Office-Holders in Modern Britain: Volume 11 (Revised), Court Officers, 1660-1837. Originally published by University of London, London, 2006.
This free content was digitised by double rekeying. All rights reserved.
'The household below stairs: Harbingers 1660-1782', in Office-Holders in Modern Britain: Volume 11 (Revised), Court Officers, 1660-1837, ed. R O Bucholz( London, 2006), British History Online https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/office-holders/vol11/pp462-468 [accessed 26 November 2024].
'The household below stairs: Harbingers 1660-1782', in Office-Holders in Modern Britain: Volume 11 (Revised), Court Officers, 1660-1837. Edited by R O Bucholz( London, 2006), British History Online, accessed November 26, 2024, https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/office-holders/vol11/pp462-468.
"The household below stairs: Harbingers 1660-1782". Office-Holders in Modern Britain: Volume 11 (Revised), Court Officers, 1660-1837. Ed. R O Bucholz(London, 2006), , British History Online. Web. 26 November 2024. https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/office-holders/vol11/pp462-468.
In this section
Harbingers 1660–1782
The harbingers were responsible for reserving accommodation for the court when it was on progress. The establishment of the harbingers consisted of gentlemen and yeomen, appointed by lord steward's warrant. (fn. 1) Two gentlemen were appointed in 1660. Three served from 1661. In 1662 the remuneration was fixed at wages of £11 8s 1½d and board wages of £60 16s 8d, reduced in 1680 to £38 10s 11½d. In 1685 one gentleman was appointed with a salary of £50. In 1689 the number rose to two with wages of £11 8s 1½d and board wages of £48 11s 10½d. In 1714 it fell to one whose salary was fixed at £60 in 1761. Supernumerary gentlemen harbingers were appointed between 1672 and 1685. (fn. 2)
As many as seven yeomen harbingers appear to have been appointed in 1660. Four were established in ordinary, two supernumerary at wages of £5 and board wages of £36 5s, apiece, in 1662. Board wages rose to £40 for ordinary yeoman harbingers, but fell to £20 for three supernumeraries in 1664. Six ordinary yeomen were named in 1668 at roughly 1662 levels of remuneration. Board wages rose to £45 12s 6d in 1674, then fell to £35 in 1680. James II reduced the number and wages of the yeoman harbingers to three at £30 in salary, but by 1689 this had climbed to five at £5 wages and £45 board wages. Their number fell again to three in 1702, rose to four in 1704, then to five in 1727, before falling to three at £50 per annum in 1761. This number rose to five again by the Establishment of 24 May 1769. (fn. 3) Yeoman harbingers were allowed fees of honour, yielding about £21 per annum for all officers under Queen Anne. (fn. 4)
This office, labelled a sinecure by Gilbert, was finally abolished in 1782. (fn. 5)
Gentlemen 1660–1685
(no account of rank taken)
1660 | 22 May | Woodgate, N. |
1660 | 14 July | Collins, R. |
1661 | 9 Mar. | Watson, P. |
1673 | 15 Sept. | Cotton, W. |
1673 | 1 Dec. | Perrin, G. |
1678 | 5 May | Evans, T. |
1681 | 23 Dec. | Tozer, W. |
Gentleman 1685–1688
First Gentleman 1689–1715
1689 | 30 Mar. | Perrin, G. | ||
1689 | 1 Aug. | Tozer, W. | ||
[1701 | c. 4 Apr. | Whitfield, M.] | ||
1702 | 30 June | La Roach, P. |
Second Gentleman Harbinger 1689–1714
Third Gentleman Harbinger 1702–1704
Gentleman Harbinger 1715–1782
1715 | 25 July | La Roach, P. |
1746 | 2 June | Gibbon, C. |
1760 | 15 Dec. | Secker, J. |
1761 | 1 July | Rivett, J. |
1763 | 21 Oct. | Baird, J. |
1768 | 1 June | Willis, T. |
Supernumerary Gentlemen
(1662–1668; 1672–1673; 1675–1681; 1682–1685; 1686–1688)
1662 | 1 Dec. | [?] (fn. 6) |
1664 | 1 Oct. | Collins, R. |
1664 | 1 Oct. | Watson, P. |
1672 | 26 Jan. | Cotton, W. |
1672 | 21 Feb. | Perrin, G. |
1675 | 30 Aug. | Evans, T. |
1678 | 23 July | Tozer, W. |
1682 | 2 Aug. | Price, W. |
1686 | 1 Feb. | Tozer, W. |
Yeomen Harbingers 1660–1685
(no account of rank taken)
Supernumerary Yeomen Harbingers 1662–1701
1662 | 1 Dec. | ? (fn. 6) |
1662 | 1 Dec. | ? (fn. 6) |
1664 | 1 Oct. | Wetherall, T. |
1664 | 1 Oct. | Sambourne, T. |
1664 | 1 Oct. | House, T. |
1674 | 28 May | Cooper, H., jun. |
1678 | 1 Aug. | De Locke, (sup?) |
1680 | 9 Jan. | Cocke, J. (sup?) |
1680 | 6 Nov. | Jones, H. (sup?) |
1681 | 5 Sept. | Gregory, E. |
1683 | 6 Mar. | La Roach, P. |
1684 | 10 Aug. | Massen, J. |
1685 | 1 July | Cooper, H., sen. |
1686 | 1 Feb. | Cooper, H., jun. |
1693 | 7 Mar. | Verhaest, J. |
First Yeoman Harbinger 1685–1782
(rankings confused in Household records from c. 1761).
1685 | 22 Apr. | Perrin, G. |
1689 | 24 April | Wall, W. |
1717 | 28 Mar. | Courant, F. |
1720 | 1 Oct. | Darington, L. |
1743 | 16 May | Parsons, R. |
By 1780 | Stones, T. |
Second Yeoman Harbinger 1685–1705; 1707–1782
Third Yeoman Harbinger 1685–1782
Fourth Yeoman Harbinger 1689–1702; 1704–1782
Fifth Yeoman Harbinger
(1689–1702; 1727–1760; 1761–1782)
NB: There seem to be a number of missing warrants for these positions, leaving gaps. Several harbingers are listed in LS 13/266 as 'promoted', but it is not clear to which position they were preferred. (prob. higher harbinger's positions, but no proof so far).