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Residence.

6, Gloucester Buildings, Old Kent Road.

Nine Elms, Vauxhall. Southampton Cottage, Battersea Fields.

29, Highbury Place, Isling

ton.

22, Dalby Terrace, City Road.

Albany Road, Camberwell. 57, High Street, Shadwell. Grove House, Doddington Grove, Kennington. 11, Fairfield Place, Bow. Tottenham. Mincing

Street.

Lane, Tower

Liverpool Street.

23, Colvestone Terrace, Ridley Road, Kingsland. 4, Adam Street, Adelphi. 30, Doddington Grove, Kennington.

10, Grange Road, Bermondsey.

7, James Street, Southampton Street, Camberwell.

1, Grosvenor Terrace, Grosvenor Park, Camberwell. Opposite Nunhead Cemetery, Peckham.

1. Guildford Street, Walworth. Manor House, Hampstead.

Frognal,

4, Montrose Villas, Richmond Road, Dalston. 10, South Street, Grange Road, Bermondsey. Clapham.

41, Mansell Street, Goodman's Fields.

Maiden Lane, Queen Street.
14, Woburn Place, Russell
Square.
Clapham Rise.

30, Paulton Square, Chelsea. 189, 190, Bishopsgate Street Without.

189, 190, Bishopsgate Street Without.

189, 190, Bishopsgate Street Without.

Redcross Street, Cripplegate.

Terrace Lodge, Hackney.
Surrey Cottage, Priory
Grove, Larkhall Lane,
South Lambeth.
Norwood, near Southall.

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5, New Bank Buildings. 31, St. Martin's Lane, Charing Cross.

8, Three Oak Lane, Horselydown, Southwark. Walworth Common. Rye Lane, Peckham.

14, St. James' Place, Bermondsey.

14, The Grove, Lewisham. 12, Chalcots Villas, Adelaide Road, Haverstock Hill. Somerset Street, Aldgate. London Wall.

67, Silva Road North, Bow. 19, Crown Row, Mile End Road.

7, Jeffrey's Terrace, Kentish Town.

67, Eaton Square, Pimlico. 8, Stonefield Street, Liverpool Road, Islington.

40, Bermondsey Square. The Grange, Bermondsey. Central Hill, Upper Norwood.

80, New Bond Street. 12, Pilgrim's Asylum, Westmoreland Place, Camberwell.

19, Middleton Road, Dalston.

1, South Terrace, Kennington Park.

11, Highbury Place, Isling

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37, Ludgate Street.

3, Windsor Cottages, Haverstock Hill.

3, Belgrave Villas, BarringRoad, Brixton.

3, Tanfield Court, Temple.

151, Minories.

EDWARD BURKITT,

Curriers' Hall,

Clerk to the Curriers' Company

CURRIERS' COMPANY.

STATEMENT of the ACCOUNTS of the CHARITY called DAWE'S GIFT, in the CITY of LONDON, of which the following persons are the Trustees, viz. :-The Curriers' Company.

1.--GROSS INCOME arising or due from the ENDOWMENTS for the Year ending on the 31st day of

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STATEMENT of the ACCOUNTS of the CHARITY called JACKSON'S PENSION, in the CITY of LONDON, of which the following persons persons are the Trustees, viz. :-The Curriers' Company.

1.-GROSS INCOME arising or due from the ENDOWMENTS for the Year ending on the 31st day of

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CUTLERS' COMPANY.

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And the testator continued, "I will that the Master and "Wardens and Commonalty of Cutlers for the time being "shall from time to time keep the premises sufficiently

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66

repaired from time to time for ever." And the will then devised the property over, in case of the neglect of the Company to perform the will, to the Master and Wardens of the Armourers of London, and if they should be like negligent, then over to Thomas Bucke, son of his brother John and his heirs; and proceeds, "I will that the master " and wardens of the Armourers' Company shall have "leave at all times to search and view the said tenements "in Fleet Lane, and other his lands and tenements, to see "whether they do lack any reparation or not "; and then he devised

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The devised property is No. 161, Fleet Street, let to Messrs. Banner & Company, proprietors of the "Watchman " newspaper, on lease for 21 years

The six houses in Fleet Lane were, on the 7th April 1864, sold to the London, Chatham, and Dover Railway Company for the sum of 4,1317., which was paid to the Cutlers' Company, and has been invested by them in the purchase of 4,6021. 15s. 9d. New 3 per cent. Annuities, in the names of four trustees, members of the court, the Company undertaking the payment of the charities imposed by the will

£ s. d.

120 0 0

The Company has no property at Egham at present, nor any other estate derived from the will of this testator.

The Company pay to the vestry clerk of St. Sepulchre, the agent of the churchwardens for the poor of Fleet Lane, 21. a year, and 17. to the same receiver for repairs of the church.

To the churchwardens of Wilberton, Cambridgeshire, 21. a year.

The Hospitals of Christ and St. Thomas, 17. each. To the Armourers and Braziers' Company, 13s. 4d. The Company now pay 301. a year to a scholar of St. John's College when there is one on this foundation. There have been considerable periods when there has been no scholar on this foundation, and during such periods the 31. 6s. 8d. a year and the dividends on the sums from time to time were accumulated. These accounts amount together to 3581. 13s. 9d. 3 per cent. Reduced Bank Annuities standing in the name of Robert Burrd, William The Squire Pryor, John Pryor, and William Anderson. 301. is at present paid to Mr. Edward Beaumont, a scholar of St. John's College and son of the clerk of the Company, who was elected in 1863, succeeding a Mr. Gear who resigned at Christmas 1863. The elections have been by the master and churchwardens and court only, and not with the participation of the vicar of St. Sepulchre. The 307. is made up of the 31. 6s. 8d. charge, the dividends of the stock, and a grant of residue from the proper funds of the Company.

The Company propose in future, rather than leave the scholarship vacant for a series of years, to fill it up by a person not within the expressed qualification.

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with a gift over to Christ's Hospital in default. And he gave another house in Fleet Street to his wife for life, and the reversion to the Company to pay to the poor prisoners of Newgate, the King's Bench, the Marshalsea, and the Gate House at Westminster, 15s. each-37.—and 57. a year to the Wainscotting of the Cutlers' Hall, with a gift over in default to the heirs of Margaret, his wife.

The Company pay the 107. per annum to the churchwardens of St. Bride's.

There were always scholars found for the exhibitions, and therefore there was no investment. The notice on

the hall door brings generally sufficient applicants. If The there were no applicants, it would be advertised. exhibitions were increased, first, in 1800 to 6l. 13s. 4d., in 1832 to 107., and in 1841 to 201. each. The Company also in 1860 added another exhibition of 201., called the New Cambridge Exhibition. The increase has been voluntarily made, as also the new creation. There has been no fund set apart as an express endowment.

As to the gifts to the prisons,

On the 17th October 1864 the Company resolved that, as two of the payments amounting to 15s. each are no longer payable, the Queen's Prison being abolished, and Newgate Street and Whitecross Street Prisons as to prisoners being amalgamated, the payments be in future made in two sums of 30s. each to Whitecross Street and Tothill Fields.

In January 1865 there is the following memorandum :The above payments were accordingly made to this time,

when Mr. Temple, of Guildhall, applied for payment of the 15s. due to the Queen's Bench Prison, alleging that debtors were still confined there. The whole amount having been paid, it was arranged that next year the payment shall be 30s, to the Queen's Bench for this and next year, 15s. to Whitecross Street, and 15s. Tothill Fields, and that afterwards each of the three prisons shall receive 17. each, making the aggregate amount of 31.

This shows the present administration of the prison gifts.

In addition to the smail charities under the endowments, the Company give away upwards of 5097. a year in pensions to their members, together with various occasional gifts for general and public purposes.

All which I submit to the Board.

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DYERS' COMPANY.

TO THE CHARITY COMMISSIONERS FOR
ENGLAND AND WALES.

IN pursuance of a minute of the Board of the 1st of
November 1864, I have inquired into the condition and

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circumstances of the following charities under the management of the Dyers' Company of the City of London, and I have stated in the report under the head of each specific endowment the result of my investigation.

Burch and Kinder's Charities

Page.

123

125

Trevillian's Charity

- 125

Goldsmith's Charity

- 125

Chambers' Charity

- 125

Maguire's Charities

The title of this Company is "The Wardens and Commonalty of the Mystery of Dyers, London."

The Court of the Company consists of two wardens and 30 assistants; there are about 80 liverymen, and freemen who are not liverymen. They are diminishing in number.

TYRWHITT'S, WEST'S, AND BANNISTER'S CHARITIES.

Elizabeth Bannister, before the Fire of London, charged an estate in Allhallows the Less with the payment of three rentcharges

To the poor of the Company

To the poor of Allhallows the Less

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To the poor of Christ Church, Newgate Henry West, on the 11th May, 4th Edw. VI., granted to the Company an estate in St. Andrew's, Holborn, upon trust, to convert part of the premises into eight almshouses and allow 2s. 2d. quarterly to the poor and 6s. 6d. at Christmas, and 3s. 4d. a year to the Chamberlain of London to view the premises.

After the report of the Commissioners of Inquiry (Vol. 6, p. 252), an information was filed against the Company, Lord Mayor, and Chamberlain of London, as visitors, by the Attorney-General, at the relation of Jno. Bewley, a freeman of the Company, praying that the charities respectively might be established and the trusts thereof declared according to the intention of the said founders thereof respectively, and that an account might be taken of all the estates and properties of or belonging to said charities respectively, and of what the same consisted, and that an account might be taken of all the sums of money received by the Company in respect of the rents, profits, and fines paid on renewal of leases, and the income of said estates of the said charities, and that an account might be taken of the interest and dividends of 7501. Bank 41. per cent. Annuities, and that the trusts thereof might be declared, and that what should appear to be due from the Company might be answered by them, and that the same might be applied to the purposes of said charities respectively, and that it might be referred to the Master to approve of a proper scheme for the application of the surplus rents and income of said charity estates then in the hands of the Company and of the future income, regard being had to the intention of the respective founders thereof, or as near thereto as circumstances would admit, and that all proper directions might be given for effecting the purposes aforesaid.

At the hearing of the cause on the 5th August 1833, the Court ordered that the said plan be deposited with the Master of the Vacation, and that the entire properties comprised in such plan should be thereafter divided between said Company and Tyrwhitt's Charity in the proportions following: One undivided fourth part thereof to be held by the said Company upon the trusts of the said Charity, and the remaining three fourths thereof to be held and retained as, and the Court declared the same to be, the sole property of the Company, freed from all claims in respect of said last-mentioned charity; but it was ordered that said Company and their successors should have power to let and lease said estate from time to time by public tender, by advertisements, or by private contract, if said Company should think prudent; and in case of any fine or premium being taken for any such lease, it was ordered that one fourth thereof be from time to time paid into the bank with the privity of the Accountant-General, to be placed to the credit of the cause to an account to be entitled

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"Sir Robert Tyrwhitt's Charity," and that the sum when so paid into the bank should be from time to time laid out in the purchase of Bank 3 per cent. Annuities in the name and with the privity of said Accountant-General in trust in the cause; and he was to declare the trust thereof accordingly, subject to the further order of the Court; and that the said Company should continue to pay the three rentcharges of 51. each in their said answer mentioned out of their said three fourths of said estate and premises.

And as to Henry West's Charity, it was ordered that the estate in the answer of said Company, and therein denominated "The Dyers' Buildings, Holborn Estate," and which consisted of 12 messuages in Dyers' Buildings, Holborn, numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, and one messuage adjoining Dyer's Buildings situate No. 19 in Holborn, with the appurtenances, be divided between said Company and the said H. West's Charity in the proportions following:-

The one undivided moiety or half part thereof be held upon the trusts and for the purposes of said last-mentioned charity, and that the remaining moiety thereof be retained as, and the Court declared the same to be, the sole property of the Company unaffected by all claims in respect of said last-mentioned charity; and it was ordered that said Company should have power to let said estate by public tender or private contract if the Company should so think prudent; and in case of any fine being taken for any such lease it was ordered that one moiety thereof be from time to time paid into the bank, to be placed to the credit of the cause to an account entitled "Henry West's Charity," and it was ordered that the same when so paid into the bank be from time to time laid out, &c. in trust in the cause; and the said Accountant-General was to declare the trust thereof accordingly, subject to the further order of the court; and it was ordered that as between said two several charities and the said Company such several parts as aforesaid of the said estates called respectively "The Dyers' Hall, Upper Thames Street Estate" and "The Dyers' Buildings, Holborn Estate," should be for ever thereafter deemed as the properties to which said two before-mentioned charities were entitled under the deed or will of said Sir R. Tyrwhitt and Henry West respectively. And the said Company admitting a balance or sum of 817. 13s. 2d. to be in their hands in respect of the rents of said estate of Tyrwhitt's Charity up to that time, it was ordered that the same be applied as therein-after directed, the Attorneygeneral thereby waiving all further account and all claim of said charity in respect of past rents; and the said Company also admitting a balance of 127. 13s. 9d. to be in their hands in respect of the rents of said estate of West's Charity to that time, it was ordered that same be applied as therein-after directed, the Attorney-General thereby waiving all further account and all claim of said charity in respect of past rents. And it appearing that 3917. 18s. 3d. Bank 34 per cent. Reduced Annuities was that proportion of the 7501. like annuities in defendants' answer mentioned which arose from the sale of the 607. per annum short annunities bequeathed by the will of Robert Burch, and that 2611. 5s. 6d. like annuities other part of said 7501. was that proportion which arose from the sale of the 401. per annum short annuities bequeathed by the will of William Kinder, it was ordered that said 3917. 18s. 3d. and 2617. 5s. 6d. stock thenceforth held by said Company as the charity funds under the said wills of said Robert Burch and William Kinder respectively in lieu and satisfaction of the 601. a year and 407. a year short annuities in such wills mentioned, the Attorney-General

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