Company of Watermen and Lightermen
The Company of Watermen and Lightermen is a historic City guild in the City of London. However, unlike the city's 113 livery companies, CWL does not have a grant of livery. Its meeting rooms are at Waterman's Hall on St Mary at Hill, London.
The role of watermen was to transfer passengers, while lightermen moved goods and cargo, between the Port of London and vessels moored in the River Thames. Although modern river workers are licensed by the Maritime and Coastguard Agency, the company continues its roles arranging apprenticeships, lobbying on river matters, and organising historic annual events and ceremonies.
The company's clerk is Julie Lithgow, formerly director of the Institute of Chartered Shipbrokers.
History
CWL was established in the medieval period to support and maintain rights of the river workers. The two main occupations were that of watermen and lightermen. The watermen transferred passengers across and along city centre rivers and estuaries. Most notable are those on the Thames and Medway. Other rivers such as the Tyne and Dee in Wales had watermen who formed guilds in medieval times. Lightermen transfer goods between ships and quays they specifically loaded and unloaded In the Port of London they overwhelmingly used flat-bottomed barges, called lighters.The King's Bargemaster and Royal Watermen are chosen from their number.
The company's centuries-spanning apprenticeship index is a popular genealogy source.
Annual race
The Doggett's Coat and Badge, which was first raced in 1715, is the oldest continuously-run river race. It claims to be the oldest continually staged annual sports event; though single sculls replaced the original skiffs or lighters.The winner's prize is a watermen's red coat plus a silver badge, displaying the White Horse of Hanover and the word "Liberty", in honour of George I's coronation. Each completing contestant of the six apprentice competitors receive a miniature of a Doggett's Badge for their lapel in a ceremony at Watermen's Hall, in silver for the winner and in bronze for the others. The Fishmongers' Company sponsors the awards, rewarding the rowing clubs of the top four with tiered prizes of £1,000, £600, £400, and £200.
Three public houses retain memorabilia of the race :
- Doggett's Coat & Badge, south-side of Blackfriars Bridge close to The Shard, London SE1.
- The Coat & Badge, Putney, London SW15.
- The Doggett Coat and Badge, Margate, lower reaches of the Thames Estuary.
Swan Upping