The name Howden is derived from the
Old English hēafoddenu meaning 'head valley'. As there are no notable valleys nearby, the
denu element (corresponding to the modern word
dean) may instead have its older sense of 'low flat space', referring to the town standing on land raised above the surrounding marshes. One of the earliest recorded parts of Howden's history describes
King Edgar giving his first wife, Ethelfleda, Howden Manor in 959 AD, the beginnings of a long connection with the
royal court of England. In 1080, William the Conqueror gave the town, including its church, which later became the minster, to the
Bishop of Durham, who promptly conferred the church upon the
monks of
Durham. However, he kept Howden Manor for himself. Records show that the church was at first a
rectory, but conflicting records also show that Hugh, Prior of Durham, was given a
bull from
Pope Gregory IX for appropriating the church towards the maintenance of 16 monks. Howden's royal connections continued when in 1191,
Prince John spent Christmas in Howden. Nine years later, John, now King of England, granted Howden the right to hold an annual fair. The most prolific of these tales was that John of Howden, at his funeral in 1275, raised his arms from his open coffin during his requiem mass to greet the host. As such, he has become regarded as a saint, though the Catholic Church has never made this official. Through the pilgrims, Howden received the money that it needed to complete the minster, fulfilling John of Howden's prophecy that he would continue aiding the minster from beyond the grave. Howden's Workhouse From 1665 to 1794, a site on Pinfold Street in Howden was used as a lodging house for the needy. A
workhouse was then opened on the site which included a manufactory, stone-breaking yard, cowshed and prison. A parliamentary report of 1776 listed the parish workhouse at Howden as being able to accommodate up to 20 inmates. After 1834 Howden Poor Law Union was formed on 4 February 1837. Its operation was overseen by an elected Board of Guardians, 42 in number, representing its 40 constituent parishes as listed below (figures in brackets indicate numbers of Guardians if more than one): East Riding:
Asselby, Aughton, Backenholme with Woodale, Balkholme, Barmby-on-the-Marsh, Belby,
Bellasize, Blacktoft, Breighton, Broomfleet, Bubwith, North Cave with Drewton Everthorpe, Cheapsides, Cotness, Eastrington, Elberton Priory, Flaxfleet,
Foggathorpe, Gilberdyke, Gribthorpe, Harlthorpe, Hemingbrough,
Holme upon Spalding Moor, Hotham, Howden (2), Kilpin,
Knedlington, Latham, Loxton, Metham, Newport Wallingfen, New Village, Newsham & Brind and Wressle & Loftsome, Portington & Cavil, Saltmarsh, Scalby, Skelton, Spaldington, Thorpe, Willitoft, Yokefleet. The population falling within the union at the 1831 census had been 12,728 with parishes ranging in size from Cotness (population 29) to Howden itself (2,130). The average annual poor-rate expenditure for the period 1834–36 had been £6,263. Initially, the Howden Guardians declined to build a new workhouse but made use of the existing parish workhouses in Howden, Holme and Cave. However, in 1839, following persuasion by the region's Assistant Poor Law Commsissioner
John Revans, a new building was erected on the south side of Knedlington Road. It was designed by Weightman and Hadfield of
Sheffield. == Partial ruin of Howden's minster ==