The Choir, now Blackfriar's Hall, became the chapel of the City Council and the Guilds with its own Chaplain. It was also used as a free school, now the King Edward VI's Grammar School in the Cathedral Close. After 1565 it was used by Flemish religious refugees who had
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been invited to Norwich to revitalise the ailing cloth trade. By 1579 there were 6000 'Dutch' in a population of 16,000 and the Choir became known as the Dutch church. They held their last service here in 1929. Memorials to their pastors John Elison (1581 - 1639) and his son Theophilus (1609 - 1676) can be seen on the north wall.
At the Reformation the East and West ranges of the Cloisters were used as granaries to store corn for poor relief. Later the East Granary became the first place of worship for the non-conformists in Norwich; the Presbyterians in 1672 and the Baptists in 1689.
In the great re-coinage of 1695, £259,000 in half-crowns, shillings and sixpences were minted in a corner of the Cloisters and these bear the letter N under the bust of William III.
In 1712 the buildings became the City Workhouse until 1859, when a Commercial School was established here which became the City of Norwich School. Later the Technical Institute was built next door and this in turn became Norwich City College. The West range was used by the Norwich Middle Class School, (part of Edward VI's Grammar), with nine masters and 260 boys, forty being boarders in the School House, at the turn of the twentieth century. The East and West ranges are now part of the Norfolk Institute of Art and Design.
These Halls are home to part of the biggest collection of Civic Portraits in the country, 127 in total, with eleven in St. Andrews Hall and thirty-one in Blackfriars Hall. The paintings here range from the late sixteenth century through to the early nineteenth century.
The South Porch is a Victorian replacement of an earlier one that stood one bay to the west. This earlier one was built in 1774 and housed on the first floor of the first public lending library in the country, (founded in 1716). The room beneath the library was used for the Court of Conscience, a court for the recovery of debts less than 40 shillings and also the Court of Request, a court for giving relief to the needy.
For further information and interactive features please visit the
Norwich Blackfriars' website created by University of East Anglia staff in conjunction with
Norwich HEART.