OYSTER FISHERIES ON THE NORTH KENT COAST
By ROBERT H. GOODSALL
In Polite Conversation1 Dean Swift wrote 'They say oysters are a cruel
meat because we eat them alive; then they are an uncharitable meat,
for we leave nothing to the poor; and they are an ungodly meat because
we never say grace.'
The countless generations that have consumed these esteemed
molluscs have paid scant heed to such considerations. The civilized
Athenians held them in high esteem as a dainty food whilst the Roman
partiality to the edible British oyster is renowned. Juvenal in satirizing
the epicure Montanus wrote:
He, whether Circe's rock his oysters bore
Or Lucrine Lake or distant Richboroughs shore
Knew at first taste.
Most of the coasts of Britain produce oysters, ostrea edulis, but
from time immemorial those bred and matured in the waters of the
Thames estuary have been held to surpass all others in their excellence.
They owe this outstanding quality to a particular feature of the estuary
shores, the great number of small streams—'freshets' as the dredgermen
call them—which flow from the bordering marshlands carrying fresh
water and suspended alluvial matter to mingle with the salt and so
create ideal feeding conditions over the oyster beds.
In these waters oysters breed in April and May, when they cast
their spawn or spat. At first this spawn floats on the surface and if not
killed by cold, devoured by fish or carried out to sea, after a few days
sinks to the bottom and with an exuded sticky substance attaches
itself to any rocks, stones, shells or other hard objects that lie to hand.
Such host material has always been known a cultch and, as will appear
later, has through the ages been guarded by special regulations enforced
by the governing Water or Admiralty Courts of the individual Companies
of Oyster Dredgers.
From spawning time until about the end of July—Lammas-tide—
oysters are said to be sick but by the end of August they have completely
recovered. This has given rise to the time honoured rule that they should
only be eaten when there is an 'r' in the month.
i Dial ii.
118
Cheyney Rock
SHEERNESS
Scrafisgat-e OYSTER, FISHERIES ON
. ,VE* MEDWAY THE NORTH KENT COAST
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OYSTER
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OYSTER
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CHATHAM THE SWALE
\ FISHERY
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row ley End./ Seasalter
Milton Regis Island
Teynham
FAVERSHAM
Snodland
OYSTER FISHERIES ON THE NORTH KENT COAST
The oyster's greatest natural enemy is the Asteria (star-fish) which
devours the bivalves by inserting its rays into the shells when they lie
open for feeding, a practice noted by the Greek naturalist Oppian
when he wrote the lines:
The prickly star creeps on with fell deceit,
To force the Oyster from his close retreat.
When gaping lids their widen'd void display
The watchful star thrusts in a pointed ray,
Of all its treasures spoils the rifled case,
And empty shells the sandy hillocks grace.
All the Kent Companies of Dredgers were alive to this danger of
attack by star-fish or, as they were customarily known, 'five-fingers'
and strict regulations were enforced to ensure that the dredgermen
collected them from the trawls and brought them ashore to be destroyed.
2 For example we learn from a 1734 entry in the Queenborough
Assembly Book.3
'Whereas the Oyster Grounds of this Borough are now very foul by
the vermin called Five Fingers for want of a due care of the Dredgermen
to Destroy them in the working Season for remedy thereof. It is now
ordered that all the Five Fingers which shall be dredged up on any
working day shall be gathered together and not thrown overboard but
brought on shore and laid on such places as the Deputy Water Bailiff
shall Direct and in case any person shall willfully Neglect to save such
Five Fingers as shall be dredged by him or in his Boat or Vessele he
shall forfeit and pay 5d. for every such Neglect and for encouragement
of Persons to save such Five Fingers It is further Ordered that six
pence per Bushell shall be paid by the Chamberlain upon the Deputy
Water Bailiffs Certificate or taken for every Bushell which shall be
saved and Deposited as the Water Bailiffe shall Direct.'
A second and almost equally destructive hazard to the oyster
broods has always been extreme cold. Over the centuries periods of
exceptional frosts have often resulted in excessive mortality on the
beds and following such winters the necessity to restock is duly noted
in the annals of the several Kent companies. Some instances of this will
be quoted later.
A third and equally ruinous cause of mortality has arisen in the
present century as a result of oil pollution of the sea, particularly
during the two Great Wars.
When primeval man first discovered the food value of shell-fish,
particularly oysters, can never be established but there is ample evi-
2 Farmers were glad to buy them to spread on their land as manure.
3 Queenborough Borough Records A.C.I, K.A.O.
119
OYSTER FISHERIES ON THE NORTH KENT COAST
dence that their gathering on the north Kent coast at the time when the
Romans became established here was an important local occupation
and provided a valuable item for export as well as a welcome addition
to home diet.
At this time and through the centuries of Saxon domination the
garnering of this sea-harvest would have been quite uncontrolled, each
fisherman working alone, or perhaps with one or two others, if some
primitive craft was available, but as soon as Kent came under Norman
rule and great monastic establishments arose to power large supplies
were needed to satisfy the tastes of the refectory tables and the monks
of such houses as Christ Church and St. Augustine's at Canterbury, the
Abbey at Faversham and St. Andrew's Priory, Rochester, hastened to
acquire control of sea manors where oysters might be nurtured. Additionally
bands of local fishermen at such places as Herne, Whitstable,
villages adjacent to the Swale—particularly the future Queenborough—
and Stroud gradually acquired a prescriptive right as individuals to
gather oysters for sale in the local markets or the Queenhithe fishmart
of the City of London.
The earliest controlled fishery on the North Kent coast may well
have been the one at Seasalter which, as part of the manor, belonged to
Christ Church, Canterbury.4 As well as working the off-shore bank in
shallow water known as the Pollard which was included as part of the
manor, the 'Men of Seasalter' at the end of the twelfth century, held
'the fisheries of Milton' (next Sittingbourne) by the yearly rent of 20s.
payable to the Manor of Milton.5 It seems probable therefore that at
this early date the Seasalter fishers cultivated and collected oysters
along the whole length of the Swale. Then in the seventh year of his
reign King John by Charter granted the Milton fishery to the Abbey
of Faversham.
Subsequent to this period organized oyster fisheries became established
in the waters of the Lower Medway from Rochester Bridge to
the Thames, at Queenborough and various other points in the Swale, and
Minster in Sheppey, in the Thames estuary off Whitstable, for a time
in the eighteenth century at Swalecliffe and as late as the mid-nineteenth
century at Herne Bay.
I t was in the Tudor period that groups of free dredgermen first
acquired charters for their organizations and were formed into Companies
under the control of appointed officials and with bylaws to limit entry
and regulate the work. Later in this paper each of these companies
and its constitution will be reviewed.
Medieval refuse pits and middens when examined bear witness to
the vast quantities of oysters that were consumed by all social grades
* Hasted, III.
* Hasted, II, 550, 630.
120
OYSTER FISHERIES ON THE NORTH KENT COAST
of society.6 Professor Rogers in his History of Agriculture and Prices
recorded that in 1273 oysters sold at £d. per hundred. Later it was
customary to sell them by the bushel, the price for which in 1388 was
8d. although ten years later it had fallen to 6d. As money depreciated
in value so the price slowly increased, in 1572 they cost 4d. per hundred,
some 500 going to a bushel. A century later this figure had risen to
2s. 4d. a bushel and by 1680 3s. 6d. a bushel. The Kent fisheries
carried on a big trade with London but also they were distributed in
large quantities throughout the county.
Prior to the establishment of Companies of Oyster Dredgers under
Acts of Parliament from the seventeenth century onward, the fisheries
operated under licence from Lords of the respective Manors and the
State Papers bear witness to many cases of the conviction of individuals
for fishing without licence. Also through the centuries there is a continuous
story of friction between the Essex fishermen (the earliest notice
in the Patent Rolls of Brightlingsea's participation in the Colne Fishery
is 13627) and those of Kent, the former making repeated raids on the
Kent beds. Also in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries there were
arguments over boundaries between the different Kent fisheries.
These troubles came to a head in 1598 when the Archbishop of
Canterbury, John Whitgift, was moved to write to his 'verye lovinge
ffriends Mr Peter Manwood and Mr John Boys' in the following terms:
'. . . by a petition exhibited to me, by the Inhabitants of Whitstable
there is a very great wrong latilie offered unto them woh if it
should be suffered would lend to their undooinge and would be a great
hinderance both to the Citty of Canterbury, and to all the townes of the
east partes of Kent, specially to the poorer sorte of people, who in
these deere tymes are not able to bye flesh for their sustenance, but
live altogether or for most pt e on such victailes, as by daylie travaile
is brought from the sea there. Now so it is (as they inform me) that
certaine seafaring men of the Essex coast and other places have verye
latelie repayred thither into Kent and there dredged oysters and
caught great store of other fishe wthin the banks sholes and streames,
and places of ffishinge neare Whitstable and thereabouts yea and
wthin the psoinots 0 f divers liberties woh are yet pfeotly knowne and the
bounds thereof. And for as much as it is a great injury committed
against the ould customes and privileges of the inhabitants of that
Kentishe cost woh they have ever quietly enioyed wthout disturbance
6 Mr. John Evans told the writer that when excavations were in progress at
Wallend, in Grain, in 1939, a large deposit of oyster shells together with thirteenth
century potsherds came to light and, he suggested, the former may have been
derived from the fishery in Grain called NIWEWERE confirmed by Henry I
(1100-1136) to the Priory of St. Andrew, Rochester (see Textus Roffensis and
Registrum Roffensis).
' E. P. Diokin A. History of the Town of Brightlmgsea, 1913.
121
OYSTER FISHERIES ON THE NORTH KENT COAST
and for that the matter requireth a speed in reformation for avoydinge
of a further inconvenience that may growe therby. These are to praye
you that you would call before you the pt i e s so offendinge and take
such order wth them, as to Justice shall appertaine and as in your
discreation, it shall seeme meete and hinderances as have bene allreadye
donn to the Inhabitants of Whitstable and of those parts and for the
pventinge 0 f furder injuryes that mey in like form be offered unto them
hereafter. And that you would acquaint me wt h your proceadinges
herein. And soe I committ you to the tuition of Almightie God.
ffrom Lambeth the 29th of March 1598.
Jo: Cant.'
A few days earlier the Earl of Nottingham, Lord High Admiral
and Henry Cobham had each written in similar terms to Peter Manwood
and John Boys, the former on 19th March from 'the Court at Richmond'
and the latter from 'his house in the Blaokfriars this 21st day of
March 1598'.
The High Admiral reinforced his direction to support the Whitstable
men's petition 'because here are allwayes manye good Pilots,
and men of great experience in sea matters for all these coasts, wch
are contynuallye at hand, and are verye wiUinge and readie to be
employed about her Mat y shippes and Navye Royall whensoever
occasion requireth.' He must surely have written from his personal
experience of these Whitstable seamen some of whom may have
served under him on the 1596 Cadiz expedition and even during the
invasion scare of the previous month.
On receipt of these directives Manwood and Boys lost no time in
taking action; they issued the following:
'To the constables of Whitstable hundred and unto all other her
Ma*y officers there and unto Thoman Rucke, Laurance Hewson, John
Saver, Thomas Bread, Edward Bassett and John Bassett, William
Saver, Christopher Spice, John Stephens, William Bredby (the petitioners)
These are in her Maty name to command you, and by reesen of letters
to us directed from the most Reverend father in god my Lord his grace
of Canterburye, premat, and Metropolitan of all England, and one of
her Maty honorable Councell, to require you to bringe before us such
seafayringe menn, not beinge of this Countie, as shall come, and catch
fishe, or dredge oysters in your baye of Whitstable, or groundes, unto
you of ancient tymes knowen, used, belonginge, and appatayninge; To
the great losse and hinderance of All the Inhabitantes of this Countrye,
whereof his grace hath a most honorable and noble care, and this shall
be your warrant.'
The pious hopes that the offending malefactors would be appre-
122
OYSTER FISHERIES ON THE NORTH KENT COAST
hended cannot have been realized for on the 7th March, 1601 Manwood
and Boys issued a second directive couched in almost identical terms as
the first. Apparently this had no better result, the raids by the Essex
men continued as before and on the 18th March, 1608 a long report
on the situation was sent to the Archbishop signed not only by Peter
Manwood and John Boys but also by Thorn. Wilford, Henry Palmer,
Ro. Edolphe, Alan Gprackling, Charles Hales, Henry Finch, George
Newman, Charles Fotherby, Ri. Hardes, Mathew Hadd and William
Mann.
From this report it appears that one offender who had been apprehended,
upon being questioned, 'gave the inclosed answers besides other
lewd behaviours', and as a result was committed 'to the common goale
of the Countye, according as the greatness of his offence, as we take it,
requireth'.8
The report continues, 'Also we have thought it our duties to inform
your grace that since that tyme as well the fishermen of Essex and
divers pt s of the Countie com in such numbers, to Dredge oysters and
catch fishe there wth manye boates at once, that they will utterlie
Destroye the grounds there and not obeye anye warrany (as we are
informed) carryinge themselves in a dangerous manner havinge abourd
musketts and other offensive weapons. And since that tyme have (as
we are likewise informed) sued two of the Whitstable men for comminge
wth warrants by vertue of your Grace's lre and my Lord Admirals, m the
Vice Admiralls Court at Rochester, and upon their appearance there,
besides the multitude of them exclaiming against them, there was also
taken from them against their wills (as we are informed) the warrants
wch they carryed wth them to Justefye their proceedings, and a warrant
in like manner by vertue of my Lord prevye Seales lres woh was never
used. Also we are informed they make common purses to beare out all
charges that may befall them, so that except there be order therein
pvicon of fishinge in these p t s wilbe spoyled.'
On the same day a letter in similar terms was sent to the Earl of
Salisbury, Lord High Treasurer; because of the information it contains
the preamble is worth recording.
'Whereas heretofore the Cittie of Canterburye hath bine verye much
releved by the Inhabitants of Whitstable, by serving the same market
wth oysters and other fishe taken upon the shores, streames, banks and
shelves near Whitstable, woh is bounded and lyeth from the Kings
deepe channell called Reddeepe unto the mayne land. And between the
land of the most, reverend ffather in God, the Lord Archbishop of
Canterbury and the late Abbot of S* Augustine. And between the sayde
Archbishop and the late prior of Christchurch now the Deane and
8 This must be a matter referred to in some previous communication which is
not inoluded among those examined by the present writer.
123
OYSTER FISHERIES ON THE NORTH KENT COAST
Chapter of Christchurch. And because this business hath bine formerly
directed and ordered by the Kings Ma^ great Counsaile in the tyme of
Henrye the 7th and so hath accordinglie continued quite tyll now of
late. And because your honnor, as we are informed, hath the Royaltie,
wch the late Abbot of S* Augustine had touchinge some parte of the
pmisses. ^jjd because the heire of S' John Smith Lord of the Mannor of
Whitstable is now the kinges Ma'? warde, we thought it our duties to
certefye the state of some accidents that hath fallen out about the same
fishinge of late.' The letter then reiterates the story contained in the
report sent to the Archbishop.
To exert as much pressure as possible in high places still another
letter in the same terms was despatched to the Earl of Northampton,
Lord Privy Seal and Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports.
Apparently these efforts had no effect for in the following December
the same group of signatories in desperation wrote once more to the
Archbishop—'we must treulie enform your grace we know not what
to do' and to reinforce their appeal for his help continued, 'in the Reign
of King Henry the 7t h the lorde Archbishop Moorton being then the
Chanceller of England, the certentye of all their liberties and privileges
(by order from him and the rest of the Lords of the Kings great Councell)
was sett downe by the principall and most learned gentlemen of this
sheire upon veiwe of the grounds, of evidence, and the church of Canterbury
confine9 and so have some Interest. After by the Archbishop
Cranmer who to bring the greater relief from that place to his Cittie,
made at his own charge that fayer waye of S' Thomas Hill (woh is the
best about this Cittie) out of his owne land, and other wch he purchased,
and lastlie what care your last most worthie pressor tooke for it, whose
vertue and honnor liveth for ever and shall never dye amongst us his
will shewe your grace. After woh tyme all things were in peace till now,
that both straingers and other fishermen of this shire make spoyle of
all. Therefore we humbly beseech your grace to take such order therin
as to you shall seem meet to you in following the last orders and speaking
to my Lord prevy Seale and my Lo: Admirall to ioyne in it Because
of their jurisdictions upon the Sea, and to my Lord Wotton Lord Lieutenant
of the Countie of Kent, or otherwise as to you grace shaU best
seem. And soe we humble take our leave, ffrom Canterburye the 19t h
of December 1608.'
Archbishop Bancroft replied, not very helpfully, to this letter on
24th December suggesting that the offenders should be called before the
signatories who were to take such steps at law as 'seeme meete and
convenient' in other words, to use a horrible modern expression, 'he
passed the buck'.
0 Confine = neighbouring or adjacent. O.E.D.
124
OYSTER FISHERIES ON THE NORTH KENT COAST
As the law seemed quite unable to stop the raids it is hardly surprising
that in the following years the situation remained as before. This is
clear from a letter sent by George, Duke of Buckingham, and addressed
from Whitehall on 22nd May, 1625, to Sir Thomas Walsingham, then
the vice-Admiral of Kent. The story it tells and the suggested remedy are
the same as those figuring in the correspondence of two decades earher.
Finally among this collection of related documents is a letter written
by James, Duke of York, from St. James, 7th May, 1669. The Duke,
who was Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports at this time, had a personal
interest in the oyster industry of the Thames estuary—he owned oyster
layings on the Essex coast and when a storm blew up over an ejection
order served on one of his tenants the matter was raised in the House
of Lords in January 1670.10 His concern for the Whitstable fishermen is
therefore understandable.
This letter reads:
'After harty S: Whereas I am informed That divers ffishermen in ye
County of Essex and others of Stroud and Milton in Kent have lately
wronged the ffishermen of Whitstable in Kent by drudging Oysters
and flashing in y6 Banks, Shoals and Streams heretofore used, kept
and maintayned as of Right belonging to that Town, woh Intrusion
tends (as I am Informed) very much to ye preuidice of ye Inhabitants of
Whitstable and Hinderance to y8 Citty of Canterbury and other Townes
and places thereabouts, wch have heretofore beene by them furnished
with all their provision of ffish:—I have therefore thought good and
doe (upon ye humble peticon of the ffishermen of Whitstable delivered
by the hande of Cap' Edward Roberts Esq1 on the behalfe aforesaid)
hereby pray and Authorise you from time to time as often as ye ffishermen
from Essex, Stroud, Milton or other stangers shall resort thither,
and their ago fnshing contrary to Right & custome to take order
for redress thereof as shall upon examinacon and proofe bee according
to equity & Justice, as I have ordered my Judge of Admiralty in such
cases and if any of them shall nott followe ye Directions by you sett
downe therein, then to demand good bond of all and every such
Refractory person for his or their appearance before you att ye next
Admiralty Co1' holden at Rochester, or else where, (thus not doubting
of yor Care and reliefe of these poore peticoners committing of them to
you I haveing allsoe ordered Sr Lyonell Jenkin Knti & my Judge of Admiralty
allsoe to take care therein) I rest
yor Affect Coz
Yorke
S* James May 7,1669
(In a different hand)
This letter was sent by his Royl Highness'
10 Dickin A History of the Town Brightlingsea 136.
126
OYSTER FISHERIES ON THE NORTH KENT COAST
Although this practice of oyster poaching on the Whitstable beds
went on for so long it was not altogether a one-way business, the
Whitstable dredgers were quite capable of giving, and probably
often did, tit for tat by making sorties on the Essex beds. Following
one such expedition in 1725 the Company of Southend
Dredgers instituted a claim for damages amounting to the large sum
of £17,000.u
Another source of friction between the fisheries was the demarcation
of boundaries of the sea manors. One such dispute was investigated by
certain 'principall and most learned gentlemen of this shire' and an
'awarde for the liberty of Whitstable' was made on the 18th December,
1608, signed by Peter Manwood, Robert Edolph, John Boys, Adam
Spracklinge, Charles Hales, Charles Fothernye, George Newman,
Richard Hardes and Willman Man.
The dispute was between Milton and Whitstable and the Privy
Council called for a true report on the boundaries of the Whitstable
and Seasalter Fisheries. Accordingly on the 1st May, 4. Henry VII
(1490) at Whitstable before William Hawte, Henry Ediall, John Diggs
and Reynold Sands evidence was given by persons representing both
sides including William, Prior of Christchurch Canterbury, James Crowe,
knight, Thomas Eden Es
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