|
St Johns Hospital Trust
History
The date of the foundation of
the Hospital of St. John Baptist at Bedford is somewhat uncertain. In the
time of Henry Beaufort, Bishop of Lincoln, a Book of Memorandum records that
in the year 980 the new Hospital of St John the Baptist was founded, but
the correct date is believed to be around 1180, for the first mention of the
hospital is found in 1216 when the brothers owned a mill in Bedford, and not
long afterwards Bishop Hugh de Wells authorised the construction of a vicarage for the church of
St. John, which belonged then to the brothers of the Hospital.
The founder's name was Robert
de Parys; other benefactors being John and Henry St. John. The original
endowment was intended to support two or three religious brethren, of whom
one should be Master; it was to be a house of charity, where all needy
persons free born of the town of Bedford (but from no other place), who had
become poor by misfortune rather than by fault, might seek admittance and be
maintained; no such persons could be presented by the Mayor and Burgesses
except with the consent of the founder and his successors. The brethren were
to live a religious life, having a common refectory and dormitory; they were
to have the tonsure of a priest and to wear clothing of any sober colour,
covered by a dark mantle. They were to remain in the Hospital for life, and,
when admitted, to take an oath of obedience to the statutes and to the
Master; they were every day to sing the canonical hours and celebrate the
divine office for the living and the dead, praying especially for the soul
of the founder and other benefactors. The Master normally corrected the
brethren, but he might appeal to the Bishop in case of necessity.
In 1302 the master held
one-twentieth of a knight's fee in Clophill
In 1306 Bishop Dalderby wrote
a fuller rule for the brethren, which was practically an adaptation of the
rule of St. Augustine to their particular circumstances. It is clear that
though they were so few in number they were expected to live quite as
strictly as the religious inhabitants of large communities.
The church was rebuilt early
in the fourteenth century, and the brethren then had a licence to beg alms
on account of their poverty. The master of the Hospital, Robert Rous, was
appointed in 1333 to hear the confessions of all the subjects of the
archdeacons of Bedford and Huntingdon. He died in 1349, probably of the
Black Death. In 1399 the Hospital was reconstituted on the old foundation by
Bishop Beaufort, with the same number of brethren and the same rule as
before.
In 1535 the revenue of the
hospital, consisting mainly of small rents, amounted to £21 0s. 8d
When inquiry was being made at
the end of the reign of Henry VIII into the condition of chantries and
hospitals, it was said that no poor person was kept there, nor had been for
many years. It appears also that there were no longer any brethren, but only
a Master, who was also Rector of the church and the revenue amounted to
£20.
The Hospital was not taken
into the king's hand at that time, but in 1591 an attempt was made to prove
that it had reverted to the Crown by the death of the Master and religious
brethren. Oliver St. John and others were commissioned to inquire into the
foundation and to find out who were the heirs of Robert de Parys. It was
finally proved that it had been united with the parish church and was the
property of the Mayor and Corporation, who in 1628 petitioned that there
should be no further proceedings against them in respect of it, 'except only
by course of law.' At the end of the eighteenth century the Rector of the
church was still called Master of the Hospital, and ten beadsmen received ninepence weekly from the funds of the old foundation.
In 1653 and 1654 a Commission
ordered that certain persons deliver up all land and possessions to John
Gifford, the Master and Rector of the Hospital and Rectory and his
successors. The income thereafter to maintain the ministry of the Master
and Rector and provide clothing and relief of poor, aged men of the Town and
Borough of Bedford and other good and charitable causes.

St Johns Rectory and the
Hospital at the rear painted by Thomas Fisher c.1820
In 1835 Henry Pearse became
Master and Rector and it was then noted that the sum of ninepence per week
was usually paid to 10 poor men and one shilling each on St John’s and St
Thomas’s days in lieu of dinners. On affixing a seal to any lease, two of
the poor men were always present and received two shillings and sixpence
each from the Master and the lessee. The property of the Trust then
consisted of the Master’s house and certain farms, fields and messuages in or
about the Town of Bedford; the value was £56,284.00. The income had been taken
principally by the Master and Rector, leaving only £19.10s amongst the then
10 beadsmen.
In 1860 the Mayor, Alderman
and Burgesses of the Borough of Bedford, with the consent of the Rev Henry
Pearse, promoted a bill in Parliament to authorise a sale of the Hospital
lands and the application of all proceeds to certain ecclesiastical purposes
in the Borough of Bedford
The opponents to the Bill
proposed that all land and buildings belonging to the Master and co-brethren
of the Hospital were subject to the Trusts of Robert de Parys. It was
further proposed that all rents and income benefit the Hospital and be
applied to the poor of Bedford.
In 1864 the Master of the
Rolls decreed largely in favour of the opponents and ordered that a scheme
for the future regulation of the Hospital and application of income should
be established and that provision be made for the appointment of Trustees.
The Mayor and Alderman etc
appealed against the decision of the Master of the Rolls but the Lords of
Appeal hardly altered the Master of the Rolls earlier decision.
Following this promotion and
failure of the Borough, the 1881 Act of Parliament was passed and in accordance
with which the Trust still operates, although the gratuities have been
regularly increased as have the payments to Charity
|