On this day … 5 October 1314

King Edward II gave ‘to the mayor, bailiff and good men of the vil of Preston’ permission to levy a tax for five years to pave the streets of the town.

Henry Fishwick in his History of Preston sets out in great detail just what the burgesses of Preston could tax, and what the charges were. Fishwick takes this grant from the king to suggest that Preston was growing rapidly at this time:

‘The long list of the articles liable to pay toll is of considerable interest as showing that even at this early date the wants and requirements of the Prestonians were such as could only have been used by a community in a prosperous and advanced state of civilisation.’

The list of articles below suggests Preston’s market place and neighbouring streets would have been crowded with traders and customers on market and fair days (spot the wolf skins for sale):

A horse load of corn: a farthing
Horses, cows, and oxen: a halfpenny
Hides of horses, cows, or oxen, fresh, salted, or preserved: a farthing
Any kind of carts bringing flesh, fresh or salted: a penny
Hogs: a farthing
Two small pigs sold before Easter: a halfpenny
Lamprey sold before Easter: a halfpenny
Ten sheep, goats, or pigs: a halfpenny
Ten skins: a farthing
Ten skins of sheep’s wool: a halfpenny
Ten skins of stags, hinds, or fallow deer: a penny
Skins of hares, rabbits, cats, wolves, and squirrels: a penny
A cart load of salt: a penny
A horse load of salt: a halfpenny
Cloth: a halfpenny
A hundredweight of flax: a penny
A quarter:–
of canvas: a penny
of Irish cloth: a penny
cloth of silk with gold, samite, diaper, and baudkin: a penny
silk cloth without gold: a halfpenny
A bale of silk and a cart load of sea fish: two pence
A horse load of sea fish: a halfpenny
Hogshead of wine: two pence
A horse load of cinders: a penny
A sack of wood: two pence
Bundles of cloth:–
per cart load: three pence
per horse load: a penny
A cart load:–
of iron or lead: two pence
grease and oil: a penny
A quarter of warde: [?]
1000 lb. alum and copperas: a penny
1000 onions: a farthing
1000 herrings: a halfpenny
Cart load of timber: a halfpenny
1000 shingles: a farthing
100 laths: a farthing
Grist mills: a half penny
Hand mills: a farthing
1000 nails for house building: a penny
100 horse shoes and wheel tires for carts: a penny
Other kind of nails: a halfpenny
All kinds of merchandise coming to the town and exceeding the value of five shillings: a farthing
Hoops for brewers’ casks: a farthing
A cart load of tanned leather: a farthing
A cart load of firewood or underwood per week: a halfpenny
Half-a-dozen cheeses: a farthing
A horse load of butter: a halfpenny

Fishwick added the following notes:
Samite is a rich kind of silk with gold or silver thread in it
Baudkin, material introduced into England in the thirteenth century
Warde was a coarse kind of cloth.

Henry Fishwick of Rochdale, in his mayoral robes
Henry Fishwick in his Rochdale mayoral robes: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Fishwick

What is so impressive about Henry Fishwick’s many books on Lancashire history, is the effort he had to put in to gather his material. For the above, he had to travel to London to inspect the Patent Rolls of Edward II, written in Latin and in a difficult to read hand, and transcribe and translate the record.

I doubt many local historians today could do the same.


Source
Henry Fishwick’s History of Preston


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