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City of London Corporation

Watermen and lightermen

Research Guide
rowing-on-the-thames

1. About this guide

This guide explains how to find individuals who worked as watermen or lightermen on the River Thames. Watermen transported passengers and lightermen transported goods.

The records of the Watermen and Lightermen's Company and Fishmongers' Company are held at Guildhall Library.

Please contact guildhall.library@cityoflondon.gov.uk to arrange a visit - advance booking is essential.

2. Online records

The following indexes by Robert John Cottrell are available on Findmypast.co.uk under Thames Watermen & Lightermen 1688-2010 (charges apply):

  • Company of Watermen and Lightermen: index to apprenticeship bindings, 1692-1949
  • Company of Watermen and Lightermen: index to apprentices reassigned from one master to another, 1688-1908
  • Thomas Doggett Coat and Badge race: index to winners, 1715-2010
  • Corporation of Trinity House: index to licences granted to ex-mariners to work as watermen on the River Thames, 1829-1864

Also available on Findmypast.co.uk (charges apply) are the following indexes which all relate to the Company of Watermen and Lightermen:

3. Watermen and Lightermen's Company

Watermen and lightermen who worked on the River Thames between Gravesend and Windsor generally had to be a member of the Company of Watermen and Lightermen. This company was founded in 1514 for watermen but was extended to lightermen in 1700.

Until the late nineteenth century it was only possible to become a member by completing a seven year apprenticeship. Apprentices had to be between the ages of 14 and 20. From 1865, watermen and lightermen too old to serve an apprenticeship could obtain a licence by being contracted for two years.

You can search the surviving records of the Company on the catalogue under reference code CLC/L/WA. Scroll down to Collection Tree View to see the full list.

The most useful records are outlined in the table below below:

RecordSeries
Apprentice bindings books, 1688-1908
(Post 1908 books are held at Watermen's Hall)
MS 6289/1-24
Apprentices' affidavit books, 1759-1897MS 6291/1-6
Apprentices' birth/baptism certificates, 1773-1921 with gapsMS 6291A/1-107
Register of contracts for those too old to serve an apprenticeship, 1865-1926
(Post 1926 registers are held at Watermen's Hall)
MS 19548A
Freedom admission books, 1765-1927MS 6290/1-19
Quarterage books, 1764-1923 with gaps
(Quarterage was the quarterly payment of fees to the company)
MS 6819/1-2
MS 6820
MS 6404
MS 6402/1-11
MS 6401/1-7
Court minutes, 1700-1887MS 6287/1-21
Complaint books, 1802-1909 with gapsMS 6301/1-8
MS 6302
MS 6303/1-6
MS 6304/1-2
MS 6305/1-4
Payments to pensioners, 1794-1928MS 6400/1-6
Payments to inmates of the almshouses in Penge, 1841-1859MS 6602/1-6

4. Trinity House Watermen

The Corporation of Trinity House also had the right to license watermen though the numbers were much fewer than the members of the Watermen and Lightermen's Company. These men were ex-mariners and tended to be older. The only surviving register of men covers 1829-1864 and is held at The London Archives in CLC/526/MS30335. It is indexed on Findmypast.co.uk (see Section two on Online Records).

5. Doggett's Coat and Badge

The 1721 will of Thomas Doggett, a Drury Lane comedian, provided for a scarlet coat and silver badge to be awarded annually by the Fishmongers' Company to a waterman of exceptional talent. Six watermen within a year of completing their apprenticeship would race from the Swan at London Bridge to the Swan at Chelsea, and have done so annually ever since. The winner would be the recipient of the said coat and badge.

The winners are indexed on Findmypast (see Section two on Online Records).

Reports of races can often be found in contemporary newspapers. Many newspapers have been digitised and made available on The British Newspaper Archive.

There are a couple of files relating to the race in the Fishmongers' Company archives in MS 7269 and MS 28833.

6. Thomas Martyn's Charity School

A watermen's school in Putney was founded in 1684 by Thomas Martyn after he had been rescued from the river. 20 sons of local Putney watermen were admitted when the school opened in June 1718. The school was situated in Putney until it closed in 1911. The Thomas Martyn Foundation still exists today as a charity providing grants for the sons and daughters of watermen.

You can search the surviving records of the school on the catalogue under reference code LMA/4523. Scroll down to collection tree view to see the full list.

7. Corps of River Fencibles

Thames watermen and other groups of river tradesmen voluntarily formed associations of River Fencibles in 1798. Fencibles were an early version of the Home Guard. The River Fencibles were officially established in 1803, and by 1804 had uniformed commissioned officers. The force was disbanded in 1813.

You can search the surviving records of the corps on our catalogue under reference code CLC/057. Scroll down to collection tree view to see the full list.