Norwich Castle
Norwich is a city on the River Wensum in the
beautiful rural county of Norfolk. During the 11th century, Norwich was the
largest city in England after London, and one of the most important places in
the kingdom.
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Norwich Castle |
When the Normans conquered England in 1066, Norwich had
25 churches and a population of over 5,000 English Saxons. With its easy access
to Europe via the river Yare made it a thriving trade centre, but the Normans did
not realise the potential of the town and area.
The heart of Norwich at that time was based around
the ancient crossroads at Tombland where the market place and the houses of the
officials who administered the town. The Normans looked for high ground to
build their castle. Ninety-eight Saxon homes were demolished to build the William’s
royal palace.
Shortly after the castle was built Ralph Guader the
Earl of East Anglia, tried to seize it but failed and escaped to France leaving
his wife, Emma at Norwich Castle. William’s army of over 300 men, laid seize to
the castle for three months and Emma had no choice but surrender.
William returned to Norwich at Christmas in 1075, and
ordered that many of the castle’s defenders were executed or had their hands
cut off or their eyes cut out. By 1122 the castle was complete and William’s
son, King Henry I stayed at the castle.
In 1100, work began on a stone keep to replace the
timber castle which was built of flint and faced with stone from Caen,
Normandy, France. It took 20 years to complete the task.
The Castle and its fee (the area covered by the
outer defences) were controlled by the Sheriff of Norwich, who was responsible
directly to the King. The Cathedral Priory was a law onto itself, and
controlled the area of the Cathedral precincts which are still walled off to
this day.
Small conflicts between the Normans, Saxons and
Vikings continued, but eventually the town became stable enough to receive a
royal charter from Henry II in 1158 and another one from Richard the Lionheart
in 1194.
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Bigod Crest |
During the Revolt of 1173–1174 when Henry II's sons
rebelled against him starting a civil war, Norwich Castle was put in a state of
readiness. Hugh Bigod, 1st Earl of Norfolk was one of the more powerful Earls
who joined the revolt against Henry. With 318 Flemish soldiers that landed in
England in May 1174, and 500 of his own men, Bigod advanced on Norwich Castle.
They captured the castle and took fourteen prisoners who were held for ransom.
When peace was restored later that year, Norwich was returned to royal control.
The Normans introduced the Jews to Norwich and they
lived close to the castle. A cult was founded in Norwich in the wake of the
murder of a young boy, William, for which the Jews in Norwich were blamed. In
Lent 1190, violence against Jews erupted in East Anglia and on 6th
February (Shrove Tuesday) it spread to Norwich. Some fled to the safety of the
castle, but those who did not were killed.
When the barons rebelled against King John in 1215,
the Prince Louis of France was invited to seize the throne of England. Louis
captured Norwich Castle in 1217 and plundered the town.
The town was again plundered in 1266 by
'disinherited barons'.
In 1297 work began on building the city walls for 37
years. All inhabitants had to contribute to the cost. The walls and the 12
gates helped control the influx of people into the town, and the collection of
tolls.
In 1349, the Black Death arrived in Norwich, and
further outbreaks of the plague in 1362 and 1369 led to the deaths of over a
quarter of the population.
In 1380 a charter was obtained giving the Bailiffs
and committee of 'Twenty Four' who were rich merchants, the power the make and
alter by-laws. A charter in 1404 replaced the Bailiffs with a Mayor and two
Sheriffs, but control of the city was still in the hands of the rich merchants. Two more charters
in 1414 and 1417 made Norwich a legal corporation and a county in itself.
In the 14th century, Norwich Castle was
no longer a favourite residency of the King but was used instead as a prison
but no prisoners were kept there until the 15th century.
By 1707 prisoners were escaping due to bad repair of
the castle so they were kept in chains. By 1810 only a few were chained up as
most prisoners were sentenced to death; flogging was not common at Norwich
prison.
It was no different to any other prison and by the
late 18th Century the gaoler charged the prisoners for almost everything
including, furniture, bed clothes, drink, visitors and for releases. The poor were
given a bread allowance and relied on friends or other people for food.
During 1824 the prison was rebuilt to accommodate
255 prisoners and 250 prisoners in 1845. Tunnels were built from the Shirehall
to the castle, to transport prisoners. Tunnels also ran from the Guildhall, the
Cathedral and the Crown Derby Pub. On
the 2nd of August 1887 the prisoners were transferred to the new
prison.
While the castle was a prison, Saturday was the day
for the hangings on the bridge between the two gatehouses, attracting up to
30,000 onlookers. During 1849 trains were laid on for the hanging of James
Bloomfield Rush for the murder of Isaac Jeremy who was the recorder of Norwich)
and his bones were buried within the castle walls. Robert Kett was captured and
hung from the top of the castle for his rebellion against Edward VI. A hanging
in 1854 lasted 5 minutes with the person struggling and the last pubic hanging
was in 1867. Some prisoners were burnt at the stake in the castle ditches.
Norwich Castle was purchased in 1887 to become a
museum and still is today, the castle was a prison for 900 years.
Ghosts and Death
Norwich Castle’s oldest ghost is King Gurgunt. During
roman times he built a castle at Norwich, and when he died the mound that the
castle is now on was built for him and it is thought that he still sits on the
mound, with a sword in hand and next to a table piled with silver and gold.
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Martha Alden |
Kett’s ghost is reported to have been seen hanging
from the top of the castle, rotting in a swinging cage.
The most popular and most sighted ghost of the
castle is of a woman in black. She was first seen in 1820 by several prisoners
who were scared half to death. She is
thought to be wearing Victorian clothing and wanders around the art exhibition
area of the museum; she turns the corner and vanishes. This area where she haunts
was once part of the prison. She has also been seen in the grounds of the
castle, floating around and the staff of the museum have witnessed in this
area.
This is Martha Alden, who lived at Attleborough with
her husband and on the 18th July 1807, she murdered her husband by
cutting off his head with a billbrook, she then proceeded to take her husbands’
body to a dry ditch in the garden with help from Mary Orvice before moving it
two days later to a pond on a nearby common and the body was soon discovered.
Martha’s defence for killing her husband was that he
had beaten her, threatened to kill her and was drinking away their inheritance.
Martha’s hanging took place on the 31st July 1807 to a rowdy
Attlebrough crowd, on a hurdle which represented a mark of shame. Once she had
died her body was handed over for dissection. The crowd burnt the cottage down
that she once lived in, but a few days later a ghostly figure was seen on the
castle hill and it was identified as Martha.
Henry Kable
and Susannah Holmes
Two of Norwich Castle’s most famous inmates were
Henry Kable and Susannah Holmes.
Henry was born in 1763 in Laxfield, Suffolk as the
son of Henry Kable and Dianna Fuller. Susannah was born in Surlingham, Norfolk
in 1763.
Kable was known for being a businessman, but was
convicted of burglary at Thetford, Norfolk, on 1st February 1783 and
sentenced to death. This was commuted to transportation for fourteen years to
America, but the American Revolution meant that transportation to there was no
longer possible. Henry was returned to the Norwich Castle prison.
Susannah Holmes was sentenced to death after being
found guilty of theft from the home of Jabez Taylor. Mr. Justice Nares donned
his black cap and sentenced Susannah to be ‘hanged
by the neck until she was dead’. The judge who passed
sentence then recommended that she be given a reprieve, which was granted by
the king. was then sentenced for
transportation to the American colonies for 14 years.
Susannah and Henry began a relationship whilst
prisoners.
In 1786 Susannah gave birth in her Castle cell to a
baby boy who she called Henry. That same year mother and baby were sent to Dunkirk
prison at Plymouth to await transportation. An order from London forbade Henry
from going with Susannah and their child. He must have thought he would never
see his family again.
Mother and baby were also cruelly separated. Captain
Bradley who was in charge of the prison had orders only to receive Susannah and
turned her baby away. “The frantic mother
was led to her cell execrating (cursing) the cruelty of the man and vowing to
put an end to her own life.”
A man called John Simpson, the Norwich prison warder
who had escorted mother and child to Plymouth took the baby to London to see Home
Secretary Lord Sydney who was finalising plans for the first convict fleet to
sail for Australia. Simpson was refused entry but slipped in a side door only
to be told that he would have to wait several days to see Lord Sydney.
“Not
long after, he saw Lord Sydney descend the stairs and he instantly ran to him.
His Lordship shewed an unwillingness to attend to an application made in such a
strange and abrupt manner. But Mr. Simpson described the exquisite misery he
had been witness to and expressed his fears that the unhappy woman in the
wildness of her despair should deprive herself of existence.”
Sydney not only ordered that mother and child be
reunited but gave instructions that Henry should be allowed to join them as
well. So Simpson collected Henry Kable from Norwich. Together with the baby,
they made the final journey to Plymouth and a remarkable reunion.
The new family were transported to Australia in the
very first famous fleet of convicts. Susannah and Henry were married among on
10th February 1788 in Sydney; they were the first to marry in the
new colony.
They fought and won the first court case in Australia’s
history. Henry became the Colony’s first Chief Constable and the first of these
reluctant settlers to step ashore on Australia.
In the years that followed the Kables thrived. At
first, conditions were harsh in the primitive hovels gathered round the bay.
Famine was ever-present. But Henry was undaunted. He was made an overseer of
convict gangs, then a constable and finally Governor Phillip appointed him as
the first Chief Constable of New South Wales. As with so much of this young
family’s life you simply could not make it up.
Susannah gave birth to ten more children and all but
one survived. The family grew rich and powerful. For a while Henry ran a public
house called the Ramping Horse, the first stage house in Australia, was named after
Rampant Horse Street in Norwich.
The first ship of any size in the new colony was
named after their eldest daughter Diana. It was built by Henry as part of a
fleet that traded across the Pacific.
Diana married a senior civil servant who had come to
help establish the colony. It was Australia’s first ‘society’ wedding. By then
her parents had served their sentence and the family had grown wealthier with
several estates and trading partnerships.
Henry Kable died in 1846 at the age of 82 ad was
buried alongside Susannah who had died 1825.
Ten generations later the dynasty they founded is
thriving and meets appropriately enough at Kable’s restaurant in Sydney to
remember their celebrated forebears who famously became known as the First
Fleeters.
Susannah is regarded as one of Australia’s founding
daughters. A few years ago she was voted one of that country’s most influential
historic figures.