BY THE REV. A. G. B. ATKINSON, M.A.
Of the religious houses of which remains
may be found in London, none perhaps is of greater
interest than the Charterhouse. Here More and
Colet kept retreat, and as a peaceful haven for pensioned
age the place still retains something of its old monastic
calm. Lying behind the markets of Smithfield,
its secluded courts and gardens are barely penetrated
by the roar of the great city. The history of
Bruno, the original founder of the Carthusian order,
and his six companions has often been told. It
is related by Prior Guigo that the University of Paris,
professors as well as scholars, were assembled at the
funeral obsequies of one of the most learned and pious
of their number. To the amazement of all, the
dead man raised his head, and as he sank back again
on the bier called out with a loud voice, “I
have been accused at the just tribunal of God.”
Three times on three successive days this terrible
occurrence took place. Amongst those present on
this occasion who were struck with horror at the unexpected
sentence of damnation was Bruno, a native of Cologne.
He was a Canon of Rheims and professor of divinity.
Five others with him, seized with a holy fear, consulted
a hermit how they might escape the judgment of God.
To them he gave the answer of the Psalmist, “Lo,
I have prolonged my flight and remained in solitude.”
They, too, were fired with the love of solitude, and
begged of Hugh Bishop of Grenoble that he would assign
them a place suitable for a retreat. This the
bishop did, and the order was established at La Chartreuse
in the mountains of Savoy in the year 1084.
The first Carthusian house in England
was founded by Henry II. at Witham, in Somersetshire,
about the year 1178, in fulfilment of his penitential
vow taken at the tomb of Thomas Becket. Another
house was founded at Hinton, also in Somersetshire,
in 1227. An attempt to found a house in Ireland
did not succeed, the institution only lasting forty
years. A third house was founded at Beauvale,
in Nottinghamshire, in 1343. The London Charterhouse,
with which we are immediately concerned, was the fourth
house of the order established in England. Before
entering upon the details of its history it will be
well to sketch the main features of the Carthusian
order, since Carthusian houses in all their chief
characteristics closely resemble one another.
Its distinguishing marks are extreme severity and
entire seclusion from the world. The fathers
live alone, each in his cell built around the great
cloister. The cell is, however, in reality a small
house, and contains four rooms, two on each floor;
adjoining these apartments is a small garden.
From the great cloister strangers are entirely excluded,
and the cell is never entered except by the father
himself, the prior, or his deputy.
A walk, the “spatiamentum,”
taken once a week together, is the only occasion upon
which the fathers leave the house; conversation is
then enjoined. Upon Sundays and Chapter feasts
the monks dine together, when some instructive book
is read aloud by one of the fathers.
The Franciscans and Dominicans are
preachers, the Benedictines maintain educational institutions,
Trappists and Cistercians cultivate the soil; but
the isolation of the Carthusian fathers is complete.
They may not even leave the monastery to administer
the Sacrament to the dying, unless assured that no
other priest can be secured.
Their food is thrust into their cells
through a small hatchway. They eat no meat, but
fish, eggs, milk, cheese, butter, bread, pastry, fruit,
and vegetables. The brethren or “conversi,”
who are laymen, occupy themselves with the manual
labour of the monastery, but all that is necessary
in the cell is done by the father himself. When
death ends the solitary’s life he is buried
uncoffined in the cloister garth, “O beata
solitudo! O sola beatitudo!"
The history of the London Charterhouse
may conveniently be divided into three periods I.,
the Monastery; II., the Palace; III., the Hospital.
I. THE MONASTERY, 1371-1537
The exact circumstances under which
the house was founded are involved in some obscurity,
for it would appear that at least three men were concerned
at different times in the work. The share of the
first of these, Ralph Stratford, Bishop of London,
being but a slight one, may be briefly dismissed.
In 1348-49 a terrible visitation of the black death
devastated the country. The bishop, being concerned
that many were being interred in unconsecrated ground,
purchased three acres of land in West Smithfield outside
the city boundaries, known as “no man’s
land,” and consecrated it for purposes of burial,
and erected also a mortuary chapel. The whole
he called Pardon Churchyard and Chapel. It was
situated adjoining the north wall of the garden of
the monastery, and extended from St. John Street to
Goswell Street. In 1349 additional ground was
required, and Sir Walter de Manny bought thirteen acres
and a rood from St. Bartholomew’s Hospital,
called the Spittle Croft, adjoining the land purchased
by the bishop. Here he also built a chapel, from
which building the Spittle Croft became known as New
Church Haw. Stow asserts that more than 50,000
bodies were interred here. De Manny’s original
intention, as appears from a bull of Pope Urban VI.
in 1378, was to endow a chantry with a superior and
twelve chaplains. This project appears, however,
subsequently to have been abandoned; for by letters
patent, dated 6th February, 1371, the King licensed
De Manny to found a house of Carthusian monks to be
called the “Salutation of the Mother of God.”
In this work De Manny had the co-operation and sanction
of Michael de Northburgh, successor to Ralph Stratford
in the bishopric of London. It seems probable
that when De Manny was summoned abroad on the King’s
wars Northburgh took up the work, and that to enable
him to do so effectually the land De Manny had bought
was transferred to him by a nominal sale. The
bishop died in 1361, and from his will it appears
that he had acquired the land above mentioned, as well
as the patronage of the chapel, from De Manny.
Further, he left L2,000 and various lands and tenements
to found a convent of Carthusians. De Manny and
Bishop Northburgh thus share between them the credit
of the foundation, although the allusion in the Papal
Bull of Urban VI., “Conventum duplicem
ordinis Carthusiensis,” refers unquestionably
not to the fact that there were two founders, but
to the fact that the monastery was intended for twenty-four
monks double the usual number. Sir
Walter de Manny, who may perhaps be regarded as the
chief founder, was a native of Valenciennes, and was
descended from the Counts of Hainault. Froissart,
his fellow-countryman, is our chief authority for
the events of his life, and has recorded at length
his deeds of bravery and daring on many fields of
battle. With these we are not concerned at length.
It is sufficient to note that he first came to England
in the train of Queen Philippa, distinguished himself
in the Scottish wars, and was the recipient of many
grants of land and other favours from Edward III.
He was present at the battle of Sluys in 1359, and
had conferred upon him the Order of the Garter.
After an eventful career De Manny died in January,
1372. His will, dated November 30th, 1371, was
proved at Lambeth, 13th April, 1372. He left
directions that he should be buried in as unostentatious
a manner as possible; but this being coupled with
the provision that a penny should be paid to all poor
persons coming to his funeral, it is not surprising
to learn that the funeral procession was a large one.
He was buried in the middle of the choir, and a fragment
of the tomb was found in a wall which was being repaired
in 1896, and may be seen to-day in the chapel of the
Charterhouse. Various other benefactions were
made to the house, and in particular a further grant
of four acres of land from the hospital of S. John
of Jerusalem in 1378. The relations existing
between these two neighbouring institutions were always
of a friendly character. John Luscote was appointed
the first prior, and held office till shortly before
his death, which took place in 1398. During many
succeeding years the history of the foundation was
uneventful, the peaceful life of the monks in their
secluded home affording little of interest to the historian.
Happy were the monks when they had
no history. Troubles gathered thick around their
successors of a later age, after the accession of Henry
VIII. to the throne.
John Houghton was elected prior in
1531, and it is around his personality that the interest
of the history now centres. “He was small,”
we are told, “in stature, in figure graceful,
in countenance dignified. In manner he was most
modest, in eloquence most sweet, in chastity without
a stain.” Such was the man who worthily
upheld the traditions of his order during the Reformation
troubles. For these and the succeeding events
we have the authority of Maurice Chauncey, one of
the fathers.
In 1533 Henry obtained the sanction
of Cranmer in the Archbishop’s Court to his
divorce from Catherine, and the King’s marriage
with Anne Boleyn was confirmed by Parliament.
In 1534 the Royal Commissioners called upon the prior
and monks of the Charterhouse to make formal approval
of the marriage. Prior Houghton and the procurator
Humphrey Middlemore were committed to the Tower, the
Commissioners being dissatisfied with the nature of
their answers. After a month’s imprisonment
they were induced to swear to the King’s laws
“as far as the law of God permitted,” and
were released and returned to the Charterhouse.
The Commissioners extracted from the rest of the community
a similar oath, by which the succession to the Crown
was fixed upon the issue of Anne Boleyn to the exclusion
of the Princess Mary. This, however, was but the
beginning of troubles. The oath by which Henry
was declared Head of the Church of England was a more
serious matter. To deny him this title became
high treason. Prior Houghton addressed the assembled
fathers in a touching manner, and bid them prepare
for death. The days were solemnly devoted to
spiritual exercises. Their fears were only too
well founded, and after interrogation Prior Houghton
and Robert Lawrence were committed to the Tower by
Cromwell. With them was arrested a third father,
Augustine Webster, prior of the Charterhouse in Axholme.
In the Tower they were visited by Cromwell and the
Royal Commissioners, and memoranda of the interview
remain. John Houghton says that “he cannot
take the King, our Sovereign, to be supreme head of
the Church of England afore the Apostles of Christ’s
Church.”
Robert Lawrence says that “there
is one Catholic Church and one Divine, of which the
Bishop of Rome is the head; therefore, he cannot believe
that the King is supreme head of the Church.”
On 29th April, 1535, after a trial lasting two
days, the three Carthusians and Father Richard Reynolds
were condemned to be drawn, hanged, and quartered.
On their way to the scaffold they passed their fellow-prisoner,
Sir Thomas More, who saw them from his prison cell.
“Lo, dost thou not see, Meg,” he said to
his daughter Margaret, “that these blessed fathers
be now as cheerfully going to their death as bridegrooms
to their marriage.” When the scaffold was
reached Father Houghton preached a brief but touching
sermon:
“I call to witness Almighty God
and all good people, and I beseech you all here
present to bear witness for me in the day of
judgment, that being here to die, I declare it is from
no obstinate rebellious spirit that I do not
obey the King, but because I fear to offend the
majesty of God. Our holy Mother the Church
has decreed otherwise than the King and parliament
have decreed, and therefore rather than disobey
the Church I am ready to suffer.”
The cruel sentence was carried out
on May 4th, 1535. Part of the mangled remains
of Prior Houghton was fixed on the gateway of the Charterhouse.
Three weeks after the prior’s execution, three
fathers, Exmew, Middlemore, and Newdigate, were thrown
into the Marshalsea, where they were cruelly tortured,
being bound upright to posts. They were brought
to trial at Westminster, and executed on the 19th June
with the same horrible mutilations as attended the
execution of Houghton. For a period of two years
after this no further executions are recorded; but
Cromwell, exasperated by the firmness of the monks,
adopted a new form of persecution. The King’s
Commissioners took charge of the monastery, which
was placed in the charge of seculars. Pressure
of every kind was brought to bear upon the religious,
who were often deprived of food, robbed of their books,
and made to listen to sermons in proof of the royal
supremacy. Under the prolonged persecution of
Cromwell’s instruments, Whalley, Bedyll, and
Fylott, some few of the monks gave way, but the major
part remained firm.
In the early part of the year 1536
Cromwell took a new step. He appointed another
prior, William Trafford, doubtless with the ulterior
object of inducing the monks to transfer the property
of the house to the King. At length he succeeded,
and a large number some twenty, both fathers
and lay brothers were persuaded to take
the oath of supremacy. At least ten, however,
refused to do so. These ten were cast into Newgate
on 18th May, 1537, and here nine died of the cruel
treatment they received. William Horn, the sole
survivor, a lay brother, was transferred to the Tower
and executed on 4th August, 1540. On the 10th
June, 1537, a deed was executed, rendering up the monastery
to the King. The monks remained till 15th November,
1538, when they were all expelled with a small pension
of L5 per annum, with the exception of Trafford, who
received L20. The yearly revenue of the house
at its dissolution was valued at L642 4d.
Thus the monastery was destroyed, though no accusation
of immorality or wrong doing was ever brought against
the unhappy men who perished with it. The monks
were faithful to their vows, the house was well ordered.
No record is to be found of any fault proved against
the London Charterhouse: “Nunquam reformata
quia nunquam deformata.”
Though the old buildings have been
largely swept away, or altered and added to, yet enough
remains to enable us, with the help of a fifteenth-century
plan, to constitute with some degree of exactness the
arrangement of the old monastery. This plan, which
is still preserved amongst the archives of the Charterhouse,
is a vellum roll ten feet long, of four skins, showing
the construction of a conduit by which the monastery
was supplied with water from Islington. The waterpipe
discharged into a conduit in the centre of the great
cloister; from the conduit it was conveyed through
the gardens into the cells of the monks. The
playground of the Merchant Taylors’ School occupies
nearly the site of the great cloister, and on the
east and the west side of it may be found traces of
two of the cells. The lower part of the gatehouse
served as entrance to the monastery, though the doors
were probably renewed after the Carthusians had gone.
The south and part of the east walls of the present
chapel are those of the monks’ church, and the
lower part of the Tower was built by them probably
in 1510-20. The charming little quadrangle, known
as Wash House Court, was the habitation of the “conversi”
or lay brothers, the servants of the convent.
On the west external wall of this court are the letters
J. H., which may possibly be the initials of the last
Prior, John Houghton, and the wall itself of his building.
Besides these remains there may also be seen a bit
of the monastic refectory, now used as the brothers’
library, though it has been thought by some that this
is the site of the prior’s cell.
II. THE PALACE, 1545-1611
During the period from 1545-1611 the
Charterhouse became a nobleman’s palace, and
passed through several changes of ownership. After
the suppression of the monastery the buildings were
used as a storehouse for the King’s hales (that
is, nets) and tents. John Brydges, yeoman, and
Thomas Hales were placed in charge of the King’s
property. This arrangement, however, was of short
duration, for in 1545 the King presented the site
to Sir Edward North, Brydges and Hales receiving L10
per annum by way of compensation. According to
Bearcroft the gift was likely to have cost North
dear. The historian tells the story on the authority
of one of North’s attendants:
“Once, early in the morning,
there came from the King to Charterhouse, then
the mansion of Sir Edward North, a messenger,
known to be a friend of his, to command his immediate
repair to the court, which message was delivered with
some harshness. This was so terrible in the
suddenness and other circumstances, as he observed
his master to tremble at the delivery of it,
who yet, finding it dangerous to use the least
delay hasted thither, and was admitted speedily into
the King’s presence with this his servant
attendant on him. The King was then walking,
and continued doing so with great earnestness,
and every now and then cast an angry look upon him,
which was received with a still and sober carriage:
at last the King broke out into these words:
’We are informed that you have cheated
us of certain lands in Middlesex’; whereunto,
having received none other than a plain and humble
negation, after some little time he replied,
’How was it then? Did we give these
lands to you?’ Whereunto Sir Edward answered,
’Yes, Sire, your majesty was pleased to
do so.’ Whereupon, having paused a
little while, the King put on a milder countenance,
and calling him to a cupboard conferred privately
with him a long time. Whereby, said this
servant, I saw the King could not spare my master’s
service as yet.”
The angry monarch was appeased, and
North retained the lands. North lost influence
with the Protector and declared subsequently for the
Princess Mary, who, on her accession to the throne,
created him Lord North.
Elizabeth, two days after her accession,
rode from Hatfield and stayed at the Charterhouse
with this Lord North “many days,” and again
in 1561 stayed there for four days, as is recorded
in Burleigh’s diary:
“The Queen supped at my house
in Strand (the Savoy) before it was finished,
and she came by the fields from Christ Church.
Great cheer was made until midnight, when she
rode back to the Charterhouse, where she lay
that night.”
In 1564 North died, leaving Charterhouse
to his son, Roger, Lord North. He, some months
later, sold the main part of the buildings to the Duke
of Norfolk for L2,500, but retained the house which
his father had built about twenty years before, together
with some two or three acres of adjoining land.
This was situated on the east side of the convent church
and on the east side of the great cloister.
The property has passed through various
hands since that day. It belonged to the Earls
of Rutland during part of the seventeenth century,
and a reminiscence of their ownership remains in the
name of the small street called Rutland Place, issuing
from the north-east corner of Charterhouse Square.
It was in this house that Sir William Davenant, in
the year 1656, was permitted to exhibit stage plays
at a time when all theatres were closed by the government.
The land is now in the hands of various owners Charterhouse,
Merchant Taylors’ School, and others.
In providing himself with a residence
on the property which he had purchased, the Duke of
Norfolk adopted a plan very different from that of
his predecessor. Instead of building for himself
a new residence, he adopted a common practice and
determined to adapt to his own uses part of the buildings
which the Carthusians had left behind them. The
part he chose for this purpose was the little cloister,
which had been built probably about fifty years before,
and was very easily converted into a sufficiently
stately mansion in accordance with the fashion of the
day. Fortunately, he was able to do this with
a minimum of destruction of the old work. The
little cloister was, in fact, a house built round a
quadrangle. In adapting it to his own use the
Duke did not interfere with the outer walls or floors,
which are very substantially built, but merely rearranged
the rooms inside. This was the more easy because
the inside rooms were probably divided from one another
by wooden partitions. The result is most interesting
to the antiquary, for he finds at Charterhouse not
only an excellent specimen of monastic building in
the early sixteenth century, but also a very pure example
of the London house of a great nobleman of the same
date. The Duke left intact a smaller quadrangle
opening out of the little cloister, which had been
built also in the sixteenth century for the use of
the lay brothers. He also beautified the large
room which had been used for a Guesten Hall, and perhaps
raised the roof. He certainly built two handsome
rooms to the north of the Guesten Hall, on the first
floor, over what had been the prior’s cell and
a small part of the cloister walk. To form an
approach to these upper rooms he built a handsome
interior staircase, which may be seen in perfect condition
at the present day. A tradition exists that in
order to give himself a little more room he pulled
down the east side of the little cloister, and re-erected
it in the same style, fourteen feet in the eastern
direction. These works were executed during the
years 1565 to 1571, during part of which time the
Duke made the Charterhouse his residence.
In the year 1569 Norfolk was committed
to the Tower for contemplating marriage with Mary,
Queen of Scots, and of being implicated in a plot
against the throne and life of Elizabeth. He was
released after some months’ imprisonment upon
pledging himself to abandon all thoughts of the contemplated
union. This promise, however, he did not keep.
A cypher correspondence was discovered under the tiles
of the roof of the house, and other papers were found
concealed under the mat outside his bed chamber.
For this he was arraigned on a charge of high treason,
and executed in 1571.
As the Duke was executed for high
treason his land escheated to the Crown. The
Charterhouse, however, continued in the possession
of his sons. It was first held by the Earl of
Arundel, and on his death it passed to Lord Thomas
Howard, his younger brother, when it became known
as Howard House. Whether this arose from the favour
with which Elizabeth was always disposed to treat
her great nobility, or whether it was that the Duke
had granted leases to his sons, which leases protected
the property from “escheat,” is not very
clear. Certainly, however, the Howards held the
property until the younger son sold it for L13,000
to Mr. Thomas Sutton in 1611, for the purpose of founding
his “Hospital.”
III. THE HOSPITAL, 1611-1908
Of the early life and ancestry of
Thomas Sutton little is recorded. He was born
in 1532, the son of Richard Sutton, a native of Knaith,
in Lincolnshire. His father died in 1558.
Thomas Sutton went to Eton, but there seems little
reason to believe, as Bearcroft endeavours to prove,
that he proceeded to Cambridge. It is certain
that he entered as a student at Lincoln’s Inn,
but did not complete his studies. Shortly afterwards
he went abroad and travelled extensively, visiting
Holland, France, Italy, and Spain. He had inherited
a modest competence from his father.
On returning home Sutton entered the
service of Thomas, Duke of Norfolk, and later engaged
himself in the capacity of secretary to the Earl of
Warwick. The Earl was Master of the Ordnance,
and made Sutton assistant to himself in this capacity
for the district of Berwick-on-Tweed. Sutton
was active during the Popish reaction then taking place
in the north. He showed loyalty, valour, and
wisdom, and was for this rewarded by being made Master
General of the Ordnance in the north in 1569.
Two cannons carved over the mantelpiece in the great
hall still commemorate Sutton’s work in this
capacity. When the country became quiet Sutton
embarked upon mercantile pursuits. He leased lands
from the Bishop of Durham and from the Crown, on which
were rich and undeveloped coal mines. In this
way he laid the foundation of his subsequent fortune;
so that when he moved to London, in 1580, he was reputed
worth L50,000, and his purse, it was said, was fuller
than Elizabeth’s exchequer. In 1582 Sutton
married Elizabeth, widow of John Dudley, of Stoke Newington.
He continued to amass wealth as his mercantile operations
extended, and he carried on a large trade with the
Continent, where at one time he had as many as thirty
agents. He is reported to have fitted out a privateer
at his own charges to meet the navy of Philip, King
of Spain. In 1594 Sutton resigned his post as
Master General of the Ordnance, and there is evidence
to show that the question of a proper disposal of his
wealth began to occupy his mind. In 1602 Mrs.
Sutton died, and the loss of his wife no doubt tended
to turn his thoughts in the same direction. Fuller
says:
“This I can confidently report
from the mouth of a creditable witness, who heard
it himself and told it to me, that Mr. Sutton
used often to repair into a private garden, where he
poured forth his prayers to God, and amongst other
passages was frequently overheard to use this
expression, ’Lord, Thou hast given me a
large and liberal estate, give me also a heart to
make use thereof.’”
He was at all times charitable and
generous with his money, and many begging letters
are extant from those who desired to profit by his
liberality. There were others with wider ambitions,
and amongst these Sir John Harrington appears to have
conceived the idea of inducing Sutton to leave his
large fortune to Charles, Duke of York, the King’s
second son, afterwards Charles I. No doubt he thought
that this scheme, if successful, would further his
interests at court.
Harrington hinted to the King that
Sutton was contemplating this disposal of his property,
and suggested that a barony should be conferred upon
him. Sutton, however, had no ambitions in this
direction, and when he heard of the matter wrote to
the Lord Chancellor and the Earl of Salisbury declining
the honour. He says: “My mynde in my
younger times hath been ever free from ambition and
now I am going to my grave, to gape for such a thing
were mere dotage in me.” Further, he prayed
for “free liberty to dispose of myne owne as
other of his Majesty’s loyal subjects.”
Sutton had already formed the intention
of founding a hospital at Hallingbury, in Essex, and
had conveyed all his estates in Essex to the Lord
Chief Justice, Sir John Popham, the Master of the Rolls,
and others for this purpose.
In 1609 an Act was passed in the legislature
for the creation of a hospital at Hallingbury.
Shortly after, however, Sutton changed his mind with
regard to the locality of the hospital, and determined
to acquire Howard House for the purpose. On June
22nd, 1611, he obtained letters patent from King James,
with license of mortmain, which set aside the Act
of 1609 and enabled him to carry out his altered intentions,
and found his hospital on the Charterhouse site.
The letters patent set out, at length, the purpose
of the founder to establish a hospital for old people,
and a free school, and schedules the lands given for
this purpose, as well as the names of the sixteen
original governors of the institution. Amongst
these were Launcelot Andrewes and Dean Overall.
Fuller says:
“This is the masterpiece of Protestant
English charity designed (by the founder) in
his life; completed after his death, begun, continued
and finished with buildings and endowments, solely
at his own charges, wherein Mr Sutton appears
peerless in all Christendom on an equal standard
of valuation of revenue.”
Sutton had hoped to become himself
the first master of the new establishment, to the
foundation of which his latter years had been devoted.
This, however, was not to be, and the munificent donor
died at his house in Hackney on December 12th, 1611,
at the age of seventy-nine years.
The foundation of the hospital thus
initiated was not carried through without a legal
struggle. Shortly after his death Sutton’s
nephew, Simon Baxter, laid claim to the estates as
next-of-kin to the founder, and in this design obtained
the support of Sir Francis Bacon, who acted as his
counsel. While the suit was still pending, this
eminent but corrupt lawyer wrote a lengthy and specious
letter to King James, setting forth objections to
the proposed scheme, and hinting in effect that if
the will were set aside the King might himself obtain
considerable influence in the disposal of the property.
The Courts decided against Baxter, though this decision
was not arrived at until after the governors had made
largesse to the King. They handed over to James
the large sum of L10,000, setting out that the grant
was for the purpose of repairing Berwick Bridge, then
“much ruinated or rather utterly decayed.”
The King received this offering, says Smythe, in a
very delicate way. It was, in point of fact, nothing
more nor less than a bribe, though entered by the
Treasury among “Sums of money extraordinarily
raised since the coming of His Majesty to the Crown.”
The whole transaction sheds a sinister light on the
customs of the period, for it is not likely that Sutton’s
executors would have parted with so large a sum had
they not been apprehensive of losing the whole, a
fear which no doubt quickened their solicitude for
the safety of Berwick Bridge. After this, the
organization of the foundation proceeded without further
trouble, and on December 12th, 1614, the body of Sutton
was transferred from Christ Church, Newgate Street,
where it had rested since his death, to the elaborate
tomb prepared for it in the chapel of the new house
where it still rests.
The governors found much work ready
to their hand. The buildings had to be rendered
suitable for the habitation of pensioners and scholars,
and a constitution for the institution had to be prepared.
The buildings, as we have seen, had been erected for
an entirely different purpose. The Duke of Norfolk’s
house, with the outbuildings, stables and farmyard,
were the materials which the governors had to utilise.
It is a matter for which the antiquary must be grateful,
that in dealing with this mass of sixteenth century
building they did their best to preserve it, and succeeded
so well that it remains to the present day. Twenty-one
pensioners or “Pore Bretheren” were elected
as the first recipients of the charity, but in 1613
the number was raised to eighty, as contemplated by
Sutton. Forty scholars were also selected and
placed under the care of a schoolmaster and an usher.
Those elected pensioners were to be
“no rogues or common beggars,
but such poor persons as could bring good testimony
of their good behaviour and soundness in religion,
and such as had been servants to the king’s Majesty,
either decrepit or old; captains either at sea
or land; soldiers maimed or impotent; decayed
merchants; men fallen into decay through shipwreck,
casualty of fire, or such evil accident; those
that had been captives under the Turks.”
The hospital did not escape its share
of the troubles attendant upon the Civil War.
Some of the governors were deposed from the government
of the foundation, the internal management of which
was interfered with by the Parliament. In 1643
an order was made for the “sequestering of the
minister’s and preacher’s and organist’s
place of the Charterhouse; and that the master of
the Charterhouse do permit such as the House shall
appoint to execute the said places; and that the receiver
do pay the profits belonging to the said places to
such as this House shall appoint to receive the same.”
About the same time Mr. Brooke, the schoolmaster,
was ejected from his office. It is alleged that
he flogged some boys who favoured the parliamentary
cause. With the restoration of the monarchy some
of the governors were restored to their positions,
and Mr. Brooke, though not reappointed schoolmaster,
was given lodging and commons in the house, and a
pension of L30 per annum, to be paid by his successor.
The history of the succeeding years
is uneventful. From time to time necessary reforms
have been introduced into the management of the institution,
but the intentions of the founder have been faithfully
carried out. The wisdom of Sutton in entrusting
his institution to the management of governors, who
have always been men of eminence in church and state,
rather than in attempting to lay down hard and fast
rules for its guidance, has been abundantly vindicated.
In the early part of the nineteenth
century, Mr. Hale, who was first preacher, and then
master for more than thirty years, introduced various
necessary reforms, and abolished abuses which in course
of time had crept in. Archdeacon Hale, besides
devoting his attention to the general care and management
of the institution, was responsible for much rebuilding
and alteration in the house itself. Between the
years 1825 and 1830 the preacher’s court and
pensioners’ court, now occupied by the brothers’
rooms and official residences, were built.
What the labours of Archdeacon Hale
were to one Part of the institution, the work of Dr.
Haig Brown was to the school. In course of time
the locality, once outside the boundaries of the town
and surrounded by pleasant fields, had become built
over and entirely changed in character. In 1864
the Public School Commissioners recommended that the
school should be removed into the country. It
was not easy, however, to get those in authority to
consent to so great a change. Sentiment was aroused
against a plan which broke long years of tradition,
and it was not till 1872 that the school was moved
to its present site at Godalming. The credit
of this step, and the subsequent success which attended
it, must be given to Dr. Haig Brown, for thirty-four
years the headmaster, and subsequently, upon his retirement,
master of the Charterhouse. Dr. Haig Brown was
appointed headmaster in 1863, and it was owing to
his clear-sightedness and energy that this migration
was accomplished. He had to struggle against
the prejudices of officials, the fears of the governing
body, and the feeling which he himself could not altogether
dismiss that a great experiment was being
made, and a serious risk run. A touch of comedy
was not wanting, for the boys themselves were strongly
against the move, and complained loudly that they
were being badly treated in being forcibly removed
from the somewhat dingy habitation, which they loved
so well, to the breezy uplands of Godalming.
By this time, no doubt, they are reconciled to the
change.
That part of the London site which
was vacated by the removal of the school was sold
for L90,000 to the Merchant Taylors’ Company,
who utilize it now for their school, for which purpose
it is well adapted, being intended for day scholars
only. Charterhouse at Godalming rapidly increased
in numbers, and continues to be one of the leading
public schools in the country.
Thus, though now unavoidably severed,
the two separate parts of Sutton’s foundation
are still fulfilling the purposes of the founder.
The London Charterhouse remains as Thackeray,
in The Newcomes, depicts it a peaceful
haven for those whose reverses in the struggle of life
have made them fit pensioners on Sutton’s bounty;
and the school equips, year by year, scholars of a
younger generation, who frequently attain to posts
of distinction in church and state.
“Floreat aeternum Carthusiana
Domus.”