From 1236, the area had a Jewish population, settled in the area for the protection of the Tower and its garrison. The Jews had to take refuge in the Tower several times and on at least one of those occasions, in 1267, during the
Second Barons' War, formed part of its
defensive garrison during a siege. This arrangement lasted until the
expulsion of the Jews from England in 1290. In 1442, the neighbourhood "was constituted a Precinct free from jurisdiction civil or ecclesiastical, except that of the Lord Chancellor". With the
Dissolution of the Monasteries by King
Henry VIII in 1531, the land became the property of the Crown, and many of the religious houses were given to prominent nobles. The hospital of St Katharine was not seized, but re-established as a Protestant house — with houses and a brewery being built within the precincts. By Henry VIII's time, there were 1,000 houses (including a brewery – the
Red Lion Brewery) in the precinct, with many foreigners, vagabonds and prostitutes, crammed along narrow lanes (with names like Dark Entry, Cat's Hole, Shovel Alley, Rookery and Pillory Lane) and many houses in poor repair –
John Stow's 1598 "Survey of London" called them "small tenements and homely cottages, having as inhabitants, English and strangers [i.e. foreigners], more in number than some city in England". Since the City's guilds' restrictions did not apply here, foreign craftsmen were attracted to the liberty, as were many seamen and
rivermen. Foreign ships were not permitted to use the wharfs within the City, and St Katharine's Quay came to be used extensively for unloading these, particularly Dutch ships. Many French settled here, after the loss of
Calais. A large number were from the districts of Hammes and Guisnes, leading to a part of the Precinct becoming known as Hangman's Gains. At the time of the Spanish Armada, Queen Elizabeth I wanted to understand the number and origin of foreigners in London. At that time the little precinct included 425 foreigners many of them shoemakers, with many of the English subjects working as seamen. The foreigners included 328 Dutch, 69 French (mostly hatmakers), 12 Scots, 8 Danes, 5 Poles, 2 Spaniards and 1 Italian. It's not clear if the exiles from Calais were counted among the French or whether they were considered as English subjects. With trade in the City regulated by the City, St Katharine became an area for foreign settlement. The status of St Katharine's appears to be ambiguous with the
court leet behaving more like a
select vestry. The area was successfully incorporated into the weekly
bills of mortality returns, which was not typical for extra-parochial places in London. Despite the high population density, however, in the
Great Plague the liberty's mortality rate was half of the rate in areas to the north and east of the City of London. The diverse nature of the area's population can be seen through the sectarian Gordon Riots in 1780. The ringleaders of the protestant mob that sought to destroy the church was led by a lame soldier named MacDonald, and two women, one black and one white. All three were hanged, on Tower Hill, for their role in the disturbances. The area of St Katharine's by the Tower was grouped into the
Whitechapel District in 1855 and became a civil parish in 1866 when its
extra-parochial status ended, following the Poor Law Amendment Act 1866. The parish became part of the
County of London in 1889. In 1895 it was abolished as a parish and combined with
St Botolph without Aldgate. Decennial census data from the Precinct illustrates the once densely populated nature of the area, and the steep fall in population associated with the creation of the docks. == St Katharine Docks ==