| Crowded,
poor, insanitary - but the yards of Norwich were
home, sweet home
| |
|
In
the 19th and early 20th century, thousands
of Norwich people lived in dirty, crowded
and insanitary yards and courts - like Mancroft
Yard, right.
There were 750 of them, approached through
archways and narrow alleys off the city's
bustling streets. Life was tough but there
was a sense of community. Most are now gone,
but one or two, like Wright's Yard, left,
have survived and prospered.
Now - with your help - DEREK JAMES investigates
the
yards and courts of Norwich |
Looking around Norwich today
it is difficult to imagine that 100 years ago
there were nearly 750 yards and courts in the
city where life for many was a daily struggle
against all the odds.
Some yards were
better than others, but many men, women and children
lived in real squalor and misery. They were poor
people, very poor, and in those days public handouts
were few and far between.
A few years
ago the late and great Norwich historian Geoffrey
Goreham published a booklet called Yards and Courts
of Old Norwich.
The booklet is
a gem, shining a light on a slice of our history
now fading in time. Geoffrey sets out to record
the rise and fall of the Norwich yard and recalls
this description of a yard in Barrack Street at
the turn of the century.
"This yard is
approached through a very narrow entrance and
has a labyrinth of passages and openings leading
from it. On the wall of the house opposite the
pump from which the water supply is derived there
were marks of accumulation of filth two feet high.
"At the time
of the visit there was refuse and decaying matter
around the pump and dirty water standing around
the drain, in at least half a dozen places. In
the middle of the passage was a drain blocked
with refuse, very close to a bake office. No lighting…"
So many of the
history books concentrate on the fine Norwich
houses with their vast gardens where the rich
lived but Geoffrey takes a walk around the corner
to a very different Norwich.
The "yard areas"
appeared to have been concentrated in three districts
of the city - Coslany, Pockthorpe and St Martin's
where the density was staggering.
But they were
also spread all over the city - especially in
the King Street and Ber Street areas. It was not
uncommon to find a family of up to eight people
living in two rooms and, even in the one room
courts, five or six people shared a single room.
Many of the names
changed over the years - often because the court
or yard took the name of the oldest inhabitant
or the more remarkable of its characters.
For instance,
in Magdalen Street, Zipfel's Court was named after
the watch-repairing family. Some yards were named
after trades, such as Pipe Burners Yard in Pottergate.
But generally
they took their names from the Norwich pubs which
they adjoined - pubs such as the Queen of Hungary
Yard in St Benedict's and the Bathhouse in Oak
Street. Then there were others such as Boarded
Entry Yard in Ber Street, Mint Yard, Soup Office
Yard and Ragged School Yard. |