recommending the adoption of this remedy (only lost by two votes) state that it would set at work 100,000 poor people inore than are already employed, and that the greater part of the persons so to be employed are aged men, women and children, and such as are relievable by charity. After making every allowance for the evident exaggeration of this, it remains clear that the London men had everything to lose by the admittance to compe- tition with them of journeymen accustomed to country conditions. The masters, on the other hand, were sure to find it to their interest, as the trade expanded, to draw upon such an abundant source of cheap labour. This motive was, however, balanced by another. As members of the company they could not expect to enjoy their monopoly without observing those ordinances which secured the status of the men. They ' S. Smiles, The Huguenots, p. 267. ^ House of Co7n?nons' Journals, Mar. 3-6, 1698. THE HUGUENOTS 219 wavered therefore between two possible lines of action. They might either prosecute the new-comers for infringe- ment of their privileges, or they might meet the Frenchmen on their own ground by letting loose the forces of free trade. The latter of these courses was partially adopted in February, 1 69 1, by a resolution empowering any lawful feltmaker to set at work any foreign (country) journeyman in the parishes of Wandsworth, Battersea, and Lambeth in the manufacture of hats of the French make, ' so that all theire Majesties Subjects and Freemen of London might have the same priviledges that the French and foreigners had 1.' But the adoption of this policy was found to have many inconvenient effects, ' certain Frenchmen and other persons, not qualified to work, making other use of the said Order than was intended.' In May 1694, therefore, the order was repealed, and the company returned to more conservative principles and took its stand once more upon the ordinances. According to these regulations all work must be done and against under the direct supervision of a qualified master. Piece- ^'^J°|°"' work, i, e. the weighing out of stuff by the employer to be to < piece- made up at the worker's own home or elsewhere, was strictly masters ' forbidden. Yet the growth of the trade was sure to favour this method of employment, since it found scope for the capitalist who, without being a feltmaker, had an adequate knowledge of the materials, whilst it enabled the journeyman who had litde or no capital to set up, in a sort, for himself. As we might expect, it was the skinners, cutters of coney, and wool merchants, who thus ' weighed out the stuff,' and against these we find the feltmakers, in November 1694, preparing to take legal proceedings^. The company continued to resist this natural development till 1755, when the ordinances in question were, along with the one against the employment of foreign journeymen, formally repealed. Meanwhile the piece-master who took out work in this way continued to exist in spite of the ordinances; and the journeyman who, for whatever reason, was out of a place, had a resource to fall back upon ; a fact which very much strengthened the independence of his attitude. In the complicated situation thus briefly analysed, the point Conflict perhaps most worthy of notice is the opportunist attitude ^^^™s alike of masters and men towards the ordinances. The men, masters whilst willing to invoke their authority for the exclusion of and men ' foreigners' and the prohibition of unskilled labour, are pre- pared upon occasion to have illegal recourse to piecework and 1 Feltmakers' Court Book, May 14, 1694. "^ Ibid., Nov. 14, 1694. 220 ANTECEDENTS OF THE TRADE UNION The com- pany tries to keep down wages Combined resistance of journey- men combination. The masters, on the other hand, while using their charter to secure a monopoly, to harry the Frenchmen, and to suppress the ' piece-masters,' are at the same time tempted to relieve the pressure of competition by employing cheaper labour from the country. Under these circum- stances a conflict was sure to break out sooner or later ; and in the autumn of 1695 we hear the first mutterings of the storm. On September 23, one of the masters was charged before the Court with employing country journeymen ; but upon his explaining that they were only engaged upon coarse felts the charge was dismissed. And next year, in February, when the free journeymen complained that a number of country journeymen had just left the French hatmakers to work in Southwark, the temporizing order was made that they should be allowed to continue one month only. On November 16, 1696, the matter came to a crisis. On that day the Court fixed a list of rates for the making of hats for the ensuing year, and ordered that if the free journeymen did not accept these rates, it should be lawful for any master living outside the freedom of the city to employ country journeymen so long as the latter brought proof of their apprenticeship. The power to fix an annual hst of wages would seem to have been left unexercised for a number of years. Indeed there is no mention of any such list in the extant records later than the one embodied in the ordinance of 1668. Since that time the price of food had gone up, and wages in the hat trade had, to some extent at least, followed. This advance was still in progress in 1696, and the company's assessment of wages was made with a view of checking it. According to one statement of the masters, the amount in dispute was 3^- out of 3 J. 6d. a day. In another place they declare the men can earn ' from twelve to twenty shJUings a week and dyett.' If either of these estimates be near the truth, the journeyman hatter was then as now amongst the best paid of skilled workmen, and it is not surprising that in face of the competition of the im- migrants and of the influx of cheaper labour, the attempt should be made to reduce his wages. The attempt, however, was met with aU the promptness and vigour of a well-organized society. On the next Court- day a deputation of twelve appeared on behalf of all the London journeymen, and, declaring they had come to a resolution among themselves not to accept any less wages than what they formerly received, desired that the late order might be set aside. In the meantime they had not THREE YEARS OF CONFLICT 221 confined themselves to peaceful resolutions ; but had pro- ceeded to make an example of a journeyman who had gone on working at the reduced rates. According to the master's statement they stirred up the apprentices to seize upon him as he was working, to tie him in a wheelbarrow, and ' in a tumultuous and riotous manner to drive him therein through all the considerable places in London and South- wark 1.' With these evidences of united action before us we Transition scarcely need to be told that the men had ' Clubs' where !^^^^^ they entered into unlawful combination and ' raised several union sums of money for the abetting and supporting such of them who should desert their masters' service.' A combination of journeymen was of course no new thing. The important question about this combination is : how far did it resemble a modem trade union ? or, to put the question in another form, how far did it possess the conditions essential to continuous existence and successful activity ? In its first form the question can only be answered by the facts already narrated, which seem to exhibit industrial combination undergoing a process of evolution, and reveal some at least of the elements of trade unionism in process of detachment from their connexion with earher economic ideas. The answer to the second form of the question is to be supplied from the remainder of our narrative. The dispute, which began in the manner described, lasted Subsequent for three years and ended to all appearance in a victory for j^^^^j^^^ the men. That it should have lasted so long without entirely dislocating the trade was due to the unfixity of a transition stage. There were, as we have seen, several competing forms of industrial organization in the field, and neither masters nor men were limited to one set of con- ditions. Probably, however, the skilled workman found a better resource in becoming a piece-master than did the qualified master in employing the unskilled country journey- man ; so that those skilled workmen who remained in the service of the company would have their choice between competing masters ; especially as the company had in 1692 repealed the ordinance requiring a month's notice on either side. Towards the end of 1697 we find the masters driven in self-defence to re-enact this ordinance with the addition that no master is to employ a journeyman who does not bring a certificate from his previous master ^. Previous to this, measmres had been taken against those Legal duel 1 Felimakers' Court Book, Nov. 23, 1698. ^ Ibid., Nov. 25 1697. ^nd men 222 ANTECEDENTS OF THE TRADE UNION between who Set up as piece-masters, and did work for the coney- ™!f'l'!„ cutters and wool merchants. Some attempt was made by the journeymen at an accommodation in this matter, based on common hostility to the French trade ; but the majority of the masters refused to tolerate ' piecework ' and the prosecutions continued^. The men's society had remained in active existence. Only a short time before, the masters had appointed a committee to deal with its ' disorderly meetings ' ; and it now proceeded to retaliate by bringing actions against the masters for the illegal employment of sindging boys ^. Two abor- In this legal duel which was carried on during the earlier f^^ te' ^^^^ °^ ^^9^ ^^^ ™^^ ^^^ probably got the worst of it. At an^com- any rate, on June 20 three of their number came to the modation Feltmakers' Court, on behalf of themselves and the rest, seeking an accommodation. They proposed that all matters relating to the trade should stand upon the same footing as in 1682; and offered to drop the prosecutions concerning sindging boys. The Court after long debate informed them that if they would give an 'ingenuous account and full discovery ' of their combinations and collections of money by Wednesday next, they might expect some favour. The journeymen promised to comply, and appeared on the appointed day with an account of the money contributed by them and of the way in which it had been spent ; ' and desired that all suits might be forborne and that they might be permitted to make a hat for themselves, and acknow- ledged they were guilty of combination and would plead so to the indictment ^.' With this evidence in its possession the Court proceeded to order the prosecution of several journeymen, and directed the master of the company to deal with the demands of the deputation. There is no indication of the promised favour being granted. The prosecutions seem to have borne hardly upon the journeymen. In August they again sought an accommodation, and, in accordance with an award of the two members of Parhament for Southwark, submitted to terms which have all the appearance of a complete surrender. Fifteen of the men in addition to those indicted are to sign a declaration in which they admit their guilty combination and renounce it for the future ; and further promise to be obedient to the by-laws of the company, and to collect money amongst themselves for the prosecution of the French * Feltmaker^ Court Book, Nov. 29, 1697. ^ Ibid., Jan. i, 1698. ^ j^jj,^ j^^g j^^ j5g8_ COMPULSORY ARBITRATION 223 feltmakers. As against all this the only concession to be made by the masters is the withdrawal of the prosecutions ^, Possibly this may be a full account of the arrangement ; The and It IS to be noted that in 182 1 the men under stress of '"^'^^'^''^ prosecution made a similar renunciation of their union ^onass°o1!s which did not in the least affect its existence. But more probably other concessions to be made by the masters were the subject of a tacit understanding. At any rate the one- sided arrangement broke down almost immediately. In September we hear that the men continue to exact the former extraordinary prices, so that the masters are induced to have recourse to the old remedy of presenting a list to the Court of Aldermen. Out of nine prices in this list three showr an advance of about 10 per cent, over the correspond- ing prices in the list issued two years previously ^ ; so that the niasters must have given ground in the meantime ; and shortly after its publication a master was summoned and fined for making a similar advance in a fourth price ^. The whole dispute was thus, at the end of 1698, opened Thedis- up afresh ; the country journeymen, whose exclusion had ^g^^^^fg obviously formed a part of the recent settlement, were called arbftration in once more, though precautions were taken to prevent them setting up for themselves * ; and the prosecutions recommenced with vigour, some forty or fifty of the journeymen being presented by the Grand Jury for refusing to work at the rates. The men on their part took up the challenge with spirit. It is clear that their combination and their resources remained intact and that they had good legal advice. By means of a writ of ' a certiorari ' they contrived to remove the case from the Lord Mayor's Sessions into the Crown Office, so that it came before Lord Chief Justice Holt at the Kingston Assizes in the spring of 1699 ^. The Chief Justice made a Rule of Court referring the matter to the arbitration of the members for Surrey 5 whose decision, given in June, was a compromise. Legal proceedings were to be stayed, and the men were to get an advance on the masters' last Ust. If the revised list, which was subsequently approved by the Court of Aldermen, is compared with the previous lists put forward by the masters it becomes clear that the men's combination had not been entirely in vain ®- ^ Feltmakers' Court Book, Aug. S, 1698. » Ibid., Sept. 23, 1698. ' Ibid., Dec. 13, 1698. * Ibid., Dec. 19, 1698, Jan. II, 1699. » Ibid., Mar. 27, 1699. ' Ibid., Oct. 2, 1699. 224 ANTECEDENTS OF THE TRADE UNION RATES FOR MAKING 'WITH DYET ' Price of hat. 1667. Nov. 1696. Sept. 1698. Oct. 1699. s. d. s. d. s. d. J. d. 6s. to 7s. 8s. to lo;'. los. 9 I I 2 I 6 9 I I 2 I 8 9 I I 3 I 8 12S. I 10 2 2 IAS. l6s. and upwards. i8s. Beaver. 1 9 2 3 2 3 2 9 2 2 2 4 2 6 3 2 2 2 6 2 6 3 2 3 3 6 2 6 3 2 expansion of the The Court Book containing the above carries the record down to 1 708, and as there is no further notice of serious difference with the journeymen as a body, it is likely that the award was accepted by them as satisfactory. It is probable too that they acquiesced in the continued prosecu- tions of ' piece-workers,' since it was not in their interests as a body to encourage this method of employment so long as they could secure good wages. Those who complain of the prosecutions are old men who say they cannot otherwise get work. Subsequent The next Court Book begins in 1727, but the records probable thenceforward contain less and less reference to the com- pany's relations with the journeymen. The reason is not far to seek. The industry was rapidly growing. There was a large export trade to Spain and Portifgal, to supply which some masters employed as many as a hundred men. To the requirements of such a trade the gild regulations were become more and more inadequate. Since the restric- tion on the number of apprentices remained, the increasing demand for labour could only be supplied from without, and the exclusion of foreigners had to be gradually abandoned. It was not till 1755 that the restrictive ordinances relating to foreigners and 'piecework' were formally abolished, but the masters had for some time tacitly ignored them. A master, giving evidence before a House of Commons' 'Committee in 1752, stated that he employed six ' foreigners ' to one free- man, and that he did not hear of any prosecutions likely to issue on that account ^- If the men acquiesced in this change, it is probable that their own combination was unmolested and that they ^ House of Commons papers. Report on a Petition relating to the manufacture of hats, 1755. Evidence of Mr. Estcutt. THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY 225 gradually widened it so as to include the new-comers. If they had not done so, their position must have been much weakened, and such evidence as we have tends to show that this did not happen. It is not too much to assume therefore that the society which is found so completely organized in 1777 had had a more or less continuous existence for the greater part of a century. But whether this was so or not is a matter of very secondary importance. In any case the effectual combined action of the London feltmakers is no isolated or accidental pheno- menon, but is representative of a general industrial develop, ment observable at this time both in England and on the continent ^ A few words as to the subsequent course of that development will serve to complete the design of this book. It was the growth of trading capita Iwhich, by separating The reduc- the craftsman from direct contact with the market, gave 'jo" °f rise to those intermediate forms of industrial organiza- mast™Ao tion which have been grouped together under the term a wage- ' domestic system.' The decay of those forms and their earner ultimate displacement by the factory system was due to the growth of industrial capital. As long as the small master owned most of the industrial capital required for the exercise of his calUng, he was not a mere wage -earner, however much he might be dependent on the capital of the trader. With the appearance of the industrial capitalist, who organized manufacture on a large scale and supplied not only the circulating but sometimes also the fixed capital, the small master was reduced either to the position of a journey- man, or to that of a wage-earning master scarcely dis- tinguishable from a journeyman. The strong objection of the London feltmakers to the giving out of materials caused their development to take the first of these forms. But in many widespread industries, including country felt- making, the second form was more common. The Bethnal Green silk-weaver is a wage-earner of this type who still retains some features of the small master 2, and a large part of the felt-making in the North of England about the middle of the last century was carried on by wage-earning domestic masters who, though they found their own work- shops and implements and took apprentices, had come to be called journeymen. 1 Levasseur, Hist, des classes ouvriires, ii. pp. 383-9°, cites instances of the activity of journeymen's combinations at Dijon, Darnetal (1688), of the Paris hatters in 1697, and of the Paris knitters in 1724, For German cases see Schmoller, Umrisse, &c., p. 389. 2 Booth, Lz/e and Labour of the People of London, 1. p. 395. CNWIN >i 226 ANTECEDENTS OF THE TRADE UNION explains the rise of Trade Unionism, The labour troubles of the eighteenth century, which marked the beginnings of Trade Unionism, were mostly due to the efforts of this class of reduced small masters to organize themselves along with the journeymen on a common footing as wage-earners. In some of the most notable of these cases, e.g. the framework-knitters, the Sheffield cutlers, and the London silk-weavers, the industries con- cerned had been represented since the middle of the seventeenth century at least by a corporation similar to the Feltmakers' Company ^. The history of the previous organization of ' domestic industry ' in the country district would probably have much light cast upon it by the publication of county and assize records, but there exists at least one striking testimony to that kind of con- tinuity of which this book has furnished many illustra- tions. In 1718 the Government issued a proclamation concerning a number of woolcombers and weavers, who had formed themselves into lawless .clubs and societies which ' had illegally presumed to use a Common Seal and to act as Bodies Corporate ^.' This adoption of legal formalities is in itself sufficiently indicative of the spirit of imitation which was so powerful a factor in the transmission of the capacity for collective action. But its significance becomes much greater in the light of the fact that it was against the weavers and woolcombers of Devon and Somerset that the proclamation was especially directed, and that in 1639 King Charles had granted a charter of incor- poration to the worsted-combers of Devon, who complained, however, that the sum they were asked to pay for it was far greater than they were able to raise amongst so many poor men ^. It is exceedingly probable that patient local research would reveal many similar antecedents of trade unionism in the records of the country cloth trade. It need not be inferred from this, however, that any hastened by mysterious efficacy is to be attributed to the mere grant faifsel^ire °f ^ royal charter. On the contrary, it has perhaps hardly been sufficiently realized how much the growth of trade unionism in England is due to the prevalence of the principle of laissez faire. It has indeed been rightly insisted upon that there was a close connexion between the abandonment by the Government of the obsolete regu- ' Brentano, On the history and development of Gilds, pp. 115-2I, 125-8 ; cf. S. and B. Webb, History of Trade Unionism, pp. 32-3. ^ Cunningham, Growth, &c., ii. p. 508. ' State Papers Dom., Charles I, ccclxi. 1 14, also Privy Council Register, Nov. 28, 1639; Feb. 6-13, 1644. which was FREEDOM TO COMBINE 227 lative_ machinery of the sixteenth century and the rise of combinations amongst the wage-earning class; and no doubt the continuance of similar governmental regulations in France and Germany for some generations longer had much to_ do with the postponement of trade unionism on the continent. But there is another important aspect of the matter which should not be neglected. The passing of the Combination Acts, and the early prosecutions of trade unionists, should not blind us to the fact that it was the comparative freedom of England in the eighteenth century which alone made the combination of wage -earners possible. At the very moment when the workers of England were ■ laying the foundations of a free organization, by the estab- lishment of the ' tramping ticket' and the ' house of call,' the Governments of France and of Prussia were putting ' a veto on any such spontaneous popular development, by transferring these same institutions into the hands of the ■ police, and utilizing them as part of the machinery of a more or less benevolent despotism ^ 1 ■ ^ Schmoller, Umrisse, Sec, pp. 430-42 ; M. Stieda, Das Arbeitsbuch I in Frankreich, in Preussische Jahrbilcher, liii. Q 2 APPENDIX A EXTRACTS FROM THE CLOTHWORKERS' COURT BOOK, 1537-1639. May 3. 29 Henry VIII (1537). It" the same day Thomas Saunders and John Willms were admytted to kepe howsse togethers for consideration that they had the stufife of Master Wight, wiche stufFe Master Wight bought of WilHam Mansell, considering that yt were better that they shuld have the stuffe then Master Wight shuld put yt to another one of another company. And so upon the same day they being admytted dyd pay xx= for theyr admyssions. July 3. 29 Henry VIII. J. Fermer hath promised to pay x« for his admyssion in this wyse following, that ys to say xii*, at mychell- mas next xii"!, and so every quarter xii'^ tyll the same some be paid. November. 32 Henry VIII. See p. 46. February ii. 33 Henry VIII. Agreed that the byll made yn the name of the hole company to be put into the Parlyamente house shalbe first shewed to my lorde Mayor at a co"'te of Aldermen on Tuesday next. February 23. 33 Henry VIII. Monycion was given to T. M., W. S. fustyan sherers that they shuld no wyse sett any foreyns on worke. March 13. 33 Henry VIII. J. C. to pay J. Ch. for a tenter which he had of him, \^ a weke so long as he hath kept yt, and that he shall leve yt as he found yt. October 16. 35 Henry VIII. See p. 58. November 7. 35 Henry VIII. Agreed that R. M. shall paye to J. B. his Journeyman for a moneths wages v' viii'^ wherof he paid iiij" iii*. November 6. 35 Henry VIII. See p. 59. April 29. 37 Henry VIII. Came diverse of the companye which occupye cottonyng, and desyred ayde of the house towards a sewte which they have before my lorde Mayre and Aldermen concerning that no freman shoulde putt any cloth to cottonyng to any foreyn but onely to fremen, who had answere that yf they could bryng yt aboute they shoulde have recompence of this house accordyng to reason. May 4. 38 Henry VIII. Whereas W. B. was indetted to H. A. in xix= viijii, yt was ordered that the said B. shall paye wekely to the said A. iiijd, and that he whom settyth the said B. aworke shall wekely stay yt in his handes for the behalfe of the said A. August 2. 38 Henry VIII. C. T. had license to take now and then a carsey to shere tyll such tyme he be able to set upp. CLOTHWORKERS' COURT BOOK, 1537-1639 229 November 10. 38 Henry VIII. Seep. 59. November 16. 38 Henry VI II. At this co'te the master delyvered to the wardeyns of the yomanry viij" xiij= viij* and they sealed a obligation for the paymt thereof again, wherein they be all joyntly bounde which obligation remayneth here yn the house. November 24. 38 Henry VIII. At this co'-te J. C. and D.'s wyffe which were at varyance for certen stuffe of hers which was layde to hym to gage, the bothe put the matter to this house, who ordered that the said woman shulde have ageyne a spice morter and a tyke of a bolster and also the said C. to give her ijs which was paid her out of hande. April II. 2 Edward VI. At this co^e whereas Lawrence Cordeman and Roger Tordeyne were at varyance, forasmuch as the said Lawrence Cordeman goeth aboute to undermynde the said Tordeyne and to gett awaye his workemasters, yt was ordered that the one of theym shall not yn no wyse work to the others workemaster. And they bothe agreed to the same order. October 10. 2 Edward VI. At this co^e yt ys agreed and ordered that whosoever from henceforth suffer other his wyffe or any of his mayden servaunts to worke openly other yn his shoppe or at his tenters, orells suffer any of them to carry other carsey or brode cloth thorou the streets or sheres to gryndinge, upon the payne of every time so offendinge xx^ to be payde w*out any favour. October 10. 2 Edward VI. At this co'te yt ys agreed that John Williamson shall have ij' a weke to oversee the workemen that they kepe their houres. May 8. 3 Edward VI. See p. 59. April 28. 5 Edward VI. At this co''te yt ys agreed that where a mocyon was made by my lorde Mayor for the fyndyng of a skoUer at the unyversitie, that this house shall yerely paye towardes the fyndynge of a skoller yerely fyve poundes. October 26. 5 Edward VI. Where Edward Rodwell put awaye his Jomeyman for certen mysbehaviours by hym doon as he sayeth, yt was ordered by this co'te that the said Rodwell shall take his said Jomeyman ageyne orells to paye hym the full of his wages for the yere. July 27. 6 Edward VI. Whereas J. A., T.W.,N. R., Journeymen, were comytted to warde for the wrongful ynformacion of John Browne, yt was agreed that the said Browne shall paye them between then and Saterdaye next their wages and vj' for their costes by them spent in the counter. December 8. 6 Edward VI. See p. 59. July 13. i Mary. All the companye had warning to kepe their servaunts from unlawful assemblies and that they have no talke of the counsells matters as they wuUe answere at their uttermoste perylls. January 16. 1-2 Mary. The wardeyns of the yomanry brought 230 APPENDIX A ynto the halle a newe cheste with iij lokkes and iij keyes to serve to put their money yn, wherein was by them put yn in redy money xiiij" vi' iid, the M' of the company havyng one keye, the upper wardeyn of the yomanry another keye, and one of the assistence of the yomanry to have the third keye. Also yt was agreed that the said Wardeyns of the Yomanry shall have such orders as hath bene here taken, concemynge such artycles as they ought amongst themselves to observe, to be entred yn their boke to th' intent they may better kepe them. July 13. z Mary. Yt ys agreed that from hensforth all such apprentices as shall come out of their yeares, beyng of the handycraft, shall before they be sworne be tryed and seen by the wardeyns of the yeomanry, whether they be workemen able to serve yn the comenwelthe or not. Also yt ys ordered and agreed that no man of the handycrafte shall by the space of two yeres next after his first settyng upp of house, kepe more apprentices at ones than one, upon payne to paye to th' use of the company xx^ Also yt ys ordered and agreed that every person of the said company which shall happen hereafter to be behynd of his quarterage or other duties due to be payde to th' use of the companye by the space of two yeares and then doo refuse to paye the same, shall not from thensforth kepe any apprentyce. July 25. 5-6 Philip and Mary. Yt ys agreed that yn considera- tion of the grete necessitie and nede of the handycrafte that there shalbe no generall dynner kept for the chosynge of new M' and wardeyns these three years next ensuing, and that all those that shalbe M' and wardeyns for the next two years next ensuinge this yere, evry M' to paye x^ and every wardeyn vii* xiij= iiijii. And that those that be now yn office of M' and wardeyns graunted of their benevolence these somes following, that ys to saye : — M' Ormiston vi^ xiii' iiii*, M' Hayward x", M'' Christofer x", M"^ Barnard vi" xiii» iiii*, M"^ William Petynger vi'^ xiij" iiiiiJ. All which somes of money soo to be payde yn forme aforesaide shalbe counted to th' use of the companye towards the bying and furniture of tasells for the welth and reliefe of the poore of the company. Yt ys agreed that the upper wardeyns of the yomanry which hereafter shalbe for the space of these thre yeres shall paye towarde furniture of the said tasells vi", and eveiy other of the said wardeyns to lyke use xl^. April 17. i Elizabeth. See p. 119. December 5. 2 Elizabeth. See p. 119. January 22. 2 Elizabeth. See p. 114. February 23. 2 Elizabeth. Whereas W. Emerson hath lately without lycence sett up house and ys founde botheforlak of substaunce and also for his demeanour, as namely for that he carrieth ale and le CLOTHWORKERS' COURT BOOK, 1537-1639 231 sometyme water and such other lyke vyle busynes, that he shall no longer kepe house. June 21. 2 Elizabeth. Seep. 117. January 13. 4 Elizabeth. See p. 61. June 9, 1563. See p. 120. '■■s: July 27, 1563. See p. 121. lis JULY 7, 1565. See p. 120. fc May 14, 1566. Whereas Rowland Matheryn hath set upp house w* out lycence contrary to the ordenance and also kepeth a foreyn, yt is ^ ordered that the saide Matheryn shall no longer kepe house but worke « as a Jorneyman tyll he mend bis condicions and be founde worthe of I- his own propre goods, x}^. ^ July 10, 1566. See p. 60. November ii-December 13, 1566. See p. 115. s: April 8, 1567. This day sixe of the fullers, yn the name of the b whole, cam and made request that none of the sheremen shulde from ;^ hensforthe make price with the merchaunts for the rowyng of clothes, butt that the fullers may be called to make their owne prices and •: receyve their owne money for their wokemanshipp. Sixe of the shere- i men beynge called and made prevy thereof, answered and lykewise made request that the matter might remayne and be used as it of longe : tyme hath bene. And shewed causes whi, that is when the merchaunts delyvereth out • their clothes to be drest, the workeman takyth the charge of the ; clothes for the safFe delyvery of them ageyne. Another cause : yf the rower that shall worke his clothes shall com to the merchaunt he maye undermynde the sheremen and cause the merchaunt to put his worke to other. Whereupon by the mouthe of M"^ Secondarye all the psons aforenamed had commandement to departe lovyngly and frendly together . . . and that hereafter when the worshipfuU aldermen and other of the Assistants shalbe here present the matter to be further talked of, and then yf just occasion shall serve, further ado thereon to be taken. November 25, 1567. See p. 116. November 29, 1567. This day the whole companye of the handy- craftes men were warned to be here accordyng to the order taken the last co''te day, and these Artycles foUowynge were red unto them, and they all with one voyce consented to every of the saide artycles, and made humble request with wyllyng hertes as they professed that these said orders may be forthwith put yn execution with dylygence, affirmyng the same orders to be profitable to them all. Item that there shalbe eight or x psons elected and chosen by the wardeyns and assistants to have the viewe of all the merchaunts' clothes hereafter to be wrought within the company, and that no person of this company to folde tak or press or to delyver to the owner any merchaunt's clothe before the same clothe be viewed and seen by two 232 APPENDIX A of the said psons so appoynted. And the said clothes so by them seen and found truely wrought, that is to saye rowed, barbed, first-coursed and shorne from the one end to the other accordyng to the statute last made, they to sett the common seale of the house to every suche clothe yn token of true workemanshipp doon upon the same. And evry suche clothe as shalbe by the saide serchers or any of them found fautye in workemanshipp, or that shalbe folded, takked, pressed, or delyvered to the owner before yt be viewed and sealed yn forme afore- saide, evry workeman of suche clothe or clothes to paye for a fyne of evry suche clothe xx^ , . . The names of those psons which freely offered themselves to travayle and take paynes to see the saide orders duely put yn execution without anything takynge for their paynes [fifty names]. October, 1568. Seep. 118, June 13, 1575. See p. 123. October i, 1577. See p. 121. November 5, 1577. See p. 118. April 19, 1591. Seep. 121. October 7, 1591. See p. 123. December 6, 1 591. This daye also att the earnest sute and request and upon the full agreement of those of the assistants and lyverye of the Companye being of the handecrafte, the Wardens of the yomanry, their assistants and xxiiij more of the saide yeomanry, it was by this Courte fuUie ordered and agreed that there shalbe fower of the saide yomanrye appointed to be seallers to seal all such woollen cloth as the merchaunts or anye of them shall appoint and deliver to anie of this companye to be dressed to the intente to be transported over sea, &c., . . . and that every clothworker shall send for the sealers when his cloth is ready. January 16, 1610-11. The humble suit of your worshippes servants of the yeomanry. First, wee entreat your worshippe that the upper warden of the yeomanryes accompt may be yearly audited according to an old custom carefully provided for by your worshipps predecessors, (that is to say) by two from your worshipps Courte of Assistants and two of our Ancients of the yeomanry. Secondly, wee humbly intreate your worshippe that the remaynder of the quarterage, your worshippes officers being paid, may remayne in the yeomanrys chest accordynge to an old custome, our wor'i Master of this Company for the tyme beinge to keepe one key, the upper wardens of the yeomanry to keepe another key, and one of the Ancients of the Assistants of the Yeomanry to keepe the third key. Thirdly, wee desire of yo'^ worPP that the upper warden of the yeomanry may have one of his Ancients last being in his place to sit by him and assist him in his accompts and to show him wherein the Company is wronged. CLOTHWORKERS' COURT BOOK, 1537-1639 233 ft Fourthly, wee desire that when wee shall fynde our officer of the Si 83 yeomanry to be slacke and remisse in doinge of his duty in his service which he oughte to doe for the good of the Company, and the same duely proved against him, that wee of the yeomanry may have full authority to dismisse him at our owne discretion, but not without the iC consent of the Master and Wardens and Assistants of this Company for i,J the tyme being first had and obtayned in that behalf. k These Petitions and requests of the yeomanry were graunted and «i agreed uppon by the Master, Wardens and Assistants present at the said courte holden the saide sixteenth day of January 1610 aforesaid. *: March 8, 1612-13. See p. 124. E December 17, 1614. See p. 201. December 20, 1614. See p. 202. January 27, 1616-17. See p. 125. November 22, 1620. This day also M' Freeman, M'' of this Company, did relate to the Court a great abuse offered unto him by William Caswell a brother of this Company, namelie that where the saide M"^ F being one of the Committees appoynted by the L"* Mayor and Aldermen for further consideration to be had of taken of some p branches of the acte of Common Council late made for restrayning of E Clothworkers from buying any wollen clothes in Blackwell Hall, and c from keepinge anie wollen clothes in their houses to be sold. And at ; a Committee Court holden the xviii*!" day of this instant moneth att J; Guildhall an objection was made by those that stand for the acte, that :-j the Artisan Clothworkers themselves by a writing under their handes : had shewed and testified their good liking and approbation of the said t act. The said M'^ Freeman did answere that howsoever some of the la said Artisan Clothworkers not knowing what they did when they set their hands to that writing, and standing at the devotion of the I drapers for labour without the which they could not maintain their charge, weare drawen to subscribe, yet he well knewe that some of the ; chiefest of those that had subscribed were abashed att that they done, J and M' Amys by name was verrie sorrie that he had been drawen to sett his hand thereunto and repented it as much as anie thinge that ever he did, whereupon the said William Caswell instantlie replied in the hearing of divers personnes that there was not a word true that the ,, said M' Freeman had spoken, for which wordes soe disgracefully uttered 1 the said William Caswell att this Court being called into question did , utterlie denie the speakinge of the said wordes. . . . June 13, 1627. Whereas . . . Suite was commenced in Court of j Kings Bench at Westminster by the wardens of yomanry in the name of master and wardens against divers Merchaunt Adventurers upon viii Elizabeth, which yet dependeth in the said courte undetermined. And the said wardens of Yeomanry considering that the proceedings in like suites formerly commenced have been stopped by some speciall ' commande of the King and State upon the sollicitation of the said 234 APPENDIX A Merchant Adventurers being stronge in purse and frendes, have be- thought themselves of a waie or meane to prevente the said Merchaunt Adventurers from the like— and to that purpose have dealte with a Gentleman named Mr. George Kirke of the Kings Ma«8 Bedchamber very gracious with his Ma*'», who for a fourth part of this Moiety of all penalties, forfeitures which shalbe obtained or gotten upon anie recovery to be had againste any the said Merchant Adventurers upon any action or suite brought or to be brought, sued, commenced, etc.— hath undertaken to doe his beste and to use all the creditt and meanes he can to his Ma''" that theare bee no stoppe or staje in course of lawe for the sollicitation or procurement of the said Merchant Adventurers in suits already brought or to be brought. [The Wardens of Yeomanry ask that the Court may record the agreement.] July io, 1639. This day a question arising in Court concerning the true scope and meaning of the ordinance for payment of admission money, whether it be thereby intended that the same should be paid by all men that are made free of this Companie being by this trade Mercers, Silkmen, Grocers, Hosiers, etc., or else by the Artisan Clothworkers onelie. The Court upon hearing the said ordenance read and takinge due consideration of the scope and intent thereof, have concluded and determined that it is onehe meant and intended by the said ordenance that the said admission money should be paid by the Artisan Clothworkers onelie and by none other using anie other trade or profession. For extracts of a later date see pp. 198-9, 206. II CLASSIFICATION OF WOOLGROWERS AND CLOTHIERS, 161 5. [Extracts from a document in State Papers Domestic, James I, Vol. LXXX, 13, year 1615, entitled Reasons to prove the convenience of buying and selling of wool. Most of the remainder of this document is quoted on pp. 188-9 o^ this book.] The breeders of wooUe in all countries are of three sorts. 1. First those that are men of great estate, having both grounds and stocke of their own and are beforehand in welth. Theis cann afford to delay the selling of their woolls and to stay the clothiers leesure for the payment to increase the price. The number of theis is small. 2. Those that doe rent the King's noblemen's and gent's grounds and deale as largely as either their stocke or creditt will afford. Theis are many and breed great store of wooll ; most of them doe usually either WOOLGROWERS AND CLOTHIERS, 1615 235 1» sell their woolls beforehand, or promise the refusal of them for money * which they borrow att the spring of the yeare to buy them sheep to ifS breed the woole, they then having need of money to pay their *: Lady-day rent and to dubble their stocke upon the grounde as the ¥ spring time requireth, and at that tyme the Clothiers disburse their a stocke in yarns to lay up in store against hay time and harvest when Gi their spyning fails. See that theis farmers and the clothiers have tt- greatest want of money at one time. as 3. The generall number of husbandmen in all the wooUe countries lin that have smale livings, whereof every one usually hath some woolle » though not much. Theis are many in number in all Countries and have great store of woolle though in smalle parcells. Many of theis ii also doe borrow money of the wooll merchant to buye sheep to stocke their comons. Their parcells being so small, the tymes of selling soe e divers, the distance of place so great between the Clothier and them, £ it would be their undoing to stay the clothiers leisure for the tyme of •1 their sale or to be subject to him for the price. . . . :_ Theis woolls are usually converted by fower sorts of people. "I I. The riche clothier that buyeth his woolls of the grower in the ■- woolle countries, and makes his whole years provision beforehand, and : layes it up in stowre, and in the winter tyme hath it spunne by his i; owne spinsters and woven by his owne weavers and fulled by his owne tuckers, and all at the lowest rate for wages. Theis clothiers could :; well spare the woolle buyers that they might likewise have woolle at their owne prizes and the rather because many of them be Brogging clothiers and sell againe very much if not the most of the woolle they buye. 2. The second is the meaner clothier that seldome or never travells into the woolle country to buy his woolle, but borrowes the most parte of it att the markett, and setts many poore on worke, clothes it presently, and sells his cloath in some countries upon the bare thred as in ) Devonshire and Yorkshire, and others dresse it and sell it in London for ready money, and then comes to the woolle market and payes th' old debte and borrowes more. Of this sort there are great store, that (! live well and growe riche and sett thousands on woorke ; they cannot !' misse the woolle chapman, for if they doe they must presently put off ( all their worke folks and become servants to the riche clothier for 4 for Home and forraine vent soe farr as that stocke will extend. CHARLES I AND THE PIN MONOPOLY 237 'sS The Pinmakers' Covenant with the King, *^ That they will buy and take off from the King or his Agent aU such PJ« m erchanta ble Lattin Wyre as they shall use in makeinge flf. Finns, and "«' to pay viiiii> per cent for readie money. t And that they shall make Finns of noe other Wyre. And will make 'J jio^Pinns^of^Iron wyre, but such black pinns as shalbee appointed ^- Ihem bylhe^ ings Agent. That they will make soe many Merchantable pinns as will serve the ' t Kingdom and for forraine vent, and deliver the same att their Hall att i^ the rates in the Schedule. ig, M^ Lidsey's Covenant -with the King, s A recitall of the Froclamation against the Importation of Lattin ci Wyre, and that James Lidsey, a farmer of the Battry works, hath '; undertaken to furnish the Kingdom with Lattin wyre made in England att moderate rates, and to make good his Maty^ customes according to a medium of the last 7 yeares. But if it shall happen that anie Lattin Wyre shalbee imported and seized to his Mat^^ use, then James Lidsey shalbee allowed by his Mat'^ and his agent 10s. upon every hundred weight so seized. He Covenants to furnish the Kingdom with good and merchantable Wyre, and to deliver it in London to the Kings Agent att moderate price not exceeding vi^'' x xii' the hundred. That he will sell all to the King or his Agent. , The King's Covenant with James Lidsey. To buy and take off yearly from him for 10 yeares soe much ; merchantable Lattine Wyre as shalbe necessary for the use and expence of the Kingdom. And to pay in ready money upon the delivery of the Wyre in London or within one moneth after vi^b xii' per centum. M' Halsted's covenant with his Mat". The King makes M' Halsted his Agent for 10 yeares for the performing all matters which on his Mat^ part are to bee performed either to the Corporation of Pinmakers or to the said James Lidsey, and to take care and see that the said Finmakers and Lidsey doe performe their Covenants to his Mat*». Lawrence Halsted covenants with his Mat'« to provide a stock of IoooqI'' to bee imployed for 10 yeares for the buying off and selling in this King doma nd in Toraine pts all such marchantable Pinns as shalbe made^by the Pinmakers. And will take them off weekely att the prices in the Schedule. And will provide the Finn makers of a Hall or place of meeting in London. 238 APPENDIX A And furnish them of Latin Wyre att moderate rates not exceeding viii"* per cent. And to others that imploy the sayd wyre for other purposes then making of Finns not above 7 per cent. And for that which shall bee transported not above vi^'' xii^ per cent. That M' Halsted will weekely take off their Finns and pay weekely for them. And will discharge his Mat'^ of all his covenants with the Pinmakers as with IW Lidsey. That M'^ Halsted will pay 1000 per annum to his Mat'^^ Exchequer att or 40 daies after. The first payment to begin from Midsomer. A recitall that the Fin business hath been managed by James Lidsey in furnishing the Pinners with wyer and buying of their Finns weekely. And that the Course hath of late for divers monethes been inter- mitted. And that it hath appeared to his Mat'^ that in the managinge of the business for the benefitt and support of the Corporation of Pin- makers much loss hath hapened to James Lidsey by imployment of his stock that way, which loss amounteth to 7000^'' or thereabouts as appeareath by an Accompt taken by M'' Auditor Fhelipps. Which said 7000^'' (with interest for the same) from henceforth his Mat'^ is pleased shalbe paid to James Lidsey out of the cleere profitts that shall here- after yearely arise to his Mat'^ out of this business. And the King Covenants that Lawrence Halsted shall have viij^'' per cent, for his stock. And shalbee allowed (for house rent, wages of officers and servants meet and necessarie to bee imployed about the premises, and other incident charges) such summes as upon accompt by oath in Exchequer shall appeare to have been necessarily defrayed and bee allowed of by the Lord Trea'^. and Under Trea"^. That M' Halsted out of the profitts shall pay the 7000^'' to James Lidsey with the interest, as the profitts shall yearely arise above 1000 per annum to the King and above the interest of the Stocke and the house rent, wages and other incident charges. That the cleere profitts (after James Lidsey shalbee paid and the interest of the Stocke and the house rent and wages) are to come to his Mat'" att the ten yeares end. And then the King is to pay M'" Halsted his stock with interest then due, and then his Mat'" to have the whole proceed and effects of the sayd stock then remaineing in the hands and charge of Lawrence Halsted. The King Covenants that M'^ Halsted shall take out of the cleere profitts by defalcation 8 per cent, for his Stocke. And for house rent, wages, &c. ut supra. And that Lawrence Halsted out of the surplusage of the cleere profitts is to pay M"^ Lidsey yearely till his sums bee paid with interest for the same. CHARLES 1 AND THE PIN MONOPOLY 239 The Lord Trea"^. is to give allowance to Lawrence Halstead upon his Accompt of these payments. M'^ Halsted is to accompt in Michas and Easter termes or one of them yearely. And that after 2000 per annum to his Mat'", and 8 per cent, for the stocks interest, and the house rent and wages and James Lidseys 7000I'' and interest satisfied, M"^ Halsted will pay into the Exchequer upon his AcCompts all pfitts yearely ariseing above. The King Covenants att the end of the 10 yeares to pay Lawrence Halsted his stocke of loooo, and he covebants then to deliver upp to his Ma'" the proceed and effects of the stocke over and above the payments afore mentioned. It is declared by his Mati° in this indenture and agreed unto by Lawrence Halsted in 7000II' or thereabouts upon the said Finn and Wyre business. Now James Lidsey doth hereby grant and assigne to Lawrence Halsted the said 7000 with the interest thereof herein before appointed by his Ma*'^ to James Lidsey for or towards the satisfaction of the sayd debt of Lidseys to Lawrence Halsted. And that Lawrence Halsted may assign debts that grow upon contracts for Wyre Finn business to his Mat'^ and the proceed thereof. Power to Lawrence Halsted with an officer to search Shipps, Shopps, houses, &c. for Lattin Wyre imported contrary to his Mat*'' Proclama- tion. And to seize the same to his Mat'^ use according to the Proclamation, Hee accompting for these seizures to his Mat'^ all charges deducted. That his Mat*^ will give M' Halsted and James Lidsey all favour and assistance as well for restraint of importation of hatten Wyre, as for the accomplishment of all other the premises. To express in the Booke. That albeit exception might bee taken to the Accompt sett for that it appeareth by oath and otherwise by the Auditors certificett yt there hath bene disbursed aboute the sume of 70001*. And a great part thereof upon his Ma*'« pleasure and direction signified to the sayd Lawrence Halsted to disburse such moneys as should bee necessary in the said business, Therefore his Mat'" is pleased to give allowance of the sayd Accompt and that the said sume of 7000!" ^\^ ^^ interest from hence to incurr shall bee answered to the said James Lidsey. That there may be inserted a declaration in this Booke by his Mat*^. That whereas the Finn makers are by theire covenant with the King to pay viij per cent, for wyre, and the prices of their Finns mencioned in the Schedule is apportioned accordingly, That in case M' Halsted shall sell their wyer under the rate of 8 per cent, That then they may abate of the prices in the schedule proportionablie to such abatement in the price of Wyre. And it is further to be provided for in this Booke. That in case Lawrence Halsted shall not within the sayd 10 years raise and receive 240 APPENDIX A out of the cleere profitts of the stocke and agency the sayd sume of 7000''' assigned him as aforesaid with interest for the sumes, That then the said Lawrence Halsted (upon the same points, covenants and provisions aforesaid) for so many yeares more and untill he and they out of the sayd profitts shall have raised and bee paid the said sume of /ooqI" with the interest thereof. All which articles agreed on by the Lord Trea"". and the Lord Cottington with the assistance of his Ma««= Attorney General, were this day ratified and confirmed by his Mat*« and the Board, and ordered to bee passed unto indentures and putt in execution. IV THE FELTMAKERS' JOINT-STOCK PROJECT, Cotton MSS. Titus B.v. 117 {circa 161 1). The state of the Feltmakers' Case with some propositions on their part to remedy the mischiefs they now are constrayned to endure. The Feltmakers were by decres in Star Chamber unyted to the Company of the Haberdashers London, and did sit with them in their hall for government of the trade till they, fynding themselves rather oppressed by them than any way cherished or abuses reformed, thereupon by sute obtayned a Charter from his Ma*y^ by which they were incorporated a body of themselves by the name of Master, Wardens and Commonalty of the art and mysterye of Feltmakers of London and 4 miles compasse. Hereupon by allowance of the Ld May«r they published their Charter, tooke them a Hall, and accordingly did doe and goveme their Company. Afterwards considering that they were a trade and company of themselves by whome many thousands doe lyve besides their Company, namely the hatt trymmers, hat band makers, hatt dyers and hat sellers which are the haberdashers, and yet neverthelesse they were extremely kept under by the haberdashers ingrossing the Com- modetye of wooUs brought in merely for their trade of hatmaking and for noe other use, and by that meames haveing both the meanes of the felt makers trade (for woolls) and the meanes of their maintenance (for buyeing their wares being made) all in their power, by which the felt- makers in general! (except some fewe in particular) doe fynd them selves much wronged, and by meanes of yt and their daily threates did feare the overthrowe of their trade : whereuppon the generallitye petitioning to the Company of the hard case they lived in notwith- standing theer extreme sore labour, besought them to provide some meanes for theire releife and prevention of what might ensue. The Company then by means made them a stock to buy the wools ymported JOINT-STOCK PROJECT, 1611 241 • the Company at the best hand : but being opposed by the haber- shers, the pryses by that meanes were enhaunsed, and yet the salle their wares made, kept in bondage as before, whereby many of eir trade have been impoverished, many forced to leave their ide, and many to forsake the Cittye, by which meanes all that nowe ■e of feltmaking as pickers, carders, trymmers, bandmakers, dyers id hatsellers are much hindred, the trade being drawn into the untry. Hereupon the company became (as often before) humble sutors for aire freedom, which by opposition of the Company of Haberdashers id theire false suggestions to the Court, they could not obtayne— )wbeit a Committee of Aldermen have certified it to be fytt — neither e suffered to have liberty to search for the abuses of theire trade ider warrant from the Lord Mayor, which formerly they have often me ; besydes their shoppes threatened to be shut upp notwithstanding leir inhabitance of the Citye many yeares. Nowe the Company seeing the extreame mallice of the haberdashers, id that the salle of their wares lyeth soly in them, whereby many are reed to hawke their hatts made contrary to the Statutes, and sell at rr lesse rates than they can truly afford them, only to buy Victual, hereby if some redresse be not had many will be undonn or forced I goe into the countrye, to the great damage of the trade in genrall id overthrowe of the Corporation which they much desire to support : hey have considered to rayse them a stocke to take in all men's ares when they be made, to avoyd hawkeing and to encourage men I follow their trade and continue within the corporation : for the enefit of all partyes : The Citye, the trade and Company and all that ymme and sell hatts and live by that trade, without desire of en- aunsing the pryce of anything or dammage to any man. The Stock they purpose to be 250001" to be resident in some con- snient place of the subburbs, where men may take notice to have lony for their wares if they will bring them, being made good and at ich rates as they may well be afforded : by judgement of sworn men F the trade who shall rate them both inward and outward so as the Dore shall sell much better then they have donn the other sort, how- Eit they sell cheaper by ij' in the pound then for the most part they ave donn : yet haveing a certen markett and ready money to buy ooU agayne, and in that then they shalbe in no hazard of losse by usting as nowe they doe their gayne will be much more. 1. The Corporation will flourish. 2. Felts will be better made in that evry man shall have pryce for is ware as his workmanship is. 3. The trade being much used in the Countrye will revert into the ittye to the benefyt of the Cittye and all that live by the trade. 4. The haberdasher shall by good wares more genrally than nowe id at as cheape rates as he now usually buyeth (the times of the yeare 242 APPENDIX A and pryces of wool considered) and be sorted with much more ease and content then nowe he is. 5. The Haberdasher of mean estate shalbe in much better case than nowe for that evry man shall have good wares without culling accord- ing to their sorts. 6. The Commonwealth shalbe better served in that nowe they shall have good wares for their mony. 7. The stock cannot but be gainful to the stockers in that the hatts according to their goodnes shall come in at ij= in the pound profitt upon the salle, mearely out of the feltmaker's labour : whoe is equally benifitted by the certen stock : besides the often retorne of the stock at 2^ in the pound cannot but geve content to the stockers. 8. The stock shall be sufficiently secured were it never so much, in that they shall deliver noe mony without a sufficient value of ware : theer salle wilbe certen in that without buying the haberdashers cannot uphold their trade : besydes no man shall have benefitt of the stock except he will bring all the ware he makes to it (except it be a hat or two specially made and that with the privilege of the stockers), besydes if at any tyme the stock shalbe full of ware and want money, the Company by a genrall consent can forbeare bringing in or slack their making for a tyme. But so it is that once in a year all felts will off, of what nature soever. 9. The wares being of necessitye to be bought, the Stockers need not trust except they will but upon good securitye, which will make men more wary in buying. V 'THE CASE OF THE FELTMAKERS TRUELY stated; [Extracted from a report of a committee of the Court of Aldermen recommending that the feltmakers should be admitted one of the city companies, which report was adopted. Repertories, Ix. f. 193. July 23, 1650.] (i ) As to matter of convenience or inconvenience : By their admittance all the Feltmakers within foure miles compasse must be subjugated under the authority of the City . . . beare an equall chardge in all taxes and sources as a Companye and have a necessary dependence thereon in point of trade as well as regulation, whereas on the contrary if not admitted they must of necessity be loose without rule or else must exert a Government without the Cittie in such place as shall be most suitable to their own interest ; which if effected must be a great prejudice to the Cittie and all of the Free Feltmakers that are members thereof. THE CASE OF THE FELTMAKERS 243 (2) If admitted, not onely the trade of Feltmaker but the Habd^'s trade wilbe advanced alsoe, the incorporatinge the Feltmakers together being an effectual meanes to prevent their scattering as formerly into severall partes of the Kingdom, which hath occasioned the making great quantitys of deceiptfull hatts wherewith chapmen in the Country have been supplied, and the Habd" trade as well as the Feltmakers of London thereby impeded, also it will greatly further the forraigne trade, the greatest parte of the material, without which good hatts cannot be made, being commodities imported by which the nation gaines much custom and excise and the indigent much advantage, all which, if they be necessitated to desperse or if for want of Government the Trade, as it must doe, shall growe to decay, must fall to the ground ; alsoe besides the losse and discouragement of soe many thousand labourious persons by whose industry not only themselves are mainteyned but the cittie and Commonwealth advantaged, (3) If admitted, by a due execution of such good lawes as have been made for the punishment of offenders, the genrall fraud that hath been used in making and vending of hats will be prevented, whereas on the contrary if not admitted, the forrainers cannot regulate the freemen nor the freemen the forrainers, being divided in interest, and soe frauds will increase, and the Habd', if hee had power, hath not the skill to prevent it. (4) If admitted, a great number of poore persons in the sevrall parishes where they live will be imployed, many of the said trade imploying 10 to 30 persons and upwards in picking and carding of wool and preparing it for use, besides Journeymen and apprentices. Alsoe the Arte itself by regulations wilbe improved ; all servants being thereby under a tye of subjection whereby they wilbe bettered in their skill and abilitie to make hatts, the want whereof hath occasioned the making of soe many deceiptful hatts as hath been hitherto ; all masters being by this meanes tyed to give an account of their true service seven years, whereby the common mischief of compounding for time, setting upp within time, marriing during their apprenticeshipps wilbe pre- vented. (5) If admitted, the great mischiefe continually occasioned by the Haberdasher in bespeaking slight, iU-wroate hatts of unskillfuU persons with which he furnisheth the merchant to the great disparagement of the trade abroad and at home wilbe prevented, it being a common course with the haberdashers to undertake to furnish the marchant with hatts at such and such rates, and then cause such slight and ill wroate hatts to be made as cannot be serviceable, whereby the buyer is so frauded, the haberdasher many times getting most by bad hatts, so that it is not to be expected that hee should finde out or punish a fault of his own appointment and wherein his owne profitt is soe much concerned ; besides had he power and will he wanteth abilitie, for unless he have Judgement in the stuff unwroate (which none but the Feltmaker R 2 244 APPENDIX A hath) hee can never finde out or prevent the fraud or know wherein a hatt is unserviceable. As to inconveniences objected. (i) That if the Feltmakers be admitted, the Company of Habd" are destroyed. Answer. Our admittance as feltmakers cann noe way destroy the Company of Habd'^, there being but aboute fortie Master Feltmakers free of the Haberdashers Company, which if taken off from them (being as they affirme poore and inconsiderable persons) could be noe great prejudice but on the contrary an ease and in probabilitie affreeing them from a chardge, but not being taken of from them nor descreing it unless the Habd" please, we cannot conceive wherein they cann be prejudiced, much less destroyed, for not withstanding their admittance as Felt- makers they must, if able men, contribute as members of the Haberd"'', and if poore men, the Company of Feltmakers must yield them releife as members of their Company as well as the Haberdashers. And as for the loss of bynding our Apprentices which is all the reall cause of complaint they have, that is a business soe inconsiderable, that it is not fitt to be named in the same day or once to be put in the balance with the conveniences before mentioned, for by the Statute no freeman can bind above two apprentices in seven years, which being computed among the fortie masters now free of the said Company if they should all keepe apprentices, the number found annually would not amount to above 12 or 14 at the most, soe that the prejudice is altogether inconsiderable especially considering that what they now strive for may bee taken from them some other legall way, should the feltmakers designe the cutting of themselves from the Habd''^ (2) That the Government of the Feltmakers is wholly in the hands of the Habd". Answer. The Habd""^ never had any power by Act of Parliament to govern the Feltmakers otherwise than to search and view their ware, neither can they by their charter pretend to any right to govern them, the word feltmaker being not so much as mentioned in their charter, neither had they any pretext of power over them, untill the feltmakers that were forraigners as well as freemen by consent (before they had a charter of their owne) agreed and did sitt with the Habd'= to assist in the regulation of their trade. But if any suite happened the charge was borne only by the Feltmakers. But for any power on them, the Habd''^ never had any, neither had they obtained soe many feltmakers to be free of their company had they not bound apprentices and after three years service sold them into the country. By which means the number of their members were encreased and much bad ware made, thereby occasioning destruction to the trade, for prevention whereof the Feltmakers were necessitated to procure theire charter, which they needed not have done could the Haberdashers have governed them or had they such right of government as is now pretended. As for their EXTRACTS, FELTMAKERS- ORDINANCES 245 Jurisdiction on their members they may still exercise it for their power of search on others not their members. If they make it appeare the company of Feltmakers wilbe soe far from hindringe that they will assist them. But for any other right in our government wee conceive that by the same rule that the Habd" challenge the Government of all the feltmakers because some feltmakers are free of their Company. They may alsoe challenge jurisdiction on all the Goldsmiths, Drapers, &c., because some drapers and goldsmiths are free of their Company. But we submitt and leave these things to the judgement of this honb'^ committee. To conclude, the exercise of the power given us by our Charter cannot hinder the Habd" from the exercise of the power given by theirs, but if both have a power given which they may execute for prevention of fraudes and abuse in Trade, wee could wish that the Habd" would cease to hinder us, and with dilligence pursue the worke to which they pretend they are impowered, least by their perverse opposition of us and neglect of their owne acknowledged duty, the Commonwealth bee further prejudiced in the destruction of a Trade which in itself is commodious and of greate use to the nation. VI EXTRACTS FROM FELTMAKERS' ORDINANCES AND COURT BOOK, MAINLY ILLUSTRATING THE DISPUTE OF 1696-9. [The new Charter was dated June 27, 1667.] Bolton Mayor. Martis octavo die. Octobris, 1667. This day M' Alderman Starling, Sir George Waterman, and Sir W. Hooker K* and Alderman, the Committee formerly appointed to consider the matters conteyned in the petition of the Journeymen Feltmakers, Freemen of this city, against the Master, Wardens and Assistants of the Feltmakers' Company, recommend the following articles [articles 1-5 abridged] : — 1. No Member or Brother to employ a foreigner except such as shalUieL admitted to the Company. [Penalty £t, a week.] 2. Whereas great numbers of foreigners are admitted on producing their certificates of apprenticeship— their intent being to set up after- wards in the country— such foreigners shall be required to pay £10 on entering. But if the Court of L'^ Mayor and Aldermen direct the admission of a foreigner, he shall only pay 7.0s. 3. Journeymen not to leave masters at pleasure, but to give a month's notice ; such notice not to be given till after a month's stay with the master. 246 APPENDIX A 4. Masters to give the same notice. 5. Journeymen spoiling work are to make good the damage, which is to be assessed between master and journeyman, or by two Masters, one chosen by each. 6. And that the said Journeymen may not by combination or otherwise excessively at their pleasure raise their wages, to the abuse, not only of the said Master-workmen, but also of all other His Majesties Subjects, Be it ordeyned and established that hence forth yearly, videlicet in September, the Master and Wardens shall present to the Court of Lord Mayor and Aldermen a table of rates, and none shall take or give more on pain of ^5 : and the wages for the ensueing year to be accompted from Michelmas next shall be as follows :— For a hatt the price being 14^. (the Master giving unto the Journeyman good and wholesome Dyett), the Master shall pay unto him for making such a Hatt 2id. in money and finde unto the Journeyman house roome and all manner of tooles and fireing and other things appertayning to the makeing of such a hatt. A hatt of the same price, the Journeyman findeing himself in meate and drinke, the Master shall pay two shillings and nynepence and finde unto the Journeyman house roome and all manner of tooles and fireing as aforesaid. For a hatt of the price of 14^., to 2^s. is. ^d. with dyett, 35. ^d. without. „ Beaver „ 2s. <)d. „ 3^. 9^. „ Fines, paines, and forfeitures to be recovered in the Court of Records. [The above is inserted in the By-laws of the Company.] Pease Mayor. July 7, 1668. Master and Wardens of the Feltmakers appearing upon the Complaints of the Journeymen that they have neglected to get the Ordinances confirmed . . . did here declare their readiness and desire to get the said Ordinances confirmed by the Judges according to the Statutes, and that the only hindrance was the want of money to defray the said charge. Whereupon the Journeymen now present offer to give 2s. and 2s. 6d. apiece towards that object. Ordered that the Masters make a liberal subscription as an example. Selected Ordinances relating to Masters, Journeymen, and Apprentices. [Abridged.] No master to take an alien or stranger to be an apprentice or journeyman ; nor to have above two apprentices at once ; nor to set to work another man's apprentice ; nor to entice another's apprentice ; nor to admit to work any person without a certificate, from a master or proof of his being a freeman ; FELTMAKERS' ORDINANCES 247 None to sett up or take an apprentice till he has served a journey- man s^years and attended Master, Wardens and Assistants and made 3 proof pieces and signed the book ; and such persons not to take more than I apprentice for three years more. Care is to be taken that upon the complaint of a journeyman of his being out of work, the Master, Wardens and Assistants or any three shall order him to be sett on worke and employed as journeyman with some member. No member to permit any man's apprentice to 'bow and basin' without leave of his master. No member to weigh stuff to a piece master. [Fine ;^5.] No member to take stuff to make hats as a piece master. No member to ' doe off' any foreign hatts [Fine is.] (not to extend to dressing and basining). No singeing boy to be employed as such above the age of l8 years. When those years are expired he is to be bound apprentice if the master have not full number, or if he have, to some other member, or dismissed. Complaints of masters and servants against each other to be heard before the court. [Refusal fined 2os.] No apprentice to marry. [Fine £s.] N one to" hgwfc" hatts. Clerk to give under his hand with the Company's seal a certificate for any member going to work in the country. Extracts from Feltmakers' Court Book. September 23, 1678. A. H. came to this court and alleged that D. H. his master refused to give him a months warning, whereupon he was fined 2iOs. in accordance with byelaws. November 15, 1680. Upon the reading of the petition of the jour- neymen against the number of sing[e]ing boyes, It was ordered that for the future noe person shall have at at one tyme above one singing boy. . . . May 14, 1680-I. Ordered that upon the debate of the information against [3 names] . . . this company will stand by all such as shall keepe one singing boy at one tyme according to the orders of this Company. June 13, 1681. Ordered that the Charter and Ordenances be taken out of the chest in order to the Tryall with the Journeymen. July 18, 1681. Ordered that the refractory journeymen be prose- cuted at the charge of the Company upon their refusing to pay their quarterage. October 17, 1681. A Committee to attend on counsell and manage the approaching tryall with the Journeymen. February 6, 1681-2. Tryall approaching at the Surrey Assizes with journeymen. 248 APPENDIX A May 14, 1694. See p. 219. November 14, 1694. See p. 219. February 7, 1694-5. Whereas severall antient men who use to work piece work make complaint for want of work unless they be still permitted to work in the same manner, the Master moved this Court that every one of the Assistants would take and employ one if so many wanted employment, and declared he was willing to receive and employ one himself. And Warden H. offered to employ an other And after divers debates— Ordered that the Beadles inquire against all offenders against the Byelaws forbidding piece work and acquaint the next Court thereof. September 23, 1695. See p. 220. February 10, 1696. Free Journeymen complain that divers coun- trey Journeymen have within these 10 days left the French Hatmakers at Wandsworth, Lambeth and Battersey and work in Southwark. Ordered that they shall be allowed to continue one month only. November 16, 1696. It is agreed and ordered by this Court that from and after the 21st day of this present month of November until the month of September next comeing, the wages to be given by the Master workmen of the Mistery liveing within the Citty of London and fowre miles compasse of the same to the Journeymen of the trade for makeing of Hats shall be as followeth, (that is to say) : — s. d. A Beaver 30 With Dyett. A Hat of any price from i8j. to a Beaver A Hat of i6j. price .... „ 14^. „ .... „ \2S. „ .... „ \os. „ .... „ 8j-. or any other price up to loj. „ 7s. or 6s „ SJ. .... 2 6 2 4 2 2 I 10 I 6 I 2 I o 9 And also that if the Journeymen free of this Company doe not accept of the wages before sett downe and expressed of, and from any Work Master liveing within the limits afores'*. Then and in such case it shall and may be lawfull for all and every Work Master liveing without the freedom of the Citty to employ or sett to work as a Journeyman any person or persons of the Mistery being Natives of this Kingdom, So as such person or persons in that case to be employed make proofe before a Court of Assistants of this Company that he or they have served his or their Apprenticeship of Seaven years in the said Mistery. Upon which proof so made and on payment of the some of Twenty Shillings fine to the use of the Company besides the Clerk and Beadles fees according to antient custome, such person or persons may be admitted a Forreigne Journeyman or Journeymen FELTMAKERS' COURT BOOK 249 of this Company, Any Byelaw or Byelaws Ordinance or Ordinances of this Company to the contrary thereof in any wise notwithstanding. And it is further ordered that none of the Masters or Journeymen of the Mistery doe give or take more than the rates above mentioned upon paine that the party offending shall forfeite for every time he shall be found to act contrary to the true meaning of the above order such sume of Money, not exceeding the sume of jlb, as a Court of Assistants of this Company shall think fitt to impose on him or them. November 30, 1696. Geo Burkridge and others to ye number of 12 Journeymen of ye Mistery declare to this Court on behalf of y™selves and all ye Journeymen of ye Trade within ye limits of ye Corporation, That they are come to a resolution among themselves not to accept of any less wages for makeing of hats y° w' they formerly rec'i and desire y* ye late Order for lessening theere wages may be set aside. November 25, 1697. See p. 221. November 29, 1697. Two Journeymen of the Trade apply to this Court to prefer a petition at the opening of the next Session of Par- hament to prevent a Repeale of the Law prohibiting the importation of French Hats towards the charge whereof they were willing to con- tribute. And further desired that the Committee might be appointed to meet some of the Journeymen to accomodate the matters in dif- ference between the Masters and them touching Piece work. After debate had on the said proposall and desire, the Mast-er informed the said Journeymen, That this Company would on their contribution assist in such a petition as desired. And that as to Piece work this Court could not at present give any Answer, in regard what was done relating thereto was upon the petition of the greatest part of the Masters of the Trade to this Court. [M' J. Rice and M' Thos Newby being summoned and reproved for working as Piecemasters, said they could not work otherwise. They were offered work and warned.] June 20, 1698. George Burkeridge, Thomas Newby and one other Journeyman came to this Court on behalfe of themselves and the other Journeymen for the accomodation of the matters in difference between them and the Company, and offered that in order thereto all matters relating to the Trade might stand upon the same foot as in 1682 and all suits touching the sindging boys to be forborne. After long debate thereupon had, the Court acquainted them that if they would give an ingenuous ace' and full discovery of their combinations and collections of money against the Company by Wednesday next they might expect some favour, which the Journeymen promised to comply with. Resolved that all persons sued for keeping sindging boys shall defend themselves at their own charge. June 23, 1698. The Master reported to this Court — That the Com- mittee appointed on the 9*'» instant had considered the matters then to 250 APPENDIX A them referred, And that George Burkeridge and other Journeymen on Tuesday last mett some of the said Committee and renewed theere desire of an accomodation of the matters in diffrence between them and the Company. And in order thereto produced what papers (they alleged) they had of contributions by them made and how the money was expended, And desired that all suits might be forborne and that they might be permitted to make a hat for themselves, and acknow- ledged they were guilty of combination and would plead so to the indictment and had distributed money to severall not to work but at the prices agreed upon. Agreed that several of the Journeymen, vizt Suth and so many as the Committee think fitt, be prosecuted for combination, and that the Master give answer to such of the Journeymen that shall apply to him on behalf of themselves and the rest. August i, 1698. Edward Izard, Thomas Newby and John Halsall Tiddressed themselves to this Court, on behalf of themselves and the whole body of the Journeymen of the Trade, for an accomodation of the diffrences between them and the Masters and offered to be unanimous in assisting the Company as formerly, and proposed to abide by the mediation and award of M'' Cox and M' Cholmley, the two Members elected and returned to serve as Burgesses for the Burrough of Southwark in the next ensueing Parliament. August S, 1698. Ordered that Daniell Torin, Abraham Torin, Jacob Braun and James Maintzu, being 4 French Feltmakers, be tryed the next Assizes to be holden for the County of Surrey. The Master reported to this Court that the Committee appointed last Court had mett several Journeymen of the Trade with M' Cox and M"^ Cholmley in order to accomodate the matters in difference between the Masters and Journeymen, who had then declared their sorrow for theire unlawful combinations to raise their wages and promised to subscribe an Instrument declaring the same, and that they would for the future be obedient to the Bylaws of the Company and discover all such evil practices. And a draught of such Instrument or submission being now read, it is ordered that the same be engrossed with such alteration as the Clerk shall think fitt and be signed by the persons indicted and fifteen more of such of the Journeymen as the Master and Wardens shall direct. And that thereupon the prosecutions against them be stayed. We whose hands are hereunto subscribed and sett being Journeymen Feltmakers in and about the City of London and Borough of Southwark doe hereby acknowledge : — That we with other Journeymen of the said Trade have held severall meetings wherein we have conspired and combined together to enhance the prices for making of Hats for which severall of us now stand indicted. And being now greatly sensible and fully convinced of the unlawfulness of such conspiracies, Doe hereby FELTMAKERS" COURT BOOK 251 declare our hearty and unfeigned sorrow for the same, And we and every one of us doe hereby promise and agree to and with the Master, Wardens and Commonalty of the Company of Feltmakers London, that neither we nor any of us (nor any other journeyman of the Trade with our or any of our privity and consent) shall or will at any time hereafter doe any act or thing whatsoever that may in any wise tend to the promoting or encouraging of such conspiracies or combinations. But that we and every of us shall and will doe all that in us lyeth to dis- courage and prevent such conspiracies and combinations for the future, And also will endeavour to raise and collect money among the Journey- men Feltmakers what they shall freely contribute and pay towards prosecuting the French or any other unlawful! workers in the said Trade, And for that purpose shall and will truly pay all such money that shall be raised by such contributions into the hands of the Master of the said Company for the time being. And we doe further promise that we will for the time to come behave and demeane ourselves tractable and conformable to the Government and Byelaws of the said Company. September 23, 1698. See p. 223. November 23, 1698. See p. 221. December 5, 1698. This Court being acquainted that the Journey- men of the Trade who were lately indicted for a Combination to raise theire wages, moved the Court of Kings Bench last Terme for theire Discharge on the Company's Order to forbeare prosecuting them, But that the same was opposed by M'' Price whose men had since that Order abruptly left him. In respect whereof the said Court of Kings Bench would not discharge the Journeymen so indicted but ordered they should try the Cause next Assizes. And this Court takeing notice that the Journeymen of the Trade in ggner^U doe notwithstanding their late submission continue their combinations to raise their wages, It is therefore by Vote ordered, That the sajd M' Price be reimbursed his charges touching the premises, and that the prosecution of the said Indictment be continued and carryed on at the Company's charge in case the Journeymen should refuse to work at the Rates lately settled. December 13, 1698. See p. 223. December 19, 1698. See p. 223. January II, 1698-9. See p. 223. March 27, 1699. See p. 223. July 3, 1699. The Master reported to this Court that on Tuesday last he attended, with others of the Company, on the Parliament Members for the County of Surrey, according to a Rule of Court made by the Lord Chiefe Justice Holt at the last Assizes at Kingston. And after hearing them and the Defendants and other Journeymen of the Trade, they made an Award and therein made no other alteration of the Rates than ■id. allowance on a Beaver, a penny on a 14 j. Hat, and a penny advance on an 8 j., And so to a \os. Hat, And they 352 APPENDIX A directed the Indictment to be discharged and Bill in Chancery to be dismissed. Ordered that the Master and Wardens doe attend the said Judge and acquaint his Lordship of what was done by the said Arbitrators, and also to acquaint his Lordship that the Company intend in September next to present a Table of Rates with the aforesaid alterations to the Lord Mayor and Court of Aldermen for their allowance. October 2, 1699. See p. 223. VII THE STATUTE OF APPRENTICES SET ASIDE. [Extract from the Privy Council Register, Oct. 29, 1669.] Upon reading this day at the Board the humble Peticon of Frances Kiderb;^_of_Framli ngham. in the County of Suffolke, Draper, Setting forth That he served his apprenteship for Seaven yeares in the City of London to a Taylor, whereby he came to the knowledge and skill of all sorts of Cloath, and used and exercised the same for a long time, That the Petio''° occasions calling him to live in Framlingham aforesaid, and that Towne wanting one that dealt in Cloath, the Petio' set up a shop for selling the same, and thereby gotta-goodJivelihoad-fnr himsplf.and Family, yet some, out of malice hath caused Three Bills of Indictmait tobe presented against him at the Sessions hel(lat_Woodbridge for that County upon the Statute made 5 Eliz. c. 4j whereby it is provided that none shall use any manuall occupations_but he that has be en bound Seaven yeares an aprentize_to the same, 'which Statute^tihough not repealed^ y et Jiaj_been_^jnost_of_the Judges looE Jupon as incon -} venient to Tra de and to the Encrease_of ^vention^V That the Peti" hath remove3~tEe''sai3Tnc[rctments into the Court of Kings Bench where Judgment will be given against him, that Statute being still in force and therefore Praying that his Mat*^ will be pleased to give order to his Attorney Generall to enter a non prose^uijox stopping proceed- ings against him. It was ordered by Hs Mat*^ in Councell That it be and it is hereby Referred to M'' Attorney Generall to examine the truth of the Peti"'^ Case, and upon Consideration thereof to Report to his Mat'° in Councell his opinion thereupon and how far he conceives it may be fitt for his Ma*'^ to gratify the Petio' in his said Request. [On Dec. 17, 1669, the Attorney- General reported that Kiderby was liable to the penalty of the Statute, but that, the indictments being in the King's name. His Majesty might order a nonprocesse to be entered ; ,which was ordered to be done.] APPENDIX B LIST OF MANUSCRIPT SOURCES FOR THE HISTORY OF THE INDUSTRIAL COMPANIES OF LONDON DURING THE SIXTEENTH AND SEVENTEENTH CENTURIES. Note. — This list is very far from being an exhaustive one. The purely trading companies, such as the Grocers, Mercers, Fishmongers, &c., have been entirely omitted ; and so have a number of companies formed to carry on new processes, such as soap, starch, paper, and glass-making, for the history of which there is abundant material in the State Papers and Privy Council Register for the period 1620-40. Even in the case of the companies included it would be impossible in a preliminary survey of this kind to exhaust the wealth of material contained in the State Papers and the MSS. Department of the British Museum. The City of London Repertories, perhaps the richest source of all, have only been directly examined in the case of one company, the Feltmakers. Most of the other references to them are derived from a brief digest contained in the Harleian MSS. 6597, 4. In the case of Remembrancia only the published ' Index' has been consulted. Abbreviations. SPD = State Papers Domestic. PCR = Privy Council Register. City Rep. = City of London Repertories. HMCR = Historical MSS. Commission Report, Appendix. Reraem. = Index to Remembrancia. BM = British Museum. Armourers' Company. 1590-2 City Rep. vol. xxii. If. 163-435. Armourers v. Cutlers. 1635 PCR Apr. 3, May 22, June 4. Artisan v. Trader. Bakers' Company. 1526 Brewer's Letters and Papers of Henry VIII,^ vol. iii. pt. 2, Nos. 1528-9, and vol. iv. pt. 2, 1 Municipal Nos. 2749-50. \ corn supply. Elizabeth : J 1579-83 Remem. pp. 373-S- „ , 1580-1 „ pp. 33, 92. White V. Brown Bakers. 1581 „ p. 33- Assize of Bread. 1592 „ „ » » 1594 ,, p. 376 ,, II ^ , 161 1 „ p. 95. White z/. Brown Bakers. 1619 „ p. 386. A Baker's Budget. 254 APPENDIX B 1620 Remem. pp. 101-2. White v. Brown. 1621 Sign Manual, vol. xii. No. 38. Charter of Biown Bakers. 1624 PCR Apr. 22. Admission of outsiders. Basket-makers' Company. 1565 City Rep. vol. xv. f. 513. Made a separate company. „ „ ,, xvi. ff. 60, 492 „ „ 1594 » » XX"- f- 303- Beavermakers' Company, see Feltmakers. Blacksmiths' Company. 1613 Remem. pp. 217-18. Against a patent for iron rods. Clockmakers' Company (incorporated 1631). 1622 SPD cxxvii. 15-16. Against aliens and importation. Clothworkers' Company. 1479 Calendar of Patent Rolls, p. 153, Membrane 28. Shearmen. 1480 „ „ 221, „ 24. Fullers. 1537 to 1700 Court Books of Clothworkers' Company (the Court Books are continuous up to present day), see extracts, pp. 228-34. Elizabeth : 1566 SPD xli. 49-50 \ 1572 SPD Ixxxviii. 24 1575 SPD cvi. 5 ; cf. Acts of Privy Council, 1576, pp. 73, 106-8, 206 1584 SPD clxxv. 14 ; cf. Acts of Privy Council, 1588, p. 327 1596 SPD cclxi. 39, 47 VAgainst export of 1597 SPD cclxv. 74 /unfinished cloth. 1599 SPD cclxxi. 3 1600 SPD cclxxi V. James I : 1604 SPD vi. log 1606 SPD XX. 9-10 1613 Mar. 3, SPD p. 124, and toil. 69-70 '' 1614 Dec. 2, SPD p. 261 ; Proclamation Coll. No. 35 > 1615 PCR June 7, 19 1616 PCR Jan. 5 ; Feb. 19, 22 ; Apr. 9, 26 ; May 9 ; Grant to New Sept. II, 18, 25, 26 I Merchant „ SPD Ixxxvi. 40, 42, 46 ; Ixxxvii. 57 Adventurers. „ Lansdowne MSS. BM cWi. passim „ Cotton MSS. BM Titus Bv 78/244 / 1617 SPD xc. 9, and Proc. Coll. No. 50 A, Aug. 12, Nov. 27, Sign Manual, vol. viii. No. 77 ; PCR. Restoration of old M. A. 1618 PCR Dec. 20 ) TT ,. ,. ... , ^ 1619 PCR Oct. 10 1 Handicraft v. Merchants. 1622 SPD cxxx. 140-3. Clothworkers v. Drapers. „ SPD cxxxiii. 3, 36. 1624 SPD clxxx. 67. „ Apr. 14, Lords' Calendar, HMCR iii.34. Handicraft regulations. Charles I : 1625 SPD xiv. 14-16. 1627 SPD Ixxxii. 76. 1628 SPD xcviii. 103. 1633 SPD ccxxxvi. 16; cclvii. 1-6. Search of artisans ; against gig mills. MANUSCRIPT SOURCES 255 1634 SPD cclxxviii. 104-7 ) m ^^. 1 t^ „ SPD cclxxxiii. 38 1 Clothworkers v. Drapers. Coopets' Company. 1590 City Rep. vol. xxii. f. 199. Apprenticeship. 1593 Apr. 3, Lords' Calendar, HMCR iii. g \ r- ^ -a i62iMar.9 „ „ „ ;;;_ j^} Coopers z/. Brewers. 1622 SPD cxxvii. 15. Against aliens. Cordwainers' Company. 1575 Lansdowne MSS. BM xxi. 30. ) r- v 1. i- u '576 „ xxii.'39 p"^''^^:ket '°'" 1578 „ xxvi. 6S-6 ) makers. 1580 Remem. pp. 178-9. 1585 SPD clxxvii. 16. Engrossing of leather. 1596 Lansdowne MSS. BM Ixiii. 4 ) T->-rr -^u n „ City Rep. vol. xxii. f. 168 \ D'ff^^nce with Curriers. Curriers' Company. 1566? SPD xli. 23. Reconstitution of compatly. 1596 City Rep. vol. xxiii. f. 519. 1604 „ vol. xxvi. 506. 1614 PCR Sept. Curriers v. Shoemakers. [For an attempt to regulate the tanning of leather by a grant of a patent in 1572-7, see Lansdowne MSS. v. 58 ; xix. 52 ; xxi v. 70-4; also SPD Eliz. xc. 22 ; cv. 5 ; cvi. 55 ; Acts of Privy Council, Jan. 1575-6 and Jan. 1576-7.] Cutlers' Company. 1566 SPD xiii. 36 I Westminster v. London. 1580 Remem. pp. 580-1 \ 1590-2 City Rep. vol. xxii. ff. 163, 435. Cutlers v. Armourers. 1606 „ vol. xxvii. ff. 213, 225, 294. Commonalty v. rulers. „ Remem. p. 93. New charter. 1622 SPD cxxviii. 46-7 } Against aliens and importation. 1623-4 Remem. pp. 260-1 \ " '^ Dyers' Company. Elizabeth : 1567 Lansdowne MSS. BM ix. 62 ) introduction of craftsmen. 1577 „ „ xxiv. 66 ( 1592 House of Lords MSS. HMCR. iii. 6. Logwood. James I : 1606-8 Remem. pp. 1 18-9. Dyeing silk. 1608 SPD xxxix. 42, 62 1614-7 Remem. pp. 120-2 1621 SPD xlii. 49, 56 1622 SPD cxxvii. 114; cxxxiii. 4-9) __ 1623 SPD cxxxvii. 9-10 exclude aliens. Charles 1 : 1 1628 SPD cxi. 33 j 1630 Remem. p. 123 Charles II : 1661 SPD XXX. 41. Additions to charter. rCf. Commons' Journals, viii. 131 ; x. 280; xi. 44-Si 96, 392-4; and for logwood patent cf. SPD James I, cxu. 109 ; cxvi. 47; cxxii. 96; cxxix. 67 ; cxxxi. 65.] Struggle for monopoly and to 256 APPENDIX B Cityrefuses to admit. . Feltmakers' struggle for recognition by City. Proclamation against Farriers' Company. 1617 SPD xli. 56. Accounts; joint-stock; clerk. 1679 Mar. 5, SPD, Entry Book, vol. xxxvi. f. 175. Heads of charter. Feltmakers' Company. For previous documents see Haberdashers. James I : 1604 July 29, SPD viii. 138. Grant of charter. 1605 City Rep. vol. xxvii. f. 72 1607 SPD xxxix. 34 1610 City Rep. vol. xxix. f. 266 1611-2 „ „ XXX. ff. 97, loi, 245, 375 „ Cotton MSS. BM Titus Bv 115-18. Joint-stock project. 1612 Remem. p. 95. 1613 Dec. 2, SPD, Proc. Coll. No. 26. Proclamation against imports. 1613 City Rep. vol. xxxi. f. 45. 1614 „ ,, xxxii. f. 19. „ PCR Mar. 16. 16 1 7 SPD xciv. 116. Supply of materials. 1618 City Rep. vol. xxxiii. ff. 343, 354 \ „ PCR May 25 1619 PCR July 25 „ City Rep. vol. xxxiv. ff. 36, 324 1622 „ „ xxxvi. f. 233 ,, Aug. 24, SPD p. 442 (vol. 1619-23)'' 1623 SPD clii. 54, and Proc. Coll. No. 117. imports. 1624 May 20, Lords' Calendar, HMCR iii.33 ; cf. Commons' Journals, i, Apr. 14; May 12, 19. Charles I : 1631 SPD cxcvii. 16. 1632 PCR Feb. 28. ,, City Rep. vol. xlvi. ff. 401, 405, 438. 1634 SPD cclxix. 39. 1636 Book of Petitions, Chas. I, cccxxiii. p. 50. 1637 SPD ccclxvi. 68. 1638 City Rep. vol. liii. f. 60 „ SPD ccclxxxii. 53, in May 26, O. XX. 230 „ May I SPD p. 392 „ PCR Dec. 19 ,, SPD cccxci. 25 1639 PCR Feb. 22 „ SPD ccccix. 126, 196 „ SPD ccccx. 142, 144, 145 „ Feb. I, Book of Petitions, Chas. I, cccciii. 26, 92 „ SPD ccccxvii. 2, ccccxviii. 72 „ SPD ccccxxii. s ; ccccxxviii. 2, 43, 77 „ Carew Transcripts at Record Office, i. 52 1640 SPD ccccxli. 25 ; ccccxliii. 85 ,, PCR Jan. 17, 24, 31 J „ Nov. 25, Lords' Calendar, HMCR iv. 29 f Refractory members. 1043 „ „ V.119I Rymer, Foedera, Beavermakers V. Feltmakers. MANUSCRIPT SOURCES 257 Feltmakers admitted by City. Skinners v. Feltmakers. See pp. 247-52. Division amongst [Commons' Journals, Aug. 7, 1644; July 2, Sept. 5, 1649; Oct. 23, 1650.] 1650 City Rep. vol. Ixi. ff. 16, 193 1658 „ „ Ixvi. f. 117 1663 „ ,, Ixix. f. 310 1665 SPD cxxii. 107 1666 PCR Apr. 27. 1667 PCR Apr. 26 1667 June 27. Feltmakers' charter. „ Oct. 8 j Extracts from City Rep. in Feltmakers' Book. See 1668 July 7 i pp. 245-6. i69?1o present } Feltmakers' Court Book. Framework Knitters' Company. 1661 SPD xxxii. 156, charter. Glaziers' Company. 1620 SPD cxiii. 47-53 ) g J , materials 1621 SPD cxx. 71, 89 i ^"PP'y 01 materials. 1625 Mar. 9, Lords' Calendar, HMCR iv. 6. members. 1637 May 5, SPD p. 68. Petition for incorporation. Glovers' Company. 1593 Harleian MSS. BM 6850. James I : Lansdowne MSS. BM Ixxiii. 17 ; Ixxiv. 40-62, re Mr. Darcy's patent. 1619 Add. MSS. BM 12504, ff. 102-16. Petition for incorporation. 1620-1 Mar. 12, Lords' Calendar, HMCR. Draft Act for incorpora- tion. 1622 SPD cxxvii. 20-1. Against aliens. Charles I : \ 1636 SPD vol. 1635-6, p. 552 1637 SPD ccclxxvii. 38 I Incorporation opposed by Leather- 1638 SPD ccclxxxvi. 90 I sellers. 1638? SPD ccccvii. 95 „ Apr. 29, PCR Gold and Silver Wiredrawers. James I : 1611-21 Lords' Calendar, HMCRiii.l3-26\ 1619 SPD ex. 127 1620 SPD cxiii. 61 ; cxviii. 98, 99, 128 „ SPD cxix. 123 1622 SPD cxxx. 33 ; cxxxii. 17 „ SPD Sep. 23, p. 448 1623 SPD cxxxviii. Ill [Cf. Commons' Journals, i. 726] Goldsmiths' Company. James I : 1616 Remem. p. 219. 1620 SPD cxiii. 119. 1621 SPD cxxvii. 12. Charles I : 1627 Remem. p. 226. 1635 „ p. III. ■ Mompesson's monopoly. Against gold thread monopoly. Commonalty v. Assistants. Against aliens. and Haberdashers. 258 APPENDIX B Gutstring-makers. 1637 SPD ccclxxii. 80. Petition for incorporation. Haberdashers' Company. 1510 Nov. 12 Brewer's Letters and Papers of Hen. VHI,\ p. 195, No. 1317 Control 1513 Miir.ii-i'i'Brewtr'sLettersandPapersofHen.Vni, of hat Nos. 3784, 3794 r and cap 1514 June I, July 8 Brewer's Letters and Papers of trade. Hen. VI H, Nos. 5144, 5239 / 1576 Lansdowne MSS. BM xxiv. 7. Feltmakers' petition for separation. 1577 Lansdowne MSS. BM xxviii. 29. Star Chamber decree. 1577-8 City Rep. vol. xix. ff. 284, 474 \ Yp\tm7,Vcr^ 1579-80 Lansdowne MSS. BM xxviii. 28, 30, 31 -^ eumaKers jj }j ,j ^t xxix. 23—7 „ City Rep. vol. xx. f. 38 1583 Lansdowne MSS. xxxviii. 4. Ag-ainst country feltmakers. 1584-1604 Haberdashers' Court Book, see above, pp. 134-5. 1591 City Rep. vol. xxii. ff. 251, 267. See also under Feltmakers and Pimnakers. Horners' Company. 1593 Lansdowne MSS. BM Ixxiii. 15. 1597 . » „ ,, Ixxxvi. 12. 1600 City Rep. vol. xxiv. ff. 140, 290, 297. Ordinances. 1668 SPD Proc. Coll. Chas. II, No. 264. Against export of horn. Hour-glass makers. James I : 1620 SPD cxiii. 20 s Charles I : a ■ 1 1637 SPD ccclxxiii. 82 \ ^Sainst glass monopoly. 1638 SPD ccclxxviii. J foiners' Company. James I : 1613 Remem. p. 96. Search over other trades. 1615 „ p. 98. Masterpiece. 1622 SPD cxxviii. 60. Aliens. Leathersellers' Company. Elizabeth : 1592 City Rep. vol. xxii. ff. 353. 364-7, 399-401. City searchers. 1593 Lansdowne MSS. BM Ixxiii. 17 ; Ixxiv. 40-62 ,, Harleian MSS. BM 6842, 71 1593-5 Remem. pp. 179-82 1594 City Rep. vol. xxiii. ff. 296, 346-9, 471 , James I : 1608 SPD xxxi. 1622 Aug. I, Lords' Calendar, HMCR iii. 27. See also Glovers. Needlemakers' Company. 1629 Remem. pp. 104, 105. An engine prohibited. Opposition to Darcy's patent for searching leather. MANUSCRIPT SOURCES 259 y Tin monopoly. 1662 SPD Ivii. I 1 1663 Nov. 17, SPD p. 343 Grant of charter. 1664 Jan. 21, „ p. 449J 1669 Apr. 5, Proc. Coll. p. 268. Import forbidden. Painters' Company. 1575 Lansdowne MSS. BM vol. xx. No. 9. '57^ ), ,, „ „ xxii. Nos. 47-53. 1578 SPD cxxv. 28. Painters v. Heralds. 1598 City Rep. vol. xxiv. f. 245 1 Painters v. Plais- l6oi Dec. 12, House of Lords MSS. HMCRiii. 10 ( terers 1619 SPD cv. 80. ' 1675 Harleian MSS. BM 1099. Co-operation. Pattenmakers' Company. 1669 SPD Charles II, cclx. 70 \ ^ 1670 SPD p. 189; Doquet,vol.xxiv.i7o \ Incorporation. Pewterers' Company. Elizabeth : 1559 SPD ix. 36. Charter. 1593 Salisbury MSS. Pt. iv. 463 (HMCR) „ Lords' Calendar, HMCR iv. 9 1595 SPD cclii. 76-7 1597 Salisbury MSS. Pt. vii. 136 (HMCR) „ Lansdowne MSS. BM bcxxvi. 67 and 71 James I : 1603 SPD ii. 45 1604 SPD Sept. 25, p. 152 ; Remem. p. 93 1606 SPD xxiii. 56 1610 SPD liv. 25 1615 SPD Jan. 19, p. 270; Grant Book, p. 135 1621 May 14, Lords' Calendar, HMCR iv. 121 ^ 1622 SPD cxxviii. III. Hammermen z/. Pewterers. Charles I : \ 1629-35 Remem. pp. 107-11 1636 SPD cccxxvi. 8 1639 SPD ccccix. 15; ccccxx. 38 „ Collection of Proclamations, Charles I, 222 „ Book of Petitions, ccciii. 100 > „ PCR Jan. I, July 4, July 17 ) Workmen again 1641 May 28, Lords' Calendar, HMCR iv. 69 ( complain. Pinmakers' Company. 1464-96 Egerton MSS. BM 1142. Account books of Pinmakers and request for amalgamation with Wiremongers. 1567 SPD Eliz. xliii. 31 \ 1571 „ „ xix. 63 1587 „ „ cc. 53 1591 )) » ccxxxix. 18 1592 Salisbury MSS. Pt. iv.276 (HMCR) 1597 „ ,, vii. p. 545 1598 Jan.l6, Lords' Calendar, HMCR iv. 1 16/ 1605 Apr. 16, SPD p. 211. Incorporation. 1607 SPD xxvi. 100 ,, Remem. p. 519 1607-9 Lansdowne MSS. BM clii. 62 „ Harleian „ „ 6842, 69 „ Cotton „ „ Titus Bv 105 S 2 - Tin monopoly. Re importation of pins. Pinmakers V. Haberdashers. Sir T. Bartlett's mono- poly. 260 APPENDIX B 1614 Remem. p. 77 ; SPD Ixxviii. 1615-18 Remem. pp. 522-5 1616 SPD Ixxxvi. 146 „ PCR Apr. 21, June 16, Nov. 20 1618 PCR Oct. 23 1619 „ „ SPD Jas. I, ex. 132 1620 PCR Mar. 21 Charles I : 1632 SPD ccxxix. 55. 1635 SPD cccii. 122. 1637 SPD ccclxv. 33 ; ccclxxxvii. 58. 1638 SPD cccxcvii. 20 ; cccc. 86-7. ,, SPD ccccvii. 100. 1639 Mar. 4, SPD pp. 531-2 ; ccccxxxvi. I ; ccccxxxviii. 51. „ PCR June 16, Sept. 15. 1640 PCR Mar. 18, see pp. 236-40. „ Nov. 25, Lords' Calendar, HMCR iv. 29. 1652 SPD xxv. 76. Charles II : 1663 SPD Ixxix. 120. 1664 SPD xci. 95 ; xciii. 60-1. „ Jan. 28, House of Lords MSS. HMCR vii. 179. 1665 PCR May ig, June 2. 1675 Morrison MSS. HMCR ix. 450. 1690 House of Lords MSS. Oct. 10 (289), p. iii. [Cf. Case of Corporation of Pinmakers, BM 816 m. 13, 89. Pinmakers' Case in opposition to Mr. Killigrew's Bill, BM.] Plaisterers' Company. 1582 Remem. p. 153. 1597 SPD cclxii. 30. „ City Rep. vol. xxiv. f. 67. 1601 See Painters and Lansdowne MSS. cvi. 57-9. 1613 June I, |PD P-J86^_ ^^^^^^^ j pj^jsterers v. Bricklayers. 1637 SPD ccclxvii. 88. Freemasons v. Plaisterers. 1664 Commons' Journals, viii. 553. Plaisterers v. Paperstainers. Playing Card-makers' Company. Charles I : 1629 SPD civ. 62. 1631 SPD clxxxv. 18; PCR f. 40. 1640 SPD cccclxxvii. 64. Plumbers'' Company. James I : 161 1 SPD Ixii. 56. Charter. 161 8-19 Remem. pp. 220-3 \ SPD cxi' ^67^ ''• 3 L Capt. Bell's patent for search of lead. 1620 SPD cxv. 59; cxvi. 104) 1632 PCR Mar. 15. Bad lead. Shipwrights' Companies. James 1 : 1605 Apr. 16, SPD p. 211. Charter to shipwrights of England. MANUSCRIPT SOURCES 261 161 3 SPD Ixxiv. 28, 92. Refractory members. Charles I : 1628 SPD xciv. 91. „ SPD cxix. 31. Number employed. „ SPD cxxvi. 26. Demands of calkers. 1633 SPD ccxxxix ) , , . . , 1634 SPD cccxiii. 18 i Materials. 163s SPD cclxiv. 134. „ SPD ccxciii. 55-6; cciv. 18. Building for foreign states. 1636 ccvii. 90-1, cccxi. 52; cccxvi. 70; cccxvii. 64-, „ SPD cccxviii. i, 30 London Ship- ,, SPD cccxx. 14 ; cccxxi. 52 Vwrights w. Rother- „ SPD cccxxvii. 37 hithe Shipwrights. 1637 SPD ccclxiii. 72 ; ccclxiv. 60 ' 1638 SPD ccclxxix. 27, c] Calkers „ SPD cccliii. 87-92 \ V. „ Feb. 19 SPD p. 268J Shipwrights. [1704 Commons' Journals; xiv. 482. Corporation desired by working shipwrights.] Silkmen's Company. 161 1 Remem. pp. 94-5. Petition for charter. Charles I : 1633 PCR Jan. 27. Charter. 1634 SPD cclxxviii. 39. Refractory members. 1635 SPD cccix. 27. Lawsuit re silk dyeing. 1636 SPD cccxli. III. 1637 SPD ccclxii. 104. Refractory members. Charles II : 1667 PCR Sept. 25, Oct. 4, 16, 23 ; of 14 Charles II, c. 15 and 19 and 20 Charles II, c. 11. Skinners' Company. 1564 City Rep. vol. xv. fol. 432. Amalgamation of Tawyers and Skinners. 1591 Salisbury MSS. Pt. iv. 91, 94 (HMCR) , 1592 Lansdowne MSS. BM Ixxi. 54 ; Ixxiii. 16 1594 City Rep. vol. xxiii. f. 251 James I : 1606 Remem. p. 93; City Rep. vol. xxvii. ff. 176, 321, 351, and vol. xxviii. f. 26 rt.rusan [Cf Livery Companies Comm. Rept. i. 388, and I skinners Statutes, 3 Jac. I, c. 9] ) v „ Cotton MSS. BM Titus Bv ff. 66, 19 ' 1616 SPD Ixxxvi. 77 „ PCR Nov. 23 1617 PCR Jan. Feb. 26 1618 SPD xcvii. 102 1636 SPD cccxxix. 30 1639 PCR Jan. 23 Charles 1 1 : 1665 SPD cxxii. 107; cxxv. 16 ) Skinners v. Feltmakers. 1666 SPD ccx. 125 ) Stationers' Company. See documents inserted in Arbefs Transcript. Artisan skinners V. Merchants. First charter. Second charter. 262 APPENDIX B Tilers and Erickmakers' Company (of Westminster), James I : 1620 SPD cxii. 80. Charles I : 1636 SPD cccxv. 141. 1637 SPD ccclxii. 81 ; ccclxxii. 58-9. 1638 SPD ccclxxxviii. 65 ; cccxcix. 43. 1639 SPD ccccxvii. 66 ; ccccxviii. 25. Tobacco-pipe makers. James I : 1619 SPD cix. 160 1620 SPD xcv. 53 ; cxv. 104 ; cxvi. 83 Charles I : 1627 SPD Ixxxix. 12 1638 PCR Aug. 19 Charles II : 1662 SPD lii. 32 ; Ix. g ; Ixi. 12 1663 SPD Ixxii. 70 1664 SPD xcvii. 65 Weavers' Cotnpany (for earlier references see Ashley, Econ. Hist. Pt. I, 86, and Pt. II, 193-201. Also above, pp. 28-30). Henry VIII: 1529 Star Chamber case printed in Cunningham, i, 620 Elizabeth : 1583 Lansdowne MSS.BM 38, 16 ) 1590 City Rep. vol. xxii. ff. 196, 202. Yeomanry's complaint. 1595 „ „ xxiii. ff. 350, 373, 406. Weavers' variance with Bailiff. 1596 City Rep. vol. xxiii. f. 513. Ordinances, number of appren- tices, &c. James I : 161 1 Remem. p. 95. Relations to Silkmen. 1612-14 „ p. 521. 1615 SPD Ixxxi. 9-56. Against aliens. 1619 SPD cix. 64, 65. Company's estates. 1622 SPD cxxxi. 76 ; cxxxii. 75 ; cxxxiii. 63 ) Weavers' exclusive „ Remem. p. 103 \ rights. Charles I : 1630 SPD clxxx. 70; PCR Sept. 15 ) -n. • -n ^««- gen, 1900. London. See Riley, Sharpe, Stow, Strype. Maitland, F. W., The Introduction to Giercke's Political Theories of the Middle Ages. 1900. Man, J., History of Reading. Reading, 1816. Markham, C. a. and Cox, J. C, Records of the Borough of Northampton. 2 vols. 1898. Martin Saint-L£on, E., Histoire des corporations des metiers. Paris, 1897. Le Compagnonnage. Paris, 1901. Moens, W. J. C, The Walloons and their Church at Norwich. London, 1888. , , ,, , ., Mummenhoff, E., Der Handwerker in der deutschen Vergangenhett. Leipzig, 1901. 268 APPENDIX C More, Sir T., Utopia. Morris, R. H., Chester in the Plantagenet and Tudor Reigns Chester. Newcastle. See Brand, Surtees Society. NiCHOL, J., Some Account of the Worshipful Company of Ironmongers. 1866. Northampton. See Markham. Norwich. See Blomefield, Hudson, Tingey. Nottingham. See Stevenson. NiJBLiNG, EuGEN, Ulm' s Baumwollweberei im Mittelalter. SchmoUer, Forschungen. 1890. Overall, H. W. and H. C, Analytical Index to the Series of Records, known as the Reme7nbrancia, 1579-1664. 1878. Oxford. See Turner, Wilson. Pauli, R., Drei volkswirthschaftliche Denkschriften aus der Zeit Heinrichs VIII von England. 1878. Poehlmann, L., Die, WirthschaftspoUtik der Florentiner Renaissance, 1878. Reading. See under England, Man. RiCART, R., The Maire of Bristow is Kalendar. Ed., E. Toulmin Smith. Camden Soc, No. 85. RiLEY, H. T., Memorials of London in the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Centuries. 8°. London, 1868. Munimenta Gildhallae Londoniensis. 4 vols. I. Liber Albus. 2. I, II, Liber Custmnartmt. 3. Translation of Anglo-Norman passages in I. 1859-62. Translation of the Liber Albus. 1861. Rivington, C. R., The Records of the Worshipful Company of Stationers. 1883. Robins, E. C, Som.e Account of the History and Antiquities of the Worshipful Company of Dyers. London. Transactions of Londoji and Middlesex Arch. Soc, v. pp. 441-76. 1881. RODOCANACHI, E., Les corporations ouvriires d. Rome. 2 vols. Paris, 1894. Rowsell, R. F., The Ancient Companies of Exeter, in Western Anti- quary, iv. pp. 187-9. Russell, W. H., The Laws of the Mercers Company of Lichfield. Transactions of Royal Hist. Soc. 1893. Salisbury. See Hoare. Savary des Bruslons, J., Dictionnaire universel de commerce. 1750-65. SCHANZ, G., Englische Handelspohtik gegen Ende des Mittelalters. 1881. Zur Geschichte der deutschen Gesellenverbdnde itn Mittelalter. 1877. Ztir Geschichte der Kolonisation und Industrie in Franken. 1884. Schmoller, G. (ed.), fahrbuch fUr Gesetzgebung, Verwaltung und Volkswirthschaft im deutschen Reich. 1877-1902. (ed.), Staats- tind socialwissenschaftliche Forschungen. 1879-1902. Strassburger Tucher- und Weberzunft. 1 879. Umrisse und Untersuchungen zur Verfassungs-, Verwaltungs- und Wirthschaftsgeschichte besonders des preussischen Staates im 17. und li,. fahrhundert. Leipzig, 1898. Grundriss der allgemeinen Volkswirthschaftslehre, i. Leipzig, 1900. Studien Uber die wirthschaftliche Politik Friedrichs des Grossen. In h\s fahrbuch fiir Gesetzgebung, vols, viii-xi. LIST OF BOOKS 269 Die Hausindustrie undihre dlteren Ordnungen und Reglements. In Jahrbuch, xi. 1887. Die geschichtliche Entwickelung der Unternehmung. In Jahrbuch, xiii-xvii. Sellers, M., York in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, in Historical Review for 1 8 97. Sharpe, R. R., Calendar of Letter-books among the Archives of the City of London, 1275-1314. 4 vols. 1899-1902. A short Account of the Worshipful Company of Shipwrights. Sherwell, J. W., Historical Account of the Guild of Saddlers. London, 1889. Shrewsbury. See under Cunningham, Drinkwater, England, Hibbert, Leighton. SiDGWiCK, H., The Development of European Polity. 1903. SlEVEKING, Heinrich, Die Genueser Seidenindustrie im 15. und 16. Jahrhundert. In Schmo\\e.r's Jahrbuch fiir Gesetzgebung for 1897. Smiles, S., The Huguenots, their settlements, churches, industries in England and Ireland. 1889. Smith, A., An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. Edition, 1812. . Smith, J., Chronicon-Rusticum-Commerciale, or, Memoirs of Wool. 1747- Smith, J. Toulmin, English Gilds, in Early English Text Society publications. 1 870. Sombart, W., Der modeme Kapitalismus. 2 vols. 1902. Southampton. See Davies. S>VEX>T>l'iiG,]., Life and Letters of Francis Bacon. 7 vols. 1861-72. Stahlschmidt, J. E. C, Notes fro7n an Old City Account Book, Arch. Journal, xlii. 1886. Starkey, Thomas, A Dialogue between Cardinal Pole and Thomas Lupset. Published by Early English Text Society. 1878. STKVEliSON,W. H., Records of Notting-ham. 5 vols. 1882-1900. StiEDA, M.,Die Entstehung der Hausindustrie, in Schriften des Vereins fUr Social-Politik. Bd. xxix. 1889. Stow, J. See Strype. Strype, J., Stow's Survey of London. Enlarged edition, 1720. SURTEES Society. The Merchant Adventurers Company of Newcastle- on-Tyne. 2 vols. Switzerland. See under Geering. Thun, a.. Die Industrie am Niederrhein und ihre Arbeiter. In Schmoller, Forschungen. iSyg. TiNGEY, J. C, So?ne Notes upon the Craft Guilds of Norwich. Transactions of Quatuor Coronati Lodge, xv. pp. 197-204. 1902. Troeltsch,' W., Die Calwer Zeughandlungskompagnie. 1897. Turner, W. H., Select Records of Oxford, 1509-83. 1880. Wadmore, J. F., History and Antiquities of the Company of Skinners. 1876. WaLFORD, C, Gilds, their origin, &c. 1888. Weavers Company of London, Facsimile of the Ancient Book of. 1 885 . Breviat of the Weavers Case. B. M. 1648. Case of the Commonalty of Weavers. Guildhall Lib. 1648. Webb, Sidney and Beatrice, History of Trade Unionism. 1894. Industrial Democracy. 2 vols. 1897. 270 APPENDIX C Welch, C, History of the Pewterers Company. 2 vols. 1903. Williams, W. M., Annals of the Founders Company. Privately printed. 1867. Wilson, J., The Cordwainers and Corvesors of Oxford, in Arch. fournal, vi. pp. 146-59, 266-79. Worcester. See under England. Wright, T., Collection of Political Poems and Songs relating to English History. In Rolls Series. 2 vols. 1859-61. York. See Drake, Sellers. INDEX Abbeville, 8i. Addled Parliament, the, l8l. Aix-la-Chapelle, textile trades of, i8. Aliens, 27 n. 2, 82, 90, 134, 229, 248. Alum monopoly, 145 «. Amiens, 46, 49, 81. Apothecaries'Company of London, 136. Apprentices, Statute of, I19, 137- 41, 252. Apprenticeship, 34-5, 48, 60, 62, 117, 138, 170, I99> 212, 217, 246-7. Armourers' Company of London, 143, 253- Armourers of Paris, 48. Arras, 46^., 80. Assistants, Court of, 42-5, 60, 73, 1 17-18, 120, 121, 134, 201, 206, 209, 217, 230-4. Assize of victuals, 67. Auvergne, 80. Bachelors' Company, 52. Bacon, Lord, 172-3, 184, 191. Bakers, 2, 61, 67-8. Bakers' Company of London, 67-8, 253- Bank of England, 150. Banking, 152, 157. Bartlett, Sir T., 165-8. Basketmakers' Company of Lon- don, 212, 254. Basle, 81. Battersea, 218, 219. Beavermakers' Company of Lon- don, I4S, 203, 256. Bedfordshire, 6. Bermondsey, 128. Bethnal Green, 6, 225. Beverley, 27. Birmingham, 6. Blackburn, 39. Black Country, 6. Blacksmiths, I, 38 «. Blacksmiths' Company of London, 51, 108, 254. Blackwell Hall, 90, loi, 192, 233. Blanks, 215. Boileau, i^tienne, 31. Booth, Mr. C, 6. Bottomry, 151. Bourges, 96 «. Braintree, 188. Breechersmakers of Paris, 46, 47, no. Bremen, 20. Brickmakers' Company of London, 147. Bridewell, 159. Bridgewater, 93, 187. Bristol, 39, 47, 50, 68, 76-7, S^n., 86 n., 95 n., 98. Bromsgrove, 91. Bruges, 89. Buckinghamshire, 188. Building trades, 64. Burellers of London, 28-30. Burke, Edmund, 13. Bury St. Edmunds, 86, 94, 147. Butchers, 2, 61, 67-8. Butchers' Company of London, 147. Caesar, Sir Julius, 192. Calw, cloth trade of, 1 75. Canterbury, 236. Capitalism, industrial, 12, 16-19, 37, 46-7, 72-3, 79> 85-93, 97, 107, 124-5, 166, 175, 182-3, 196, 198-9, 202-4, 209, 225, 235. Cappers, 44, 71-2, 80, 82. Carpenters of Worcester, 65. Carpenters' Company of London, 109, 212. Caulkers of ships, 143. Chalons, 119. Chancery, 163. Chapman, 159-62, 243. Chard, 93, 187. Charitable bequests, 93, 152. Charles I, industrial policy of, 141, 272 INDEX 143-7, 168-9, 200, 203-4, 226, 234, 236-40. Chaucer, 5, 131. Cherbourg, 84 n. Chester, 49, 50, 66, 68, 72, ^T, 78, 84 «., 85, 95, 99, 104. Clerks of Companies, 163 n. Clockmakers' Company of Lon- don, 108, i36«., 203;^., 207,254. Cloth, manufacture of, 26-37, 44~ 5, 53-4, 86-102, 105, 112, 123, 180, 188, 191, 234-6. Clothiers, 36, 49, 85, 86-102, 104, 174, 234-6. Clothworkers' Company of Lon- don, 44-5, 57, 105, II2-2S, 136, 142, 198-9, 201-2, 206, 228-34, 254-5- Clubs, Journeymen's, 221, 250-1. Cobblers, 2, 63, 85. Cockayne, Alderman, 124, 166, 181, 182, 201. Coggeshall, 188. Coke, Chief Justice, 207. Colbert, ill, 172, 187-8. Colchester, clothiers of, 147, 336. Collective purchase of materials, I49> 153-6, 162-4. Cologne, 8g. Combination laws, i227. Combmakers of London, 147 «. Commenda, 151. Commons, House of, 164, 173, 207, 213, 214, 218, 224. Companies: j^« Joint Stock, Livery, London, Merchants. Cordwainers of London, 19, 22 n., 64 ; of Paris, 21, 149, 255. Corporations, case of, 207, 208. Corps de Metier of Paris, 42, 52, 79- Coventry, 38, 50, 54, 65, 75, 78, 97. Cranfield, Sir Lionel, 184. Crown, The, 14, 107, 136, 142, 168, 173, 181, 186, 189, 193, 203, 226, 234, 236. Curriers of London, 9, 22 «., 255 ; of Paris, 20, 149 ; of Reading, 84. Cutlers of London, 24, 108, 144, 255; of Paris, 25, 109; ofRuhIa, 26 ; of Sheffield, 6, 226. Darcy's patent, 142. Devizes, 84. Devon, clothiers of, 174, 18S, 226, 235- Division of labour, 9. Domestic system, 3, 6, 22, 52, 56, 72, 81, 103-5, 107, 127, 219, 225, 228-32, 235-6, 240-2. Dorchester, 84. Doublet-makers of Paris, 47, 50. Draper, the, 30, 86-102, 252. Drapers of London, 30, 44, 57, 75. 79, 105, 107, 233 ; of Stras- burg, 30, 36; of Paris, 32; of Rouen, 35. Droitwich, 91. Durham, 40, 78. Dutch merchants, 165, 170, 176. Dyers, 27 ; of London, 30, 255 ; of Paris, 32. East, trade with the, 180. East India Company, 151. Edward VI, 56, 109. Elizabeth, Queen, 97, 103, 109, 142, 154, 165. Essex, cloth industry of, 90, 188. Evesham, 91. Exeter, 39, 50, 76, 83, 236. Export, restrictions on, 89, 106, 113, 122-3, 150- Factory system, 5. Farriers' Company of London, 163, 256. Faversham, 84. Fellmongers, 39. Felt hats, 71, 131. Feltmakers' Company of London, 79, 130-6, 142, 145-6, 156-64, 166, 183, 196-7, 215-25, 240-52, 256. Flanders, 18, 35, 180. Fleet prison, 164. Florence, textile trades of, 18, 81, 89. Founders' Company of London, 109, 205, 207. Framework-knitters' Company of London, 226, 257. Framlingham, 252. France, industrial policy of, 136, 177, 218, 227; trade with, 177, 217. Frederick the Great, 172. Frederick of Wiirtemberg, 179. Free Trade, 14, 100-2, 194-5. French immigrants, 218, 248. Fugger family, 88. Fullers, of Florence and Ghent, 18, organized as a craft, 27 ; of London, 30, 44, 231 ; of Paris, 32, 46. INDEX 273 Gardeners' Company of London, 2I2«. Gardiner, S. R., 1^6 n., 173. Genoa, 80. Germany, 6, 26, 36, 42, 49, Si. 54, 81, 87-8, III, 176, 179, 187, 227. Ghent, textile trades of, 18, 89. Gild, craft, 7, lo-li, 13, 16-19, 21-2, 27, 41, 61, 70, 74, 103, 149, I7S, 201, 213, 216. Gild merchant, 16, 70, 148. Girdlers' Company of London, 108, 165; of Paris, no, 149. Glass, 183. Glaziers' Company of London, 144, 257. Gloucester, 38, 40, 50, 68 n., 78. Gloucestershire, 188, 191, 236. Glovers, 39, 84. Glovers' Company of London, 79, 129, 211, 257 ; of Paris, 149. Gold and silver thread monopoly, 145 n., 257. Goldsmiths' Company, 43, 74, 108, 129, 257. Gordon, Sir Alexander, 141. Gravesend, 84. Grimsby, Great, 73. Grocers' Company of London, 79. Gross, Dr., 74. Gutstring-makers' Company of London, 147, 258. Haberdashers of Exeter and York, 83- Haberdashers' Company of Lon- don, 44, 79, 81, 106, 108, 127, 129-35, 145, 157, 165-7, 196-8, 240-5, 258. Halifax, 188. Halstead, Mr., 169, 236-40. Hampshire, 188. Handicraft, 2. Handlemakers of London, 25 ; of Paris, 25. Hatband-makers' Company of London, 147. Hats, felt, 131, 215 ; silk, 214. Hatters of London, 44, 79, 82, 214 ; of Paris, 46. Hatters' Fair Trade Union, 214. Henry III of France, 136. Henry IV of France, 137, 177, 188, 189. Henry VIII of England, 89, 102, 108, 131. Hereford, 50, 68«., 78, 84 «. Hewett, Sir W., 45. Holland, trade with, 165, 167, igi. Homers' Company of London, 147, 258. Hourglass-makers' Company of London, 258. House of call, 227. House of Commons :ji?£ Commons. Huguenots, 218-19, 248. Hull, 63, 76. Impositions, 183-6. Ipswich, 87, 97, 147. Ireland, 77, 80, 185. Ironmongers'Companyof London, 78, 108, 169. Italian cities, 81, 150. James I, 135, 141, 145, 155, 165, 173, 179, 181-93. Jersey, 185. Joiners' Company of London, 108, 212, 258. Joint-stock enterprise, 13, 150-64, 240-2. Journeyman, The, 11-12, 47-63, 66, 118-20, 126, 197, 199-201, 204, 210, 213-27. Judges of Assize, 56. Justices of the Peace, 56, 147. Kent, 122-3, 188. Kidderminster, 91. King : see Crown. Kingston, 84. Laffemas, Barth^lemy, 178. Laissez-faire, 226. Lambeth, 128, 219. Lancaster, 39. Leather crafts, 19-24,39, 128, 149. Leathersellers' Companies in Lin- coln and Reading, 83. Leathersellers' Company of Lon- don, 79, 83, 106, 108, 127-30, 142, 211, 258. Leeds, Clothiers' company of, 147. Leicester, 27 n. Leicestershire, 188. Lettres de maitrise, 136. Levellers, 210. Lichfield, 78. Lincoln, 27 n., 64, 66, 95. Lincolnshire, 118. List, Frederick, 193. Liverpool 39, 63. Livery Companies, 7, 41, 73, 79- 274 INDEX London, Companies of : — Apothecaries, 136. Armourers, 143, 253. Bakers, 68, 253. Basketmakers, 212, 254. Beavermakers, 145, 256. Blacksmiths, 51, 108, 136,254. Brickmakers, 147. Broderers, 48 n. Butchers, 147. Carpenters, 109, 212. Clockmakers, 108, 136 «., 207, 254. Clothworkers, 44-S, 57, 105, 112-125, 136, 142, 198-9, 201-2, 206, 228-34, 254-5. Combmakers, 147 «. Coopers, 255. Cordwainers, 19, 22 n., 64, 255. Curriers, 19, 22 n., 255. Cutlers, 24, 108, 144, 255. Drapers, 30, 44, 57, 75, 79, ioS-7, 233. Dyers, 30, 255. Farriers, 163, 256. Feltmakers, 79, 130-6, 142, 145-6, 156-64, 166, 183, 196-7, 215-25, 240-52, 256. Founders, 109, 205, 207^ Framework-knitters, 226, 257. Fullers, 30, 441 Gardeners, 212 «. Girdlers, 108, 165. Glaziers, 144, 257. Glovers, 79, 129, 211, 257. Gold and Silver Wiredrawers, 257. Goldsmiths, 43, 74, 108, 129, 257. Grocers, 79. Gutstring-makers, 147, 258. Haberdashers, 44, 79, 81, 106, I08, 127, 129-35, 145, 157, 165-7, 196-8, 240-5, 258. Hatband - makers' Company, 147. Hosiers, 147, 258. Hourglass-makers, 258. Ironmongers, 79, 108, 169. Joiners, 108, 212, 258. Leathersellers, 79, 83, 106, 108, 127-130, 142, 211, 258. Mercers, 79, 81. Merchant Taylors, 44, 52, 55«.j 106, 1 14-15, 202. Needlemakersj 258* London, Companies of {cont.) : — Painter-stainers, 259. Pattenmakers, 259. Paviors, 212. Pewterers, 61, 108, 143, 153-6, 163, 166, 207, 259. Pinmakers, 79, 136, 164-71, 176, 183, 203, 259. Plasterers, 144, 260. Playing - card - makers, 144. 203, 260. Plumbers, 144, 260. Saddlers, 22, 108, 207. Shipwrights, 143, 212, 260. Silkmen, 129, 261. Skinners, 44, 104, 129, I36«., 183, 202, 261. Soapmakers, 253. Starchmakers, 136, 253. Stationers, 108, 143, 207. Tilers and Bricklayers, 144, 261-2. Tobacco - pipe - makers, 147, 262. Weavers, 28, 109, 136, 204, 205, 207, 210, 262. Long Parliament, 208. Lord Chancellor, 56, 143, 173, 176. Lord Chief Justice, 133, 141, 143, 223. Lorimers of London, 22 ; of Paris, 24, 46. Louis IX, 87. Louis XIV, 172, 218. Lubeck, 20. Lydsey, Mr., 168, 236-40. Lynn, 91. Lyons, silk manufacture of, no. Maiden, 188. Manchester, 39. Marlborough, 27 n. Masons of London, 65. Master, small, 3, 11, 22, 53, 58, 83, 92, 94, 103, III, 112, 121, 126-7, 133, 142, 146, 15s, 157, 195-205, 219, 226, 228-32, 235. Masterpiece, 48 n. Mastership, 11, 34-5, 47-8, 52-3, 57, 62-3, 136-44, 228. May Day, Evil, 83. Mercantilism, 14, 89, 101-2, 172, 177-8, 182-94. Mercers' Companies, of Paris, 25, 79-81 ; of Lichfield and Derby, 78 ; of London, 79, 81. INDEX 275 Merchant Adventurers, 76-7, loi, 1>P3. 151, 182, 191-3, 233. Merchant Employers, 11. Staplers, loi. Taylors' Company, 44, 52, 55 «., 106, 114-5,202. Merchants, Companies of, at Hull, York and Bristol, 76 ; at CarUsle, Alnwick and Preston, 78. Metal trades, amalgamations of, 38, 83. MMiers et marcJiandtses, 46. Middlemen, 5, 81-3,107, 112, 129, 134, 150, 188-9, 234-6. Milan, 81. Monopolies, 144-7, IS4) 166-70, 176, 183, 203-4 ; statute of, 190. More, Sir Thomas, 139. Morley, Mr. John, 210. Morpeth, 39. Morrell, Hugh, 147. Mvmicipal regulations, 94-6. Nantes, edict of, 178, 218. National debt, 150. National economy, 4, 10, 71, 123, 138. Needlemakers' Company of Lon- don, 258. Netherlands, 131. Newcastle-on-Tyne, 64, 76. Newton, Lanes., 39. Norfolk, 91. Normandy, 131, 178. Northamptonshire, 188. Norwich, 39, 64, 74, 83 «., 86, 91, 96-7, loi, 187, 188, 236. Nottingham, 6, 73. Nottinghamshire, 6. Noy, Attorney-General, 141. Nuremberg, 187. Ormskirk, 39. Oswestry, 99, 187. Oxford, 27, 40, 50. Oxfordshire, 188. Painters' Company of London, 259. Painters of saddles, 22. Paris, 21, 24, 25, 31-4, 42, 46-8, 50, S4-5, 79-81, 87, 100, 149- Parliament, 14, 56, 66, 77, 82, 86, 90.93, 96-8, 104, 114. Ii9i I3S> 137-41, 146, 164, 170, I73> 181-3. 190, 208. Pattenmakers' Company of Lon- don, 259. Paviors' Company of London, 21 2. Pewterers' Company of London, 61, 108, 143, 153-6, 163, 166, 207, 259. Picardy, 178. Piece-masters, 219. Piecework rates, 216, 220, 223-4, 246, 248, 251. Pinmakers' Company of London, 79. 136, 164-71, 176, 183, 203, 236-40, 259. Pinmaking, 38. Place MSS., 215. Plasterers' Company of London, 144, 260. Plauen, 187. Playing-card-makers' Company of London, 144, 203, 260. Plumbers' Company of London, 144, 260. Plymouth, 50, 188, 236. Pole, Cardinal, 102. Potters of Paris, 46. Preston, 39. Printers of London, 108, 143, 210, 211. Privy Council, 68, 76, 122, 124, 132, 143, 147, 166, 168, 185, 186, 188-9, 192, 201, 203. Protectionism, municipal, 86-102, 123, 17s ; national, 172-95, 202-4. Provins, cloth industry of, 34 and n. Prussia, 35, 172, 227. Quarterage, 135,210, 217, 232. Reading, 64. Retahation, 183, 190. Rheims, 81, 100. Rochdale, 188. Ropemakers and Hempdressers of London, 144. Rouen, cloth industry of, 35, 49 ; Notables at, 177. Royal Battery Works, 168. Ruhla, cutlers of, 26. Rutland, 188. Saddlers of London, 22, 108, 207; of Paris, 24, 46, 109, 149; of Reading, 84. Saffron Walden, Cromwell at, 210. T 2 276 INDEX St. Albans, 84. Salisbury, 78; Robert Cecil, Lord, 181. Savary, 79. Sawyers of London, 212. Saxony, 187. SchmoUer, Prof. G., 36, 151. Scotland, 74, 184. Search, 233. Shearmen, 27, 32, 40, 49, 231. Shearmen's Company, London, 44, 53- Sheathers of London, 25. Sheffield, 6, 226. Shipwrights' Company of Lon- don, 143, 212, 260-1. Shoemakers, 56 n., 62-3, 84. Shrewsbury, 39, 68 «., 78, 86, 95, 97) 98-9, 100, 186. Shropshire, 188. Silesia, cloth manufacture of, 35. Silk manufacture, 6, 55, 179, 226. Silkmen, Company of, 129, 260. Skinners of Arras, 46 n. ; of Strasburg, 51; of Paris, 1 10, 149- Skinners' Company of London, 44, 104, 129, 136 «., 183, 202, 261. Small master ; see Master. Smith, Adam, 10, 152. Solingen, cutlery of. III. Somerset, 93, 226, 236. Southampton, 236. Southwark, 128, 159, 222. Spain, trade with, 174, 217, 224. Spectacle-makers' Company of London, 147. Spence, Sir James, 141. Staffordshire, 188. Star Chamber, 132, 189, 192, 240. Starchmakers' Company of Lon- don, 136, 253. Starkey's Dialogue, 102. Stationers' Company of London, 108, 143, 207. Statute of Apprentices, 119, 137- 41,252. Stockers, 162, 242. Strafford, 172, Strasburg, 30, 36, 42, 51, 54, 81, 87. Strike of hatters, 220, 248-52, Stuart policy, 14, 142-7, 172, 201. Suffolk, 91, 122-3, 188. Surrey, members for, 223. Sweating System, 5. Switzerland, 35. Tailors, 2-3, 56, '62-3, 252; of London, 44 ; of Bristol, 47 ; of Paris, 47, 50; merchant, 44,52, 55«., 106, 114-15 ; 202. Tanners, 141 ; of London, 19 ; of Paris, 20 ; of Reading, 83. Taunton, 93, 187. Tawyers of London, 104. Territorial economy, 187. Textile crafts, 26 ; of Florence and Ghent, 18 ; of London, 28 ; of Strasburg, 30; of Paris, 31. Thuringer, cutlers of, 26. Tilers, 65. Tilers and Bricklayers of London, 144, 261. Tin, 153-6. Tobacco, 174. Tobacco-pipe-makers' Company of London, 147, 261. Toulouse, 80, 104. Town, rise of, 2 ; town economy, 9, 71 ; protection of town in- dustry, 88-93 ; town bargains, 149. Trade Union, descent of, 8, 126, 141, 200, 210, 213-14, 221, 224, 227. Tramping ticket, 227. Treasure, 185. Troyes, 34«.,49, 81. Trusts, 175-6. Tucker of Strasburg, 30, 36. Tudor pohcy, 55, 140, 150, 190. Typper, Mr., 135. Ulm, 81,87-8. Unterkaufer, 36. Uxbridge, 84. Victualling trades, 67. Village community, 2. Vire, 84. Voigtland, Saxon, 187. Wage-earner, 12, 198-201. Wages, assessment of, 119, 216, 220, 223-4. Wakefield, 188. Wales, cloth industry of, 87, 186, 1 88. Wandsworth, 218, 219. Wardens of companies, 42, 73. Warrington, 39. INDEX 277 Warwick, 40. Warwickshire, 188. Weavers of present day, 6 ; of Florence and Ghent, 18 ; or- ganized as a craft, 27 ; of Lon- don, 28, 109 ; of Paris, 31. Weavers' Act, 92. Weavers' Company of London, 109, 136, 204, 205, 207, 210, 226, 261. Whitchurch, 187. Whittawyers, 39. Whittington, Sir Richard, 81. Wigan, 39. Wiltshire, 191, 236. Winchester, 27, 30^., 64. Winwood, Sir R., 166. Wisbech, 50. Woolcombers, 226, Wool-growers, 234-6. Wool trade, 106, 132, 152, 1S8-9, 234-6. Worcester, 40, 64-5, 78, 91, 92, 97- Worcestershire, 6, 91, 188, 191. Wrexham, 68 n. Wrights, 66. Wiirtemberg, 176, 179. Yarnmakers, 235-6. Yarmouth, 91, 188, 236. Yeomanry organizations, 11, 51, 57^-61, 114, 123, 124, 135, 155, 198-9, 208-10, 229-34. York, 76, 83. Yorkshire, 235. THE END OXFORD PRINTED AT THE CLARENDON PRESS BY HORACE HART, M.A. PRINTER TO THE UNIVERSITY