The journey of Bury St
Edmunds Town Council
This article has been compiled from information
held by Bury St Edmunds organisations and the Town Clerk. Grateful
acknowledgements are also extended to the material of:
Margaret Statham
Suffolk Records
Office
St Edmundsbury Borough Council
website
In the autumn of the year 869 the Danes invaded East Anglia. King
Edmund fought against them but during the conquest was slain, the
anniversary of his death being commemorated on 20 November. By the
time of his martyrdom the site of the Abbey of Beodricsworth,
afterwards known as Bury St Edmunds, had existed for nearly three
centuries. A shrine to St Edmund was created by the small religious
household who guarded his relics.
Canute became King of England in
1016 and in recognition of his great belief in St Edmund he ensured
that funds were used to create Bury St Edmunds as a town of renown.
He established the town’s monastery in 1020 with a community of 20
monks. From the King’s funding and at the direction of Abbot
Baldwin the Abbey Church was rebuilt and the relics of St Edmund
were translated to the Abbey and the shrine became the seat of many
pigrimages.
The history of the governance of Bury St Edmunds lay in its Abbey
from which considerable power was exercised and controls of land
and tithes were administered. Key figures in this dominance were
the Abbey’s Cellarer and Sacrist.
The Cellarer was an officer whose responsibility was to ensure that
the monks of the religious community were fed and he ensured that
that the people of the agricultural land surrounding the town made
their contribution either by materials or produce. He was also able
to negotiate beneficial prices of goods sold in the town’s
market.
The Sacrist was another key member of the Abbey’s organisation,
being the collector of rents. He owned at least 250 houses and was
the controller of the markets and fairs all of which raised
substantial income from rent. He also administered the courts,
regulated weights and measures and controlled the provision of
intoxicating liquor.
It can be seen that the roles undertaken by the Cellarer and
Sacrist were the forerunner of the model of modern local
authorities but life did not always function smoothly – disputes
were regular and riots occasional. Throughout the thirteenth and
fourteenth centuries tensions between the Abbey and townspeople
were high, the latter regarding their life as being
undemocratically ruled.
Bury St Edmunds was described as being in a lawless state in 1327,
a situation that lasted two years. On 15 January 1327 approximately
3,000 people gathered at the gates of the Abbey, forcibly entered
the premises, manhandled the monks and looted property including
the town’s charters. A great desire among the rebellious
townspeople was that the Borough should become incorporated and
they extorted from the Abbot a charter of incorporation but upon
the restoration of law and order the charter was nullified because
it had not been freely and lawfully obtained.
More riots occurred in May that year when townspeople, Franciscan
friars and other clergy carried out a further assault on the Abbey
and destroyed the doors of the churches of St Mary and St James. In
August the situation worsened when the Abbot was kidnapped. It was
not until November 1327 that the King’s soldiers intervened,
rounded up the perpetrators and the town was fined £14,000 for its
rebelliousness, remitted to £4,000 if the townspeople
behaved.
The national peasants’ revolt of 1381 against the introduction of a
poll tax led to further disorder in the town in June of that year.
Peasants and people from the town ransacked the Abbey and the home
of the King’s Chief Justice, barbarically murdering the latter and
one of the monks. The revolt was quelled within nine days, again
resulting in the townspeople being fined.
During the fifteenth century the Guildhall Feoffment Trust was
established and was allowed by law in 1472 to administer the
bequests of two of its prominent members, John (known as Jankyn)
Smyth and Margaret Odeham and others who subsequently gave or
bequeathed large sums to the Trust. The Trustees not only used the
money to provide alms to the poor but in maintaining the town’s
fabric for example by repairing its gates and bridges.
As part of the English Reformation, Henry VIII began the
dissolution of the monasteries. In 1539, the Abbey was invaded by
his followers and sacked. Without its roofs being protected, the
structure of the buildings rapidly deteriorated and fell to ruin.
Townspeople added to the destruction by removing stonework,
recycling it for other purposes. The only buildings to survive were
the Churches of St Mary and St James, the Abbey Gate, Norman Tower
and the foundations of parts of the original Abbey.
As the seventeenth century approached, a petition for incorporation
was drawn up but objections staved off the inevitable incorporation
of Bury St Edmunds until 1606 when through Letters Patent this
transpired. A Corporation was formed comprising 37 members of whom
there was an Alderman, 12 Capital Burgesses and 24 Burgesses of the
Common Council. Annually, the Corporation elected four Assistants
from the Borough’s Magistracy and the positions of Town Clerk and
Recorder were created.
Between 1684 and 1688 the Corporation was governed by a new Charter
which meant that the Crown had the right to nominate members and
led to changes in the members being retitled the Mayor, Aldermen
and Burgesses of Bury St Edmunds.
The next 150 years saw many developments in the town and
considerable social change. Population grew to 7,135 in 1757 and
although there were many signs of affluence, poverty was equally
evident. The latter half of the century saw the removal of the town
gates to improve the highway access for carriages. Laws passed in
1811 empowered Improvement Commissioners to watch, pave, light and
clean the streets. Gas was introduced to the town in 1830; the
brewing industry, banking and shops began to prosper. In 1827 the
decision was taken to build a new Cattle Market but about 300
people petitioned against its removal from the Corn Market.
Reform was very much at the heart of public feeling – 12,000 people
(half of whom were classified as ‘poor’) attended a festival and
dinner at the cricket ground.
The Municipal Corporation Act 1835 brought about significant
changes to local government, not least the provision of a Council
of elected members composed of a Mayor, Recorder, six Aldermen and
18 Councillors representing the three wards of the town. This was
another change that was not accomplished without some degree of
problem and resistance – the previous administration was deeply in
debt and Alderman Abraham Gall, wanted to sell the town’s assets to
relieve the debt. He wrote to the Town Clerk declining to give up
the maces, chain and other property of the Corporation until he had
the authority of Act of Parliament for so doing.
On New Year’s Day 1836 the first Town Council meeting was held
pursuant to the new Act and after the election of Aldermen was
adjourned until the next day when Mr Francis King Eagle was elected
mayor, to hold office till the November meeting of the Council. Mr
Eagle was a bencher of the Middle Temple, an eminent tythe lawyer
and first Judge of the County Courts for Suffolk. He had been an
unsuccessful candidate for Bury St Edmunds at the first election
after the passing of the Reform Bill of 1832 and was described as a
very active politician in the interest of ‘reform’, especially in
local matters. He died in 1856, aged 72 years.
Traceable roots of the Town Council include a commemorative stone
plaque on the gable end of a property in School Yard testifying,
‘This entrance to the cattle market made by order of the Town
Council August 1852 J.P. Everard Esq. Mayor’.
Further reference to the Town Council can be found beneath the
‘Pillar of Salt’ traffic sign on the Angel Hill which was designed
in 1935 by Basil Oliver, ‘Architect to The Bury St Edmunds Town
Council’. This is now a listed monument and it is thought to have
been the Country's first internally illuminated street sign.
The Local Government Act of 1894 set up urban and rural district
Councils. This resulted in the establishment of Clare RDC, Thingoe
RDC and Haverhill UDC. Parish Councils were instituted to replace
the Vestries. The Urban sanitary authorities were abolished, so in
Bury, its functions were transferred to the Corporation that took
on the powers of an urban district council, but retained the status
of a borough.
Bury St Edmunds was formerly the county town and administrative
centre of West Suffolk, an administrative county of England created
in 1889 which survived until 1974 when it was rejoined with East
Suffolk to create a Suffolk-wide administration. After the local
government reorganisation in 1974 Bury St Edmunds did not have a
Town Council but the town’s viewpoints were represented through the
Bury St Edmunds Town Area Forum.
In 2003 across Suffolk the Council Tax was increased by around 18%
on average leading to considerable public unrest. On 1 April 2003
Bury St Edmunds Town Council was inaugurated with its precept
through Council Tax of £13.95 per year. Its first elections of this
era took place in May of that year.
The Quadricentennial celebrations in 2006 commemorated all that had
gone before in the 400 years since King James I granted the Charter
of Incorporation to Bury St Edmunds in 1606. At a Civic Service and
Choral Evensong held in the town’s Cathedral Lord Phillips of
Sudbury gave a moving and apposite address as guest of honour,
exhorting the young people of today to participate fully in their
communities towards a better and brighter future for all. Having
been ‘lost’ in the local government reorganisation of 1974, the
Town Council’s Coat of Arms were re-established by the College of
Arms under Royal Warrant.

Bury St Edmunds Town Council currently comprises 17 Councillors to
represent the nine wards of the Town. Its range of services
includes management of the town’s allotments, war memorials,
nativity sculpture, grit and waste bins. Financial support and
commitment is given to Bury in Bloom and requests for
support from groups and organisations are considered.
Councillors are a ‘local voice’ and are active across the
community, for example making their views known on planning and
licensing matters and representing the Council on several external
bodies.