St Albans Market
A busy St Peter’s Street in August 2023
LocationSt Albans
Coordinates51°45′15″N 0°20′14″W / 51.754267°N 0.337134°W / 51.754267; -0.337134
AddressSt Peter's Street, St Albans, AL1 3ED
Opening date860
DeveloperWulsin
ManagementSt Albans City & District
OwnerSt Albans City & District
EnvironmentOutdoor
Goods soldFresh fruit and vegetables, fresh fish, bread, cheese, street food, fashion, accessories, prints, jewellery, records, blinds, fabric, foam cut to size, nuts, olives, baked goods
Days normally openWednesday, Saturday
Number of tenants165
Websitestalbans.gov.uk/markets

St Albans Market is an outdoor street market in the cathedral city and market town of St Albans. The market runs from Market Place North-East up St Peter's Street to the junction with Catherine Street and is managed by St Albans City & District Council.

History

Beginnings and the medieval market

Wulsin, the sixth abbot of St Albans Abbey founded St Albans Market in circa 860 to generate income for the Abbey and to form the centre of a new town.[1][2] Market Place is next to the Waxhouse Gate entrance to the abbey and it is possible that the market had already formed around this gate before coming under the control of the abbey.[3][4] The market was managed on behalf of the abbey by a clerk of the market.

In the time of Abbot Geoffrey de Gorham (1119–1146) the income from the tolls and the market dues are given as £11-14-0.[1]

Henry II of England (1154–1189) confirmed the Abbey's control of “the town of St Albans with the market place and every liberty a borough ought to have.”.[3] There were further confirmation of the abbey's market rights by Richard I in 1198.[5]

The market was divided into areas where traders of similar commodities all competed for customers.[6] The known areas are the:

  • Fleshambles for meat,
  • Fish Shambles for fish,
  • Malt Cheping,
  • Wheat Cheping,
  • Leather Shambles,
  • Pudding Shambles,
  • Wool Market, and
  • Cordwainers Row.

By 1287, at the latest, market days had become established as Wednesday and Saturday as they still were in the twenty-first century.[4]

By this time, the abbey had also founded markets at Codicote, High Barnet, and Watford. Of these, High Barnet and Watford markets are still trading.

In the early 1290s and Eleanor cross was erected at the southern end of Market Place between the market and the entrance to the abbey.

The Moot Hall was the building in which the abbot's court dealt with legal issues arising within the town and surrounding area and was also the venue for the court of piepowders which dealt with legal issues arising on the market.[4]

A plan of mediæval St Albans Market and its most important buildings.

In the summer of 1297 John of Berkhamsted found himself on the wrong side of the bench when the inhabitants of St Albans made a complaint to Edward I and the abbot was found guilty of weights and measures offences concerning bread and ale. For a few weeks the market fell under royal control before being returned to the abbey.[1] Edward reconfirmed the abbey's market rights in 1301.[5] In the 1334 subsidy roll, the market was valued at £265-3-8 for the purposes of taxation.[5]

In the thirteenth century, many of the stalls gave way to permanent building and shops and by 1355 large parts of Market Place had been built over. In the earlier part of the thirteenth century, fees are recorded for stalls in the Market Place but in the next century the term shops supersedes that of stalls.[3]

Early modern period and the end of the abbey

By at least 1519 the abbey was leasing out the collection of the market rents. The first known lessee being John Gelly with a lease of thirty-one years.

A royal market

As part of the dissolution of the monasteries, Henry VIII closed the Abbey in 1539 and took possession of the market, it remained crown property for the next fourteen years. The holder of the lease for market rents at that time was a Raynold Carte, who held it at an annual rent of £13-6-0. For an unstated offence he was placed in the pillory on a market day in 1541 from one hour before the market opened until an hour after the market closed.[3]

The town takes control

In 1553, Henry’s son Edward VI sold the right to hold the market on Wednesdays and Saturdays as well as three fairs on:

to a group of local merchants and landowners. The letters patent[7] which recorded this sale also incorporated St Albans as a borough.[6]

The new mayor acted as clerk of the market overseeing the setting of prices, the accuracy of weights and measures, and presided over the court of piepowders. Following the restoration, St Albans received a charter in 1664. As had the abbey and the crown in the preceding century, in the seventeenth century the corporation leased out the rents of the fairs and markets to bailiffs who paid a fixed rent. At between £40 and £80, in the second half of the century, this was the largest single source of revenue for the corporation.[6]

In 1702 the remaining stump of the Eleanor Cross was demolished[8] and in the following year the corporation ordered that a market cross “be built and set upon the waste ground where the old Cross lately stood near to the Clock House.”[9] The cross erected in 1703 was an octagonal building with a roof supported upon eight columns above which was the figure of Justice, and within it was the town pump worked by a large wheel.[3]

Closure of the Wednesday market

In the early eighteenth century the Wednesday market ceased trading.[10]

In 1729 a market bell was installed in the market house to announce the opening of the market to traders who were not freemen of the town. Only freemen of the town were allowed to trade before the ringing of the bell, which was rung at 10 a.m. in the market house, The bell was used until 1835.[4][6]

The eighteenth century saw a decline in the number of markets in England with Shefford and Toddington in neighbouring Bedfordshire disappearing completely. The annual revenue from the markets reached £326 in 1709–10, then dropped to around £100 in the mid-1730s, and then further dropped to £59 around 1750. The corn market is described as being the first market for corn in England at the beginning of the century but no longer holding that title by the 1750s. Despite the decline in revenue and reputation, the fact that St Albans remained at the centre of a transport hub meant it could still be described as “one of the greatest in England”.[6]

The end of the century saw the addition of a plait market on Saturdays. In the 1790s the Lady Day and Old Michaelmas (10 October) fairs are described as well attended and markets at clothes and toys were traded. The statute fair for hiring farm servants, held at New Michaelmas is described as “sometimes but thinly attended” because of competing fairs held earlier in the year.[6]

Industrial Revolution and wholesale market

By the early nineteenth century the St Albans Turnpike Trust reported that in the year from June 1808 alone, over 45,000 carts and carriages and 260,000 market-bound animals were recorded at the local tollgates.[11]

The Market Cross was taken down in 1810, but the pump remained.[3]

The use of market places for humiliating public punishments continued into the mid-nineteenth century. At the Midsummer court sessions of 1812 a man was convicted of unnatural assault, a euphemism used then for same-sex sexual activity. He was imprisoned for twelve months, but also condemned to the pillory, on a market day, in St Albans for one hour before noon. At this point the use of the pillory seems to have gone out of fashion as one had to be borrowed from Hertford.[12]

By 1815 the plait market was being described by Shaw as “one of the largest in England".[13]

A new town hall and courthouse was built on the site of the old Moot Hall[4] in 1830. The town hall opened directly onto the market enabling the stalls to reach into the building.[14]

The repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846 greatly increased the opportunities for trading grains. The existing grain market—where grain was sold retail to householders, and wholesale to millers, bakers and other traders—consisted of a roof supported on posts and open on all sides to the elements.[15][13] In 1857 this building was replaced with a new Corn Exchange that still stands today.[16]

In 1872 the town pump was replaced by a drinking fountain.[17]

Return of the Wednesday market

Due to Sunday trading laws if cattle were purchased on a Saturday, they could not complete their journey on the Sabbath. Buyers would have to bear the costs of stabling and feeding their purchased animals till Monday. Local farmers started sending their cattle to Hertford, Barnet, Hemel Hempstead, Watford, and Hitchin markets.[10]

By the 1880s selling plait wholesale had given way to finished products and hat making was becoming a major local industry.[18]

Twentieth and twenty-first centuries

Market Place, St Albans on market day in 1915

In the late 1920s the public drinking fountain to the south of the Clock House (now known as the Clocktower) was removed due to the obstruction it was causing to the public highway.[17] After hosting an Eleanor Cross, a market cross, a town pump, and then a public drinking fountain in sharp succession; the site has been left empty since.

In 1926 the Wednesday cattle auction was moved from outside of the Town Hall (now the Museum + Art Gallery) to a site on Drovers Way that is now occupied by a multi-story car park.[19]

In the early twentieth century the Council used their powers under the Shops Act 1911 to make the Wednesday market day an early closing day for retail shops. Pass the regulation required the assent of the owners of two thirds of the affected shops.[20]

Better storage and refrigeration facilities saw the gradual end of the trade in live animals for food and in 1976 the cattle market was closed.[19]

A view from the Clocktower north east along St Peter’s Street on Saturday 17th September 1966

Sometime in the later part of the twentieth century the Council began erecting their own stalls using trailers and tractors and storing their equipment in a yard next to the Cattle Market on Drovers Way. The new, built market, was a convenience to the traders and enabled the Council to more effectively control the layout of the market and the space occupied by individual traders.

The early closing of shops on Wednesdays ended with the passing of the Deregulation and Contracting Out Act 1994.

The boom in coach excursions that had sustained St Albans and many other provincial markets faltered towards the end of the twentieth century due to an ageing clientele and competition from rail travel. Coach tour passengers fell from 2.3m in 1990 to 1.5m in 2015 and from 15% of tourism travel in 1980 to 5% in 2015.[21]

The Council’s stall team dismantling the stalls at the end of a market day

By the second decade of the twenty-first century, the increasing cost of putting up the stalls and the imposition of business rates on outdoor markets meant that St Albans Market was no longer generating revenue for the Council but now required a subsidy to continue.

A view through the market, south west, towards Market Place with the Council supplied stalls

Market profits had been in decline for many years. In 2013–14 the combined income of the twice-weekly Charter Market and loss-making monthly Farmers' Market was 36 per cent lower than 2012–13 and 46 per cent lower than 2011–12.[22]

COVID-19 pandemic

In March 2020 at the onset of the pandemic, along with markets across the country, the market closed on 25 March and 28 March as restrictions were introduced to try to restrict the spread of the Severe acute respiratory syndrome 2 virus. The closure brought the issue of the market's losses to a head and the Council made the stall team redundant and mothballed the Market depot, the stalls, and the equipment used to put up the market.

The market reopened the following week for food traders only. Many of the traders received grants to purchase their own stall equipment and the market returned to being a traditional self-build market. The number of pitches were greatly reduced to facilitate social distancing. Social distancing rules were not relaxed until the end of July 2021[23] when the market started to slowly increase in size.

After an unsuccessful attempt to tender the market build to a private contractor, the Council postponed the tendering and continued with the self-build market.[24]

By 2023 the Council was reporting higher occupancy levels on the Saturday market than before the pandemic restrictions but that the Wednesday market remained smaller than in the past.[25]

Other markets in St Albans

In addition to the traditional Market and fairs, there are a number of other markets regulated under the Part III of the Food Act 1984.[26] On the second Sunday of each month a market with a heavier emphasis on local food and drink, sustainable, and arts and crafts.[27] Two Sunday markets are run by private operators, on the third Sunday of each month, Corky Events run an Antique and Vintage Market and four times a year The Vegan Market Co. hold a vegan food and produce market.


Transport

Bus

230, 300, 301, 302, 304, 305, 357, 361, 601 The Alban Way, 602, 653 Tigermoth, S4, S5, and S6.

Railway

The nearest stations are St Albans Abbey and St Albans City.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Williams, Laurence (1917). St Albans a History. London: Longman Green and Co.
  2. Nicholson, Henry (1870). The Abbey of Saint Alban, some extracts from its early history and a dedication of its conventional church. London: Bell and Daldy.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Page, William (1908). A History of the County of Hertford. London: Victoria County history. Archived from the original on 2023-05-30.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Saunders, Chris (2003-02-24). "The Market Place". salbani.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2021-09-26.
  5. 1 2 3 Letters, Samantha (2005-02-23). "Hertfordshire". Gazetteer Of Markets and Fairs In England And Wales To 1516. Archived from the original on 2022-08-25. Retrieved 2023-12-09.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Freeman, Mark (2008). St Albans a History. Lancaster: Carnegie Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-1-85936-139-9.
  7. "Translation of the Letters Patent of the seventh year of the reign of Edward VI". St Albans City & District Council. 2023-02-02. Archived from the original on 2023-02-02. Retrieved 2023-12-09.
  8. Nicholson, Henry (1870). The Abbey of Saint Alban, some extracts from its early history and a dedication of its conventional church. London: Bell and Daldy.
  9. Lane, Hilda (2022-05-31). "Queen Eleanor of Castile" (PDF). St Albans & Hertfordshire Architectural & Archaeological Society. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-05-31. Retrieved 2023-12-09.
  10. 1 2 Merrick, Julia (2020-02-18). "Wednesday markets: from cattle to carriages and Christmas". St Albans & Hertfordshire Architectural & Archaeological Society. Archived from the original on 2023-03-30. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
  11. Mein, Jon; Iddiols, Frank (2021-08-16). "Tackling obstructions in the High Street and George Street". St Albans & Hertfordshire Architectural & Archaeological Society. Archived from the original on 2023-03-30. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
  12. Le Hardy, William (1923). Hertfordshire County Records. Notes and Extracts from the Sessions Records of the Liberty of St Albans Division. 1770–1840. Vol. IV. Hertford: Charles E. Longmore. pp. 122–123.
  13. 1 2 History of Verulam and St Alban's. St Albans: S. G. Shaw. 1815.
  14. Dunn, Chris (2019-05-26). "The Town Hall: a Brief History". St Albans & Hertfordshire Architectural & Archaeological Society. Archived from the original on 2023-05-22. Retrieved 2023-12-10.
  15. Green, Chris (2014-08-31). "The earliest known photo of St Albans?". St Albans & Hertfordshire Architectural & Archaeological Society. Archived from the original on 2023-05-22. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
  16. Berk, Tony (2019-08-09). "St Albans Corn Exchange: form and materials". St Albans & Hertfordshire Architectural & Archaeological Society. Archived from the original on 2023-05-22. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
  17. 1 2 Bourton, Peter (2019-05-16). "Town Drinking Fountain". St Albans & Hertfordshire Architectural & Archaeological Society. Archived from the original on 2023-05-22. Retrieved 2023-12-09.
  18. Ouston, Janet (2019-05-19). "Straw hat making". St Albans & Hertfordshire Architectural & Archaeological Society. Archived from the original on 2023-03-30. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
  19. 1 2 Hanlon, Bryan (2020-10-02). "St Albans street name quiz: the answers". St Albans & Hertfordshire Architectural & Archaeological Society. Archived from the original on 2023-03-30. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
  20. "Happy 124th birthday to St Albans Lodge no. 2786!". Facebook. Retrieved 2023-12-10.
  21. Hay, Brian (2021-03-17). "Reflections on the future visions of UK tourism outlined in Burkart and Medlik's 1974 book: tourism: past, present, and future". Journal of Tourism Futures. 9 (2): 292. ISSN 2055-5911. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2022-10-15. Retrieved 2023-12-10 via emerald insight.
  22. Adams, Matt (2021-02-11). "New plans hope to reverse fortunes of loss-making Charter Market". The Herts Advertiser. Archived from the original on 2023-12-09. Retrieved 2023-12-09.
  23. Kleiderman, Alex; Bowden, George (2021-07-05). "Covid: Mask law and one metre rule set to end in England". The British Broadcasting Corporation. Archived from the original on 2021-07-05. Retrieved 2023-12-10.
  24. Adams, Matt (2023-03-10). "What Is Council Doing To Restore St Albans Charter Market?". St Albans Times. Archived from the original on 2023-12-09. Retrieved 2023-12-09.
  25. Bates, Pearce (2023-10-06). "St Albans: 'Substantial growth' for charter market". The Herts Advertiser. Archived from the original on 2023-10-22. Retrieved 2023-12-09.
  26. "Part III Markets The Food Act 1984". legislation.gov.uk. The National Archives. Retrieved 28 December 2021.
  27. "Visit St Albans Markets". St Albans City & District Council. 2023-12-10. Archived from the original on 2023-03-29. Retrieved 2023-12-10.
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