Online Encyclopedia

CORPORATION OF TRINITY HOUSE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 286 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CORPORATION OF TRINITY HOUSE  , an association of
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English mariners which originally had its headquarters at Dept-ford in Kent . In its first charter, received from Henry VIII. in 1514, it was described as the " guild or fraternity of the most glorious and undividable Trinity of St Clement." The firstmaster appointed was the founder of the corporation,
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Sir Thomas Spert,
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comptroller of the
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navy to the king, and
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commander of the " Harry Grace de Dieu."
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Deptford having been made a royal dockyard by Henry VIII., and being the station where outgoing
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ships were supplied with pilots, the corporation rapidly
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developed its influence and usefulness . By Henry VIII. it was entrusted with the direction of the new
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naval dockyard . From Elizabeth, who conferred on it a grant of arms in 1573, it received authority to erect beacons and other marks for the guidance of navigators along the coasts of England . In 1604 a select class, was constituted called Elder Brethren, the other members being called Younger Brethren . By the charter of 1609 the
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sole management of affairs was conferred on the Elder Brethren; the Younger Brethren, however, having a
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vote in the election of master and wardens . The
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practical duties of the fraternity are discharged by the acting Elder Brethren, 13 in number, of whom 2 are elected from the royal navy and 11 from the merchant service; but as a mark of honour persons of rank and eminence are admitted as honorary Elder Brethren . In 1647 the corporation was dissolved by parliament, but it was reconstructed in 166o, and the charter was renewed by James II. in 1685 . In 1687 a by-law of the Trinity House for the first time required an agreement in writing between the master and crew of a
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ship . A new hall and
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alms-houses were erected at Deptford in 1765; but for some time the offices of the corporation had been transferred to
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London, where for a while they had a house in
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Water Lane,
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Lower
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Thames Street, and in 1795 their headquarters were removed to Trinity House, Tower Hill, built from the designs of
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Samuel Wyatt . By an act of 1836 they received powers to
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purchase from the
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Crown, as well as from private proprietors, all interests in coast lights . For the maintenance of lights, buoys, Rm., they had power to raise
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money by tolls, the surplus being devoted to the
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relief of old and indigent mariners or their near relatives .

In 1853 the

control of the funds collected by the corporation was transferred to the board of trade, and the money over which the brethren were allowed
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independent control was ultimately reduced to the private income derived from funded and
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trust
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property . Their practical duties in erection and maintenance of lighthouses, buoys and beacons remain as important as ever . Similar functions are carried out by the
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Northern Lighthouse Board and the Irish Lighthouse Board, for Scotland and Ireland respectively . They have also the care and supervision of pilots . Other Trinity Houses established under charter or act of parliament for the appointment and control of pilots are at Hull and Newcastle . The Elder Brethren of Trinity Masters also act as nautical assessors in the high court of admiralty . The corporation has a large
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wharf and repair
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shop at the mouth of the
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river Lea, where most of the
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work in connexion with buoying the Thames is carried out . See W . H . Mayo, Trinity House, London, Past and
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Present (London, 1905) ; C . R . B .

Barrett, The Trinity House of Deptford
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Stroud (1893) .

End of Article: CORPORATION OF TRINITY HOUSE
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