Associated Livery Companies of the Church
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The Haberdashers' Company The Worshipful Company of Haberdashers, number 8 in the order of seniority of the Livery Companies of the City of London, had temporary offices in Bartholomew Close during the building of their new hall in West Smithfield, which has now opened. It has been agreed that St Bartholomew the Great should be one of the two churches with which the company is associated, the other being St Lawrence Jewry next Guildhall, with which they have a long connection. |
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The Butchers' Company The Worshipful Company of Butchers, one of the seven oldest of the City of London Livery Companies, continues to be a highly active Company both within the City of London and the meat industry. Providing first-class facilities and hospitality services to worldwide clients, Butchers' Hall is suitably located in the historic Smithfield Area, where the Butchers have been a significant presence for more than a thousand years. Strypes' edition of Stow's Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster records "that in the year 975 A.D., in the Ward of Farringdon, without the city walls, there are situated divers slaughter-houses and a Butchers' Hall where the craftsmen meet." The Company is proud to have been associated with the Priory Church of St Bartholomew The Great for many years. |
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The Founders' Company |
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The Fletchers' Company Though fletching, the adding of flights to arrows and the making of arrows themselves are no longer crafts controlled by a Guild, the Worshipful Company of Fletchers continues to be active in the life of the city. The Fletchers were first mentioned in 1371 when they presented a petition to the Lord Mayor, requesting that the two trades of Fletcher (the maker of arrows) and Bowyer (the maker of longbows) should be kept entirely separate. By the time of Henry VIII, the Fletchers had a hall in St Mary Axe and various rolls show the elections to office. In the 16th century, widows were admitted as members on the death of their husbands and even single women were sometimes admitted, a practice which continued into the 18th century, despite the Company informing the 1887 Commission that "No women have hitherto been admitted". The rise of the gun caused the eventual extinction of the longbow as a weapon of war and archery is now confined to the sports field. The present-day Company shares one of the newest livery company halls in the City of London with the Farmers' Company. The Hall is situated in Cloth Street, very near St Bartholomew the Great. A full account of the Company's history can be found in the The Fletchers and Longbowstringmakers of London by James E.Oxley (1968). |
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The Farriers' Company The Worshipful Company of Farriers is first and foremost a fellowship of men and women who are Free of the Company and the City, and therefore, by definition, Citizens of the City of London, regardless of where they live, and who share a dual interest in the Horse and the City. The first records claim that the Fellowship was called together by the then Lord Mayor in 1356, and the modern history of the Company begins with the grant of the first Charter by King Charles II on 17th January 1674. It is number 55 in order of seniority of the Livery Companies of the City. Today, the Company has responsibility for securing adequate standards of competence and conduct among those engaged in the shoeing of horses, and is the examining body for the registration qualification for farriers, the Diploma (DipWCF). It also encourages farriers to take the Company's higher qualifications - Associateship (AWCF) and Fellowship (FWCF) - and to engage in Continuing Professional Development, by offeringcourses for professional development, and awards at farriery and best-shod horse competitions throughout the country. The Company has links with the mounted units of HM Forces, HMS Ocean, St Martin in the Fields High School for Girls and the FANY (Princess Royal Volunteer Corps). It endeavours to assist farriers and their families who fall on hard times, and supports the Lord Mayor's Appeal. The Company is justly proud of being able to combine interest in the modern craft of farriery with its history of involvement in the City. |
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The Farmers' Company The main aims and objects of the Worshipful Company of Farmers, whose Grant of Charter of Incorporation was made in 1955, are: to stimulate the development of agricultural education; to provide financial assistance for overseas visits by agricultural students; to provide a common meeting ground for farmers and allied professions; to promote a better understanding of the importance of farming in the economic life of the nation and the close association of farming with the City of London. More than 70 per cent of the members of the Company are farmers, while the remainder are engaged in ancillary agricultural occupations. The Company shares a hall with the Fletchers' Company in Cloth Street. |
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The Information Technologists' Company |
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The Hackney Carriage Drivers' Company |
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The Tax Advisers' Company The Company of Tax Advisers continues to be associated with the Priory Church. |
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The Guild of Public Relations Practitioners The new Guild of Public Relations Practitioners' association with the Priory Church began in 2001. |










