Tour through the Eastern Counties of England, 1722

comparison of the extent of it; but to say there are hardly any

people to be seen there, is far from being true in fact; and

whoever thinks fit to look into the churches and meeting-houses on

a Sunday, or other public days, will find there are very great

numbers of people there. Or if he thinks fit to view the market,

and see how the large shambles, called Cardinal Wolsey’s Butchery,

are furnished with meat, and the rest of the market stocked with

other provisions, must acknowledge that it is not for a few people

that all those things are provided. A person very curious, and on

whose veracity I think I may depend, going through the market in

this town, told me, that he reckoned upwards of six hundred country

people on horseback and on foot, with baskets and other carriage,

who had all of them brought something or other to town to sell,

besides the butchers, and what came in carts and waggons.

It happened to be my lot to be once at this town at the time when a

very fine new ship, which was built there for some merchants of

London, was to be launched; and if I may give my guess at the

numbers of people which appeared on the shore, in the houses, and

on the river, I believe I am much within compass if I say there

were 20,000 people to see it; but this is only a guess, or they

might come a great way to see the sight, or the town may be

declined farther since that. But a view of the town is one of the

surest rules for a gross estimate.

It is true here is no settled manufacture. The French refugees

when they first came over to England began a little to take to this

place, and some merchants attempted to set up a linen manufacture

in their favour; but it has not met with so much success as was

expected, and at present I find very little of it. The poor people

are, however, employed, as they are all over these counties, in

spinning wool for other towns where manufactures are settled.

The country round Ipswich, as are all the counties so near the

coast, is applied chiefly to corn, of which a very great quantity

is continually shipped off for London; and sometimes they load corn

here for Holland, especially if the market abroad is encouraging.

They have twelve parish churches in this town, with three or four

meetings; but there are not so many Quakers here as at Colchester,

and no Anabaptists or Antipoedo Baptists, that I could hear of – at

least, there is no meeting-house of that denomination. There is

one meeting-house for the Presbyterians, one for the Independents

and one for the Quakers; the first is as large and as fine a

building of that kind as most on this side of England, and the

inside the best finished of any I have seen, London not excepted;

that for the Independents is a handsome new-built building, but not

so gay or so large as the other.

There is a great deal of very good company in this town, and though

there are not so many of the gentry here as at Bury, yet there are

more here than in any other town in the county; and I observed

particularly that the company you meet with here are generally

persons well informed of the world, and who have something very

solid and entertaining in their society. This may happen, perhaps,

by their frequent conversing with those who have been abroad, and

by their having a remnant of gentlemen and masters of ships among

them who have seen more of the world than the people of an inland

town are likely to have seen. I take this town to be one of the

most agreeable places in England for families who have lived well,

but may have suffered in our late calamities of stocks and bubbles,

to retreat to, where they may live within their own compass; and

several things indeed recommend it to such:-

1. Good houses at very easy rents.

2. An airy, clean, and well-governed town.

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