Livery Company Trade, Craft & Professional Groups

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Livery Company Trade, Craft & Professional Groups Livery Company Trade, Craft & Professional Groups Financial Services Group (13) Textiles Group (13) Andrew Marsden John Snowdon Actuaries Broderers Arbitrators Clothworkers Chartered Accountants Drapers Chartered Secretaries Dyers Chartered Surveyors Framework Knitters City Solicitors Feltmakers Information Technologists Haberdashers Insurers Mercers International Bankers Merchant Taylors Management Consultants Needlemakers Marketors Upholders Tax Advisers Weavers World Traders Woolmen Guild of Investment Managers (Observer) Construction Group (14) Ms Jo Mabbut Cask Group (6) Builders Merchants Brewers Carpenters Coopers Chartered Architects Distillers Chartered Surveyors Glass Sellers Constructors Innholders Engineers Vintners Glaziers Joiners & Ceilers Leathery Group (9) Lightmongers [Rotating Clerks] Masons Leathersellers Paviors Coachmakers & Coach Harness Mkrs. Plaisterers Cordwainers Plumbers Curriers Tylers & Bricklayers Girdlers Glovers Wood Group (4) Loriners Turners Pattenmakers Carpenters Saddlers Upholders Furniture Makers Food Group (7) Maj Gen Jeff Mason Wet 11 Bakers Basketmakers Cooks Environmental Cleaners Farmers Farmers Butchers Firefighters Fishmongers Gardeners Fruiterers Joiners & Ceilers Poulters Launderers Plumbers Page 1 Livery Company Trade, Craft & Professional Groups Wet Group (11) (Continued) Suggested Paper Group (3) Scientific Instrument Makers Stationers & Newspaper Makers Water Conservators Makers of Playing Cards Watermen & Lightermen Wax Chandlers Metal s Group(12) Suggested Warrior Group (5) Blacksmiths Armourers & Brasiers Broderers Bowyers Cutlers Cutlers Farriers Fletchers Founders Gunmakers Gold & Silver Wyre Drawers Goldsmiths Unaligned Companies & Guilds (32) Gunmakers Air Pilots Ironmongers Art Scholars Needlemakers Bowyers Pewterers Carmen Tin Plate Workers Alias Wire Communicators Workers Educators Clockmakers Entrepreneurs Fan Makers Nauti Group (4) Fletchers Watermen & Lightermen Freemen of the City of London Master Mariners Fuellers Shipwrights Grocers Trinity House Hackney Carriage Drivers Horners Health Livery Group (5) Human Resources Professionals Apothecaries Investment Managers Barbers Launderers Cutlers Makers of Playing Cards Spectacle Makers Musicians Nurses Needlemakers Painter-Stainers Suggested Arts Group (5) Parish Clerks (Church) Arts Scholars Salters Painter-Stainers Scriveners Musicians Security Professionals Chartered Architects Stationers & Newspaper Makers Clockmakers Tallow Chandlers Tobacco Pipe Makers & Blenders Suggested Transport Group (5) Wax Chandlers Air Pilots Wheelwrights Carmen Young Freemen Hackney Carriage Drivers Fuellers July 2020, Fellowship of Clerks Page 2 .
Recommended publications
  • City Livery Companies
    city livery companies The history Origins 3 Apprentice and freeman 4 Organisation and traditions 4 Growth, decline and rebirth 5 The modern companies Strength to survive 9 A continuing role in commerce and trade 9 Modern trade – traditional support 10 Supporting education 11 Charity and the community 13 The social dimension 14 The future 14 The City of London links The links with the City of London 17 Committee liaison 17 The City of London 17 The Lord Mayor 18 The role of the mayoralty 19 The Sheriffs 19 Appendices Forming a livery company 22 Some events and ceremonies The Silent Ceremony 23 The Lord Mayor’s Show and Banquet 23 The freedom of the City 24 Common Hall 25 Livery ceremonies 25 United Guilds’ Service 25 Cart Marking 26 Swan Upping 26 Companies in order of precedence 27 Alphabetical list and description of companies 29 Schools connected with livery companies and the City of London 38 Further reading 39 Map of the halls 40 The fascinating history of livery companies reaches back many centuries. al y Livery companies have their roots in the medieval trades and crafts and yet, with their ability to grow and adapt to meet new needs, their work is as relevant today as ever. Livery companies continue to do what they have done for most of their history. They support, and in some cases still regulate, their trades. They help to educate and train young people and they spend their income to help people all over the world. As a liveryman myself, I have had the privilege of seeing this work firsthand.
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  • Guilds, Wool, and Trade: Medieval England in a Global Economy
    Transcript Guilds, Wool, and Trade: Medieval England in a Global Economy Around 1250-1350, an archipelago of trade stretched across Afro-Eurasia. Nick and Trevor explore the role of the wool trade in this system and its impact on England. Transcript Guilds, Wool, and Trade: Medieval England in a Global Economy Timing and description Text 00:01 NICK: Hello, I’m Nick Dennis, fellow of the school city projects and a history teacher in the UK. Nick Dennis and Trevor Getz in a grassy field TREVOR: And I’m Trevor Getz, professor of World History at San Francisco State surrounded by sheep University. We’re standing here in the February cold in a field in southern England, with some sheep, for some reason. NICK: It’s to talk about medieval trade routes. TREVOR: Right. And all I’m saying is, we could easily be standing in a field in Photos of a cotton field in India where they grow cotton, or a silk farm in China, or a salt mine in the Sahara India, a silk farm in China, Desert—all places where people were actively producing highly desired goods in a salt mine in the Sahara the 13th century, and all places that are a lot warmer than this one. Desert 00:57 NICK: Traditionally, historians who have written or thought about medieval Europe, Asia, and Africa, have thought of them as separate places, but we now understand An Archipelago of trade that these communities were connected to each other in a big trading system—one stretching far back in time.
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  • City Living 2014.Docx
    REORDERED PUBLICS: Re-imagining the City of London ABSTRACT The unrelenting global recession has intensified pressure on the public realm to mediate between different actors vying to assert political rights, economic claims, and social expression. Multi-disciplinary frameworks for reading economic systems as integral to the design and lived experience of the public realm have shaped our conceptualisation of the financial crisis as a city design problem. The following body of work offers a socio- spatial and political analysis of the City of London as a ‘business as usual’ city in which private interests trump public good. Through a design-based proposal for policy intervention and physical restructuring that radically alters the City’s socio-spatial realities, we re-imagine the City of London as a true public city for the 21st century. Where productivity stems from the residential diversity, urban intensity and inclusive public spaces that significantly increasing residential numbers in the City brings. KEYWORDS City of London; Housing; Public City; Public Space; Neoliberal City; Design Intervention; Occupy. INTRODUCTION In the late summer and autumn of 2011, London was a city strained by economic recession, unhinged by a wave of riots, and occupied by demands for alternatives to austerity. The public presented a series of challenges to ‘business as usual.’ On August 6th, the protest against the police killing of a young black man in North London escalated into attacks on businesses and public infrastructure that ignited five days of riots across London and the UK (Guardian and the London 1 School of Economics, 2011). On the morning of October 15th, protesters aligned with the global Occupy Movement stormed the London Stock Exchange - a symbolic heart of the local and global financial sector (Occupy LSX, 2011).
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  • City Briefing Presentation
    A Very Modern Tradition Livery Companies in the 21st Century cityandlivery.co.uk @CityandLivery By Paul D Jagger Court Assistant of the Information Technologists’ Company Welcome to ‘A Very Modern Tradition’, a swift exploration of the role, relevance and impact of the City of London’s Livery Companies in the 21st Century. Recommended Reading The City of London Freeman’s Guide is the definitive concise guide to the City’s customs, ceremonies, events, officers, landmarks and institutions. This is the handbook every Journeyman, Yeoman, Freeman, Liveryman, Alderman, Sheriff and Lord Mayor should have in his/her knapsack! Available in hardback £15 or eBook £9.99 in all good City outlets and online. City of London Secrets of the Square Mile gives an overview of the City’s kaleidoscope of colour facets; civic, commercial, social, heritage, arts, gardens, etc. Available in glossy paperback £5 in all good City outlets and online. The Livery Companies 110 Companies, of which 33 are ‘Modern’ and 77 are ‘Ancient’ of which 12 are ‘Great’ all comprised of c27,000 Liverymen c20,000 Freemen (of companies) A quick review of the Livery Companies as they are today (October 2019): There are 110 Livery Companies, the most recent was elevated to that status in 2014 (The Worshipful Company of Arts Scholars). Of the 110 companies, 33 of them are described as ‘Modern’ (a term meaning much the same as ‘New’ in New College Oxford) and probably will ever be so. The modern companies are those dating from 1926, the first among them being the Honourable Company of Master Mariners*.
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  • The Livery in Education March 2021
    The Livery in Education March 2021 LSL is grateful to the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths for their sponsorship of this brochure. Livery Schools Link Livery Schools Link (LSL) was set up in 2003 We have joined our volunteer brokerage to assist with support for education in schools platform which matches requests from schools by Livery Companies. In 2016 it became Livery for help with activities, such as careers talks, Schools Link Ltd (LSLL), a not for profit company with volunteers from Livery Companies with limited by guarantee. In 2017 it became a charity, two established charities: ‘Speakers for Schools’ Reg. No 117234. It is run by a Board drawn from and ‘Inspiring the Future’. representatives of member Livery Companies who pay an annual subscription. The annual Livery Education Conference is another of our regular activities, held now in The purpose of LSL Ltd is: March each year. This gives an opportunity 1. To support schools in developing young for senior members of Livery Companies people’s employability skills for work and life. to meet with senior school staff. 2. To make young people aware of the wide range of employment and training In 2020 we started a Digital Divide Campaign opportunities which are represented by to raise funds to help disadvantaged students Livery Companies and their members. become digitally connected to make full benefit 3. To help to raise the aspirations of young from on-line learning. As we raise funds, people. we partner with schools for them to provide 4. To positively encourage Livery Companies a proposal for how they will invest the funds.
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  • London Livery Companies Old and New, Armorial Design of the Later Twentieth-Century
    THE COAT OF ARMS The journal of the Heraldry Society Fourth Series Volume I 2018 Number 235 in the original series started in 1952 Founding Editor † John P.B.Brooke-Little, C.V.O, M.A., F.H.S. Honorary Editor Dr Paul A Fox, M.A., F.S.A, F.H.S., F.R.C.P., A.I.H. Reviews Editor Tom O’Donnell, M.A., M.PHIL. Editorial Panel Dr Adrian Ailes, M.A., D.PHIL., F.S.A., F.H.S., A.I.H. Dr Jackson W Armstrong, B.A., M.PHIL., PH.D. Steven Ashley, F.S.A, a.i.h. Dr Claire Boudreau, PH.D., F.R.H.S.C., A.I.H., Chief Herald of Canada Prof D’Arcy J.D.Boulton, M.A., PH.D., D.PHIL., F.S.A., A.I.H. Dr Clive.E.A.Cheesman, M.A., PH.D., F.S.A., Richmond Herald Steen Clemmensen A.I.H. M. Peter D.O’Donoghue, M.A., F.S.A., York Herald Dr Andrew Gray, PH.D., F.H.S. Jun-Prof Dr Torsten Hiltmann, PH.D., a.i.h Prof Peter Kurrild-Klitgaard, PH.D., F.R.Hist.S., A.I.H. Elizabeth Roads, L.V.O., F.S.A., F.H.S., A.I.H, Snawdoun Herald Advertising Manager John J. Tunesi of Liongam, M.Sc., FSA Scot., Hon.F.H.S., Q.G. Guidance for authors will be found online at www.theheraldrysociety.com LONDON LIVERY COMPANIES OLD AND NEW, ARMORIAL DESIGN OF THE LATER TWENTIETH-CENTURY RICHARD GODDARD Abstract In 1960 Bromley and Child published their definitive work The Armorial Bearings of the Guilds of London, and it was perceived that there was a need for this to be updated with the many livery companies which came into being since that date, including various others from 1954 which were omitted from Bromley and Child.1 This paper is divided into three parts.
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  • Livery Company Trade, Craft & Professional Groups
    Livery Company Trade, Craft & Professional Groups Financial Services Group (13) Textiles Group (13) Andrew Marsden John Snowdon Actuaries Broderers Arbitrators Clothworkers Chartered Accountants Drapers Chartered Secretaries Dyers Chartered Surveyors Framework Knitters City Solicitors Feltmakers Information Technologists Haberdashers Insurers Mercers International Bankers Merchant Taylors Management Consultants Needlemakers Marketors Upholders Tax Advisers Weavers World Traders Woolmen Guild of Investment Managers (Observer) Construction Liveries Group (18) Amanda Jackson Cask Group (6) Blacksmiths Brewers Builders Merchants Coopers Carpenters Distillers Chartered Architects Glass Sellers Chartered Surveyors Innholders Constructors Vintners Engineers Environmental Cleaners Leathery Group (9) Glaziers [Rotating Clerks] Horners Leathersellers Joiners & Ceilers Coachmakers & Coach Harness Mkrs. Lightmongers Cordwainers Masons Curriers Painter-Stainers Girdlers Paviors Glovers Plaisterers Loriners Plumbers Pattenmakers Tylers & Bricklayers Saddlers Wood Group (6) Food Group (7) David Mortlock Maj Gen Jeff Mason Carpenters Bakers Furniture Makers Cooks Joiners & Ceilers Farmers Turners Butchers Upholders Fishmongers Wheelwrights Fruiterers Poulters Page 2 Livery Company Trade, Craft & Professional Groups Wet 10 Group (13) Suggested Arts Group (5) Maureen Marden Arts Scholars Air Pilots Painter-Stainers Basketmakers Musicians Constructors Chartered Architects Environmental Cleaners Clockmakers Farmers Firefighters Suggested Transport Group
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  • Classification of London Livery Companies
    LONDON ELECTORAL HISTORY – STEPS TOWARDS DEMOCRACY 7.4 LONDON LIVERYMEN AND THE LIVERY COMPANIES Voters in Common Hall in pre-reform London exercised their franchise by virtue of being freemen of the City and members of livery compa- nies.1 These were mutual organisations, which played a public role.2 Membership of a livery company could be gained by any of three means: by patrimony (the right of a son born when his father was a liveryman); by servitude (after serving a period of indenture to learn a trade); or by redemption (payment for the privilege of joining). In addition, liverymen who attained the aldermanic bench could, according to ancient custom, translate to one of the high-status ‘Great Twelve’ companies.3 Nonetheless, this practice was in decline by the eighteenth century.4 Thus while it remained theoretically possible for an individual to migrate from one livery company to another, such an eventuality was rare.5 Hence a livery company membership is a very stable category. Although the names of some livery companies look like occupations, these titles were not occupational categories. The trades of the Bowyers’ and Fletchers’ companies had already disappeared by the start of the eighteenth century. And there was no automatic correlation between a man’s mode of making a living and the title of his livery company. In practice, this assertion is difficult to check, because surviving occupa- tional data about liverymen are very patchy.6 But it was understood that the companies were transforming themselves from old-style occupa- tional guilds into a mixture of charitable bodies, social clubs, and property-owning associations.
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  • How Do You Join a Livery Company?
    How do you join a livery company? Much of this website assumes membership of a livery company, or other close involvement in the civic activities of the City of London – and hence a certain basic knowledge of the livery world. However, how do you actually become a liveryman? (which is equally open to men and women) This note seeks to answer the basic questions, but each of the 110 livery companies (at 2017) will have their own admission procedures, and the answer will be very different from the various companies. It may be helpful to start by dividing the 110 liveries (or guilds as they used to be known) into three broad categories. Each company has a precedence number, and roughly speaking these three groups will follow the precedence. A. The senior (and oldest) are those with significant assets (usually including a hall), and their members enjoy considerable privileges. B. In the middle are ancient companies (created before circa 1700) but ones whose wealth is more modest, and often, whose links with their original trade has diminished (not least amongst its membership) C. Modern Companies, those formed since 1926, and which represent professions most relevant in today’s world. It is likely that to join group A the applicant will either have a family connection, or receive a personal invitation. A relevant connection with the industry may help an “outsider”, but that is by no means certain. The Grocers’ Company has few (if any) grocers amongst its membership. The Brewers’, on the other hand, still require direct involvement in the brewing industry, but this is relatively rare in this group.
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  • Livery Company Records
    The world’s leading publication for one-namers - E NA N M O E F S O T U D D L I I E S U G 1 ournal 9 79 Jof One-Name Studies Livery Company Records Palliser Two New Guild Indexes Vol 10 Issue 6 April-June 2010 Vol A Surname With A History Mapping Global Surname Distributions Using DNA To Disprove A Relationship & Much More All the latest Guild news and updates - E NA N M O E F S O T U D D L I I E S U G 1 9 79 CHAIRMAN Peter Hagger 106 Hayling Ave Box G, 14 Charterhouse Buildings Little Paxton Goswell Road, London EC1M 7BA Huntingdon Tel: 0800 011 2182 PE19 6HQ Guild information E-mail: [email protected] 01480 477978 Website: www.one-name.org [email protected] Registered as a charity in England Bookstall and Wales No. 802048 As well as Guild publications, the VICE-CHAIRMAN Bookstall Manager has a supply of Paul Millington Journal folders, ties, lapel badges 58 Belmont Street and back issues of the Journal. The Worcester address is: President Worcestershire Derek A Palgrave MA MPhil FRHistS FSG WR3 8NN 01905 745217 Howard Benbrook Vice-Presidents [email protected] 7 Amber Hill John Hebden Camberley Richard Moore FSG Surrey SECRETARY GU15 1EB Iain Swinnerton TD.DL.JP. Kirsty Gray Alec Tritton England 11 Brendon Close E-mail enquiries to: Tilehurst, Reading [email protected] Berkshire RG30 6EA Guild Committee 0118 941 4833 Forum The Committee consists of the four [email protected] Officers, plus the following: This online discussion forum is open to any member with access to e-mail.
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  • Committee Report Template
    Committee(s) Dated: Policy & Resources Committee – for decision 21 January 2021 Establishment Committee – for decision 27 January 2021 Subject: Findings and recommendations of the Public Tackling Racism Taskforce Which outcomes in the City Corporation’s Corporate 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 8 Plan does this proposal aim to impact directly? Does this proposal require extra revenue and/or Not at this stage. capital spending? If so, how much? £ N/A What is the source of Funding? N/A Has this Funding Source been agreed with the N Chamberlain’s Department? Report of: The Tackling Racism Taskforce For Decision Report author: Emma Cunnington, Town Clerks Summary The Tackling Racism Taskforce (TRT) was set up in June 2020 and tasked to consider what the City of London Corporation currently does to tackle racism in all its forms and to assess whether any further action could be undertaken to promote economic, educational, and social inclusion through our activities, including any historical issues with a view as to how we might respond to them. This report sets out the findings and recommendations of the Tackling Racism Taskforce and covers a summary of actions that the Taskforce have discussed should be taken forward by the City Corporation to tackle racism, across the following work streams: • Staffing • Governance • Police • Education • Business • Culture NB: Health and wellbeing tended to be a consistent theme that linked across all six of the above workstreams. In Appendix 1, a full list of recommendations across the workstreams can be found. The Taskforce would urge Members of the Policy and Resources and Establishment Committees on the importance of this work and for it to be carried out at speed.
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  • Heraldry of the City of London and Its Livery Companies Online and Print Resources for Further Exploration
    Heraldry of the City of London and its Livery Companies Online and print resources for further exploration Thank you for attending the my lecture on the Heraldry of the City of London and its Livery Companies. The following resources may aid your further exploration: Websites of Heraldic Authorities and Learned Societies HM College of Arms The Court of Lord Lyon (Scotland) Office of the Chief Herald of Ireland (Irish Republic) The Canadian Heraldic Authority (Canada) The Heraldry Society The Heraldry Society of Scotland The White Lion Society The Royal Heraldry Society of Canada The New Zealand Heraldry Society The Australian Heraldry Society Blog Articles The Arms of the City of London in the 21st century Why Liverymen should petition for Arms Know your Heraldic ABC (Arms, Badge and Crest): Part 1 - Myths Debunked Know your Heraldic ABC (Arms, Badge and Crest): Part 2 - Armorial Achievements Explained Papers of the Guildhall Historical Association Mayoral Heraldry Heraldic Artists who work for City Livery Companies Timothy Noad (HM College of Arms) Quentin Peacock (Digital Heraldic Artist) Livery Company Armorial Merchandise A2 Poster of the Arms of the City Livery Companies (£5 excl P&P) Downloadable PDF file of the above (£9) 500 piece laser-cut wooden jigsaw of the above (£42 excl P&P) Books on City and Livery Treasures The Heraldry of the Livery Companies of the City of London since 1954 by Richard Goddard (2017), ISBN: 978-0-99346-803-2 The Armorial Bearings of the Guild of London by John Bromley & Heather Child (1960) published by Frederick Warne & Co. Note: This is still available from antiquarian book sellers such as abebooks.co.uk Coat-Armour of the London Livery Companies, an enquiry based upon original research by Charles Welch (1914) published by Chiswick Press Note: This is a reproduction of Wallis’s London’s Armory (1677).
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