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THE TOWN OF
HYTHE IN THE DISTRICT OF SHEPWAY
The Court of Shepway was
established less than a century after the Norman Conquest of 1066. The Charter
of Edward I (reigned 1042-66) records that the King's Court was formed to
handle any disputes between the Cinque Ports (then Dover, Sandwich, Romney,
Hastings, and Hythe ), which the individual boroughs couldn't settle between
themselves.
The Court had powers equivalent to those of the Shire Courts
which administered the law in England at the time. King's Court sessions were
usually held in the open, on Lympne Hill, where the Shepway Cross now
stands.
The Cross was erected in 1923 to mark this
site.
The Shepway Cross stands at
about the centre of the original Cinque Ports. Today Shepway Council, based in
Folkestone, provides services for over 90,000 people from just west of Lydd,
along the 'Kent Ditch', through Appledore, then east to include Newchurch,
north including Elmsted, Stelling Minnis and Lyminge Forest, Hawkinge, part of
Capel, and Folkestone itself.
HYTHE TOWN HALL
The Town Hall, formerly the
Guildhall, was built on the site of the covered market place in Hythe High
Street in 1794.
Previous meetings had been held in the parvise of the Church of
St Leonard's. Meetings of Mayors and Town Councillors (called Jurats) may have
been held in the ancient 'Wealden House' almost opposite the Town Hall.
LIST OF THE BAILIFFS OR MAYORS
The Domesday Book
describes Kent as being under the jurisdiction of the Archbishop of Canterbury.
The Borough of Hythe had 225 inhabitants (burgesses or freemen). From 1399 the
Government of the Borough was vested in the freemen and 12 Town Councillors
(Jurats) who were sworn to defend the town and its people. Queen Elizabeth I
granted Hythe a Royal Charter as a Cinque Port in 1575. Mayors were now to be
elected.
MOOT
HORN
The Moot Horn was
presented to the Town by Thomas Tourney in 1592 to summon the
Freemen to vote on town business (Freemen were men who were
permitted to vote). The horn was used in 1975, to mark the 400th
anniversary of the granting of the Royal Charter to Hythe and
was last blown to herald in the new Millennium by Bandmaster
Richard Carroll of The Salvation Army, playing the Millennium
Fanfare which he composed for the occasion
THE PAINTINGS
The portrait of
Charles James Fox
(1749-1806) hangs in the Town Hall.
Fox was a British statesman and member of the Liberal
Party, and spent most of his political life in opposition to the Government. He
supported religious tolerance, ending the slave trade, American and Irish
independence and the French Revolution. In 1802 he opposed Prime Minister
William Pitt and the war with France. When Pitt died in January 1806, Fox
became Secretary of State, but died in September of the same year and was
buried in Westminster Abbey. Another Whig Member of Parliament, Stewart
Marjoribanks of Berwick, presented the picture of Fox to the Town, together
with the pictures of the two East Indiamen.
BUST OF ELIZABETH THE QUEEN
MOTHER
This
was commissioned to commemorate the Queen Mother's installation as Lord Warden
of the Cinque Ports.
PORTRAIT OF LORD WAKEFIELD
Lord Wakefield was born in
1859 and became a pioneer and entrepreneur in the oil industry. The Wakefield
Oil Company made him a rich man. He became Lord Mayor of London in 1915. After
the 1914-18 War, he purchased Talbot House, which had been requisitioned as a
soldiers club overseen by 'Tubby Clayton', founder of TOC H. He purchased White
Cottage near the top of Blackhouse Hill and then built the Links, a small house
next to White Cottage.
In 1936 he presented Hythe with a lifeboat, the VISCOUNTESS
WAKEFIELD
(costing £6,000). The lifeboat was lost at sea in 1940
during the evacuation of Dunkirk. He was made an Honorary Freeman in 1938. Lady
Wakefield bequeathed 10,000 for the benefit of the poor in Hythe. Every year at
the celebration of Mayor Making, a solemn moment is given to hanging a wreath
to this portrait.
VENETIAN
FETE
The Venetian Fete has been held on the Royal Military Canal
since 1860, except for the war years. Since 1954 it has been held every second
year. A trophy is awarded for the best entry.
THE ARMORIAL BEARINGS OF THE CINQUE PORTS
These
were presented by Edward I and are carved over the Roll of Hythe Bailiffs and
Mayors in the Town Hall.
ADAM FIRE PLACE
This fireplace was designed by the Adam brothers, and
made in 1793. Robert and James Adam were architects who are best remembered for
their use of straight lines ornamented with garlands in furniture and
architecture. The Banner of the Cinque Ports which is displayed over the
fireplace, was presented to Hythe by John Hosgood, whilst serving as Mayor in
1980.
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