Vanishing England eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 374 pages of information about Vanishing England.

Vanishing England eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 374 pages of information about Vanishing England.

[Illustration:  The Old Jetty, Gorleston]

The town, now incorporated with Yarmouth, has a proud boast:—­

        Gorleston was Gorleston ere Yarmouth begun,
        And will be Gorleston when Yarmouth is done.

Another leading East Anglian port in former days was the county town of Suffolk, Ipswich.  During the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries ships from most of the countries of Western Europe disembarked their cargoes on its quays—­wines from Spain, timber from Norway, cloth from Flanders, salt from France, and “mercerie” from Italy left its crowded wharves to be offered for sale in the narrow, busy streets of the borough.  Stores of fish from Iceland, bales of wool, loads of untanned hides, as well as the varied agricultural produce of the district, were exposed twice in the week on the market stalls.[6] The learned editor of the Memorials of Old Suffolk, who knows the old town so well, tells us that the stalls of the numerous markets lay within a narrow limit of space near the principal churches of the town—­St. Mary-le-Tower, St. Mildred, and St. Lawrence.  The Tavern Street of to-day was the site of the flesh market or cowerye.  A narrow street leading thence to the Tower Church was the Poultry, and Cooks’ Row, Butter Market, Cheese and Fish markets were in the vicinity.  The manufacture of leather was the leading industry of old Ipswich, and there was a goodly company of skinners, barkers, and tanners employed in the trade.  Tavern Street had, as its name implies, many taverns, and was called the Vintry, from the large number of opulent vintners who carried on their trade with London and Bordeaux.  Many of these men were not merely peaceful merchants, but fought with Edward III in his wars with France and were knighted for their feats of arms.  Ipswich once boasted of a castle which was destroyed in Stephen’s reign.  In Saxon times it was fortified by a ditch and a rampart which were destroyed by the Danes, but the fortifications were renewed in the time of King John, when a wall was built round the town with four gates which took their names from the points of the compass.  Portions of these remain to bear witness to the importance of this ancient town.  We give views of an old building near the custom-house in College Street and Fore Street, examples of the narrow, tortuous thoroughfares which modern improvements have not swept away.

  [6] Cf. Memorials of Suffolk, edited by V.B.  Redstone.

[Illustration:  Tudor House, Ipswich, near the Custom House]

[Illustration:  Three-gabled House, Fore Street, Ipswich]

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Vanishing England from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.