Page:An Historical Essay on the Livery Companies of London.djvu/17

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Livery Companies of London.
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The Skinners 1327 Edward III.
The Carpenters 1344 Edward III.
The Grocers 1345 Edward III.
The Vintners 1365 Edward III.
The Fishmongers 1384 Richard II.
The Mercers 1393 Richard II.
The Salters 1394 Richard II.
The Haberdashers 1407 Henry IV.
The Cordwainers 1410 Henry IV.
The Cutlers 1413 Henry V.
The Armourers 1423 Henry VI.
The Brewers 1438 Henry VI.
The Drapers 1439 Henry VI.
The Leathersellers 1442 Henry VI.
The Barber Surgeons 1461 Edward IV.
The Ironmongers 1463 Edward IV.
The Tallow Chandlers 1463 Edward IV.
The Merchant Tailors 1466 Edward IV.
The Dyers 1472 Edward IV.
The Pewterers 1474 Edward IV.
The Cooks 1480 Edward IV.
The Clothworkers 1482 Edward IV.
The Joiners 1569 Elizabeth.
Their Halls.The greater part of the Halls which existed before or near the Reformation appear to have been formed from the deserted mansions of the great, and from buildings devoted to religious purposes. Drapers Hall was a mansion belonging to Lord Cromwell; Salters Hall belonged to the Earl of Oxford; The Grocers built their Hall on the site of Lord Fitzwalter's town mansion; the minor companies, in several instances, bought and converted the Halls of the dissolved religious houses into Trade Halls, as, for instance, the Leathersellers, who fitted up the fine hall of the Nuns of St. Helens; the Pinners, who occupied the Austin Friars Hall, afterwards called "Pinners Hall Meeting House"; the Barber Surgeons, who built on part of the site