Gybson's Conduit
Gybson's Conduit, initially known as St Lawrence's Well, is a well conduit monument next to Westwick Street in Norwich which took water from Saint Lawrence's spring. Completed in 1577, it has protected status as a Scheduled Monument, and is a major piece of stonework in the Early Renaissance style.
History
1547–77: Creation and renaming
Prior to the creation of the conduit, in 1547 the people of Norwich were granted access to a common lane which allowed them right of access to Saint Lawrence's spring. This was under the condition that they gated the lane and kept this gate closed at night.Robert Gibson, a wealthy brewer and Sheriff of Norwich, acquired the land on which the spring resided, taking it into private ownership, in 1576 or 1577, under the condition that he install a pump to bring water from the well for parishioners through a lead cock, or conduit. He thus closed this lane and built the conduit in the same time frame, initially named Saynt Laurens Wel. It was intended to bring water from Saint Lawrence's spring to the local population. Historian Brian Ayers has said that its construction may have been a display of Gybson's generosity to the people as well as his power over their basic needs, consolidating his own status as a man of influence. An inscription on the conduit reads:
Gybson hath it soughte
From Saynt Laurens Wel
And his charg this wrowghte
Who now here doe dwel
Thy case was his cost, not smal,
Vouchsafed wel of those
Which thankful be his Worke to se,
And thereto be no Foes.