Johanna Hill and Johanna Sturdy

Last updated
Johanna Hill's maker's mark Johanna Hill bell maker's mark.jpg
Johanna Hill's maker's mark

Johanna Hill (d. 1441) and Johanna Sturdy (fl. 1459) were English bell-makers. They both ran the same bell-foundry in Aldgate, London in the fifteenth century and produced church bells that were used all over the south of England.

Contents

Johanna Hill

Johanna Hill, who may have been from Surrey, was married to bell-maker Richard Hill. [1] When he died in May 1440, Johanna took over their foundry in the parish of St Botolph, Aldgate. She oversaw four apprentices and a household of twenty people. [2] Seven of the bells she produced survive, bearing her stamp, which is a copy of her husband’s stamp surmounted by a lozenge containing a floret or cross, signalling that it belonged to a woman. [3] Johanna Hill’s stamp is found on bells in Devon, Buckinghamshire, Essex, Hertfordshire, Suffolk and Sussex. [4]

She died in May 1441, leaving the St Botolph bell-foundry to her daughter, also called Johanna, and Johanna’s husband Henry Jordan. [5]

Johanna Sturdy

Johanna Sturdy's maker's marks Johanna Sturdy bell maker's marks.jpg
Johanna Sturdy's maker's marks

By the 1450s the St Botolph bell-foundry was owned by bellmaker John Sturdy alias Leicester and his wife Johanna Sturdy. [lower-alpha 1] By 1459, John had died and Johanna had taken over the foundry, as shown by her correspondence about the warranty for a bell she was supplying to Faversham, Kent. [3] Ten of her bells survive and, like Johanna Hill’s, bear a stamp which was her husband’s mark surmounted by a lozenge. [2]

Notes

  1. Stahlschmidt assumed that the two names belonged to the same Johanna in successive marriages. However, Caroline Barron and Jennifer Ward have established that they are two separate women.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cecily Neville, Duchess of York</span> English noblewoman

Cecily Neville was an English noblewoman, the wife of Richard, Duke of York (1411–1460), and the mother of two kings of England—Edward IV and Richard III. Cecily Neville was known as "the Rose of Raby", because she was born at Raby Castle in Durham, and "Proud Cis", because of her pride and a temper that went with it, although she was also known for her piety. She herself signed her name "Cecylle".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Aldgate</span> Human settlement in England

Aldgate was a gate in the former defensive wall around the City of London.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Whitechapel Bell Foundry</span> Defunct bell foundry in London, England

The Whitechapel Bell Foundry was a business in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. At the time of the closure of its Whitechapel premises, it was the oldest manufacturing company in Great Britain. The bell foundry primarily made church bells and their fittings and accessories, although it also provided single tolling bells, carillon bells and handbells. The foundry was notable for being the original manufacturer of the Liberty Bell, a famous symbol of American independence, and for re-casting Big Ben, which rings from the north clock tower at the Houses of Parliament in London.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Caroline Chisholm</span> English-born Australian humanitarian (1808–1877)

Caroline Chisholm was an English humanitarian known mostly for her support of immigrant female and family welfare in Australia. She is commemorated on 16 May in the calendar of saints of the Church of England. Her path to sainthood within the Catholic Church has commenced; she had converted to Catholicism around the time of her marriage and reared her children as Catholic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Henry Grey, Duke of Suffolk</span> English nobleman

Henry Grey, Duke of Suffolk, 3rd Marquess of Dorset, was an English courtier and nobleman of the Tudor period. He was the father of Lady Jane Grey, known as "the Nine Days' Queen".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Caroline Norton</span> English social reformer and writer (1808–1877)

Caroline Elizabeth Sarah Norton, Lady Stirling-Maxwell was an active English social reformer and author. She left her husband, who was accused by many of coercive behaviour, in 1836. Her husband then sued her close friend Lord Melbourne, then the Whig Prime Minister, for criminal conversation (adultery).

Matilda was Countess of Boulogne in her own right from 1125 and Queen of England from the accession of her husband, Stephen, in 1135 until her death in 1152. She supported Stephen in his struggle for the English throne against their mutual cousin Empress Matilda. She played an unusually active role for a woman of the period when her husband was captured, and proved herself an effective general who managed to force the Empress to release Stephen. Under the agreement that settled the civil war, the Queen's children did not inherit the English throne; however, her three surviving children ruled Boulogne in turn as Eustace IV, William I, and Marie I.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shenley</span> Human settlement in England

Shenley is a village and civil parish in Hertfordshire, England, between Barnet and St Albans. The village is located 14 miles from Central London. As of 2021, the population of the parish was 5,390; however, the parish stretches far beyond the village itself; it is the largest parish in Hertsmere and is very rural, including hamlets and farming settlements such as Dancers Hill, Green Street, Kitts End, Ridge, Saffron Green, Shenleybury, and the largest other settlement, South Mimms.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eleanor, Duchess of Gloucester</span> 15th-century English noble

Eleanor Cobham was an English noblewoman, first the mistress and then the second wife of Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, who in 1441 was forcibly divorced and sentenced to life imprisonment for treasonable necromancy, a punishment likely to have been politically motivated.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gillett & Johnston</span> English clockmaker and bell foundry

Gillett & Johnston was a clockmaker and bell foundry based in Croydon, England from 1844 until 1957. Between 1844 and 1950, over 14,000 tower clocks were made at the works. The company's most successful and prominent period of activity as a bellfounder was in the 1920s and 1930s, when it was responsible for supplying many important bells and carillons for sites across Britain and around the world.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eleanor de Bohun</span> Duchess of Gloucester, Duchess of Aumale, Countess of Buckingham and Countess of Essex

Eleanor de Bohun was the elder daughter and co-heiress, of Humphrey de Bohun, 7th Earl of Hereford (1341–1373) and Joan Fitzalan, a daughter of Richard FitzAlan, 10th Earl of Arundel and his second wife Eleanor of Lancaster.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Worshipful Company of Parish Clerks</span> Guild of the City of London

The Worshipful Company of Parish Clerks is one of the Guilds of the City of London. It has no livery, because "in the 16th century, the Parish Clerks declined to take the Livery on the grounds that the surplice was older than the Livery and was the proper garb of members of the Company." It is not, therefore, technically a livery company although to all intents and purposes it acts as such. It is one of two such historic companies without livery, the other being the Company of Watermen and Lightermen.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Holy Trinity Priory, Aldgate</span> Monastery for Augustinian canons in medieval London

The Holy Trinity Priory, also known as Christchurch Aldgate, was a priory of Austin canons founded around 1108 by the English queen Matilda of Scotland near Aldgate in London.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">East Smithfield</span> Human settlement in England

East Smithfield is a small locality in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets, east London, and also a short street, a part of the A1203 road. Once broader in scope, the name came to apply to the part of the ancient parish of St Botolph without Aldgate that was outside of the City of London.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Elizabeth Tilney, Countess of Surrey</span> English noblewoman

Elizabeth Tilney, Countess of Surrey was an English heiress who became the first wife of Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk. She served successively as a lady-in-waiting to two Queen consorts, namely Elizabeth Woodville, wife of King Edward IV, and later as Lady of the Bedchamber to that Queen's daughter, Elizabeth of York, the wife of King Henry VII. She stood as joint godmother to Princess Margaret Tudor at her baptism.

Elizabeth le Despenser was an English noblewoman. She was the youngest daughter of Hugh le Despenser the younger and his wife Eleanor de Clare. Her father is famous for being the favourite of Edward II of England; he was executed as a result of his position and actions. Through her mother, Elizabeth was a great granddaughter of King Edward I of England.

Samuel Enderby (1755–1829) was a British whaling merchant, significant in the history of whaling in Australia.

Naomi Blake née Zisel Dum was a British sculptor, whose work reflected her experience as a Holocaust survivor.

Patricia Batty Shaw, CBE was a chairwoman of the United Kingdom's National Federation of Women's Institutes.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Abbey of the Minoresses of St. Clare without Aldgate</span> Former convent in London, England

The Abbey of the Minoresses of St. Clare without Aldgate was a monastery of Franciscan women living an enclosed life, established in the late 13th century on a site often said to be of five acres, though it may have been as little as half that, at the spot in the parish of St. Botolph, outside the medieval walls of the City of London at Aldgate that later, by a corruption of the term minoresses, became known as The Minories, a placename found also in other English towns including Birmingham, Colchester, Newcastle upon Tyne and Stratford-upon-Avon.

References

  1. "The Women who Forged Medieval England | History Today". web.archive.org. 2024-09-10. Retrieved 2024-09-10.
  2. 1 2 Barron, Caroline (1994). Barron, Caroline M.; Sutton, Anne F. (eds.). "Johanna Hill (d. 1441) and Johanna Sturdy (d. c. 1460), Bell-Founders". Medieval London Widows 1300-1500: 99–111. ISBN   978-0-8264-2182-1.
  3. 1 2 Stahlschmidt, J.C.L. (1884). Surrey Bells and London Bell-founders. p. 83.
  4. Ward, Jennifer (2006-10-12). Women in England in the Middle Ages. A&C Black. p. 93. ISBN   978-0-8264-1985-9.
  5. Barron, Caroline (2008). "Women traders and artisans in London". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/52233.(Subscription or UK public library membership required.)