Legal Quays
The Legal Quays of England were created by the Act of Frauds (1 Elizabeth I, c. 11), an Act of Parliament enacted in 1559 during the reign of Elizabeth I of England. It established new rules for customs in England in order to boost the Crown's finances. One of its most important provisions was the establishment of a rule that it was illegal to land or load goods anywhere other than authorised Legal Quays in London and other ports, under the supervision of customs officers.[1] The legislation also set out which towns were authorised to act as ports.[2]
Origins
The Act was enacted largely at the instigation of Sir William Paulet, 1st Marquess of Winchester and long-serving Lord Treasurer. It established the Legal Quays and appointed commissioners to designate such quays at every port in the realm. At the most important port by far, London, Paulet himself was appointed along with Sir Richard Sackville and Sir Walter Mildmay, the Under-Treasurer and Chancellor of the Exchequer respectively, to undertake "the limitation, assigning and appointing of all the quays and wharves and places appertaining and belonging to the Port of London for the loading and lauding, discharging, unloading and laying on land thereof wares and merchandises". Their role consisted of surveying London's wharves and quays to recommend which should be designated as Legal Quays.[1]
Legal Quays in London
Although many quays already existed along the Thames shoreline, Paulet, Sackville and Mildmay decreed that "all creeks, wharves, quays, loading and discharging places" in Gravesend, Woolwich, Barking, Greenwich, Deptford, Blackwall, Limehouse, Ratcliff, Wapping, St Katherine's, Tower Hill, Rotherhithe, Southwark and London Bridge should be "no more used as loading or discharging places for merchandise".[1] Twenty existing quays with a frontage of 1,419 ft (433 m), all located on the north bank of the Thames between London Bridge and the Tower of London, were designated as Legal Quays.[3] In order of their position between London Bridge and the Tower of London, they were:
- Fresh Wharf
- Cox's Quay
- Gaunt's Quay
- Hammond's Quay
- Botolph Wharf
- Lyon's Quay
- Somer's Quay
- Smart's Quay
- Dice Quay
- Ralph's Quay
- Young's Quay
- Wiggin's Quay
- Sable's Quay
- Bear Quay
- Porter's Quay
- Custom House Quay
- Wool Quay
- Galley Quay
- Chester Quay
- Brewster's Quay [3]
To cope with the volume and complexity of trade in London, particular quays were required to specialise in particular cargoes. For instance, Bear and Young's Quays were reserved for trade with Portugal, due to the presence nearby of warehouses used by Portuguese merchants; other wharves were reserved for the import and export of commodities such as fish, corn, woollen cloths, oil and wine.[1] They were privately owned and operated as a de facto monopoly.[4] During the Great Fire of London in September 1666, which started a short distance to the north in Pudding Lane, all of the Legal Quays were destroyed. They were quickly rebuilt and were all back in operation by the mid-1670s.[5]
Expansion
The regime set out in the 1559 Act lasted into the 18th century. Seventy-four English towns were eventually designated as ports and authorised Legal Quays were established within them.[2] However, this system proved too limited to cope with the demand in the Port of London and further wharves, known as "public sufferance wharves", were established under an Act of 1786. Most were located on the south bank of the Thames.[6][7] They were used to land low-duty goods, but with no expansion in the list of ports or Legal Quays, or increases to the size of the quays themselves, quay space was constantly in short supply and was not remotely adequate for the demands of increasing levels of trade.[2]
By way of illustration, by 1800 around 1,775 vessels had to moor in a space with capacity for only 545. The legal quays had not added any more frontage since 1666 and warehouse space was very limited. Congestion and delays were constant and chronic, with most vessels forced to unload while moored in the river rather than being able to moor alongside a quay. The long delays and lack of security led to widespread problems with theft and pilferage. The issue was eventually addressed with the construction of enclosed docks to the east of the City, notably on the Isle of Dogs and in Wapping, Blackwall and Rotherhithe, each with their own Legal Quays and secure bonded warehouses. The Customs Consolidation Act 1853 allowed Legal Quays and bonded warehouses to be built outside the docks, and by 1866, nearly 120 riverside wharves had obtained these privileges.[4]
References
- 1 2 3 4 Bryson, Alan (26 November 2008). "The Legal Quays: Sir William Paulet, First Marquis of Winchester". Gresham College. Retrieved 28 February 2015.
- 1 2 3 Derek Howard Aldcroft (1 January 1983). Transport in the Industrial Revolution. Manchester University Press. p. 178. ISBN 978-0-7190-0839-9.
- 1 2 James Elmes (1831). A Topographical Dictionary of London and Its Environs: Containing Descriptive and Critical Accounts of All the Public and Private Buildings, Offices, Docks, Squares, Streets, Lanes, Wards, Liberties, Charitable, Scholastic and Other Establishments, with Lists of Their Officers, Patrons, Incumbents of Livings, &c. &c. &c. in the British Metropolis. Whittaker, Treacher and Arnot. pp. 269–70.
- 1 2 Ball, Michael; Sunderland, David T (1 November 2002). An Economic History of London 1800-1914. Routledge. pp. 219–21. ISBN 978-1-134-54030-3.
- ↑ Rule, Fiona (2012). London's Docklands: A History of the Lost Quarter. Ian Allan Publishing. pp. 13, 129. ISBN 978-0-7110-3716-8.
- ↑ E.B. McGuire (5 November 2013). The British Tariff System. Routledge. p. 132. ISBN 978-1-136-59511-0.
- ↑ Charles Knight (1847). The land we live in, a pictorial and literary sketch-book of the British empire. p. 271.