ROW SIXTY EIGHT‑ THOMAS LUCAS ROW*1

BREAM'S ROW*1  

(Not mentioned by Johnson)

 

 Rows 68 - 74 link


Row 68 map


From King Street to Howard Street, and is now absorbed by Regent Street.  Early in the seventeenth century there stood an old house at the north‑west corner belonging to Giles Call, who was Bailiff in 1632. He sold to Thomas Lucas, merchant, who filled that office in 1658, and hence this row was called Mr.Thomas Lucas' Row.

Regent Street replaced the Row

Lucas has been a name of very longstanding in Yarmouth. Warren Lucas was named as one of  twenty seven jurats  in articles confirmed by Henry III, and filled the office of  Bailiff in 1369.  John Lucas was Bailiff in 1636, and his pedigree was recorded in the Heralds visitation for 1664. His son, Thomas Lucas, who married Elizabeth, daughter of John Cooper, followed in the Political footsteps of his father, and on  the  death of Oliver Cromwell, being then one  of  the  Bailiffs,  he  signed  the  address   to  Richard  Cromwell,  congratulating him on his accession to the Protectorate.  He seems to have been a man of hot temperament, and to have  been  the  enemy  of those who favoured a restoration.

 

During the latter part of the 18th century and the beginning of the 19th century the house was occupied by Mr.Samuel Bream, and the row  latterly  known  as  Bream's  Row.  He  let  what  were  then considered  to  be  the  best lodgings in the town, consequently they were often let by the port  Admiral,  or  by  the  Admiral  in  command  of the North sea  fleet.  Sir  Richard  Onslow  lodged  there, as did Admiral Lord Duncan.

 

(Sir Richard Onslow was speaker in  the  house of commons when Sir  Robert Walpole was first Prime Minister ‑1721 to 1742. It was also the age of Robinson Crusoe, and the accession of George II in 1727)  

 

The next House, which was  also absorbed by Regent Street, was in 1773 in the occupation of Anthony Cooper Gray  Esq.,  and after of Thomas Utting,  who sold in 1774 to Robert Cory, Mayor  in  1803. Between this row and the  next  there  was  formerly  a row running from the Quay  to  Blind  Middle  Street, which was stopped up  in 1761, and added to the adjoining house to  the north. When Regent Street was  made  in  1813 the site of this old row was added to the adjoining house to the south, and then the north front of the London and Provincial Bank is built upon it, which is now the office of the Norwich Union Assurance Company, and previously those of Eagle Star Insurance. 

 

                            

 

No residents listed in this row 1886 onwards.