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Friday, October 30, 2020

An African Boy in 1800s Marlow.

Updated December 2023

Some may be surprised to know that there are a few examples of black residents of Marlow in the 1800s.

Edward Mazongoo's stay was brief but his story interesting.

Born according to his 1871 census entry in Zanzibar Africa I first find him working as a 14 year old garden boy in Hampshire for a rich widow. He was one of multiple servants in the household. Being a garden boy could lead to a good job if the boy could get enough experience and expertise to become a head gardener. These were senior servants, in charge of other employees and often qualifying for a house along with the job. In its apprentice stages however the job of gardener was very low paid. Though live-in garden boys like Edward would get a bed but an actual bedroom was very unlikely. Most often the position involved sleeping in the kitchen or kitchen passage in an employer's house on a pull up bed or in the potting shed or stables outside, like the stable lads. I have come across no other obvious records of a black boy taking on a gardening role. Most African or Caribbean servants were valets or footmen. Better paid jobs, though with long hours of expected service. To be honest you were never really not on call. As black servants were scarce, managing to find and employ one became a sign of social cachet as well as a talking point. To be a footman you would in addition need to be tall and considered good looking.

Three years after Edward Mazoongoo was entered into the census as a garden boy, he too had become a valet. Now he was living in Marlow and said to be 19, which means his age is out somewhere. His employer was a Mr John Marsham whose main home was in Palace Gardens, Kensington London, but who also stayed at Marlow, presumably as a "country" or weekend retreat. Edward perhaps was unhappy as he stole Marsham's chequebook and filled out two cheques. His enquiries as to the cashing out process and his incorrect rendering of his employer's name sparked suspicion at both the London bank branches he attempted to get to pay him money. A warrant was soon put out for his arrest on the charge of forgery.

Edward got all the way to Lichfield before being caught. The jail there could not hold him- he escaped- and a national alert was put out for police to be on the lookout for him. London Police suspected that he would try to get to Liverpool Docks so police were waiting there for him. To Liverpool Edward did indeed go, on foot all the way it was reported. An awaiting Superintendent soon spotted him and a local detective constable successfully gave chase and seized him. He still had the stolen cheque book on him at the time. Edward was sent back via Lichfield to London for trial.

At the trial, the charge of forgery was dropped in favour of one of stealing the cheque book only. Edward had wrote the name of Marsham on the cheque he tried to cash but had not tried to copy the signature and had not spelt the name correctly on at least one cheque. His uncertainty about the banking process as a whole suggests he did not understand a signature was required, only the provision of the name of the account holder. So on a technicality, the fact that no one could possibly be fooled into cashing a cheque without a signature on it in the right place, Edward was free of the charge of forgery. For the theft of the cheques however he received 6 months in jail with hard labour.

It is possible to tease out a few facts about Edward from the case. He must have been at least partially literate in order to write his employer's name. That the police suspected he would go to Liverpool docks possibly implies they knew that he had a previous connection to the place. Perhaps he had arrived into the country as a very young sailor. His going to Lichfield is puzzling but may just be the result of hitching a ride to wherever he could get as fast as he could.

How he covered large swathes of the country in a short period of time is not obvious. To take 2 (or 3, reports vary) days only to walk to Liverpool seems improbable if he did indeed only travel on his own two legs. He does not seem to have been sighted between Lichfield and Liverpool which is something of an achievement for a man who would stand out from the crowd more than the average man.

He appears on no further censuses, nor do any obvious family members for him.

More about Marlow's any 1800s black residents in the future and about Edward too if anything more can be discovered about either.

 Note added October 2021: see this post about George Alexander Grafton a black child buried in Marlow churchyard in the 1800s.

To find every mention of any person on this blog choose the Person Index option on the drop down menu. See also Biographies Of Individuals here.

Researched and written by Charlotte Day.

©Marlow Ancestors. You are very welcome to use this research for family or local history purposes with credit to this blog. 

Sources:

My transcription of microfilm photographic images of 1871 census pages provided by the LDS at their Family History Centre. You can now easily find census images and transcriptions of them online.

Staffordshire Advertiser 13th September 1873, Huddersfield Daily Chronicle 20th September 1873 via the BNA accessed June 2019.

London Evening Standard, 19th September 1873, Burton Chronicle 18th September 1873 via the BNA accessed August 2020.

The Hour, 23rd September 1873. Accessed 2021. British Library Archives.





Thursday, October 15, 2020

Miller Graves And Research, Great Marlow

©Marlow Ancestors. Use image or research if you give credit to this blog.

Note: We have grouped these graves together for ease of use as they are for people of the same last name but there is no reason to conclude that those on the different graves were related to each other.


Philip Homan Miller "of Moyleen" died 1928 aged 82 and his wife Marianne Sophia who died 1929 aged 78. 

Both of the above were artists / painters. Phillip and quite possibly his wife were of Irish origin.

Moyleen was a 14 room house off West Street/Henley Road. This would at the time have been referred to usually as "West End". 

This grave is in Marlow Cemetery. Marianne was obviously a skilled maker of preserves as her "pure orange jelly" was exhibited at the Royal Horticultural Society show in London in 1909, earning her a Banksian Medal no less. During the 1st world war as part of the war effort a jam factory was based there. Local schoolchildren were allowed time out of lessons to pick rose hips and blackberries to feed the factory.



The above grave is in All Saints Parish Church. It's badly weathered but here's what is readable..

John Miller who departed this life November 19th 187-

Aged 35 years. 


ALSO - 

Daughter of the above, Jane born Jan 1867, died June 1878.

It is not probable that these Miller's are related to those at the top of the page.

Sunday, October 11, 2020

Holy Trinity Church, Great Marlow, Trinity Road (formerly known as Gun Lane, Trinity Lane and Road)



In 1892, the vicar chided mourners for placing artificial flowers in glass cases on the graves. This was he said a "foreign habit" which did not teach the "truth of resurrection" in the same way as real flowers did. The habit would be gently and kindly discouraged he said. 

















 Photos by Kathryn Day. Holy Trinity Church (disused as a place of worship. Now a hairdressers).

To read about Charlotte Cocks of the Glade in Marlow who was very involved in this church see here



We have photos of all the gravestones which are still standing and that can be read, these are being uploaded onto the blog gradually. Search for people under the Graves option on the menu. There is also a church related option for more content concerning the various places of worship in Marlow.

©Marlow Ancestors. 

Saturday, October 10, 2020

Marlow Heroes Arthur Corby and Charles Bonny

I always like to highlight the great things some of your ancestors may have done. Today here's a look at Arthur Harry Corby and Charles Bonny whose determination and quick thinking ensured that a child molester was brought to justice.

The incident occurred in the Spring of 1903. Arthur and Charles were in a relatively new partnership together as coach builders. They were already doing well having supplied the water company and a while later would beat other older firms to win the contract to build a new sewage cart for Marlow too. Their workshop was in Prospect Road a short distance from Arthur's family home in the same street.

Whilst working one afternoon Arthur noticed two children on the nearby footpath on Hanging Hill (alongside the allotments now) collecting flowers. Walking towards them with an umbrella was a man. A horrified Corby saw the man apparently feign the dropping of his umbrella near one of the children Annie Davis, so as to have excuse to pause by her. It then appeared that he "interfered" with her. She struggled from his grip and fled in great distress to Corby and Bonny's workshop. The man adjusted his clothing and continued his way up the path towards Bovingdon Green. Bonny took the girl inside their premises where Corby sought confirmation from her of his suspicions that she had been attacked. While Bonny took Annie home to her mother Corby flew off in pursuit of the offender.

As soon as the child was safe Bonny joined the chase. They caught up with the man, later revealed as a James Pauley, in the stable of the Royal Oak pub at Bovingdon Green. He refused to come with them back to Marlow but strong arm tactics meant he had no chance of escape. They hauled him back to their workshop where they held him while Annie's father went for Sergeant Crook. In the meantime Bonny let him know if it was up to him he would be shot! Pauley tried to feign drunkenness as an excuse for his behaviour. 

The judge was having none of that excuse and a sentence of 9 months hard labour was imposed.

Despite their success the partnership between Corby and Bonny broke up within months. The reason is not known by me. 


Background:

Arthur Harry Corby was born in Marlow in 1873 to Ambrose and Harriet Corby. He grew up in Prospect Place which in it's early days was called Marefield Place. The historic homes there no longer exist. He became a wheelwright as a teenager before starting the coach building business. In 1903 he and his wife Ada and toddler son Frederick lived with his widowed father Ambrose, a bootmaker. He later lived as well as worked in Prospect Road.

In 1912 he was again a witness in a court when he found one of his Prospect Road neighbours dead in bed. Arthur appeared as a witness at the coroner's inquest.

He himself died in 1957.


Charles Bonny spent his childhood in Canada though his parents were of English origin. He returned to England to live with his maternal grandfather Robert Shaw the Marlow boat builder by the time of the 1901 census. They lived down by Marlow Bridge and Charles was listed as a coach builder then. Following the break up of his partnership with Corby he returned to Canada.


Annie Davis was 9 at the time of the attack.  She was the daughter of George and Louisa Davis. She later became a dressmaker. I think she married. George and Louisa suffered another sad event when their disabled young lodger committed suicide - you can read more here


For a post about another local hero, poverty campaigner Andrew Mearns see here

To find every mention of an ancestor on this blog use the Person Index option on the drop down menu. Hundreds of people are mentioned.

Researched and written by Charlotte Day with additional research by Kathryn Day.

©Marlow Ancestors. You are very welcome to use this research for family or local history purposes. Please give credit to this blog if quoting from this research and link here so that my sources remain credited for the information they provided.


Sources included:

Canada passenger lists at National Library of Canada.

Canadian census from the LDS family search website accessed August 2020.

Other census returns my transcription from census page images on microfilm.

South Bucks Standard 15th May and 3rd July 1903. Paper at the British Library, via BNA. Accessed August 2020.

Great Marlow Parish Registers. Old transcription of mine.

GRO death index on their website, accessed August 2020







Friday, October 2, 2020

1833 Parochial Assessment High Street Great Marlow Part One

I have transcribed this from the original handwritten assessment working notebooks which have been in my family for some years and are in a fragile and faded condition. The books were annotated with corrections and changes until about 1840. I will add any such information and flag it as such. Other notations are from my other research.

Transcription by Charlotte Day.

© Marlow Ancestors. You can use this transcription for local or family history purposes if you credit this blog.

Town- Houses and Buildings (land is a different record I also have and will transcribe in the future). 

No Address Given

Edmund Flemming (late)=

Property occupied= Marlow Place with suitable offices, large garden, lawn, green houses etc [Their "etc" not mine]

Annual value of property= £110


High Street West Side [West Street side]

John Snelling Wright=

Dwelling house, yard and garden

£22

*****

Misses Rolls [this is Brampton House. The sisters ran a school for girls]:

House with yard and garden

£25

*****

Jane Fowler=

Cottage with small yard 

£4

*****

Thomas William Allum [brickmaker and bricklayer. Multiple properties] =

Dwelling house, shed with loft and building, late malt house and garden

£16

Loft over Mr **** store house 

£1

Also a Kiln at Bovingdon Green

£9

*****

John Frith [multiple pieces of  property]=

Dwelling house and garden

£11

Woodhouse and loft on the opposite side of the yard

£1

*****

Theophilus Clifford [Stonemason. See my previously published post on Marlow Bridge for more on him here. Also, a fuller biographical post on him is available here ]

Dwelling house, yard, shops, loft and garden

£12

Shed etc at the Wharf 

£2

*****

John Collins (carpenter, builder. Later at pub next door)=

Dwelling house, workshops, garden and yard

£10

*****

James Creswell [publican and carpenter. Occupier till at least 1838]=

The Fountain Head [This was a beerhouse whose occupier had a carpentry business out back] which is a house, 2 shops, paint house and garden]

£9 [when property sold 1838 the rent was up to £12 12 shillings per annum]

*****

Mrs Sarah Aveling. [Note: title Mrs is mistaken or given as mark of respect to a popular and respected but unmarried woman. Will 1844]=

House, garden and yard

£9

*****

Owen Wethered esq=

House with requisite offices, shrubbery, kitchen garden and orchard 

£75

*****

Wethered and Son [Brewers]

Garden adjoining above

£1

Large timber yard, sawpits, sheds, piggery and store room for timber

£10

Store rooms, 7 in number. Large extensive building with counting house etc 

£35

Cooperage, scalding shed, dray house and stables

£8

Two stables, coach house etc

£8

Carpenter's shop, malt loft, and store houses

£18

Table beer run room (?) with the loft over it

£12

Brewhouse and buildings in the centre of yard with malt lofts etc 

£70

Flow room in Miss Roll's yard

£2 10 shillings

Malt house and shed in Mr Hatch's yard

£15

Ditto in Mr Maddock's yard with store house [Robert Maddocks, further along the same side of the High Street. Sometimes given as Maddox]

£20

Store cellar under Juggins and  Stallwoods' houses

£3

Malthouse and lofts in yard behind Steadman Camden's [this was other side of High Street, near where Sainsbury's Local is now]

£15

Store house and loft adjoining Mr Wade's

£3

Small store house in Mr Wade's garden with loft over it and small garden

£3

In yard leading from High Street 2 large stables and lofts over them 

£4

Two stables, cart house, dung yard, piggery, large cart shed and store house

£12

Small store house in yard

£1

Malt house, late Mr C Wethered's [Charles Wethered, liquor merchant. Active by 1823. Will 1827], barley lofts and coal houses

£25

Screening rooms and lofts and a malthouse

£20

Two stables with store rooms and barley lofts adjoining

£6

*****

Thomas Wethered

Orchard at Bovingdon Green

£3 10 shillings

*****

Late Mrs Gordon [Jane, widow of George who was originally of Croughly Banffshire Scotland. Couple had lived in Marlow since at least 1808].

Dwelling house with convenient offices, stables, greenhouse, yards and garden

£45

*****

William Hatch [baker, a VERY troublesome character who is featured in a post of his own here]=

House, bakehouse, flour loft, yard, 2 gardens, cart house, stable and piggery

£10

Large garden called Hanging Acre

£5

*****

Ann Washbourn [an embroideress and maker of children's clothing and later a teacher. She later moved to both St Peter Street and West Street. See her West Street school premises and read more about it here]

House and garden

£8

*****

Robert Maddocks [a carpenter and, tut tut, party to electoral fraud in the early 1830s. Electoral fraud was to be fair a Marlow speciality. Biographical post on him and his wife Jane here]=

Part of a house for billiards etc 

£6 (This was the "News Room")

Dwelling house, stable, 3 chaise houses, shed, work and store shops, yard and garden

£12

*****

William Allum [a tailor]=

Dwelling house and garden

£6

*****

George Rogers [plumber painter and glazier]

House, shop, yard, garden

£8

*****

Thomas Hewett [butcher, in this property by 1826]=

Dwelling house, butcher's and baker's shop and garden

£7 10 shillings

Slaughter house up the yard

£1

Stable and loft

10 shillings

*****

Matilda Newell [bonnet maker. Not in this property 1826]=

Dwelling house and garden 

£8

*****

To find every mention of a person on this blog use the Person Index option on the drop down menu.

To find more High Street content see the"Specific Shops, Streets, Etc" menu here

To be continued....









Chapel Street Area Schools

The earliest known private School in Marlow was established circa 1757 by George Faux AKA Fox*. This was a boys' school and was known as...