| Although
Bristol Charities was created by an Act of Parliament in 1835, its
roots go back almost 700 years when Bristol first emerged as a major
port and trading centre. Many entrepreneurial merchants of that period
and in later centuries made great fortunes, with several of them leaving
large, enduring legacies to charitable organisations set up in their
name to benefit the city’s poorest citizens. Over
the years, these tended to come under the administration of Bristol
Corporation (the forerunner of today’s Bristol City Council).
By the early 19th century, the Corporation was responsible for administering:
The endowment funds of three schools – the Free Grammar School
(now Bristol Grammar School), the Red Maids’ School and Queen
Elizabeth’s Hospital.
Three charities offering accommodation to the poor. They were Foster’s
Almshouse, (founded in 1492), and two almshouses in Old Market
Street, Trinity Hospital North (1411), subsequently sold by the
Trustees, and Trinity Hospital South (1395), now known as Barstaple
House.
57 non-educational charities, principally involved in gifts to the
poor.
The
Corporation assumed this role as the trustees appointed to run the
endowments had to be a permanent body. However, the entangling of
endowed charity funds with local politics inevitably led to suggestions
of improper use of the cash – largely by unsuccessful candidates
following elections – particularly as by the early 19th century,
the endowments were producing an annual income of £13,000.
One
of the early consequences of the passing of the 1832 Reform Act
was for the re-organised House of Commons to turn its attention
to reconstituting the municipal corporations, which had long been
the subject of widespread complaint – particularly in Bristol,
where the organisation’s performance had undoubtedly been
one of the triggers of the 1831 Bristol Riots.
The Whig (Liberal) government of the day therefore appointed a Royal
Commission to look into the municipal corporations. Its findings
highlighted the serious shortcomings of local government throughout
the nation, including observing that the Corporation of Bristol
“offered a very unfavourable specimen of the results of self-election
and irresponsibility”, even though it did not identify any
misuse of public funds.
The
Commission’s findings led to the Municipal Corporations Bill,
introduced in June 1835. Part of the legislation stated that the
former corporations ceased to be charity trustees on 1 August 1836
– and Bristol Charities was born.
|