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Tuesday, June 27, 2023

Rough Music and Rag Sorting - the life of Emily Frith/Jones

 

The subject of today's post is one of those former Marlow residents whose name we pick at random to research and feature. We do this to tell the story of as many people as possible, rather than focusing just on the famous or wealthy.  It was all the interconnected lives of our past residents that made Marlow what it is today. As always, even someone picked at random proves to be interesting.


Emily Frith of Gun Lane

Emily was born in the early 1830s in the surprisingly populous Gun Lane, Great Marlow, to Henry and Susannah. Henry worked mainly as a sawyer and carpenter. (Properties mostly demolished, now known as Trinity Road.) The cottage the family occupied was on the side later occupied by the Victorian Police station and petty sessions court, and it is now under the Dean Street carpark. The family had at least three other Frith households in the lane. Their home was one of the smallest there, with a assessed value of £3 10s in 1833. It was a fairly crowded area, with a relatively poor population, and as such many newly married young working class people took the opportunity to rent a affordable if unglamorous property within it. There are not many long standing Marlow families that won't have a Gun Lane resident amongst their members if they stayed long enough! Henry was lucky though to have a small garden attached to his home. Later he moved to the Common Slough (aka Spittal Square, where Chapel, Spittal and Dean Streets meet). Emily however, stayed in Gun Lane and at the age of 19 was lodging with her sister and brother in law Fanny and William Stroud in Gun Place. Gun Place was a little court of houses, all now vanished, off Gun Lane, and now under the Dean Street car park on the side of Rookery park. This was even more compact than Gun Lane, and suffered not infrequent problems with poor sanitation. 


Rag Sorter

Around this time Emily was working as a rag sorter while two sisters she lived with were satin stitch workers. The girls were therefore employed in two classic Marlow occupations of the time for young Marlow women. Neither role was well paid but both were at least steady jobs. Emily was almost certainly working at the Marlow paper mills, as they employed a good number of rag sorters, as rags were required in vast numbers to make paper at the time. It was not the easiest job as rag sorting was regarded as a frequently dirty and smelly task but it was a very highly skilled one. They needed to sort rags by type, before they could be washed and pulped and were required to work at a furious pace. Emily's hand and eye co ordination must have been excellent as would be her ability to concentrate. Most of those employed with her were also young women as females were regarded as better suited to the skills involved! 


Working Mother

In 1852 she married agricultural labourer Job Jones (of Forty Green by birth, later Great Marlow and Bovingdon Green). Job was lodging  in West Street at the time of the 1851 census. Job had spent a month in prison with hard labour in 1850 for damaging a tree. This means Job was most likely supplementing his income as very many Marlow men did, by gathering wood for the purpose of skewer making. The skewers were used in the meat industry. Making them obviously wasn't illegal but cutting bits off suitable trees or bushes to use as raw materials was, if you did not have the right to do so from that specific tree. (You can read about the skewering / "skewerter" trade in Marlow here). Plenty of Emily's Frith relatives had similar convictions as did many others in Marlow. Her father Henry had found himself in court at least once charged with theft (of a duckling from a farm) but that case was dismissed when the prosecutor failed to turn up in court. And her teenage brother Henry was fined for a "gross assault" on a young woman on a country footpath near Marlow Bottom. 


In 1861 Emily and Job were lodging with three young children at the Jolly Maltsters in Dean Street. (AKA the Jolly Malsters). As is true of many of the properties that would have been familiar to Emily, The Jolly Maltsters has been demolished. It was one of the larger and older drinking places in Dean Street and took in longer term lodgers for much of its history. While it started life as one of the more respectable Dean Street pubs and beer houses, it's reputation declined in the 1860s and by 1872 was in trouble for harbouring "people of notorious character" including poachers and prostitutes. (You can read about the history of the Maltsters here) Most of the trouble related to those drinking there, rather than living in so let's hope Emily and Job got plenty of peace! Emily was now working as an embroiderer, a useful job that many mother's could do at home around their endless domestic and child rearing responsibilities.  I have noted that many Marlow women who were previously rag sorters go on to work as embroiders too. Job was still working as a farm labourer, usually for the Wethered family. This was possibly the reason the family moved a mile or so out of Marlow to Bovingdon Green a short while later. 

In 1865 Job spent a few days locked up in the police station on suspicion of stealing coal from the brick kiln at Bovingdon Green. He was caught crossing the Green with a lump of it under his arm. When accosted by a constable, he said he'd picked up the coal from the grass. This was enough for the arrest of Job, despite the fact that Mr Corby had not missed any coal. Corby said he certainly could not identify it as belonging to him and Job was released. The JPs were not impressed by the case having been bought before them especially as the coal had a value of 2d!


Rough Music

Rough music involves a group of people going outside someone's home and making a cacophony of noise and disturbance to register a protest at the conduct of someone inside. It's often associated with alerting cuckolds or those engaged in relationships when unmarried that the community knows what's going on. I've noticed that many protests were directed at those suspected of violence towards their wives or habitual drunkenness but some also to those who had dobbed in someone else for committing an offence. It was getting to be a little old fashioned in 1874 and associated more with rural communities but it was not abandoned in our area for some time - especially around Bovingdon Green, Marlow Common and Lane End. 


In 1874 Emily was involved in just such an incident as a "musicker". A member of the household of Joseph Meade(s) in Bovingdon Green had "turned approver" in a court case relating to stolen corn. This means the "approver" had confessed to his involvement in the crime, and gave full information as to others involved, in exchange for a full pardon himself. The community of Bovingdon Green was very upset at this, and decided to let the Meade / Meades family know (or rather some members of it as some Meades were actually performing the music themselves!) Emily, along with her sister in law Eliza and several others created a hubbub outside the Meades home over two nights. Two policeman from Marlow tried to disperse them but they just came back repeatedly in circumstances described as "almost amounting to a riot". In the end 4 women including Emily and 3 men were arrested and charged with "unlawfully, wilfully and maliciously damaging the house and property" of Joseph Meades. Emily had to appear before the magistrates at the Marlow police court. Luckily for her, the magistrates were baffled as to why the charges bought were relating to property damage for which they felt there was no evidence, rather than "tumultuously assembling of the disturbance of the public peace". So the case was dismissed! It was alleged that Eliza had kicked the boards of Mead's pigsty and that all the women threw buckets of water at and into the house and banged on the window shutters with stones.


Smallpox

In 1870, one of Emily's daughters returned from London where she had been in domestic service. The girl had felt ill before leaving, and shortly after arriving back in Bovingdon Green she came out with smallpox. Another case was reported around the same time, also in a young person who had recently returned from London. Job's employer Mr Wethered was saluted for continuing to pay him while he was unable to work due to staying in precautionary isolation and helping to care for his daughter. The victim appears to have made a recovery although it is not stated if she was disfigured in any way by this dreadful disease. 



Death at the Brewery

In 1884 tragedy would intervene in the life of Emily. Husband Job was still working for the Wethered as a farm labourer but he was sometimes also employed by them to do casual work at their brewery. On one such day, poor Job would suffer a fatal accident in the yard. There was  loaded dray there, awaiting a horse, along with a cart loaded with a couple of barrels. Reports on the event contain some contradictory information as to what exactly happened but it seems most likely that Job tripped over the shafts of the dray and in attempting to steady himself grabbed the tailgate of the adjacent cart. This then tipped up crushing him with two barrells falling down. His son John was present and along with another lifted the cart off Job. He was placed on a horse blanket until the yard clerk David Rush told someone to fetch the stretcher from the armoury along with Dr Culhane who worked from  the High Street close by. He was taken into the Brewery office before the decision was made to take him home to Emily, with Dr Culhane accompanying the injured man. Sadly his internal injuries were severe and Job died the following day. He had according to his wife remained conscious to the last and had prayed unceasingly. 

At the inquest the verdict was accidental death but recommendations were made to the brewery to improve their procedures for immobilising loaded drays and carts. Some of those present said the wheels of the cart had been properly "scotched" that is wooden blocks or stones had been put under them to prevent movement, but others could not remember if it had been done and also it was admitted the stones were often slippery and wet and could easily be dislodged. It was also said by some that a two barrels had been placed under each end of the cart to prevent tipping up, or that one had been placed under the centre of the cart, and that the shafts were also resting on an empty hogshead for the same purpose. This last point was strongly denied by other witnesses and it's obvious from the questions asked at the inquest that some felt sceptical that a barrel placed under the cart could have been dislodged when Job stumbled given the weight of both that and the cart. At other times it was said the shafts were held by men while the cart was loaded which does not sound very safe either. Job was just 52*. His son John who was present at the Brewery was only 17. 


Goodbye Emily

A death notice for Emily, wife of the late Job Jones, appeared in the South Bucks Standard in May 1895. It tells us she was then living in Cambridge Place in Marlow. This is yet another entirely demolished address, which was previously located between Eton Place and Oxford Road, off Queens Road. I hope the last year's of her life were peaceful. 


NOTES:

There was another Emily Jones in Marlow of a similar age to our featured Emily. She was married to William Jones, who also worked at the brewery and lived in Bovingdon Green at times. This "other" Emily is most likely the one who took to casual nursing in the 1890s, working as an uncertified midwife. Uncertified was not the same as illegal, it meant she had not received formal training or qualifications which she was not bound to do at the time. 

Related Posts:

To find every mention of a family or individual here, use the A-Z Person index in the top drop down menu. There are thousands of people listed there with more names added weekly. We do try and indicate which families will soon be featured in published content, but the order can change if requests are made. 

Another death of a brewery employee in 1884 features here

To find other posts relating to Bovingdon Green see here 


Written and researched by Kathryn Day. 


Sources include:

1833 Parish Assessment - our transcripts from the original notebooks in our possession. 

Census transcripts from the microfilm by Jane Pullinger and Charlotte Day. 

Bucks Herald, April 1850, January 1874 and November 1884 -  British Library Archive. 

South Bucks Standard November 1884, May 1895 and clippings related to the Job Jones inquest, courtesy of Miss Morton. 

Berkshire Chronicle November 1884, British Library Archive. 

Buckingham Express November 1884, as above 

Bucks Advertiser and Aylesbury News April 1850. 

"England and Wales Death Registration Index 1837-2007," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2JGT-KGC : 31 December 2014)

 Emily Jones, 1895; from "England & Wales Deaths, 1837-2006," database, findmypast (http://www.findmypast.com : 2012); citing Death, Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, England, General Register Office, Southport, England.


© MarlowAncestors




 







Thursday, June 22, 2023

Recreated 1830s Trade Directory Part One Occupations A-D

 We scour wills, court cases, adverts, property records and more in order to compile posts like this.

The relative status of individuals in the past is not simple to divine from their job title as for instance "builder" could mean a labourer on site or the wealthy owner of a business who did no  manual labour, and "shoemaker" might be the poorly paid person doing piece work or the one paying dozens to do that.

Attorneys (see also Solicitors)

George Ellison. Lived High Street. His practice was based in London but he did take on local work too. More on him here

Auctioneers

Thomas Rolls and Son. High Street.

Baby linen 

Elizabeth Ford. West Street. Seller and maker. 1839.

Samuel Washbourne. Chapel Street. Manufacturer. 1833.

Bakers

William Blake. Chapel Street.

James Bird Brooks. Causeway. Also corn dealer and farmer (see below). Biography here

James Creswell. Junior. Spittal Street. 

James Croxon. At least 1833+ West Street. An eventful life- biography here

Joseph Duley or Daley. 1831. Could be mistake for JAMES Daley, late baker of West Street 1833.

Sarah Hatch. High Street, with her son William Hatch.

Francis Hone 1833+. West Street.

John Jarvis 1835- should this be Little Marlow? Certainly in Little Marlow by 1837 where he was also a parish constable.

Robert Piggott. Died of "Visitation By God" 1830. Had been a ship's cook at Battle of Trafalgar.

James Sawyer and family. West Street. Biography here. For his dad see Butchers.

Thomas Stroud. 1838.

Bargemen

William and George Creswell. Barge masters. Brothers.

John White. 1834. Not same man as beer seller below though that John had also worked as a bargeman!

Basket Makers

William Johnston. Also occurs as Johnson. 1830 to at least 1841 in West Street.

Richard Muspratt. Throughout decade. West Street. Very close to William Johnston above.

"Beast and sheep salesman"

Robert Richmond. In 1835 Robert of Great Marlow says he's been prevailed upon by his friends to "commence droving" on a new route from Winslow to Amersham via Whitchurch, Aylesbury and Chesham. Strict punctuality assured. Left Marlow 1839 after financial trouble -see here

Beersellers, innkeepers and publicans (many would also function as lodgings houses, q.v)

Job Aris/Ayres - Handy Cross, 1835

Thomas Archer. White Hart. More here

William Bavin. Two Brewers. See here.

John Boulter. Crown and Anchor. Oxford Road. See here

Elizabeth Bowles. Royal Oak, Dean Street. (Not Bovingdon Green). 1833.

Thomas Bowles. Jolly Maltsters Dean Street. See here

Richard Bye. Two Brewers. See here

Richard Clark. First at the Jolly Maltsters Dean Street- See here and then at the Rose and Crown Dean Street. 

William Coleshill. Dean Street.

Edward Collins. Royal Oak Bovingdon Green.

John Collins. Fountain Head. High Street. 1839.

James Creswell. Fountain Head. High Street. 1833-38. Then at George and Dragon Causeway. Also carpenter when in High Street.

William Creswell. 1830-32. Six Bells. Quoiting Square. See here

William and Ann Creswell, not same William as above. The Compleat Angler. Full biography here

George Davis. The Chequers. High Street. See here and David Davis ditto. 

Richard Davis. The Greyhound Chapel Street.

George Dell to 1831. Barge Pole. Church Passage. See here

George Dorrell. The Ship. West Street. 1831-32. He probably moved to unknown Dean Street premises in c 1833, and was still a beershop keeper in 1838. However a Mrs Dorrell is at the Ship in 1836. 

William Earis. Blue Flag. Handy Cross. 1833+. Also Blacksmith.See here

Mary Fletcher, Thomas Oxlade Fletcher. White Hart. Chapel Street. More here

Thomas Fletcher. Black Boy. Church Passage. 

Henry John Franklyn. The Fox. West Street.

James Franklyn. The Crown. 1836+ This was also the posting house. See here

Charles Gibbons. Dean Street. 1839.

John Green. Three Horsehoes, Burroughs Grove. 

William Harding. The Turks Head. High Street. Pre 1830s and throughout it. Also shoemaker. Fined for selling short measures 1843.

Mary Hawkins, later Mary Bye. Two Brewers. St Peter's Street. See here.

Elizabeth Higgs. The Roebuck, Causeway. 1831-33. More here.

William Higgins. Black Horse.

Charles Hoare. Three Horseshoes. Gun Lane 1838+ Also shoemaker. More here.

William Hoare. Three Horseshoes. Gun Lane. Pre 1830s to 1838.

Samuel Hobbs. Two Brewers. 1839. See here

Thomas Livings. The Bear. Chapel Street 1833-39. Also boot and shoe maker.

John Muspratt. 1831+ Three Tuns. West Street.

Mrs Ollis. Three Tuns. West Street. 1830.

Richard Oxlade. Blue Banner. St Peter's Street. Also grocer. See here.

Thomas Oxlade. 1831. Possibly at the Lower Crown.

Joshua Phillips. Kings Arms, Little Marlow 1839. More on him here

John Pierce /Pearse. Coach and Horses. West Street. Pre 1830s to 1833.

William Plumridge (Chapel Street. He is probably already occupying the White Hart at this point). 1839. Also bricklayer. 

Richard Ruddle. Hare and Hounds. Biography here.

Thomas Sparks, William Sparks. Barge Pole. Church Passage. See here

William Stallwood. Three Loggerheads, Quoiting Square. 1833 -37.

Thomas Stroud. Rising Sun.

Joseph Tyler. Clayton Arms. Quoiting Square. Previously draper. More on him here

William Ward. Six Bells. Quoiting Square. 1833+. See here

George Westbrook. The Crown. 1830-35. See here.

John White. 1838-at least 1852. St Peter's Street. Name of his premises is unknown, but they were small.

Widow White. Likely widow of Robert. The Swan, Causeway.

Eusebius Windsor. Elephant and Castle, Dean Street.

Thomas Wyatt. The Horns. Chapel Street. More here

Blacksmiths

James Aldridge. 1839. St Peters

Thomas Bird. Chapel Street. 1833-39 at least.

James Brown. 1839 Chapel Street.

Henry Butler. 1836.

Samuel Carter. High Street. 1839. Different man was a carpenter. There were 3 Samuel Carter's in Marlow in the 1830s.

William Cock. 1839. Market Square.

John Collins. Also a builder and at the Fountain Head pub. Blacksmith and builder 1833-39. Dead by 1841. Premises High Street. Note there was at least three other men of this name in Marlow at the same time. 

Joseph Frewin. Chapel Street. 1833.

George Gilman. Quoiting Square. And Whitesmith. 1832. Died 1833. A butcher of the same name also lived in Marlow at the same time. 

Thomas Grey. High Street. 1839.

Charles Haines. Common Slough. 1839.

William Harding. High Street. Also Beer seller.

Jeremiah Humphreys. Spittal Street.

Joshua Meakes. Spittal Square.

Thomas Meakes. Chapel Street.

James Nicholls. 1835.

John Shanks. Journeyman only. Possibly worked for Samuel Carter in the High Street. Lived St Peter's Street. 

Mr Truss. Spittal Street. 1839

Booksellers

George Cannon. Market Square. Biography here. Also printer, stationer.

Boot and shoe makers. See also Cordwainers.

Henry Aldridge Pre 1830s to 1831.

James Aldridge. Son of Thomas below who died 1833.

Thomas Aldridge. 1.) Will 1833. 2.) His son Thomas Charles Alridge.

John Bryant 1831-36.

William Buckingham. 1835. Shoes.

Steadman Camden. High Street. See under Clothiers in Part One for more.

John Coleshill. (Shoe). Likely employee rather than employer 

William Dewey. 1833-47. Chapel Street.

Charles Haines. (Shoe).

Benjamin Harding. (Shoe). 1832-37.

William Harding. High Street. Throughout period. See under beersellers above.

Charles Hoare (Shoe). See under beersellers above. More here.

Ephraim House. 1833.

Thomas Livings. Chapel Street.  Pre 1830s to 1833 at least. Also beerseller (see).

William Sharp. West Street. Also school proprietor. 

Henry Stallwood. 1835.

William Truss.

Braziers

Alfred Batting. Also tinplate.

William Harper. 1832-35. Also tinplate worker.

James MacLean. Premises High Street. Also tinman.

Brewers

Samuel Barnes. St Peter's Street. Pre 1830s+ Also maltster.

Richard Gibbons. St Peter's Street.

Thomas Wethered and Sons. High Street. Pre 1830s+

Bricklayers 

John Plumridge 1835, West End. 

Plumridge and Sons 1839

William Plumridge, Chapel Street. Also beer seller. In 1835 a partnership between a William Plumridge of Great Marlow and George Reading ditto builders, bricklayers and stonemasons, was dissolved. 

George Reading. West Street. Also builder.

James Smith. 1838.

Robert Wakelin(g). Pre 1830s+ Quoiting Square.

Brokers

Robert Crake 1839. Chapel Street. Later described as carpenter and appraiser 1847. Seems also to work as a property agent.

Thomas Walker. Spittal Street. "Tom". 1832+. Also Carpenter during 1830s. Was also a little later a parish constable. Find out more about him in this role here

Builders 

William Bond. Junior. High Street. More on him here

John Collins. High Street. 1833-39 at least. Also a blacksmith on same site.

Thomas Corby and son. Biography of them here

Charles Fletcher. Severely injured when the scaffolding he is standing on gives way in 1832. He falls 23 ft with two others who miraculously are only bruised. 

Robert Maddocks. See under Carpenters below for a biography link.

William Plumridge and George Reading partners until 1835. See bricklayers above. 

George Reading. West Street. Also bricklayer.

Butchers

David Andrews. West Street.

James Creswell. Spittal Street. A baker of same name in same street.

Richard Davis. Pork butcher specifically. 1834+

Charles East. 1831-33. Dean Street.

William East. 1833 - at least 1847 Spittal Street 1847. Adult and operating as a butcher by 1814. Wife Martha 1810s. SECOND MAN wife Elizabeth 1822-31.

John Fowler. High Street. 1832.

George Gilman. Died of an apoplectic fit in 1833. Another man of this name was a blacksmith and whitesmith.

Rachel Hall. West Street. Biography of her here

Richard Hawkins. High Street. 1839.

Edward Hewett. High Street.

Richard Moores. 1831.

William Neighbour. Possibly Spittal Square. Pre 1830s to at least 1834.

Jason Povey. Spittal Street. 1839. Involvement in political bribery here

John Saddler. West Street. 1833, 1839.

Robert Sawyer. West Street. 1839. Almost opposite the Coach and Horses which at one point his son William had. Pork butcher specifically. Had previously been a baker but gave up the business in favour of his son James, see Bakers. Robert died in 1849.

William Westbrook. Market Square.

Cabinet Makers

Mealings see here

Cambric Cap Makers

Ann Washbourne.

Carpenters

James Beckett. Quoiting Square. From at least 1833 to at least 1841.

William Bond Junior. Also builder. Biography here

Samuel Carter. 1820-39.  Possibly employee not business owner. A different man of same name was a blacksmith in Marlow at the same time and there was at least one other man of the same name in Marlow at the same time.

George Creswell. Also publican. At George and Dragon. See above under beersellers.

James Creswell. Also publican. See under beersellers above.

Charles Fletcher. Insolvent 1830. Had large Spittal Street premises.

Patrick Fullicks. 1835. Possibly West Street.

Charles Haines 1835

James Haines. Also Joiner. High Street (seems more Causeway).

Robert Maddocks. And Builder. High Street. Biography here

John Smith 1835 (at least)+ High Street. With his wife Sarah was also a china dealer.

Thomas Walker. See under Brokers above.

Carriers (and see Coach Services)

William Quartermain.

Thomas Wyatt of the Horns Chapel Street, and his son George  See under beersellers above for link to more on Thomas.

Chair Makers

James Bavin. Premises Quoiting Square 1832. Brother of William Bavin below. 

William Bavin. St Peter's Street, and possibly Chapel Street. And publican. See here

William Jarvis. 1830.

Childbed Linen

Richard Silver. West Street. Will 1831. Transcribed on blog here

John Washbourne. Probably Quoiting Square.

Samuel Washbourne. Chapel Street.

Cheesemongers

See grocers in part two, available soon.

Chemists and Druggists

William Thomas Butler. Market Square.

Robert Footitt. High Street.

Mr Fowle. High Street. 

Chimney Sweeps

Francis East aka Frank. Chapel Street. 1833.

China Dealers

John and Sarah Smith. High Street. John was also a carpenter so it seems Sarah did most of the shopkeeping. 

Clothiers

Steadman Camden. And shoe maker. Premises High Street. Biography here.

Lydia Moss. Biography here

Coach Services

Susannah Clark. High Street. Also grocer. Widow of Thomas. Will proved 1844. Her coach was the first vehicle to cross Marlow's new suspension bridge.

Frederick Wyatt. High Street. Details here

Coal Merchants

Thomas Gibbons. From before 1830s.

William Wiggington. Note: two individuals of that name present in town at same time.

Confectioners

Benjamin Baines. High Street. See here.

James Janaway. Spittal Street. 1832-33. Also biscuit baker.

Coopers

Thomas Reeves. West Street. 1833 to at least 1841.

William Rose. West Street. 1839.

Cordwainers

James Brown. 1835.

John Bryant. 1835.

William Davey. 1835.

Charles Livings. 1835.

James Patterson.

Richard White. West Street. Senior and Junior. See here.


To be continued: Occupations part 2 - here part three here and part four here.


Further information:

Recreated 1600s trade directory Part One and Part_two

Recreated 1700s trade directory here

Recreated trade directory 1800-1819 Part One - here part two here

Recreated 1820s trade directory part 1 here Part 2 here

©Marlow Ancestors 



Saturday, June 17, 2023

WILL OF ANN FULLER

Ann Fuller of Great Marlow, singlewoman. Will written 1851 and proved 1852.

Margaret Hickman has kindly offered to be her executor so she is appointed as such.

Just debts, funeral and costs for proving the will are to be paid first.

1 guinea each to:

Sarah Truss, widow.

Elizabeth Piggott, widow.

The wife of Edward Edwards.

The wife of Benjamin Marcham.

Elizabeth ?Mayor? 

The wife of Thomas Robinson of Harleyford.

To the wife of Joseph Austin her fire irons, fender, and sheets.

To Hannah Austin her best ....ing.

Tea caddy to ....Hickman.

Chest of drawers to Margaret Hickman.

From the rest of the furniture and clothing Martha Atkins, Susan Cleobury, Ann B.... and Caroline ?Dark? can choose something to remember her by.

Rest of her possessions: half to the said Mrs Austin and half to be divided between the children of Mrs Austin.

Witnessed by Ann Fry and William Fry both of Marlow.

The will was proved by Margaret Hickman wife of George Hickman.

Notes:

Ann lived with an elderly William Hickman, a surgeon, in West Street Marlow at the time of the 1841 census. I am unsure if she was related to him as the 1841 census did not record household relationships. William died aged 94 in 1850. George Hickman was his son and also a surgeon. Margaret Hickman was nee Aitchinson.

Benjamin Marcham and his wife lived in Oxford Road.

The wife of Thomas Robinson of Harleyford was named Mary. He was a Chelsea Pensioner.

Elizabeth Piggott was a laundress in Chapel Street Marlow.

Sarah Truss was an elderly laundress of Spittal Street.

William Fry was a servant (live out) who lived in West Street. It is uncertain whom he worked for. He had a daughter called Ann but she would have been only in her mid teens in 1851 which seems young for a will witness, though not unprecedented. The grave of William and his wife Phebe / Phoebe can be seen on the blog here, and their home here

More Marlow will summaries indexed here.

All mentions of any individual on this blog can be found by looking at the A-Z Person Index.

©Marlow Ancestors.

Will is held at the National Archives Kew. Transcribed by me and then summarised here.

Saturday, June 10, 2023

Hurley Grave - Fowler / Benwell

 Hurley churchyard.

"Here lieth ye body of Eliz: wife of Richd Fowler of Sheepshouse near Henley daughter of Joseph and Ann Benwell who departed this life ....February 1747 ......year age."





 Grave images index here [Marlow, Little Marlow, Hurley. Some grave posts contain further biographical information].

Other Hurley posts indexed here

Will transcription index [Mostly Marlow] Here

Post by Charlotte Day.

Saturday, June 3, 2023

A Job For The Servants

 This post deals with some of Marlow's most hardworking former residents, the servants. In particular we will be looking at how they got their jobs. 


For those employed at a farm, the early Marlow Fair was a traditional hiring opportunity. (Primarily in the pre Victorian era) The first day was used as a hiring fair. Although mainly used to recruit the likes of carters, ploughman, dairy maids and agricultural labourers, I have found references to indoor staff like general servants at a farmhouse gaining employment at this time. Those seeking employment often carried a symbol of their trade, such a tool, to speed the recruitment process. 


Another traditional place to find staff was to apply to the vicar who would be reasonably likely to know of a youngster from a "respectable" family who was available to hire. Others placed adverts in local or even London papers laying down their requirements. Sometimes the adverts are strangely specific such as requiring a housemaid aged between 45-55 years of age. Preferences for protestant or church going servants were not uncommonly stated. The requests could be placed on the Victorian era at the local newspaper agents such Smith & Co in the High Street, or bookseller George Cannon. As time went on it was more common for staff without positions or seeking new ones to advertise their own availability. They often asked replies to their posts to be sent care of one of the stationers or other shops. Best not to let an employer whom you still lived with that you were planning to seek new pastures!


Shops were the usual given place of contact for those advertising or seeking positions in the pre Victorian era too. For example drapers and bankers Messrs Wilkinson and Borroughs can frequently be found fulfilling this role in the 1790s. One such especially detailed advertisment for a cook in 1795 is fairly representative. It asks for a healthy, clean and good tempered lady between 30 and 40 years of age who crucially has had smallpox already (and was therefore hopefully immune from getting it again). This cook would have control of all downstairs and would have the assistance of a combined kitchen and dairy maid. She must have experience and knowledge of general cooking and pastry making, pickling and preserving in particular. The lady would need a good character from her previous position of course. (An "undeniable character" as they express it. The term unexceptional character was even more popular meaning the same thing.)



Miss Hurrell's Servant Registry Office

 Evidence suggests that several shopkeepers were running de facto recruitment agencies. But from the late Victorian period, both employers and employees could take advantage of Miss Eliza Hurrells official Servant Agency. Eliza was born in Surrey in the early 1840s but she joined family in Maidenhead by 1871. She likely worked as a servant as a young women in common with most of those running a servants bureau Otherwise she appears as a dressmaker at first. By 1881 she had moved to West Street, Marlow with her brother Robert, a journeyman printer. At this time she had begun to recruit servants on the behalf of others if she had not done so before. "Miss Hurrell's Registry Office" began to feature regularly in the small ads and trade directories. At this time servants' registry offices had a somewhat mixed reputation. They were convenient but were accused of profiteering by charging fees to both servants for being put on the books and potential employers for having a servant placed with them. Others thought that they encouraged staff to believe it was so easy to get another position they needn't stick at any job, so they would constantly chop and change employers. Worse accusations were made of the larger registry offices who sometimes provided accomodation to women between positions, with over priced lodging fees charged for crowded and unpleasant rooms. Eliza was not one of these establishments and as she remained in business for many years, she presumably satisfied both parties well enough. 

In early 1891 Eliza became the third wife of farmer Emmanuel Plumridge*. Emmanuel actually fulfilled many roles and has featured in our blog often before. Use the A-Z person index in the top drop down menu to find every mention of him here. After her marriage Eliza placed a number of adverts alerting the ladies of Marlow and district of her change of name. These adverts also say that "owing to the scarcity of servants with good characters" she had been unable to supply servants to all those who had applied to her. Which is a neat way of saying that she only supplied those with the best of references. She would nevertheless endeavour to continue to place "good servants in good positions." Those seeking work through Eliza were expected to attend her office every day to hear of new opportunities. The office was then in Spittal Street, where the Plumridges had a little shop. Most provincial servants' registry offices seem to have been within shops ran by the person placing servants rather than stand alone businesses. Eliza would interview both staff and employees to find out their needs, probably in her own living room. 

Adverts were also placed by Eliza on behalf of staff seeking new roles. For example in 1885 she was seeking positions for a 21 year old general servant who was a "dissenter and total abstainer" with good cooking skills. Adverts requiring an applicant to follow a particular branch of the Christian religion or to be a regular church goer were not uncommon then.  Otherwise a "strong and active" woman with good character was looking to be employed as a kitchen-maid, while an experienced 23 year old wanted a position as a plain cook. (Everyday cooking, not just the preparation of toast and gruel!) She was placing servants not just in Marlow, but in and around Maidenhead, Windsor, Surrey and London. They were almost entirely in domestic roles but she did place at least one young woman as a servant in a small private temperance hotel in London - an ideal and allegedly comfortable situation for "respectable girls" according to Eliza. 

 You may think that Eliza's experience with finding trustworthy staff would prevent the family suffering their own domestic troubles. Unfortunately within a year of their marriage, Emanuel Plumridge had need to prosecute a former employee for embezzlement. He sold milk from his farm, and hired James Faulkner to deliver it and take payments. Unfortunately James ran off with the takings and was not tracked down for nearly a year. On arrest he confessed immediately and was sentenced to 6 months imprisonment with hard labour. 


In the later Edwardian era when Eliza Hurrell had passed away, the chief servant registry in town belonged to the Smith family, of Rose Villa, Beaumont Rise and Beaufort Cottage. Mrs Smith advertised for servants needed over a fairly wide area including Wycombe, Oxford and Maidenhead as well as sometimes further away such as London or Brighton. The ads tend to be short of detail, and certainly rarely mention pay or conditions. Mrs Smith was also busy arranging the letting of accomodation in Marlow for "the river season". 




The shop in blue was one of probably two Spittal Street locations used by Miss Hurrell's Servant Registry Office. It was used for similar purposes by Mrs Norcott many years later. Eliza was a member of the Wesleyan church just up the road in Spittal Street. 


*Emanuel/Emmanuel Plumridge was one of Marlow's most hard working individuals himself. Born in Lewkner in c1832. His first wife was Ann Cross ( married 1853), his second Hannah Turner (married 1873). For much of his life he worked as a ganger on the railways first for the Great Marlow Railway Co, later for Great Western. He later became a farmer, milk seller, haulage and cartage contractor (on his death William Dean took this over), house agent, shop keeper, hurdle maker and council contractor for various rubbish clearance projects. He died 1897 and is buried in Lane End churchyard. Eliza outlived him by several years and continued to place servants after his death. At first he farmed at various places that had been part of the former common fields, in particular what was known as Field Farm (later the site of Captain Marshalls Menagerie and the home known as The Eyrie, later Gossmore House). Later he was at Copy Green Farm. 

Written and researched by Kathryn Day. 

Further Information:

To find other posts linked to specific occupations, see the index here

To find all mentions of any individual or family here, see the A-Z person index in the top drop down menu. As of March 2023 there were over 6,000 historic Marlow residents mentioned there with many more to come. 


SOURCES

Kellys Directory of Buckinghamshire 1883 (Kelly's Directories Ltd) 

Census information from the transcripts of Jane Pullinger and Charlotte Day. 

South Bucks Standard 1 May 1891, 10 May 1895, 17 September 1897, 28 October 1897, 4 June 1909 (British Library Archives) 

Reading Mercury 08 October 1892 as above. 

The Solicitors Journal and Reporter 1895, digitised by Google. 

The London Gazette, 1895 collected edition. 

Servants, Employers, and Registry Offices by "W.M" 1865. No publisher listed. 

Social Notes Concerning Social Reforms, Social Requirements & Social Progress  (Simpkin, Marshall & Co, 1878)

 Report from The Royal Commission on Labour, Sessional papers - (HMSO 1894)

The Servants Magazine or Female Domestics Instructor (1848)

Half Hour in a Servants Registry Office - Anon, as included within Wonderful London: It's Lights and Shadows of Humour and Sadness (Tinsley Bros 1878)

Encyclopedia of Domestic Economy by Webster T Parkes (Longman, Brown & Green 1852). 

Maidenhead Advertiser 1885. 

Reading Mercury 11 January 1796. This from the British Library Archive, BNA 



© MarlowAncestors




Thursday, June 1, 2023

Poetic Postmaster William Tyler

 William Tyler (born circa 1797) was a fascinating man, poet, political influencer, post master etc- and historic West Street Marlow resident.

His initial day job was that of a property agent specialising in sales and lettings of farms and land but also handling houses. In his spare time however he was a poet. He is said to have known well the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley and his author wife Mary Shelley who lived elsewhere in West Street for a short period in the 1810s. They probably shared a similar radical outlook. William would often write or speak about his memories of Shelley's residence here and it's a shame more of his anecdotes were not preserved. He had been given the chance to read diaries kept by Mrs Shelley during the families time in Switzerland for example and described it to contain many curious entries and incidents. Furthermore he knew the exact spot that the Revolt of Islam had been composed, on a little island near Medmenham Abbey. He says Shelley had visited that place daily while working on the Revolt, and had sometimes stayed there overnight. It was he said in 1824, now known by few. 

William's collected book of poetry 'Woodland Echoes' published in 1824 was a love letter to the tranquil beauty of the countryside along this stretch of the Thames. (It also features brief reminisces of Shelley's time in Marlow.) But William was acutely sensitive to the fact that the beauty of the scenery masked a hard reality for many. 1800s elections in Marlow were scarcely ever less than controversial but reached a particular low in the 1820s-40s for corruption and underhand dealings. In 1827 successful anti-reform M.P Owen Williams evicted scores of his tenants for daring to vote for his liberal opponent in the previous year's election. William lead the public outrage at this act, writing to newspapers and others to quash William's allegations that they were all in rent arrears. As a property agent he could have seen a lot of homeless residents and business owners as a money making opportunity for himself and those he represented but instead he tried unsuccessfully to get the evictions reversed. The victims held on for four months by simply refusing to leave but were then ejected.

He and local surgeon John Goodman organised a petition to Parliament for secret ballots to be brought in for elections and for an update on the Bribery Act to crack down on dirty elections. The Whig M.P for the county town of Aylesbury Lord Nugent was an early ally for them and retained Tyler's public support for years. William himself originated from a dissenting family in the Aylesbury area.

Col William Clayton, who hoped to represent Marlow as a Liberal candidate rehoused all the voters who had been evicted. He was eventually elected as M.P for Marlow in 1832. 

William Tyler acted as a property agent for some Clayton owned homes then. His ads for those properties which he had the job of letting often spoke of the beauty of the local scenery which had inspired his poetry or the health of Marlow's riverside location.

William continued to speak out on political matters both locally and in London. He strongly supported the end to discrimination against Catholics and Dissenting Christians, who because of the Test Acts were barred from various kinds of public office (Marlow in general was not in favour of Catholic emancipation). William also argued in favour of Irish independence, saying that he was embarrassed as an Englishman every time he accepted the warm hospitality of an Irish family.

In 1842 he found himself in hot water as a result of Clayton's dubious electioneering practices at the last vote, that is Clayton claiming some of his supporters who were also his tenants occupied more property than they really did in order to qualify them for a vote. As his "man of business" in Marlow William cannot of been unaware of what was happening in general and was openly accused of abetting voter fraud in the case of Zachariah Blick. Mr Blick was a Clayton supporter who wanted to register to vote in Marlow on the grounds of occupying sufficient property. The opposition objected saying Zachariah wasn't wealthy enough. He had even received poor relief (which would have debarred him from voting). William Tyler stood accused of tearing out a page in the local Union's record book that recorded this relief. He said he had not done so himself though a relieving officer had torn it out and given it to him in case he needed it for his own records. It isn't easy to say why William would ever need a record of someone else's poor relief. There was a feeling similar antics had occurred previously as regards another Clayton supporter William Plumridge. Had William Tyler grown weary of fighting for political integrity? Did it become a case of "If you can't beat them, join them"? It is important to say that many of the local papers reporting the case were strongly Conservative and biased against any Liberals in their reporting. 

William does not seem to have faced any charges in relation to the 1842 election. Indeed he was clearly still held in high esteem and trust in Marlow as when the role of Post Master for the town fell vacant in 1849 and there was no immediate applicant to take it on, William Tyler was nominated for it and accepted. This meant moving across West Street to new premises as in those days Post Masters lived in the Post Office. Mail came by waggon from Maidenhead twice a day, the first one arriving at ten past 5 in the morning. Letters were also sent to Maidenhead for onward distribution twice a day. Though William would have been very busy with the postal service he still acted as a property agent. His wife Ann worked as a milliner in the Post Office building, as did her mother Elizabeth Rose and sister Charlotte Rose who lived with the Tylers.

William continued to assist Liberal voters to register to vote in Marlow so he wasn't put off politics.

He was an early member of the town's Literary and Scientific Institute. He gave frequent lectures for the Institute on the subjects of art and history, illustrated by his own collection of antique prints, as well as on literature until poor health curtailed his appearances. His last known lecture was in the Sunday School building of William's church the Salem Chapel in Quoiting Square, which was where he himself worshipped. The lecture was on the theme "Knowledge Is Power" in 1856. The Windsor and Eton Express reporting the lecture said a large audience had been delighted by the talk and that William had spoken without notes for 90 minutes. It also called him a much respected Marlow resident. 

The theme of William's lecture was close to his heart. He was one of the biggest supporters of the town's British School which provided non-denominational education. Unusually for the time, music and recreation were seen as key to the children's development and a regime of kind encouragement for the mostly poor children to learn and truly understand their studied subjects was preferred over learning by rote.

William and his wife Ann may not have had any children of their own. She died in 1856 age 59 - see here grave here He seems to have died in the next few years himself.

Written and Researched by Charlotte Day. Additional research by Kathryn Day. 


Additional Notes and links:


William witnessed the will of Elizabeth Heine [could be Haine] of Great Marlow 1851.

 William was the brother of Clayton supporter  Joseph Tyler a linen draper and then publican at the Clayton Arms Quoiting Square. Joseph's wife Elizabeth features in another biography post on this blog. It is available here. More on Joseph in future. Biographies of other individuals are indexed here

More about the British Schools here

More posts about historic West Street (or any other street) residents can be found indexed here.

Another Shelley friend in Marlow. - the Maddocks see here

©Marlow Ancestors.

Sources:

Bucks Chronicle 1827 4th August. British Library Archives. 

Berkshire Chronicle 29th October and 19th November 1842. As above.

Bucks Advertiser. 2nd February 1856. As above.

Oxford Gazette June 10th 1843. As Above.

Windsor and Eton Express, November 13th 1824, February 2nd 1856. As above.

History Of Parliament Online. https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1820-1832/constituencies/great-marlow

Slater, Isaac. Slater's, late Pigot & co., Royal National and Commercial Directory and Topography of the counties of Bedfordshire, Berkshire. United Kingdom, n.p, 1852.

Post office directory of Berkshire, Northamptonshire, Oxfordshire, with Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, and Huntingdonshire.  United Kingdom, n.p, 1847.

Woodland Echoes - Tyler, William (Wetton of Fleet Street, 1824)

1841 and 51 census Great Marlow as transcribed from microfilm by Jane Pullinger.




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...