Monday, February 28, 2022

Will Mary Keen 1724

Mary Keen widow of Great Marlow. Will written 1723 and proved 1724.

Says she weak in body but of sound mind and memory, praise be to God.

To be decently buried at the discretion of her executor.

Daughter Susan Smith gets testator's best petticoat and her cloak.

To granddaughter Ann Smith the box that was testator's daughter Hannah's box.

Daughter Grace Keen gets all of the rest of testator's wearing apparel both linen and woollen.

To each grandchild living at time of her death 2 shillings sixpence.

Son Henry gets all rest of her good's and chattels and is to pay any debts. He is appointed executor.

Will witnessed by Anne Elliott, Mary Sawyer [makes her mark], Robert Tilbury solicitor.

Notes:

In her own will the daughter Susan Smith mentioned above calls herself Susanna.

P.C.C will held at the National Archives. Transcribed by me and then summarized here.

©Marlow Ancestors. You are welcome to use my summary for family or local history purposes if you credit this blog.


Patients Treated At The First Marlow Cottage Hospital

  We have completed several posts about the original Marlow Cottage Hospital in Cambridge Road (1889 -1915), which you can find linked to below.  This one focuses on some of the patients treated there. The hospital was intended to serve Great Marlow, Little Marlow and Bisham but on average a third of patients came from places such as Lane End and Wooburn. Over half were children. The number of inpatients is hugely dwarfed by the outpatients who attended the hospital for more minor care, and also those in ill health that the nurses visited in their homes. 


Operations were performed at the hospital which had it's own operating theatre. The visiting surgeons (Dr John Dunbar Dickson and Dr Robert Culhane) were responsible for these but the day to day care was down to the Matrons - Nurse Mary Ann Cassidy in the first year, and Mary Anne Cole thereafter, sometimes assisted by a second paid nurse, probationer or servant. The most common operations were relatively simple - the removal of tonsils and adenoids in children for example. But some were more complicated. I've chosen to feature the unsuccessful 1894 operation on William Soley because the inquest gave really interesting details of the attempts made to revive him. Most operations did not end so badly however! 


William was a journeyman baker working for Mrs Spindlo in Chapel Street. He had a tumour in his groin and it was decided it must be removed quickly. He was reluctant to be operated on but was persuaded by the doctors that it was really necessary. As a working man he naturally had to consider carefully before committing to anything that would result in an unpaid period of time off work. Mrs Spindlo provided her cart to carry him to the hospital. He had previously undergone several examinations and it was determined that his heart and lungs were healthy enough to endure the operation. This was due to take place the following day. It would be performed by Dr Culhane, assisted by Dr Dickson, and attended by Matron Mary Cole. Chloroform was the anaesthetic available to them. Unfortunately within two minutes of it being administered and before any cuts were made, William stopped breathing and suffered a cardiac arrest. To revive him they tried not only artificial respiration, but also hitting William with wet towels, putting mustard on his chest, applying ammonia to his nostrils and cold water to his face. Sadly nothing worked. William died on the operating table. It was decided he had suffered an unpredictable reaction to the chloroform, which caused or accelerated a heart problem. The coroner's jury donated their fees to poor widow Eliza. 


Most of the adult male patients seem to have suffered work based injuries.  I will give two examples. 


Ellis Harvey, aged 56, was working on Dial Cottage in 1890. He was a bricklayer and was engaged on doing some exterior repairs. He fell from 18-20ft high scaffolding and suffered serious spinal injuries. A cart was requisitioned to take him straight to the Cottage Hospital. His injuries were beyond the repair of the doctors, and Nurse Cole could only do her best to make him more comfortable in the last days of his life. He died less than two weeks later. As before, the jury at the inquest into his death gave up their fees, this time donating them to the Hospital itself. It was believed he had suffered from a giddy spell, as the scaffolding was examined and was considered safe. (He was working for Mr Pierce of High Wycombe)


The second case is that of Amos Newell age 25. In 1893 he was working for his uncle Emmanuel Plumridge, who leased part of Star Meadow (off Wycombe Rd) from Mrs Atkinson of The Rookery. What Emmanuel was interested in was the large walnut trees there. They were the sort of crop that has bought a surprisingly large number of Marlow men and women to grief. More valuable relatively than now, a large number of people had convictions for stealing walnuts from Marlow trees, and those in Star Meadow were a hot target. (Trees at Little Marlow were also plagued by nut rustlers!) Emmanuel had been given the right to also collect the nuts when he hired the field. So his nephew Amos and another man were sent to harvest the crop. Amos did not work exclusively for his uncle whose main job was as a  highways and cartage contractor.  Amos is described as a farm labourer at his death. In the effort to reach more nuts, Amos clambered up the tree as he always did. He would stand on a bough and shake the branches with the other man remaining below. Unfortunately Amos misjudged his foothold and the bough he stood on broke off, and he plummeted to the ground. He was taken immediately to the hospital but died shortly afterwards. Another case involving a walnut tree was that of William Beaver, hawker, of Primrose Lea. If it was hazardous to knock the nuts down sober it was much worse to attempt it while "in drink" and unfortunately that's what William did in 1899. He fell 40ft from the tree, at Frieth. At first it seemed a miraculous escape from serious injury. His fall had been broken by lower branches to some degree and he had no broken bones but he did have 2 cuts on his head. He was taken by cart back to Marlow to have his wounds seen to at the Cottage Hospital. On the way there his wife Martha*, from who he was seperated, was informed of the accident and saw him briefly. She said she remarked it was not wise to pick walnuts when the worse for drink and sent the cart on it's way, not thinking him seriously injured. Dr John Dunbar Dickson saw to his head and sent William home. But the "friends" that he lived with would not recieve him and so he was returned to the hospital and admitted. He complained of a headache after 2 days, but his condition took a sudden dramatic turn for the worse on the forth day. He had became agitated and violent towards the nurse the night before, and the doctor said he was forced to put William in a straightjacket to protect the staff. Dr Dickson said William had begun to suffer from severe delirum tremens which had been aggrivated by his fall, and sadly William died "raving mad" a few hours later. 



 




Alcohol also played a part in the horrifying accident suffered by Lower Assendon bricklayer Phillip Joseph Joiner, who was working at Bourne End. Phillip was "worse for wear" and waiting to cross at the level crossing near Bourne End station. But a goods train was pulled up there and rather than wait for it pass, Phillip decided to crawl under the train through to the other side. Another man waiting at the crossing warned him to wait, but Phillip was determined. Sadly the train moved while he was on his way underneath and his legs were severely injured. He was taken to the Cottage Hospital quickly and both legs were amputated. He did not survive. He was 29.  


These cases might be depressing, so I'll end with an example of one that seemed very serious but had a happy ending. A "Master White" aged between 10-12 years old, fell out of a moving train between Bourne End and Marlow in 1892. He was travelling back to Marlow alone. It seems he had been leaning out of the window, when his cap fell off. In trying to make a snatch for it, he over reached and fell from the train. This is partial guess work from those at the the time as no one travelling on the train saw exactly what happened. Very luckily for the boy, someone in the fields adjacent to the rail line did see him fall. They ran to the spot and initially feared the worst as the boy was unresponsive and covered in blood due to some nasty head wounds. But he came round, and was carried to the Hospital. He was found to have a lot of cuts, and was naturally badly shaken. But under Nurse Cole's expert care, he was expected to make a full recovery. 


The times the staff could not save their patients always makes more of a ripple than those occasions where the sick make a quick recovery. The staff there saved hundreds of lives and lots of Marlow people would not be alive today if their ancestors had not spent time at the Marlow Cottage Hospital. 


*Martha Beaver had successfully applied for a seperation order from her husband in 1898 after he had assaulted her with a penknife while drunk. He was sentenced to 2 months in prison with hard labour and on release was made to pay a weekly sum for the maintenance of his wife and the three youngest of their six children then living at home. 


For more about the hospital see the following posts:

Matron Mary Ann Cole here

Matron Mary Ann Cassidy and the setting up of the forerunners to the Hospital here

Apothecaries and patent medicine sellers here

List of medical related posts here

The Romantic troubles of Dr Culhane here

Death by fire here

More on the Spindlo's here

Others are on the General History option in the top drop down menu. 


To find every mention of your ancestor here use the A-Z Person Index in the top drop down menu. 


See:

South Bucks Standard 16 September 1892, 03 August 1894. 


©Marlow Ancestors













 

Sunday, February 27, 2022

Marlow Place History

here



 Marlow Place is often said to have been built 1720 or 1721 for the future George 2nd when he was still the Prince of Wales. It was also used by his son Frederick as a residence. However Country Life Magazine in 1921 reported a date of 1727 visible on the roof and it is said that a floor brick contains a 1730 date. These may be dates of modifications to the property though they seem to be occuring rather soon after the initial build.  These later dates though do tie in better with architectural analysis by various historic visitors to the house who said 1720 is too early stylistically to be a probable date for the house and something in the later 1720s -1730 is instead indicated. 
A different edition of Country Life from 1913 mentions only a date of 1731 scratched in an apparently contemporary hand into the brickwork of the outer wall. 
A description of a brick built mansion "on the right before you turn into the High Street" [as Marlow Place would have been when you entered Marlow by crossing the river at the old St Peter Street bridge point] by someone recalling their time at the juvenile branch of the Royal Military Academy tells us it was once owned by the mistress of Charles II, Louise De Kerouaille Duchess of Portsmouth. However it calls the house Alfred House, a smaller property which is within the High Street rather than located before you reach it. Alfred House in the High Street was also used by the Academy. So which property did the writer really mean? The source he had for his information is not stated. 
I can find no evidence beyond local tradition that the house was definitely built for, rather than simply used by, the then Prince of Wales. All evidence seems to point to the house being built either for John Wallop Esq or most likely his mother Alicia. Certainly it was Alicia Wallop who lived in Marlow Place by 1739 to at least 1742. Her garden adjoined the back of High Street businesses including a soap boiler which from its use of animal carcasses would be a smelly (and fire hazardous) neighbour to have, plus at least two blacksmith premises which would have been noisy. A good reminder that even the most privileged in society in the 1700s struggled to escape the noise and mess inherent to everyday life.

Tenant Admiral Forbes had recently left the property in 1772. He was "removing to Essex". The household goods are therefore auctioned off and the "large and exceedingly good house" is to let. It was available with or without accompanying pasture and meadow land. The garden itself is well stocked with the choicest fruit trees, so they say. There were no immediate takers and the house was empty of tenants for at least a year. In 1773 the adverts offering the property decide to include more elaborate descriptions of the house to drum up interest. Amongst other benefits, we are told the town has 3 stagecoaches to London a week in the summer and two in the winter. And water carriage could be had "almost to the door". It is not of course an immediately riverside property but is within a few minutes walk of the Thames. 

The resident in 1780 looks to have been Edward Valentine Stead Esq. He left the house circa 1789 and died aged just 35 in 1790. Owen Williams M P succeeded him in residence. 

The Royal Military College used the premises to provide extra accommodation in the early 1800s.

In 1833 the occupier had recently been Edmund Flemming. The property was then valued as being worth £110 per year. It was the most valuable house in town by some way.

In 1834 Marlow Place was advertised as to let in the local press. [Berkshire Chronicle 26th July 1834, accessed by me online March 2021 via the BNA]. The house was then described as consisting of ten bedrooms, a library, entrance hall, dining room, breakfast room, drawing room with detached offices [they meant rooms for domestic management like laundry rooms and stores], a double coach house and stabling for ten horses. There were also lawns, greenhouses and gardens listed as part of the property in the 1833 assessment. Later reports mention meadows and fruit trees too. 


 

These premises made an impressive  boy's boarding school between 1857 and 1877. Thomas Mathews was the first master to run the school there, alongside his wife. He found the building in a most dilapidated state at the start of his tenancy and spent considerable time and effort in restoring the house. He was very keen on cricket and the school had a cricket ground in a meadow by what later became the railway station. Boys needed to bring with them to school 3 suits of clothes, 6 shirts, 3 nightshirts, 6 pairs of stockings, 3 pairs shoes, a pair of slippers, 6 towels and a bible.

Music and book keeping lessons were included within the standard school curriculum as was, unusually, Hebrew if desired. For an extra fee French or swimming lessons could be obtained or the boy prepped for the Civil Service entrance exam.

When Reverend Thomas Gwynne used the premises as a school in the 1870s he could take 26 pupils. Their minimum age was 8. Gwynne had previously ran a private school from Candover Park in Hampshire. He was known as "Old Tom" to his young charges, although not to his face of course! He was a much liked man by the adults in Marlow - but not by the pupils whom he taught. More on him in a separate post in the future.

The Mathews had taken children from age 6, with the younger boys under Mrs Mathew's care. 

These various school proprietors all rented the property rather than own it.

Marlow Place was owned by the Williams family from at least 1795 - Colonel Thomas Peers Williams was born at the house then. Owen Williams is listed in parliamentary papers as resident there 1809 to 1817. The Williams family eventually sold it to long term tenant and architect William Niven, who wrote a couple of articles about the house for magazines such as Country Life. His grave is on the blog here.




In 1877 the last incarnation of the school closed and the house was due to be refurbished and converted back into a family home. During this work, labourer Timothy Young was killed in the grounds when engaged in demolishing a 10 ft high garden wall. Made partly of brick and partly of flint, Timothy was buried alive when the wall suddenly collapsed before the workers were ready. Some of the others engaged in the task were also injured by falling bricks but Timothy was hemmed in by nearby shrubs and could not make his escape. He was dug out by his colleagues but died of his severe injuries a little over an hour later.

Lady Marie Alice Rushout - tenant there -died 1882. She was the widow of baronet Sir Charles Rushout and had moved to Marlow from Gloucestershire. The following year the house contents were up for sale by a Lady Northwick perhaps a relative as the contents included little miniatures of "the Misses Rushout" by Andrew Plimer. Known as "The Three Graces" they were, the daughters of Sir Thomas Rushout". These miniatures were regarded as particularly fine and beautiful works of art. 


In 1885 the new occupant of Marlow Place was widow Jane Haig who moved there from Bray Court, Maidenhead. A few days after she moved in, Jane's upper housemaid Alice Anthony AKA Kate or Katie Anthony was caught with a large amount of stolen goods hidden in her bedroom. Sacked, Alice was supposed to be escorted to the 4.10 train out of town by the butler but for unspecified reasons she ended up sleeping the night at Marlow Place instead. At six the next morning she did a flit with her mistress's portmanteau and another stolen bag stuffed with an astonishing amount of loot.

Unfortunately her knowledge of Marlow train times was sketchy and she ended up waiting longer than she had expected for her getaway train. Jane's coachman John Gale was on her trail. Confronted, she ran off without the portmanteau but John and a summoned constable cornered her near Little Marlow. She still had other stolen articles on her person. In court they struggled to find room to display everything she had carried off.

I won't list it all but to give you a flavour of the items here's some of them:
A gold ring
A pair of lady's drawers
2 corsets
Some sheets of papers
3 pairs of scissors
A music book
3 table cloths
12 handkerchiefs
Curling tongs for the hair
Buttons
2 tooth brushes
2 gold pins
5 pairs of shoes
Measuring tape
An umbrella
Envelopes
12 photographs (no mention of their frames)
Opera glasses
2 pairs spectacles
Elastic
Button hook.

Left behind in her room were articles stolen from Jane's stores like soap, furniture polish, candles and matches. I suppose Alice ran out of room in her two bags to take it all with her!

Unsurprisingly she was jailed. The maximum sentence possible -six months - with solitary confinement an added punishment. Alice screamed and collapsed in the dock upon hearing the sentence.

A crowd of around 100, all from the poorest parts of town, gathered at Marlow station to see Alice and accompanying officers of the law leave by train for the jail in Aylesbury after her conviction. It is hard to judge whether this was in support or disapproval of Alice or just from curiosity. Alice was said to have previously lived in Marlow and may have had family here.

Jane Haig continued to live at the house until at least 1888 when her married daughter Helen Frances Warner drowned while swimming with family at Temple.



William Powley once Vice Principal of Durham University lived at Marlow Place until his premature death aged 56 in 1895.
Next came Colonel Clarence Granville Sinclair a young widower who himself died aged just 37 in 1897.
He was followed in residence at Marlow Place by William Niven. Mr Niven was able to buy the house from the Williams family rather than just rent it in 1921. See a photo of his grave 

That brings us up to the end of the blog time frame. 

Related Posts:
Biography of Alicia Wallop here

Biography of three Victorian Trinidadian pupils at Marlow Place School: here



Main post researched and written by Charlotte Day. Photos and information about Thomas Young and Admiral Forbes provided by Kathryn. 

Additional sources I found useful:
Reading Mercury 29th March 1773 & 12th October 1792, South Bucks Standard 27th November 1896 , Maidenhead Advertiser 14 April 1877, Oxford Journal 11 July 1772, held at the British Library Archive and accessed via the BNA.

Parochial assessment notebooks 1830s, owned by my family. These are being transcribed gradually onto this blog.

1871 census. Transcribed by me. Census information always remains Crown Copyright. 

GRO death index.

Armorial Families. A Directory of Coat Armour, by Arthur Charles Fox Davies published 1910 by T.C and E.C Jack.

Saturday Review of Politics, Literature Science and Art volumes 28-29 published by John W Parker 1870. Accessed via Google Books March 2021.

History of Newbury and Its Environs by Edward William Gray, published by Hall and Marsh 1839.

Country Life volume 49 page 353. And Volume 33 issue 836. 

Dutton and Allen Commercial Directory 1867.

Bentley's Miscellany, Volume 20 : "Shots from an Old Six Pounder". [Richard Bentley 1846]

English Country Houses: Baroque - James Lee-Milnes (Country Life Books, 1960)

 Andrew and Nathaniel Plimer - George Charles Williamson, (G Bells & Son 1903. )




©Marlow Ancestors. You are welcome to reuse this research for family and local history purposes if you credit this blog and link here so that my sources also remain credited for information given.


Saturday, February 26, 2022

Bowen, Dorell and Dorell Bowen graves, Great Marlow


Mary Dorell who departed this life November 3rd 1848 age 70 years. (Read her will, proved 1849 here )

ALSO OF

John Dorell Bowen died Aug 22 1850 aged 16 years.




The footer of the above grave. 



Above, Priscilla, wife of Thomas Bowen Junior of the Red Lion of this town. D.1837 (She was nee Dorell.) They married 1832, at Aston Rowant where Priscilla was from (Kingston Blount). Mother was Mary Dor(r)ell. 



The footer for Priscilla's grave giving her initials and death date, above.



 Above is the footer for a grave that is no longer visible as a yew tree trunk is within mm of it's surface. It contains the initials :

M.B 1829

T.B 1835

T.B 1843  [This is likely Thomas Bowen senior as he was known, father to Thomas and father in law to Priscilla, who died this year]


These grave stones are in All Saints Churchyard, Marlow. 


List of Red Lion landlords here

Grave marker image index here


© MarlowAncestors

Will Summary Mary Dorell Of Great Marlow 1849

 I obtained a copy of this PCC will from the National Archives, Kew. This I transcribed and now summarize here.

MARY DORELL / DORREL WIDOW. WILL PROVED 1849.

Asks for burial at Great Marlow Church.

Executors to invest £130 in public stocks for the benefit of her grandson John Dorell Bowen son of Thomas Bowen of Great Marlow until John is 21 when he is to receive the £130. If he dies before 21 both the lump sum and the income from it's investment go equally to testator's children= Joseph Dorell, Elizabeth Brooks, Jane Harding and Eliza Moss.

Son Joseph £130.

Daughters as above equal share in testator's wardrobe contents.

Household furniture and effects to be equally divided between son and daughters.

Rest of personal estate after debts paid to her three daughters as above.

Son in law Thomas Bowen and friend Robert ... executors.

Witnesses W.L Ward of Great Marlow and Henry Anthony bookbinder of Great Marlow. [Ward was the solicitor]


NOTES:

Mary Dorell widow of Great Marlow [Aka Mary Dorrell] Written 1847. Proved 1849.

Asks to be buried Marlow Churchyard.

Executor to invest £130 and take the dividends, interest and produce of that until testator's grandson John Dorell Bowen son of Thomas Bowen publican of Great Marlow is 21 then John gets it himself. If John died before then it to be divided between testator's son Joseph Dorell and daughters Elizabeth Brooks, Jane Harding and Maria Moss.

£130 to son Joseph Dorell.

Her wardrobe to be divided equally between her daughters.

Household goods divided equally between her son and daughters.

Anything else remaining in her estate after funeral costs and debts paid to be divided between her daughters.

Executors: son in law Thomas Bowen and friend Robert Footitt.

Testator made mark rather than sign.

Witnessed by W.L Ward solicitor and Henry Anthony bookbinder, both of Great Marlow.

Notes:

Mary was the widow of John Dorell / Dorrell. The family came from Oxfordshire. Mary lived in a cottage in Quoiting Square Marlow, very close to the Red Lion, owned first by Thomas Bowen senior, father of Thomas Junior, and then passed by will to Mary Dorrell's daughter in law also called Mary Dorrell who had married George Dorrell. If you are scratching your head at that- Mary of the will's son George and daughter Priscilla both married Bowens, the children of Thomas Bowen senior. I hope that helps explain the family!

Mary's daughter Priscilla, wife of Thomas Bowen Junior, predeceased her. The Bowens, a father and son both called Thomas, ran the Red Lion in Marlow for many years. Sadly young Thomas Dorell Bowen did not live to see his legacy payable at age 21. He died aged 16 and shares a grave marker with Mary. See the image  here

Mary's son George, not mentioned in the will, was also a Marlow publican.

Will witness W.L Ward was William Lakin Ward, solicitor of the High Street. 

Executor Robert Footitt was a High Street chemist.


Transcribed and then summarised from a will held at the National Archives Kew by Charlotte Day.

©Marlow Ancestors



To find all mentions of an individual here use the A-Z Person Index in the top drop down menu where you will also find a link to our other will posts and a grave marker image index.  

©Marlow Ancestors. Reproduction permitted with credit.


Friday, February 25, 2022

The Terrible Youth Of Today - 1896 style

 

For the little children of old Marlow, playing in the streets was a common occurrence. Of course with children expected to start work sooner, and many families unable to afford bought toys, not all children had the same experiences. 


With some of the streets busy with horse drawn traffic, many of the children's games were not looked on indulgently when they interfered with the business of their elders. In the early Victorian era, "sliding" in the streets was the game of choice for many, and a perpetual cause of complaint from the adults. This was easier to do on the pre tarmac road surfaces. In the 1840 the son of draper Mr Morgan of the High Street was injured when he collided with a cart carrying manure while intent on sliding. He was not seriously hurt. 


In the 1840's complaints of children driving iron hoops along the streets became frequent. The press expressed some sympathy for the young miscreants while recognising that their play was dangerous and sometimes illegal. The children had no other place to amuse themselves in save the streets they reasoned, making their games "in some measure excusable". The Enclosure acts formalised the use of Gossmore as a recreation ground later but there was as yet no Higginson Park or Riley or Seymour recreation grounds.  


The other dangerous if common childhood amusement was to try and catch a ride on the back of passing carts and waggons, and later steam traction engines and the like. In 1903, there was a tragic accident involving this practice, the victim 7 year old Percy William Allen. Little Percy had just left school in the Causeway and was walking home, with his brother James. A lorry driven by William Skipton, in the employ of Mr Porter of Station Road, turned into the High Street. A number of little boys ran after it to try and gain a ride by clinging to the back or sides. As James and Percy reached Timberlake's Cycle and Phonograph depot, Percy ran off towards the lorry and managed to jump on to the back and hold on for a ride. The driver could not see him there but he had noticed several boys hanging onto the sides. He was heard to call to them 3-4 times to get off. Sadly Percy lost his grip and fell under the vehicle. The lorry was carrying 2 tonnes of flour so with a wheel going over the little one's head and leg, he stood no chance whatsoever. The driver heard a bump and stopped instantly. He was horrified by what had happened. It was immediately apparent the boy was beyond surgical aid. Dr Nicholson was in attendance immediately and arranged for the poor parents to be called. The kind Mrs Mundy, whose shop the accident had occured more or less outside of, would not allow the little lad to lay in the street and picked his body up and carried him into her shop. The inquest was held at the Verney Arms in Dean Street, with the jury donating their appearance fees to the family.  Mr Porter paid for the funeral - the boy was buried at Holy Trinity but the marker can no longer be seen. There was "an extraordinary amount of people in attendance to show sympathy for the bereaved parents". 


Another gripe was the frequency with which children played football in the road. Three boys, Phillip White, Benjamin Mundy, and Arthur Stroud, were fined 6d for using the highway near All Saints for a game in 1896 for example. 


A letter writer (anonymous) to the local press in 1896 thought the youth of the day were a badly behaved lot, causing "pandemonium" in the High Street during their 2 hour lunch break - and after the school finished at 4. (Long lunch was a feature of Victorian schools because many children went home to eat, and some went quite far.) And what were the young miscreants up to other than making a great deal of noise? They incessantly rang door bells, stripped fruit and flowers from gardens, played ball in the road, sat on peoples doorsteps, wrote "filthy words" on any surface their pencils would work on and in the summer bathed nude in the river. Or so the writer said. 

 


Some of those getting into trouble for "play" in the streets or on the highway were adults. Playing marbles and pitch and toss was not the preserve of just the young. The adults were suspected of gambling on the result, hence why it was frowned upon beyond logistical reasons.  The quieter lanes were favourite spots for this - with cases noted in particular in Munday Dean Lane, around Bovingdon Green and Frieth, and on Gossmore. 


Written and researched by Kathryn Day. 


Related Posts: 

Avert your eyes...bathers about! here

Posts about everyday life in old Marlow for young and old can be found here: here



To find all mentions of an individual here, use the A-Z Person Index in the top drop down menu, where at the time of writing you will find mentions of 3,045 old Marlow residents. New people added daily. 

©Marlow Ancestors

Thursday, February 24, 2022

Wymers Farm Marlow

Updated October 2024

Description: half way between Wycombe and Marlow. 1850= 59 acres. 1876= 59 acres arable pasture and woodland with two worker cottages included. 1881= 61 acres.

Historic occupiers (who in the past were not often the owners of their farms) and history timeline:

1831- 1851 Henry Webb. Also an agricultural land surveyor from 1849 and church warden. He went bankrupt in 1851 and the household furniture had to be sold off. Henry and his wife Caroline (nee Hyatt, married London 1837] eventually moved away to Croydon, Surrey where they both died in old age. Farm had been up for sale in 1850. (59 acres arable land and 11 acres woodland) At that point as well as the farm house a separate house or "gentlemanly residence" known as "Wymers" was part of the estate. This in other records is consistently described as having an impressive and lovely garden. Henry lived in this larger house at the time of the 1833 parochial assessment with only a cottage as the rest of the residential buildings on the estate. This cottage was either the later farm house in it's infancy or the first of the two worker's cottages later mentioned as being part of the estate with no farm house yet built. In 1844 a dozen turkeys are stolen from Henry in one of Marlow's traditional December poultry thieving raids. 

1854- 1882 Aaron Simmonds. Sometimes given as Simmons. Wife Mary. Before becoming a farmer in his own right he was a corn dealer but also helped his uncle William on his farm in Little Marlow. Aaron lived with him then. Aaron was summoned in 1866 for using a steam threshing machine at Wymers too close to the public highway. Aaron said he was unaware of restrictions on their use in that way and anyway the road concerned was rarely used. He received a minimal fine of 1 shilling plus costs [Reading Mercury 22nd Feb 1866, British Library]. In 1872 the farm house was used for the inquest into the death of 3 year Mary Ann Burt, daughter of Thomas and Harriet of nearby Ragman's Castle (a small farm / homestead) who had accidentally burned to death. Such deaths were sadly not uncommon in Marlow's past, nor anywhere else. Four years later Aaron hosted another coroner's inquest into a a sad case, seventy plus year old Mr Gardener, who lived in a nearby cottage finding himself unable to work due to age cut his throat rather than go into the workhouse. His wife found him lying injured in bed but he could not be saved. The jury decided that he had been suffering from temporary insanity (Reading Mercury 22nd January 1876, British Library Archives). Read more here

Aaron died at the farm in 1882 age 76. His widow Mary died at Little Marlow in 1892.

1882- The owner put the farm up for sale. Marketed largely as a shooting estate rather than a farm.

1890-1895 Mr Sauvee occupier. Employed a game keeper and kept chickens. In November 1893 snow was so severe that the farm was cut off behind drifts that were over 10 feet deep. Seemingly tenant of Mr Phillips.

[1893-1913 at least Wymers farm house as opposed to the farm lands was occupied by Thomas Arnold Herbert a prominent figure in local Liberal politics and who was elected South Bucks M.P. in 1906. He also maintained a home at Kensington Park Gardens London. Sadly though "radical" and "Liberal" for his times he was a dedicated blood sports participant who often hosted local hunts. Wife Elizabeth. Both she and her husband loudly opposed women being given the right to vote. This was thought to be a contributing factor to his failure to be re-elected in 1910. Mr Herbert seems accident prone breaking his arm in a riding accident in London and then while still recovering from that managing to overturn his carriage in Marlow hurting himself afresh. Elizabeth was a passenger in that carriage but was unharmed. A photo of Thomas can be seen on Wikipedia].

1897- farm stock for sale. New tenant if the farm lands / yard coming in.

1901-1902 Henry Seymour. Wife Mary. 

1939 Thomas Herbert retired Q.C. Does not seem to actively farm.



Farm occupancies compiled from the cross referencing of adverts, censuses, property records, farming journals, court cases, wills I have transcribed and more. Ongoing research, I hope to fill in the gaps as I sift through further notes.

For other farm occupier listings see the Specific Shops, Streets Etc option on the top drop menu here  if you want a Marlow Farm. If you want a Little Marlow or other nearby farm try the Other Places option here 

To look for all mentions of any individual choose the Person Index option on the top drop down menu. 

©Marlow Ancestors. You are welcome to use this my original research for family or local history purposes if you credit this blog and link here.

Wednesday, February 23, 2022

Will Summary Ambrose Smith of Great Marlow 1726

 Ambrose Smith of Great Marlow. Will written either 1724 or 1725, hard to read. Proved 1726.

Timberman of Great Marlow.

Says has a healthy body and a sound mind and memory, praise be to God.

Asks to be decently buried.

Dear wife Elizabeth all his messuage, cottage, land and hereditaments whatsoever, all household goods and £40 in money.

Daughter Mary Smith £80

Youngest Son John Smith £100

All rest of personal property to son Ambrose Smith who is appointed executor.

Witnesses: Elinor Hester, Ambrose Aldridge and Charles Powell.

Summary created from my transcription of a will held at the National Archives, Kew.


You can find a list of other wills on the blog here

©Marlow Ancestors. You are welcome to reuse this summary if you credit this blog.


Note: The Smith's were a Catholic family and an Ambrose Smith of Great Marlow was repeatedly summoned for recusancy over a period of many years. However the indictments continued after the death of this Ambrose Smith so if he was one of those indicted, another family member of the same name must have been responsible for a least some of the court appearances. One of the Ambrose Smith's of Great Marlow Parish was described as being a shopkeeper, and on one occasion is specified as living at Land End which was within the Parish. Ambrose Smith of Lane End is mentioned in the will of John Plater proved 1738 here


John Plater Will 1738

 John Plater yeoman of Great Marlow. Will written 1737. Proved 1738.

Says he sick and weak in body but of perfect mind and memory.

Places his soul in the hands of Almighty God.

Beloved wife Mary gets:

Message of tenement in Great Marlow with its garden orchard and wood yard which he bought ten years since from John Collett.

£100 to be paid out to her from his estate called Booker in the parish of West Wycombe and his little estate in Great Marlow called Square Close and out of his stock and implements of husbandry.

Household goods and furniture in the parlour and the chamber he lays in, his linen, the dresser with drawers in the hall, a dozen of his best pewter dishes, a dozen of his best pewter plates, his largest kettle, 2 porridge pots and any other household goods she wishes.

Rest of his estate to his beloved brother in law Ambrose Smith of Lane End in the parish of Great Marlow who is appointed executor.

[The will of a different Ambrose Smith proved 1726 is available on the blog here]

Witnessed by Robert Donham, Katherine Law and Sylvester Law. [Landlord of Upper Crown Inn]


This PCC will was transcribed and then summarized by me from a will held at the National Archives, Kew.

All mentions of someone on the blog can be found under the Person Index on the top drop down menu and more wills are under the Will Transcriptions index here


©Marlow Ancestors. You are welcome to use this will summary for family or local history purposes if you credit this blog 


Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Otters in the Thames at Marlow


 If you were fortunate to walk along the Thames of an evening in the 18th century you may have had the pleasure of seeing an otter at Marlow. Mostly active at night, they might still leave a trail on the banks that you could see during the day. They could still be found in Victorian times, but in much lower numbers, and unfortunately a few Marlow men had a role to play in their decline and eventual disappearance. The Thames otters are now back although I am not sure any have yet made their way to Marlow. 


The problem for the otters was that Marlow made a lot of money from the men that came to Marlow to fish. And otters were regarded as ruining the anglers sport as they competed for the fish stocks. So if a fisherman saw one, he was likely to catch and kill it. Fisherman in this context usually refers to the professionals who were employed to convey or escort anglers to the best fishing spots. Henry Rockell, a long time fisherman of this type, caught and killed a "very fine" otter 3ft 10" long and weighing 23lb in 1862. In 1891, the Temple Lock keeper boasted of catching his 5th otter in 2 years. Part of the motivation was regular payments by angling clubs offered for the capture of otters dead or alive. (In 1880 there was a 10 shilling reward for a dead otter offered by the local anglers association. In 1889 the reward was £1) You have to cheer the otter that escaped two gunmen who had come across it on the towpath near Hurley. They fetched a punt in order to pursue it on the river but it managed to go via a ditch into private property where it was safe from their attention. Perhaps this was the same one that eluded Hurley Lock Keeper Davis in 1872. He fetched his gun but then found the only cartridge he had didn't fit it. The Hurley lock keeper Townsend was gently satirised in an 1882 Thames guide for being a man obsessed with the subject of otters, turning every conversation round to the subject of needing to keep a watchful eye out for them. By the time the book had been published, Mr Townsend had caught and stuffed one of his quarries, putting it on display in a glass case. Mr Barksfield, a carpenter on the Danesfield estate, killed both a male and female otter in 1889.


One person who would pay for a live otter was Alfred Heneage Cocks of Thames Bank and later Poynetts near Hambledon. A man of many interests, Mr Cocks was the keeper of a menagerie of British wild animals, which included some otters bred in captivity. He contributed his observations about their behaviour to many journals and institutions. His prize male otter, captured on the River Isis in Oxfordshire, died while still young leaving him with two captive females and a thwarted plan to breed them. He gained another in 1895 thanks to the lock keeper at Temple. It was in fact an otter that had started Alfred's animal collection when he was still a boy. He had came across a Marlow man who had caught one and who offered to find another and sell it to the young man. He finally managed to breed a litter from a young female he had hand reared within his house. Alfred seems to have possessed at least 8 other adult otters between the 1870s and 1890s, caught by either himself or others chiefly around Marlow and Bisham. Some he kept for over a decade.  I'm pleased to say at least one female made a successful break from her cage into the freedom of the Thames however. Strange as it may seem in our eyes, considering his habit of removing them from the wild, Alfred considered himself an ally of the otters.  He campaigned to make it illegal for lock keepers to trap the animals (successfully, it was banned by the Thames Conservancy in 1903) and declared the shooting of them by anglers ignorant and disgraceful. 


The last mention of an otter I can find nearby until recent times was one sadly killed by a dog in the river in 1916. Otters were now rare enough in this stretch of Thames for the appearance of the otter to be reported nationally. 


Other once abundant wildlife that may not be easy to find in the Marlow waters now are eels and lamprey. Eel baskets or "bucks" used to sit on the older versions of Marlow Bridge. Eel "lines" are mentioned later - the anglers also objecting to these for interfering with other fishing.  Marlow's Domesday book entry says the manor was good for 1000 eels a year. An unfortunate diner at an unnamed Marlow public house in 1766 died in "great agony" after an attempt to consume 5lbs of eels, along with 5lbs bread, and 5 quarts of beer. He managed the bread and beer, but became sick after chomping his way through the first 3lbs of eels! (Mr Adnose Jack)


Marlow was regarded as the farthest part of Thames from London that was good for catching lampreys. In the late 18th century the Dutch were said to be the buyers of "incredible quantities" of these each spring. They were still regarded as abundant in the early Victorian era. A mostly forgotten seasonal harvest that would have occupied many Marlow people. 


Salmon had disappeared from our stretch of the Thames in the the first part of the 19th century. (1820 was a date often given for last one caught.) Wycombe Road farmer William Cresswell (Creswell) had extensive knowledge of the river. In 1866 he was one of several Marlow men who appeared before a Royal Commission on the subject of preventing pollution in the Thames and improving its navigation. He was asked how the river had changed within his life time. The loss of salmon stood out to him. He recalled last seeing one in the river 48 years before, but before that he remembered salmon of 20-30lbs were taken. William had ran the Swan barge with his brother George in his youth, and had also taken out fishing parties from the Compleat Angler, ran by his parents for decades. Various people had ideas as to why the salmon had vanished, with the inclusion of more locks one suggestion, and too many steam launches on the river another, along with pollution. 


For a sight that was just as unusual in the past as now we can mention a 7ft long sturgeon seen swimming in the Thames in 1824. It came from the direction of Maidenhead and seems to have escaped the attention of fisherman. 

Written and researched by Kathryn Day. 


Related posts:

To read more posts about the Thames in Marlow from the bargemen working on it, to frozen river skating and procedures for reviving the drowned see the index here

To find all mentions of an individual here, use the A-Z person index in the top drop down menu where you will find links to posts about 3,025 and counting former residents of Marlow. 

A post listing for info about places close to Marlow such as Harleyford, Temple and Hurley is available here


Sources

Zoologist Monthly Journal of Natural History, 1877 (West and Newman)

Proceedings of the Zoological Society, 1881. 

The Zoologist, 1882 collected edition. 

Alfred, H.J, 1859 - A complete guide to spinning and trolling for fishermen. (Alfred & Son London)

Dickens, Charles - Dickens Dictionary of the Thames (Dickens 1889 edition)

Fennell, John Greville, 1867 -The Rail and The Rod, or tourist Anglers Guide to waters and quarters. (H.Cox,London)

Royal Society for Encouragement of Arts, Manufacture and Commerce Journal Vol 17 (RSA 1869)

Fearnside, William Gray, 1834. Tombleson's Thames  (Tombleson and Company,  London)

Windsor and Eton Express 31 August 1824 - copy from the British Library and accessed via the BNA November 2020

Bucks Herald Apr 1 1882, as above

South Bucks Standard. 1 March 1891, as above.

Western Daily Press, 29 April 1916. As above.

Kelly's Directory of Berks, Bucks and Oxfordshire 1883, (Kelly's Directories Ltd)

Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic news, vol 2 1875. 

Pask, Arthur Thomas, The Thames From Lock To Lock, a Playful Guide 1882. 

Weekly Amusement, December 1766. Digitised by the InternetArchive. 


©Marlow Ancestors













Monday, February 21, 2022

The Flackwell Heath Treasure

 In 1829 William Higgins a 24 year old thatcher from Well End by Little Marlow was amongst other workers repairing or pulling down depending on which report you read a tiny cottage in Flackwell Heath.

To his great surprise William found a hoard of golden guineas hidden in the thatch. Some early reports other workers found them too but later reports clarify that it was just William. The coins date from as far back as the reigns of James 2nd (deposed 1688). The exact number of them couldn't be got out of the workmen but was reckoned to be at least 700, probably in fact 2000.

William started to spend them freely. His premature death a few months later was put down to his new "dissipated" ways as he enjoyed his treasure trove. 

Further examination of the cottage revealed an old  will from a member of the Sawyer family which gave instructions as to how to find not only that treasure but others hidden in the building too. A thousand more guineas were then discovered by following those further instructions.

An "inquest" into the coins after William's death declared that William had found at least 700 coins himself. That may be the number he had left at his death. There is no detail I can find as to who was able to claim the rest or why the coins were not demanded of William immediately by the cottage's owner. Even if he did not wish to tell anyone what he had done with them couldn't he be forced to produce them sooner? And why had that will gone undiscovered in the cottage apparently for years?  Was it also concealed?

Sadly we'll probably never know. No will at the National Archives of a Sawyer is the will in question. I read them all! It may be the will was never taken to probate being so out of date.

The name Higgins or Higgens goes back a while in little Marlow but I did not see William's baptism there upon a cursory sweep of records. If I do find out more about him or the will I will upload.

Remember to check your thatch, everyone!

Researched and written by Charlotte Day.


To find other posts about Flackwell, Well End and other places around Great Marlow see the post index here

And to find every mention of an individual here, use the A-Z person index in the top drop down menu. 

Sources:

Newspaper copies at British Library Archives accessed via the BNA March 2021=

Sussex Advertiser 25th May 1829. 

Hampshire Telegraph 25th May 1829.

Berkshire Chronicle 30th May and 7th November 1829.

Bucks Gazette 2nd January 1830.



Sunday, February 20, 2022

The Other Royal Celebrations In Marlow


We have posts due on events such as the Golden and Diamond Jubilee Celebrations of Queen Victoria's reign, but this entry is about how the town celebrated (or not) some of the other events in Queen Victoria's life. 


If your ancestor lived in Marlow in June 1838, then it is very likely they at least heard celebrations of the Queen's coronation because it appears to have been a very noisy event. Victoria had succeeded to the throne in June 1837 so the residents of Marlow had plenty of time to consider how to mark the occasion. The reports vary widely with rival political groups accusing the other of doing little, which is reflected in the accounts published in local newspapers. The Windsor and Eton Express said that the church bells were rung on Coronation day and that the shops were closed. Others said this was a lie, and only the Tory supporters in town would be content to do so little. The Bucks Gazette said liberal tradespeople took on the task with enthusiasm as did the Clayton family at Harleyford. The Clayton's Conservative political rivals, the Williams of Temple House, who included the Marlow M.P, were accused of not organising anything grand. So the reports have to be filtered with the understanding of the political bias of the reporter. One thing all can agree on is that many fireworks were let off, some guns, and a few cannons. The last were courtesy of Harleyford where the din of artillery was said to have been kept up all day. After 41 discharges of cannon, even the most devoted royalist in the neighbourhood must have been happy a new Queen was not crowned everyday!

 Amongst the criticism levelled at MP Thomas Peers Williams and his supporters such as the Wethered family of the Brewery, was that they had not as wealthier citizens put their hand in their pockets to subsidise any celebrations for the poorer classes. It seems they had been expected to pay the bell ringers for their services, but had not offered to do so so the money had to come out of the Church rates fund. It was also hoped a subscription would have been raised to provide some relief to the poor.  The Bucks Gazette went further and said those who put on events publicly had "resisted the will of the domineering tyrant in the town." (Williams) This may be a little unfair, as while Williams was a controversial politician who was accused of evicting those of his tenants who did not vote for him, his family did entertain members of the Royal Family at Temple House in latter years and so was not exactly anti royal. It seems the feeling was that big occasions meant those who acted in power in the town should play their part and help those with little money to celebrate. Failure to do so was regarded as "selfish". 


Those who did include the less well off were Joseph Tyler of the Clayton Arms in Oxford Lane/Quoiting Place. Joseph entertained more than 100 to dinner - an "elegant repast". And Messrs Wright of Marlow Mills gave a hot beef dinner with ale and punch to 100 or so staff and their family members. This dinner included plum pudding which might seem unseasonal to our eyes but it's a regular feature of many Victorian celebration dinners in Marlow and elsewhere whatever the time of year. 


Moving on to 1840, when Queen Victoria was married to Albert. On this occasion the liberal papers again accused the conservative interests of failure to mark the occasion properly. The celebrations were described as "very limited". But Harleyford House bought out their "artillery" again. (41 discharges of cannon). The bells were of course rang and guns fired. The reliably generous and kind Benjamin Atkinson of The Rookery entertained all his staff to a meal along as did a few unnamed tradesmen working on a smaller scale. But the "most influential  inhabitants of the town who owe all this wealth and influence to the lower ranks of society did very little."


In 1858, the Queen's eldest daughter, Victoria the Princess Royal was married in turn to Prince Frederick of Prussia. Mr Borgnis and Mr William Ward decided to treat the boys of the Blue Coat school (now Borlase) to something to mark the event. Their choice would probably not get distributed today, given that it consisted of cake - and wine! Those attending the National schools recieved some tasty buns while the pupils of the British Schools were given a full tea, presumably without alcoholic beverages. 


The Queen's birthday was usually marked in a small way. Prayers for her continued health were a standard in the local churches. The church bells were rang, and some shops and homes were decorated with bunting. This is more often recorded in the later part of the reign. The local Oddfellows lodge (friendly society) held a church parade (that is a parade to the parish church in full regalia for a  special service) on several occasions in the 1880s in honour of Her Majesty's birthday. In 1887, they were lead by the town band and they followed this with a public dinner for 100 people at The Greyhound.


Various members of the Royals visited the big houses in the area such as Temple, Gyldernscroft and Harleyford. Some of these visits were "under the radar" but others very much the opposite. When the prince and princess of Wales passed through Marlow in a steam launch, on their way to visit the Williams at Temple House, they were expected. Their arrival was somewhat inconveniently timed to occur during the Regatta. They were late, but they did indeed arrive in the end and were greeted with a royal salute. 


The last event other than the Jubilees to mark was of course the death of the Queen. The first notification of any significant news usually came courtesy of a telegram to the post office which would then be displayed either inside or out for all to see. (Less seriously the match reports of Marlow Football Club when playing away also arrived this way.) A week before the Queen's death, a telegram bought news the Queen was seriously ill. Special prayers were said in the various churches and chapels the following day, in the hope of a recovery. Public events due to take place in the next few days were cancelled as a gesture of respect - dramatic performances in the Music Room and a football match. But on 22 January 1901, the news was recieved by telegram late in the day that the Queen had died at Osbourne House, surrounded by her family. It was immediately ordered that the bells should toll in the church. This sound was said to be what made many Marlow residents realise that the rumour about the Queen's death were true. 

Written and researched by Kathryn Day. 


Related posts:

Coronation Celebrations 1902 here

Jubilee 1887 Here

Storm disruption during 1897 jubilee Little Marlow here

Royal furniture makers the Mealings here

Other posts about everyday life in old Marlow here

To find every mention of an individual here, use the A-Z person index in the top drop down menu. 

Sources:

Goodrich, Samuel Griswold. Peter Parley's visit to London during the Coronation (Library of Alexandria, 1838)

McCarthy, John - A History Of Our Own Times, 1871. 

Wilson, Robert. Life and Times of Queen Victoria (Cassell and Company, 1891) 

Bucks Gazette 14 July 1838, 22 February 1840 - British Library Archive, accessed via the BNA. 

Reading Mercury 30 January 1858, 31 May 1890, 26 January 1901 - As above

Bucks Herald 13 July 1878, as above. 

Windsor and Eton Express 30 June 1838. As above. 

Slough Eton and Windsor Observer May 28 1887, Slough Library. 



©Marlow Ancestors














Friday, February 18, 2022

The Limes, Glade Road

The house immediately after the Baptist Chapel in Glade Road, if walking away from the railway station. On the side of the building a large "built 1884" plaque is unmistakable so it was erected the same year as the Baptist Chapel. A house on the other side of the road now called "Lime House" [number 1] is not the historic "The Limes".

Historic occupiers I can identify:

1890-91 John and Mrs Lily Mentor. John's tragic death by suicide is examined in Kathryn's post here.

1896 as summer renters and 1897-99 as actual residents= Conrad Dressler, sculptor and potter and his wife. Conrad was a member of the Arts and Crafts Exhibitor's Society. He operated from Medmenham Pottery which expanded to a site at Marlow Common. Conrad and his wife moved to live nearer to it at Bovingdon Green. To read about trouble Conrad got into see " Artists In Marlow History" here.

1899 - Mrs Greenwood. 

1900= house is again a seasonal holiday let.

1908= Alice and Henry Gray. This couple skipped about a bit in Glade Road, occupying various properties. Henry bought Clifton's stores grocery and off licence shop in the High Street early in 1902. This was on the corner of Institute Road. He had previously been manager of a similar shop in Staines but was of Marlow birth. His brother James was a mortgage broker / insurance agent based in the Old Vicarage in the High Street who soon came into the grocery business with Henry too.

1911-24 Mrs Moore.

Our blog focuses on Pre 1930s Marlow People.

©Marlow Ancestors. You are very welcome to use this content for family or local history purposes if you credit this blog and link here.

Sources Included:

Mapping the practice of sculpture in Britain and Ireland 1851-1951. University of Glasgow and HATII. http://sculpture.gla.ac.uk .Accessed 23rd October 2021.

South Bucks Standard 17th April 1891 and 22nd May 1896. British Library Archives copies.

Kelly's Directory of Bucks 1911 and 1924. Kelly's Directories Limited.







Thursday, February 17, 2022

Dr Battie

 

William Battie is the man credited with designing Court Garden House in Marlow, his future residence. As a  doctor, he was also credited with unwittingly becoming the origin of the term batty to describe someone eccentric. This is difficult to pin down, and there are other candidates. What is sure, is that William was doctor who became a  specialist in nervous disorders, and he may have had a few eccentricities of his own. 





William was born in 1704 in Modbury, Devon, the son of Rev Edward Battie. He went to Eton and Cambridge, initially to study law. But he failed his exams so took up medicine instead, and so was eventually admitted to the Royal Society. He first practiced as a    physician in Cambridge in 1729 before moving to Uxbridge, then Twickenham. He worked as a physician at St Lukes Hospital, resigning in 1764, and as a superintendent of a private mad house at Woods Close, near Islington. He would eventually own two private homes for the mentally ill. His 1758 treatise on the treatment of madness criticized the prevailing methods at Bedlam hospital in particular, and produced a furious response which was also published. William pioneered a more humane approach and said it was critical that the patients physical wellbeing was taken care of  - with a good diet for example. 


 Concern about the state of private "mad houses" lead to the appointment of a commission at the House of Commons to look into their regulation - or lack of it. William appeared before it in 1863, when he was now regarded as a very eminent physician in his field. He was asked directly if it happened that perfectly sane individuals found themselves shut up in a private asylum. He replied that it was "very frequently" the case. William said those responsible for deciding whether a  patient should be admitted or not were not competent judges and as a whole the premises needed better supervision. Sadly, while plans for enhanced regulation were made, they were not directly acted on until 1774 and then only partly. 


There are two oft repeated stories about William. One is that he liked to do impressions of Punch, which were regarded as side splitting funny by his contemporaries. This has more than one source. This act of mimicry he used once to save the life of a child with a throat swelling who he made laugh so much with his antics that the swelling burst. The same performance possibly saved him from injury after an altercation with some Marlow area bargeman. They were upset by his promotion of an idea that the transportation of goods by water could be done more efficiently if the barges were no longer pulled by men, but by horses instead. Naturally those paid to do the extremely hard and dangerous work of pulling the barges were not going to support a loss of their income. The barge hands won in the short term. William is said to have stopped a dunking at their hands by making them laugh with his Punch impression. He was reported to walk around in fear of a similar attack long afterwards. 


The second main Dr Battie story is that he designed Court Garden as an amateur and forgot to include a staircase in his plans so it had to be added later. Dr Battie may have forgot the staircase at the design stage but it is hard to imagine the professionals tendering to build his design would not have pointed this out before they began work, or that they allowed the build to finish without saying a word. So perhaps the idea of the house seeing completion before a staircase was put in is not quite true even if Dr Battie did not remember to include a spot for it in his workings, hence it's awkward placing. The origin of this story is a letter written by Francis Carter, an associate of Battie, to the author of a book of literary anecdotes, after the death of Battie. But this book says Francis, who despite visiting Battie at Marlow several times and indeed spending several summers at Marlow Place, never actually went inside the "very faulty" house. So perhaps it is not the most authoritative voice. (Some editions also say Battie lived at Marlow Place, not Court Garden but this may well be a subsequently corrected printing error rather than a mistake by the author.) The story is nevertheless repeated often in later contemporary accounts without mentioning the source. One fault the house definitely had was a basement that was below water during periods of high flood. This is mentioned much later too, and is not surprising given it's riverside location as homes much further away reported the same problem. The same source is behind the story that William liked to go about town dressed as a  "common labourer". Perhaps he did, given his talent for mimicry. 


William married Miss Goode in 1738/9 and had 3 daughters - Anne, Catherine and Philadelphia. Anne was the eldest and unmarried at his death. She inherited Court Garden and eventually sold it to another eminent surgeon, Richard Davenport of Essex. She later became the second wife of George Young. William is not buried at Marlow. He died in 1776 a little after suffering a paralytic stroke in his 75th year. He wished to be laid to rest next to his wife in Kingston, Surrey with no monument above. Among the bequests he left was £100  to St. Lukes hospital and a similar amount to benefit the widows and orphans of clergyman. 


Written and researched by Kathryn Day. 

© MarlowAncestors. 


To find posts about other medical practitioners, Marlow's medical history from apothecaries to nursing clubs, and general posts about everyday life in old Marlow look at the index here


To find posts about another particular house such as Court Garden - see the index here


Sources include:

Gibbs, Robert. Worthies of Buckinghamshire And Men Of Note In That County (R Gibbs 1888)

Nicholls, John.  Literary Anecdote  of the 18th Century - Essays and Illustrations. (John Nicholls 1812)

Rose -Edward Henry James, Rose, Henry James, Wright, Thomas. A New Biographical Dictionary, Vol 3 (T Fellowes 1857)

Wright, William - Fishes and Fishing. (T C Newby 1858)

Wednesday, February 16, 2022

From Manor House to Mangle-Rooms

 


In this blog we tend to focus on the less famous and/ or wealthy residents of Marlow past in order to represent the majority of people living here in days gone by. But this post is about some of the fancier residences in town and what the fashionable locals were seeking or would expect to have in their ideal homes prior to 1850. For many, the choice of where to live was about finding somewhere affordable and hopefully warm and well maintained. Unfortunately affordability and comfort did not necessarily go together! 


The earliest home I will deal with is Marlow's manor house, at the time of the death of Constance Le Despenser in 1416. Her husband Thomas was executed in 1400 but Constance managed to keep her customary widow's or dower portion of the estate, one third of the manor. When she died, an inquisition post mortem was held. This was a customary examination of what property someone held at their death, of who it was held etc, in order to facilitate it passing to the correct heirs, and to protect the interests the Crown. The inquisitions were supposed to be thorough and accurate but it's amusing how often they come with incomplete or inaccurate information- in particular what right someone had to land or when they were granted it. But Constance's one third of the manor included "two rooms in the site of the manor, built above and below at the end of the great chamber, the deyhous [dairy] and cow-house at the entrance to the court of the granary there" as well as one bay of the great barn. She of course also received various pieces of land and woodland, rent from the mill farm, and a third of the manor money spinners such as tolls from the market and fairs, court fines, and the "view of the frankpledge",  that is the money forfeited by a group of people within the manor if one of their member committed a crime. These cow houses and barns might seem rustic accessories for the home of a granddaughter of a king, but they were essential for the running of the household. We do not know how much time, if any, Constance herself actually spent at the manor here as she had other property to choose from. 


 One of Marlow's West Street homes. 



These type of agricultural outbuildings were still a selling point for large and expensive Marlow homes into the early 19th century. Some were relics of a farming past for the property, others proudly modern. Remnantz had a dairy for example and the 9 bedroom home known as The Cottage (later Quoitings, not the same as Oxford Cottage) still had both a dairy, an extensive cow house and a granary in 1846. Almost all the larger houses of West Street in particular could boast of some kind of barn, piggery or cow house prior to 1820, and they were not considered incompatible with genteel living when situated a suitable distance from the house. 



Above, the dairy at Remnantz as seen from West Street.  Cow name plaques were still on display inside in the 1990's including, yes, a Daisy. 


In the 1600's and 1700s in particular, one of the chief features of a property advertised is access to a private well. This was essential to a large household before mains water could be relied upon. Aware that not all wells are created equal in terms of reliability and cleanliness, the property advertiser's usually specify that the properties well is truly good or "sweet". Drainage was a contentious issue. Even Lady Queensbury, renting the Deanery in St Peters Street in 1879, encountered the problem of evil smelling odours wafting into her otherwise pleasant home. She described these as being so overwhelming that she was unable to use some of the rooms, including her own bedroom. Her daughter went further and said the odour was reminiscent of a fitting human body she had encountered while travelling in Patagonia! The cesspits were moved from under the house to a further distance, but apparently still caused a nuisance. 


A separate brewhouse was a standard feature of the better houses in the same period.


Still outside, the actual planting of a garden in terms of flowers rarely gets mentioned.  The wow factor in Georgian and Regency Marlow was all about the tastefully planted shrubberies, gravel walks, and in the largest gardens, mature or "forest trees" in the "pleasure garden" -as opposed to the kitchen garden which was ideally walled to provide shelter for crops. Garden fashions came and went, and what is promoted by Marlow house sellers isn't necessarily what London buyers would have considered the last word on garden design. Lawns feature more as a desirable aspect after the 1840's. Greenhouses were also desirable as they could help the family enjoy a much wider range of fruit and flowers at the tail end of the growing season. The largest Marlow homes boasted more than one greenhouse or glasshouse, designed to cater for plants preferring different temperatures or humidity. Few could compete with the huge orchard house (glasshouse for fruit trees) of Court Garden. Orchards as a whole, some quite small, were much more common however. 


Stabling was taken for granted in those larger properties. Marlow Place could accommodate 10 horses in 1834 and Thames Bank between 6-8 in 1812. A double coach house was something to aspire to, perhaps a smaller chaise or gig house too, and a carthouse for the more practical. Paddocks for the horses are not often mentioned although many of the houses in Marlow did come with meadow land. In reality there was no shortage of grazing in the town centre and the tenants of these "closes" or pieces of enclosed land behind the High Street for example were often not the occupiers of the house or business attached to it. 


A "brick and tile" house description showed the potential purchaser they would not be buying an old fashioned thatched or timber framed residence. "Sashed" is often added to this description to show the property had modern sash windows. Bow windows followed these as a feature of note, and continued to be specifically mentioned as a selling point into the 1850's here. 

 

Moving inside, the most attention was always given to describing the entrance hall (first impressions count!) and rooms used for entertaining. If you relied on printed house advertisements from the 1700's and early 1800s you'd almost imagine no home in Marlow came with a kitchen. They are rarely considered worthy of a specific mention as they will "only" be the domain of the staff.  However because the smooth running of the house was dependent on these practical features, a token description of the home having all the necessary "domestic offices" was usually added. These were of course not offices in the modern sense but the provision of facilities for running the household such as laundry rooms and stores. An outside detached wash house was a desirable feature here prior to around 1820 because it took the work away from the peace of the house. Prospect House at the junction of Wycombe and Little Marlow Road was especially proud of their "excellent" wash house around the late 1700s. Some homes were advertised with a specific "mangle room" later. (The older 'box mangles" were hefty pieces of kit, and needed a lot more room than the Victorian kind with rollers that we tend to think of) The traditional position of the kitchens changed over time, from basement accommodation and back extensions  to a more central spot in the home. The cooks at Remnantz must have been glad indeed when the kitchens moved from the relatively gloomy cellar to the floor above, saving them tramping up a flight of stairs. Back kitchens which occasionally feature in Georgian house ads refer to what we would later call a scullery. Sometimes rooms specific to the upper servants use do get detailed, for example a housekeepers room, and a butler's or footman's pantry. 

 

Bedrooms feature much less prominently in property advertising than they do now. We often mention the number of bedrooms first because it's an important search criteria for us. The exact number of bedrooms usually  got left out in the 1700s advertisements, in favour of lengthier descriptions of the sort of rooms you would entertain visitors in. All homes had bedrooms, but not all could boast several reception rooms so the print space was given over to the those more distinguishing features. The scope of servant accommodation was also usually left fairly vague  - usually just described as  "ample" or "suitable" or a mention was made of attics, a traditional spot for a maid's bedroom. For comparison, Marlow Place had 10 bedrooms in 1834, The Cottage 9 in the same year and Court Garden 8 in 1848.  Dressing rooms were a standard feature of these more substantial properties. 


Around 1800 and for a period of about 10 years it was fashionable in Marlow to describe the dining room as an "eating room." The wealthy would expect at least a drawing room and breakfast room (otherwise morning room or morning parlour) in addition, if not a library. The most fashionable and modern houses between about 1810 - 1830 e.g Thames Bank and Spinfield, boasted of rooms separated by folding or French doors that would allow two or three rooms to be used together to form a large single space for dances. Wine cellars were frequently described, but some houses had a beer cellar too. 


From the 1840's billiard rooms start becoming more of a promoted feature in Marlow, peaking in the 1890's. The Cottage had a newly built self contained billiards room on offer in 1846, a good solution if no existing space could be sacrificed. As time went on, the type of house offering a dedicated billiards room includes the less substantial properties more often.


Moving down the scale, a newly built 3 bedroom house in West Street in 1840 could offer 3 good bedrooms, a parlour, roomy kitchen, pantry, and a wash house with pump, stable, yard, and good gardens. The house was promoted as having a "passage entrance" which was the next best thing to a large entrance hall. This was important because this distinguished the house from a truly old fashioned or smaller scale one in which every room opened into each other, and the front one directly onto the street too. 


Another forgotten type of home bonus was the lease of a home that came with a pew in the parish church. Less common was an icehouse, but Court Garden had one in 1848 as did Spinfield. 


Last word goes to the location of our ancestors perfect home. Advertisements naturally extolled the delights of fine views, especially of Quarry Woods or the river. But there's much more focus on describing the healthy climate or excellent air that a particular spot enjoyed - or so they said. This is understandable given the number of diseases believed to be caused at the time by damp or unhealthy air. Even the type of soil the homes were built on was considered important, with heavy clay considered especially dangerous to health. Court Garden was advertised as sitting on chalk and gravel soil when up for rent in 1848. However as this soils chief advantage was supposed to be that it was well drained, and given the frequent basement flooding Court Garden suffered from, this seems to be a somewhat optimistic selling point!


Among the spots in Marlow praised for their healthy situation in the Georgian, Victorian and Edwardian periods was Newtown Road (Little Marlow Rd end), Prospect House, Spinfield, Highfields, and Oxford Road. Amusingly, almost any home not located within either the High Street, that end of West Street or St. Peter's Street, gets described prior to 1840 as "near Marlow" rather than within it. Thames Bank, Oxford Cottage, Western House, Tylecotes and The Glade/Cedar House are amongst the properties so described.


 

I have compiled the above after reading and comparing a vast number of property descriptions and auction notices etc specific to Marlow. 


Written and researched by Kathryn Day. 

© Marlow Ancestors. 


Related posts:

If you are interested in a specific house in Marlow, take a look at the post index here


For posts about everyday life in old Marlow see the index here


And to find all mentions of an individual on the blog, use the A-Z person index on the top drop down menu. 












How to have fun in Edwardian Marlow

This post is about some of the more unusual options for entertainment available to our Edwardian Marlow forebears. You can find links to posts about the more conventional options for fun at the bottom of the page. 


I think our first stop may be the Duke Of Cambridge in Queens Rd to see land lord William Plumridge. Nothing unusual about having a pint you might say. But in 1904 William has given us an unusual reason to stop by - his monster apple tree. He is very good at growing fruit but this year his tree of Peasgood Nonsuch is producing individual apples the largest of which weighs over 1lb 1oz. Marlow takes horticulture seriously and the biggest fruit is on display in the High Street at Mr Fields. Strictly not for sale, or not until everyone has come to marvel enough at it. This might strike you as a not very exciting exhibit but Marlow celebrates the victories of her sons and daughters, however minor. 


If that exhibit did not satisfy you, perhaps you would like to see something that was a genuine item on display at the 1889 L'exposition Universelle in Paris. The very same that gave us the Eiffel Tower. It won a gold medal no less, the only one in its category. You will never guess what it is. To find out we must go to April 1907 and the Wesleyan Chapel fundraising bazaar. They are trying to pay off the cost of their new Sunday school buildings. The star exhibit is...a piece of blotting paper. But a Paris Exposition prize winning piece of blotting paper!  It was made by Messrs Soper at the Kings Mill in Loudwater. Time for a selfie perhaps? Marlow knows about paper making thanks to the mills here so there are probably a few people around who have a professional interest in this sort of thing and who could explain the finer points of just what makes an exceptional piece of blotting paper. On second thoughts, perhaps it's time to leave. 


Above, crowds heading to see the Bucks blotting paper at the Paris Exposition. Marlow has to wait until Edwardian times for her turn.


Moving on to June 1908 we can enjoy an up to the minute entertainment. And it definitely doesn't involve either paper or apples. For this we need to go to the boys school room, which is what we call the church hall in The Causeway. This is the venue for the grand gramophone entertainment in aid of the Church Lads Brigade. For this we will take a seat, and enjoy a concert played on the gramophone. It's going down well and several pieces get an encore. It might seem strange to see no musicians but how much more of an occasion it is to go out nicely dressed and listen to music with our friends and neighbours, and with refreshments to hand. If you enjoy it, there's plenty of similar events, and even radio based ones later on. 


For a completely different kind of performance we can stroll to the river to enjoy one of the river based dramas that are performed from time to time. We don't mean the constables chasing the "young savages" who like to streak along the river banks after a naked swim. These are proper dramatic endeavours, usually put on or at least hosted by the Marlow Rowing Club. In 1910 their invitation swim-meet ends with a water "pantomime". The following year there is a full on extravaganza or "water drama"  called "The attack on the Settlers Camp". Maidenhead String Band are in attendance and provide the accompaniment. No wonder they sometimes need a calming exhibition of blotting paper. 


Other quirky sources of fun include the Bicycle Gymkhana, 3 hour long musical and gymnastic performances in the Music Room, and the more unusual obstacle course type races to creep in at the Regatta. 


For posts about other sources of fun see: 

Marlow Fair (ceased to be held in the streets after 1903) here

Bathing in the Thames - here

Cycling including bicycle gymkhana and bicycle polo - here

Cinemas of silent era: here


And general posts about Marlow life in the past - here



Selected sources: 

South Bucks Standard 16 September 1904, June 12 1908 - British Library Archive, Accessed via the BNA. 

Bucks Herald 6 April 1907. As above. 

© Marlow Ancestors except Paris Exposition photo which is used under a creative commons licence.