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There is a display in the second gallery telling of the Great Fire of Nantwich.
ON
December 10, 1583, a
Nantwich brewer living in the Waterlode,
accidentally started a blaze which
burned for 20 days, destroying 150 houses, inns and other buildings.
The
fire made around 900 people – half the population – homeless, but
fortunately, only two people perished.
Transporting of salt, a principal product of Nantwich,
was stopped for a while and the use of the town as a military staging point was halted.
The
support of the town by trade and industry was a matter which concerned Queen
Elizabeth I and her Privy Council. As a result, she ordered a
nationwide collection for funds to rebuild Nantwich, to which she
contributed £1,000. This deed is marked in a plaque on a building in
Nantwich Square, now called “Queen’s Aid House” (pictured).
A modern translation would read: "God grant our Royal Queen in England long to reign, for
she has put her helping hand to build this town again”.
John Maisterson led four local men in administering the funds and poor relief, and overseeing the
buying of trees in Buerton, near Crewe, and Wirral. It took
about three years to rebuild the town in the
established medieval street pattern.
Following
the Queen’s generosity, May 1 in both 1584 and 1585 was known as
“Queen’s Day”.
After that the name fell into disuse.
l This item is based on an article by
the late Eric Garton, a 20th Century Nantwich historian, in a souvenir
brochure for the 400th anniversary commemorations of the Great Fire and
Rebuilding of Nantwich, which records the events that took place in
1983-4.
Back to What to See in the
Museum | See a painting of the Fire of Nantwich
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