Fuller's Hill
Fuller's Hill became the roadway leading from North
Quay to the end of Northgate Street, although it originally did not run as far
west, since it only ran as far as the end of Row Nine.
Fuller's Hill was in the seventeenth century, the residence of some prominent people in Yarmouth, including Sir Thomas Meadowe, who was recommended by Charles 1st. to be elected to the office of Bailiff. Thomas Meadowe, the father of Sir Thomas, had been elected in 1617, 1629 and 1638. His son Sir Thomas Meadowe also entered the Corporation, and was friendly with Sir John Wentworth of Somerleyton Hall. He was responsible for paying one thousand pounds of ship money gathered from the Yarmouth citizens to Sir John Wentworth, but had resisted this. Sir John Wentworth was the High Sheriff at the time. Sir Thomas Meadowe had lands in Herringfleet, and owned the Manor at Herringfleet which he had built in 1650, and also re-built the great barn there.
In 1662 he was
selected to fill the office of bailiff, and at that time the townsfolk disowned
Henry Cromwell as High Steward, and elected in his place Edward Hyde, Earl of Clarendon
and Lord Chancellor. Whilst in office Sir Thomas entertained the Bishop
of Norwich, Lord Townshend, Lord Richardson, Sir William D'Oyley and the Dean
of Norwich, and provided an
"entertainment extraordinary" for Sir Edward Turner, Speaker of the
House of Commons. This cost thirty five pounds.
In 1682 he was once again bailiff, and had to
personally attend the King in Council on the affairs of the town. In his house at Yarmouth he had the Earl of
Yarmouth as a guest, when the latter came to be sworn in as High Steward. Palmer also relates how Sir Thomas Meadowe,
as prime bailiff and his colleague Nathaniel Symonds, at that time the junior
bailiff, had a squabble as the duties which were in dispute. Nathaniel Symonds will be mentioned in the
matters concerning 55 King Street and the White Lion public house.
On the south side of Fuller's Hill, adjoining Conge
Street, towards the west, Sir Thomas Meadowe had a Brewery, which he purchased
from Augustin Bloomfield. This was probably the oldest Brewery in the town
according to Palmer, and was conveyed
in 1698 to Christopher Brightin, beer brewer. Sir Thomas Meadowe's house was
rebuilt in 1642. He had obtained leave to extend the walls so far as the former
buttresses projected, and to enclose a
piece of ground to the west. At that time the only substantial piece of building on Fuller's Hill with a large piece
of ground enclosed is that on the south end of Fuller's Hill to the west of
George Street. (This is the site of the former Zebra bus depot, now divided
into Comet and the D.I.Y. shop.) The only substantial building that might have
been Sir Thomas' brewery would be that on the south-west end of Row Eleven, in
the middle of the site which is now Brewery House, or the Brewery Stores, previously
the Falcon Brewery; eventually this absorbed Row Thirteen.
Brewery Street is on the site of what was formerly
rows seventeen
and eighteen, at Sayer's Corner. Fuller's Hill was originally much higher and
was thought traditionally to be the oldest part of the town where the
settlement first began. Even in
Palmer's time the road had been much lowered for the convenience of traffic,
and the houses on the south side became much elevated above it. These houses
are evident in the photographs of Fuller's Hill, as it was then; these houses
have of course all been entirely swept away, and the space between Row Ten and
Row Nine completely obliterated and filled by the road. Here the Surveyor's
plans showing the outline where the road was to be prior to demolition, are
most useful.
Fuller's
Hill passage would now be situated in the car-park on the north side of
Fuller's Hill. Lacon's brewery,
mentioned above, was one of the first premises to be connected to the
telephone, in 1888, and had the number - Yarmouth 12. At the foot of the hill
at the west end of Fuller's Hill there was an old public house called the
"Sawyer's Arms". This was destroyed by fire in 1841, and a new house
erected on the site called "The Albion", and then set back eight feet
in order to widen the road, which had been very narrow. The Albion public house can be seen on the
1797 and 1906 maps, becoming wedge shaped as re-built after the 1841 fire.
This
pub. is seen as a rather square Georgian style building with very tall chimneys
in the 1880 photograph, looking over the top of the hill. The large house
likely to have originally belonged to Thomas Meadowe, can easily be seen in the
photograph to the left of the Albion. Immediately in front of this was George
Street, commencing with no. 116. Rather
nearer, the next houses situated on the very high ground faced by a wall and
which were approached by steps, are seen in three photographs, one with a
gathering of people, and one with a clear view of the south side, showing the
"Jolly Waterman", which was closed in 1903. The Jolly Waterman was
no. 32 Fuller's Hill, and on the elevated piece were nos. 34, 35,
36 and 37. There was a
passage-way between nos. 35 and 36, the entrance to which looked like a
doorway, but which had no door and passed under no. 36. nos. 38 and 39 had a
double shop front, 38 had a bay window, 39 had a flat window with many panes,
no. 40 was the square two-storey house with the sign board in front, and what
looks in the photo. like a passage way goes into a yard as seen from the
surveyor's drawing, on the 1906 plan.
No. 41 can then be seen which is a rather pretty georgian private house.
No. 116 George Street, looked very dilapidated indeed, possibly empty and
semi-derelict, judging from the state of the windows. As seen on
the surveyor's plan, no. 116 had the corner cut off. I feel that this must have
been demolished earlier in order to
improve the view into Fuller's Hill. It looks in a better state in the 1880
photograph, but has all its main windows looking east, and a very small window
with a rounded top at ground floor
level- or between floors; perhaps on a stairway looking north into Fuller's
Hill. Between this house, (no. 116) and Sir Thomas Meadowe's house there
appears tohave been a fairly tall garden
wall. No. 31 had a first floor
platform, projecting into Fuller's Hill, which must have been used for loading
carts - perhaps there was a grain loft.
Irene
Newman*3 lived at the Albion from the age of 7 with her family (1929) until she was in her twenties, at which time
the old Inn was demolished to enlarge the roadway. The house had already lost
its licence as described by Harry Johnson, and had been lived in by the
vagrants, so it was in a poor state. Her brother aged 18 did all the decorating,
and subsequently became ill. The Newman
family comprised seven girls, three boys, and their parents. There were four
large bedrooms on the first floor, and they used these rather as dormitories,
with 2 cots and 2 beds in one room. The Council owned the house then, and when
they later pulled it down, Irene was moved to Milton Road. In a modern house
(no. 3) on the north side, (modern as described by Palmer) Dr.Alfred Impey
commenced practice in Yarmouth as a physician, and obtained considerable eminence.
He died in 1852 at Cove Hall, Suffolk, at the residence of his Father in Law,
William Everett Esq., at the early age of thirty eight. There was a mural monument to his memory in
the south aisle of St. Nicholas Church, with an inscription on brass "Erected
By Friends Who Appreciated His Worth And Abilities". At the south-east corner stood an old house
which in 1751 was the property of John
Hurry, and was occupied by Martha Palmer, widow. It was re-built as two
dwelling houses in 1777 by John Vout, liquor
merchant*4, and they were partially pulled down in order to widen the approach
to Fuller's Hill. In 1903 Mr.Howes
removed the mound and demolished some cottages to make way for the widening of
Fuller's Hill.*5 These must have been either 41 and 42 Fuller's Hill, or
possibly what was subsequently shown as
16 Church Plain. These buildings are
again seen on this corner during the demolition taking place in January 1971. There are two photos showing D.H. Folkes'
Antiques Shop and the Public House to its left or south side in Brewery Plain.
Previously the Folkes' shop seems to
have been the Tobacconist behind the belisha beacon in the 1930's photographs.
Buttings is no. 42. -the number can clearly be seen. The end house in Fuller's Hill on the south side (no. 41) is Cubitt's Yarmouth Bloaters and Kippers. In Northgate Street at the south end, on the
west side, we still of course have the Crystal
Public House, on the corner of Fuller's Hill. nos. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9,
and 10 remain much as they were. There is now a Hairdressers at no. 2. Nos. 3,
4 and 5 are Cox's Jewellers. No. 6 was owned by Mr. Doughty, no. 7 was in 1991
Keith Lawson's Antique Clocks, and no. 10 is part of Wheatley's
establishment, the Antique Merchants.
*3.
interview, 1991.
*4.
John Vout was referred to as owning houses on the corner now called Brewery
Plain, and owned the King's Head public house on the east side of Northgate
Street.
*5.
ref. Ecclestone's extracts.
FULLER'S
HILL : Occupants 1874
North
side
1.
Parker, William, wine and spirit merchant
1.
Deeks, Thomas, Ham curer
3.
Bensley, Thomas, Ham carpenter, "Impey House"
4.
Goose, James, gardener
5.
Goffin, Alfred, marine stores
6.
Emes, Suzanna
Fuller's Passage
1.
Wisker, John, marine stores
2. Pillow,
Charles, carter
3.
Millard, Charles, musician
4.
Thomas, Benjamin, fisherman
7.
Thomas, John, shopkeeper
8.
Farner, Rebecca, Lodgings
9.
Whittaker, George, brewery
10.
Bullimore, George Robert, carter
11.
Barker, Zachariah, blacksmith
12.
Hall, George, shoemaker
13.
Cobram, William
14.
Thompson, John, victualler, "Albion Tavern"
15.
Atkins, Philip, cowkeeper
16.
Forder, shoemaker
17.
Harbord, Robert, barman
18.
Rowland, Mrs., dressmaker
Blake, William, shrimper
20.
Waters, James, coal porter
21.
Gown, James, coal porter
22.
Chandler, Samuel, coal porter
South
side
23.
Ratcliffe, John, coachbuilder, house,
26.
Caister Road
24.
Scotten, Sarah, shopkeeper
25.
Rainford, Rosanna, shopkeeper
26.
Rogers, Louis, fisherman
27. Gooch,
T., basket maker
28.
Fulcher, Mary, laundress
George Street
29.
Allcock, James,John, beer retailer
30.
Wells, John
31.
High, Henry, shoemaker
32.
Campher, Robert, basket maker
33.
Watson, James, basket maker
34.
Long, Mary Ann, laundress
35.
Bexfield, Stephen, miller
36.
Symonds, Harriet
37.
Woodrow, Wm., brewery
38.
Clarke, George, fisherman
39.
and 40. Watson, George, Game dealer
41. Ramm, Cornelius, haberdasher
42.
Cooper, J.W., shoemaker, (and Church Plain)