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Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Holland Road Marlow Early History

 Holland Road was laid down late in 1901 by the workers of Mr Fossett of Slough. Earlier that year much of  the land that the early properties in the road would be built on had been bought bit by bit by speculator James Andrews Holland and in his honour it was decided by the Urban Council to name the new road Holland Road. The land was previously part of the "Quarrydale Estate", perhaps the grounds of the house Quarrydale which was by it though that does not look to long predate the Holland Road. 

James had no previous experience in property speculation. He would later state in court that his main former career was that of an employee of the Midland Railway. On the 1901 census he was the manager of a timber merchant in Ashford near Staines Middlesex and in 1881 appears as a carpenter and joiner which seems at odds with his statement of being a Midland Railway employee. Unless he was employed as a carpenter in some way by them ???

Regardless of his experience,  thanks to loans from Mr Cripps of Marlow and Garner and Sons of Uxbridge he was able to begin building up Holland Road. You can understand why this area seemed a golden prospect to such a speculator. Holland Road was within walking distance of the station and the river yet would have still felt removed from the main body of Marlow. A peaceful but well connected semi rural idyll.

First in the new road came a bungalow with an attached artist's studio, then 2 cottages. These cost £729, 18 shillings and 6 pennies to erect on top of a purchase price for all the land of £567. These were followed by five more houses in a block for himself and two for his wife Sarah (or so he would later state) on more of the land. The couple lived in home called "The Maisonette" in Holland Road. Unfortunately James had overreached himself financially and could not afford to continue to build on the rest of his land.

Though he had tenants for some of the built property this was not enough to keep him afloat and he was forced to try to sell the bungalow with studio, and 2 houses. These did not sell in two attempts and James filed for bankruptcy. There was some scepticism voiced in court that two of the properties allegedly built for his wife were genuinely not part of the bankrupt's possessions. He owed £510 to creditors at the time.

The mortgagees tried again to sell some of the property in 1906 and were seemingly successful at last. James and his wife moved away from the town. In 1911 he was a Building Works Manager boarding at Shottesdon, Shropshire. 

An early family to set up home in Holland Road was the Haddon family. In 1907 Richard Johnson Haddon (who may be the father of the family or his identically named son) appeared as a witness at the Old Bailey in London when Arthur Malyon of Leytonstone, Henry East of Dean Street (fruit and horse dealer), Frank Price of Dean Street and James Newell (of Marlow or Stokenchurch reports vary) were accused of a string of thefts in London and it's environs involving horses, wheeled vehicles and harnesses.

Some of the stolen property was sold in Marlow, some at Henley Fair and some elsewhere. Richard Johnson Haddon reported taking 4 horses to Henley Fair for East, including one of the allegedly stolen animals. He also believed he had seen another of the stolen animals in a field off Dean Street by the Bank of England pub. This field was one of two rented by East. 

The charges against Frank Price were dismissed by the courts at an early stage. Henry East was found not guilty and was welcomed home to Marlow by a crowd of 200 people who repaired to the Plough pub for a raucous celebration (on which more here) The rest of the accused were found guilty and sentenced to 18 months in jail. The court case contains various interesting points not relating to Holland Road but to Marlow in general and how the horse dealing trade operated here in the early 1900s.

It is also noticeable for the statement that using the "F word" as Henry East was quoted as doing was common in the town in 1907 (at least in Dean Street!). There is a link to a transcript of the Old Bailey trial in the Sources section below. The earlier hearings at lower court's were reported at great length in the South Bucks Standard.

Those giving evidence for the good character of East, included Francis Crawford Caffin who was a fruit customer of his and William Fisher the butcher of Market Square 

Two years earlier Richard Johnson Haddon Senior and Richard Johnson Haddon Junior had been in court at Marlow following an altercation with their Holland Road neighbour William Henry Lavell. It was alleged that a sickle had been thrown by Lavell at a dog owned by Haddon Junior and threats made against Haddon Junior himself. The judge accepted that he had not intended to harm the dog, only frighten it off and had been provoked by the dog taking one of his valuable chicks. He was thus asked to pay only half the costs of the case and Haddon Junior the rest. Lavell was bound over to keep the peace towards the Haddons.

 In 1914 William Lavell, still of Holland Road was sentenced to 4 months hard labour for arson at Wright's paper mills where he worked as a packer. Drunk thanks to a long drinking session at the Carrier's Arms in Wycombe Road (that and the Plough would be his nearest pubs from home), William had wanted to get revenge on the mill owners for exploiting and under paying certain female staff as he saw it. Women in his eyes could not stand up for themselves in such matters! He set fire to a door and put up barricades to hinder attempts at extinguishing the fire. Nobody was inside at the time. William was married to Ellen (nee Smith. M 1896) who on the previous census was described as a paper mill hand. This would have been at Wright's. It is not mentioned in the court case that Ellen was one of the women William thought was being mistreated but it may have been so. The couple's address in 1901 was "New Town" the district around Holland Road so they were already close to Holland Road. It is possible their home existed in the street prior to it being named or properly laid down as a road both of which occurred several months after the census was taken. Development in Marlow was very haphazard, piecemeal and disorganized!

Written and researched by Charlotte Day.

For other posts about specific Marlow Roads, shops or farms see this index. All references to any individual on this blog can be found on the A-Z Person Indexes. Thousands of people are mentioned.

Sources:

https://www.oldbaileyonline.org/browse.jsp?name=19070528

South Bucks Standard September 6th 1901 and 21st July 1905. Bucks Herald 27th June 1903 and June 6th 1914. Bucks Advertiser July 11th 1902. All British Library Archives via the BNA.

England and Wales Census 1911. National Archives, Kew. Census information remains Crown Copyright. 

"England and Wales Census, 1901," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:X96C-M5W : 20 May 2019), James A Hollands, Ashford, Middlesex, England, United Kingdom; from "1901 England, Scotland and Wales census," database and images, findmypast (http://www.findmypast.com : n.d.); citing Sunbury subdistrict, PRO RG 13, The National Archives, Kew, Surrey.

"England and Wales Census, 1881," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q27J-WWZG : 12 December 2017), James A Holland, Leicester St Margaret, Leicestershire, England; from "1881 England, Scotland and Wales Census," database and images, findmypast (http://www.findmypast.com : n.d.); citing p. 17, Piece/Folio 3158/106, The National Archives, Kew, Surrey; FHL microfilm 101,774,883.

"England and Wales Census, 1911," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:X7VP-XTT : 22 July 2019), William Henry Lavell, Marlow, Buckinghamshire, England, United Kingdom; from "1911 England and Wales census," database and images, findmypast (http://www.findmypast.com : n.d.); citing PRO RG 14, The National Archives of the UK, Kew, Surrey.

GRO marriage index.




Thursday, October 19, 2023

Will Of Thomas Plumridge 1816

 Thomas Plumridge bricklayer of Great Marlow. Will both written and proved in 1816.

Says he sick in body but of sound and disposing mind.

The messuage or tenement where he dwells in Quoiting Place [now called Quoiting Square] in Great Marlow and two cottages in "St Peters Street or Duck Lane" [now just St Peters Street. In true Marlow fashion the street had several alternate names used haphazardly, also being known as Bridge Street or Bridge Lane] to wife Charlotte for her life then his executor Thomas Bowen to sell the property and divide the money equally between the testator's children who are then living.

After his just debts settled all his money, household goods, chattels etc to his wife for life then to his children [not named].

Made mark rather than sign.

Witnesses: John Allnutt, John Pearce and George Siegmond.

Notes:

Thomas Plumridge married Charlotte Webb at High Wycombe in 1801. 

Thomas Bowen lived nearby in West Street and was landlord of the Red Lion pub. More on the Bowens here.

George Siegmond was a West Street drawing master. More on him here.

John Pearce may be the man of that name who lived a little later in Chapel Street.


Links:

To find every mention of any Plumridge's on this blog - there are many- see the A-Z person index here.

More content related to historic residents of Quoiting Square can be found indexed here

Other wills transcriptions here

Will transcribed by Charlotte Day  from an original held at the National Archives Kew and then summarised here.

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

Friday, October 13, 2023

W T Porter - Man Of Many Talents

 If you read many old local papers relating to Marlow, you cannot fail to come up with the name W T Porter throughout the Victorian and Edwardian period and beyond. 

William Thomas was on the surface a coal merchant, cartage contractor, railway agent and later farmer. But this only brushes the surface of the many roles this very busy man fulfilled. Porter's are of course long associated with the coal trade in Marlow. Many people recall buying coal from them at their yard adjacent to Marlow Station well into the 20th century. It was William's father Walter** that started this. Walter came to Marlow to fulfill the role as the very first station master at Marlow railway station in 1873. Prior to this he had the same position at Marlow Road Station (or Bourne End as it was subsequently known). Within a couple of months he'd also started business as a coal merchant, and if that wasn't enough, he was the licensee of the newly built Railway Hotel at the same time (now known as the Marlow Donkey). It was here the Porter family lived at first, and William's mother Sarah Ann was the one actively managing that side of the business. The coal yard was adjacent to the station and Walter also leased a "wharf" with additional coal storage - this was not a wharf on the riverside but an area mainly used a loading and unloading. (The wharf was where the extra goods siding of Marlow station was put in in 1902, so William had to move both that and his railway agents booking office then. The new office was built immediately opposite the station booking office which was considered a better site anyway.)  You could place an order with Walter's manager at either of those two places. 


William was born in 1861 before the family moved to Marlow, in Appleford, Berkshire. He was about 16 when his father Walter died aged just 40 in 1877 at the Railway Hotel. It was presumably quite a sudden death as only a few months before Walter was considered well enough to be considered for election for overseer of the poor for the Parish Council. The license for the Hotel was immediately officially transferred to widow Sarah Ann, who as mentioned above had always effectively been the one in charge there. The family continued the coal merchant business, with William T assuming the management of that by the time he was 20. 


Sarah Ann narrowly escaped the serious attention of the 1880 election rioters in Marlow. A detailed post about that is available here. Suffice to say, Sarah had been seen to allegedly sport the colours of the winners of that election, the Tories, on her carriage. The rioters were supporters of the losers and wreaked wide scale destruction in the centre of Marlow. They set out to smash the windows of the hotel but were stopped from forcing their way inside when one of the rioters pleaded Sarah's case. She was a widow with no vote herself he said. This largely worked and no significant damage was done. William's older sister Elizabeth was at this point assisting her mother at the hotel and it must have been an anxious time. 


On a happier note W T was involved in the Marlow Regatta from the 1870s - at first as a successful competitor,  later as Captain of the Rowing Club as well as a committee member for its organisation. Not all of the races  William took part in were absolutely serious - he had good form in the aquatic tug of war for example. One definitely serious role he often fulfilled was a judge at the Regatta once his own competing days were over. He contributed financially to the events organising funds and was indeed a Vice President on the organising committee. The position of Judge was not perhaps the most glamorous one at times, as bad weather seems to have been attracted to the Regatta in many of the years William was doing this job. In 1912 William was applauded for stoically staying out in the elements all day despite torrential rain descending upon him. Everyone else had tried to shelter under the bridge they say, although "everyone" must have been quite a small number given the space available!


William and wife Minnie lived for very many years at Woodlea / Wood Lea in Station Rd. This is almost opposite the Railway Hotel and is a good size house that reflects the business success that William and his family had enjoyed. They employed a servant, and after Minnie's death a live in housekeeper. From the 1890s if not before, William had been involved in buying and selling land and property speculation. Many houses and pieces of land in the area of Station Rd and Dedmere Rd in particular passed through his hands at some point. In 1895 we are told a brace of pretty villas are in the course of construction for William, "almost opposite the station", and he's often seen bidding for property all over Marlow. For example he owned the strip of cottages in Little Marlow Rd next to The Plough. His role as landlord and land owner is interesting as he was a fiercely critical of those in a similar position who did not maintain their poorer tenants premises. As a member of the Marlow Urban District Council he frequently asked awkward questions that shows he had no truck with those making excuses while the tenants lived in conditions of misery. In the early 1900s he constantly campaigned for improvement to areas such as Hatches Row and Primrose Lea in particular, where residents suffered atrocious sanitation and water supply issues. In 1905 William said he was strongly in favour of drastic measures being taken to force house owners in the area of Dean Street to update their properties. He was one of the few other than Dr Dickson who remembered to put the needs of the poor tenants at the forefront of decisions. When a few years later someone complained about a paperwork delay that has slowed down the delivery of enforcement notices on the owners of defective properties, William firmly said the owners themselves were the one who were a "disgrace". He said they should be able to see with their own eyes that they were forcing their tenants to live in a shameful state. 


William's position increasingly meant he was voted into all kinds of committees in Marlow. The 1897 Jubilee dinner and tea committee was one of the bigger projects. (You can read more about that here.) The large "vans" and other vehicles used by the Porters were in demand for many Marlow parades and processions. The most touching is probably the impromptu torch lit procession organised within hours of the end of the South African wars being confirmed in 1902. William's vehicle, laden with patriotic emblems and flags was one of the highlights. Just before the First World War William was part of the Marlow Improvement Committee - this was not related to housing conditions this time but was a sort of early tourist attraction group. They decided to advertise Marlow's charms in various newspapers. They also produced an illustrated guide to the town that was sent to 50 leading London hotels in order to tempt the wealthy guests to take the train to Marlow. 


William had a celebration of his own at Woodlea in 1910, or rather it was held to celebrate his son William Arthur reaching his majority. A marquee decorated with fairy lamps was put up on the lawn and some 30 employees of the Porters and their friends were invited. No band was needed as Mr Porter possessed a modern gramophone to entertain the guests with a "choice selection" of tasteful music. The speeches were fulsome and even the vicar joined in, praising William Juniors sporting talents in particular. He'd succeeded his father to membership of the rowing club amongst other pursuits. George North, representing the Porter's staff, presented young William with a gold tie pin to mark the occasion. You can imagine the horror that must have been felt in 1917 when William Junior of the Oxford and Bucks Light Infantry was reported missing in action in France. It took time for any further news to reach home, but thankfully when it did come, it showed that William was still alive, albeit injured. He survived the war and assisted his father in the coal business. 


At some point William had added the role of cartage contractor and railway goods agent to his business. In 1900 he opened a parcel office in Marlow High Street so customers did not need to even go to the station itself in order to place an order for any branch of his business.


"Mr Porters meadow" off Dedmere Rd features in local Victorian newspaper reports almost as often as the man himself. He actually owned several meadows about there. It was used sometimes for rides and sideshows of the Edwardian Marlow Fair after it had been evicted from its position in the streets of the town. (The Star and Crown Meadows were more often used). Then there were many football matches played by one of the bewildering number of football teams and youth sides Marlow once supported. * The most exciting event was probably the arrival of a army biplane in 1914. It was seen flying over the town before it made a controlled landing in order to make some repairs. The pilot was entertained by Dr Dickson at his home in nearby Institute Rd until they were ready to depart. 


William was also a supporter who contributed to the building of the current Marlow Library, then the Literary and Scientific Institute headquarters. He was also a Freemason. He defined himself as a farmer on the 1911 census, in addition to running the coal business. This was mainly at Town Farm in Bisham. 


As Sarah Ann Porter, William's widowed mother got older, she retired from the active management of the Railway Hotel (in 1901). However she continued to live there, as it was taken over by her younger son Charles Henry Porter who also worked as a coal merchant both with and independently of brother William. Her grave at Marlow Cemetery can be viewed on the blog here (Died 1923). Charles turned the livery and fly hire side of the business into a huge success and as he wished to expand this further in 1902, Messrs Porter as coal merchants and railway agents had to remove from the Railway Hotel to new stables and coal wharf constructed for them "near the railway." 


Post written and researched by Kathryn Day. 


* A list of  Victorian and Edwardian football teams in Marlow is available here


** There was another Walter Porter resident in Marlow, a watch and clock maker. This other Walter, husband to Ellen, died suddenly on Christmas Day 1862 leaving numerous little children. A public fundraising appeal was launched out of pity for the widow's terrible loss. 

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

Landlord listing for the Railway Hotel: here

© Marlow Ancestors.


Sources:

Marlow Guides 1903&1905

Cairns, Jock - The Book of Marlow (Barracuda Books 1976)

Dickens, Charles - Dickens Dictionary of the Thames (1886 edition)

Kelly's Directories for Buckinghamshire 1886, 1889, 1911, 1915, 1920,1939. (Kelly's Directory Ltd)

Census data, transcribed from the originals by Charlotte Day and Jane Pullinger. 

Bucks Herald July 12th & 13 December 1873, 25 August 1888, 7 July 1917 (British Library Archive) 

South Bucks Standard 29 November 1895, 9th March 1900, 24 October 1902, 8 December 1905, 8 March 1907, 28 February 1908, 29 July 1910, 15 August 1912 as above 

Maidenhead Advertiser 6 June 1900, 1 July 1903 - as above 

Reading Mercury - 28 December 1918 as above. 




Monday, October 9, 2023

Forty Green Assessment 1833

 Compiled Autumn 1833 for use in 1834 for tax calculations. Those listed are heads of household who occupied residential property. They may or may not have actually owned the property. Farm land is not included in this part of the assessment. I have transcribed the information below from the assessor's original working notebooks used to compile the assessment. The amount listed for each property is the estimated annual rental value of the property.

Forty Green

Each occupying a cottage and garden with an annual value of £3 10 shillings:

Charles Swadling (see below for another of this name too)

Abraham Gray

William Pope

*****

Cottage and garden with £4 annual value:

Joseph Heath

*****

Cottage and garden with £3 annual value:

Charles Swadling 

All references to any individual on this blog can be found on the A-Z Person Index in the top drop down menu. Thousands are mentioned. Other parts of the assessment can be found by searching for a street of interest here and for outlying areas by searching here

Transcribed by Charlotte Day.

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

Tuesday, October 3, 2023

Hill Farm Marlow

 Not to be confused with Hill Farm, Cadmore End or Hill Farm, High Wycombe. A mixed farm. In 1833 was 90 acres in size. Did not apparently have a farm house on site until a few years later. In 1853 was 100 acres, 66 of which had long been part of the farm, the remainder was in Marlow Common Field rather than with the main part.

Occupiers (not necessarily same as owners) and history timeline, gaps in occupiers are gaps in our knowledge, we will endeavour to fill them as and when we can=

1833= James and David Webb who had other local farms and lived off-site.

1851= William Stanmore. Wife Fanny.

1853= Richard Gibbons. Tenant. Farm for sale with a newly erected brick and tile farmhouse "prettily situate with commanding views" [Bucks Herald 27th August 1853 advert]. The property was sold privately.

1854= Mr Batt

1861= Thomas Batt farm bailiff  for the Wethered family owners. Wife Ann. Live in carter George Brown, odd job boy 16 year old Joseph Dark and 14 year old carter's boy John Ellick also on site. By 1863 had gone to Little Marlow as steward to the manor there. Had previously been bailiff at Old House Farm. For his grave see here.

1864= John Hewett.

1865= Thomas Carter.

1868= Mr Carter. His farm worker died of sunstroke while labouring this year.

1870= just about everything on the farm put up for sale- cart horses, beef cattle, sheep, pigs, dung carts, market waggons etc as the farm was up to let.

1871= James Child. Wife Caroline. James retired and moved to Hendon, Middlesex after 1876 but before 1881.

1881= Joseph Blackwell was the resident farm bailiff (for who? Presumably Wethered family). Lived at the farm with his daughter Elizabeth there. Joseph had recently recovered from insolvency when he moved to Hill Farm. He was previously a farmer at nearby Clay Lane Farm. See here.

1894-1911= Abel Dell. Advertised in the Bucks Herald 1895 for a strong girl fond of children to help in the farmhouse. Female farm servants would have been required to feed and tend any animals in the farmyard such as poultry and pigs as well. Moved his home to nearby Bencombe Farm 1909 or 1910 but still kept Hill Farm until 1911. For his life at Bencombe see here.

1911-20 = Aubrey Croxford. Wife Ada. Aubrey was a grocer and baker before he took to farming.

1928= Farm also used for commercial timber growing.

1937-39= John Norman. Farm had at least some dairy cattle at this time. 


Further information:

To find every mention however small of an individual or family here, use the A-Z Person Index in the top drop down menu. 

For info about other specific farms, check the index here

General agricultural related posts can be found listed here


Written by Charlotte Day. Researched by both Charlotte and Kathryn.

Other Sources=

England and Wales Census, 1871, database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KXS5-2BX : 26 June 2022), James R Child, 1871. Other censuses my transcriptions from microfilm. All census material remains Crown Copyright.

Bucks Herald 22nd June 1895. Bucks Advertiser. 27th August 1898. Bucks Herald 16th November 1928. All British Library Archives via the BNA.

1833 Great Marlow assessment notebooks, transcribed by Charlotte Day from originals in our possession.

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


Sunday, October 1, 2023

The Sleeping Beauty of Turville

Young Ellen Sadler of Turville became famous throughout the country for her apparently incredible feat of sleeping without waking for 9 years. She is included here because her family spent some time living at Little Marlow, and other relatives at Marlow and in addition it was at Great Marlow that her troubling illness first manifested itself in a dramatic way. 

Early life
Her father William Sadler, born in Turville was a agricultural labourer, chair-maker and pauper at different times. As a young man he'd moved to Stokenchurch for work purposes, employment found for him by the Overseers of Turville. He spent two years learning the chair trade from Mr Styles there.  The people of Stokenchurch were perhaps a little less pleased with Williams arrival than William himself. He married a local woman named Ann, a lace-maker and had several children with her before her early death. However at some point he also became romantically attached to another woman named Ann Parker, whom he eventually lived with for around 11 years without marrying her, according to his own admission. He had frequently recieved parish relief due to poverty. William and Ann has had 5 children illegitimately he said. Apparently the people of Stokenchurch had paid him to marry Ann, given him a dinner and paid the marriage fees. He was a man that certainly needed to be persuaded into marriage to Ann! Sometime afterwards he moved to Little Marlow for a different job. After a while he was again resorting to poor relief. The parish of Little Marlow considered that his birth parish of Turville should take the family back and then the family would be someone else's financial responsibility. Turville thought he could not be considered legally their problem any more, and refused to take the Sadlers. The case went to court in 1854 and it's thanks to the reports of this that we hear Williams account of his early life and various movements. How demoralising the entire proceeding must have been for Ann. She had to hear her husband say that he'd delayed marrying her for 2 months after the banns were read to see how much more the people of Stokenchurch would pay to make an honest man of him. This caused laughter in the court, and perhaps it was the bravado talk of a man in an embarrassing situation but it hardly seems sensitive to Ann and the children. William also told the "court" that Ann had previously lived in a barn and the Wycombe Union poorhouse.  It was decided the family were not indeed the problem of Turville. But eventually they did arrive back there and in 1859, the sleeping girl Ellen was born - the couple's 10th child according to contemporary reports at least.  

Ellen is usually described as a quiet dreamy child who would often seem to be lost in her thoughts for hours on end. (This phrasing is universally repeated in contemporary article after article)  She was one who rarely joined in the games of other children. However another source said she had not seemed really any different from other children at the time, except especially quiet. We hear she went to Sunday school, was reasonably good at learning, and had a great reverence for religious things. In addition a popular story was that young Ellen has scolded her step father for intemperate ways, a talking to he'd only take from her lips. Of course this might be gilding the lily a little, to suit the image of an angelic sleeping beauty.  (Ellen's father died when she was young, and her mother remarried agricultural labourer William Frewen (Fruin) of Turville soon afterwards.)

When she was about 11 or 12 she was sent to be a nursemaid to a family with two children in Marlow. I do not think the family are ever specifically named. While Ellen may seem to be young for this kind of role, she would not have been considered so at the time. Unfortunately it seems her symptoms began in earnest soon after. She began to be sleepy and forgetful and  to complain of a pain in her head. Her employers called in a doctor and eventually she was sent home to her family as it was determined she wasn't capable of looking after herself let alone two younger children. This was diagnosed as a probable abscess on her neck. The doctor responsible for the poor at Turville was Stokenchurch's Henry Hayman. After examining her, he thought she needed to be treated in the county hospital at Reading. Later he would say he treated her for glandular swellings on the neck.  According to some reports, it was the local vicar who asked the doctor to arrange this admission. It may be so, local parishes bought a certain number of "tickets" for admission to Reading hospital and the parish doctor could decide who deserved to receive one. Off Ellen went for her neck abscesses to be treated. It's generally accepted she stayed there about 17 weeks, although a stay of up to 4 months is sometimes mentioned. The record books of the hospital were said to wrongly give Ellen's age on admittance as 9, but also to more accurately state a spinal complaint causing debility was suspected. The doctors were baffled by her case, and decided in the end she was incurable. She was sent home on a rattling cart all the way to Turville, in March 1871. 

The sleeping starts

What happened next I've tried to put together from sometimes widely different contemporary reports. Many more were written some time after the event. Most claim the source of their information was Ellen's mother and/or Dr Hayman. 

There's some consensus that Ellen sleepiness continued, the periods growing longer and more profound, and were often precluded by an attack of "hysteria" and the sound of bells ringing that only Ellen could hear. The long sleep is generally thought to have started 2 days after she arrived home. Dr Hayman did not see her until then. A popular story was that when Ellen felt in a lot of pain on this second day and expressed a wish for death to end her suffering, her mother had suggested the girl prayed with her. This she did before succumbing to a series of seizures before the big sleep. Her initial "trance" was also punctuated by seizures and restlessness. Dr Hayman was called at this, but she was already unconscious at his arrival. From that moment on Ellen never altered from the position she had adopted, of lying on her side, one hand under her head and legs drawn up. Her mother said this was the position that girl had been wont to sleep in. 

Food and Drink? 
Most stories of Ellen's long sleep suggest she lived on a liquid diet of port wine (considered especially suitable for invalids at the time), tea with sugar and a little whole milk. At first the family were able to pour liquid down her throat - they did not think she actively swallowed it. But after 15 months, during one painstaking feeding session, Ellen's jaw clenched rigidly and it was with huge difficultly they were able to remove the feeding spoon. A gap in her teeth was then used with the spout of a teapot from a child's toy set. (This was capable of holding only 4 teaspoons of liquid.) According to some they'd had to break two teeth of Ellen's to provide access to the spout. Let's hope she was unconscious for that procedure. 

It's difficult to believe anyone could survive on a liquid diet so long but it's interesting not every account suggests she had no food. Some mention gruel was part of her diet. Another says the mother told him they'd tried her on liquid arrow root before her jaw clenched.  Nevertheless it's not surprising the general consensus was that before long her lower body in particular looked like a dead person, cold and emaciated. Dr Hayman reported that the mother said the generally produced a large quantity of urine every 4 days or so but no bowel movements.

Money talks
As news broke of Ellen's prolonged sleep, curious visitors began to call at the families humble little cottage hoping to see the child for themselves. Although even Ann's critics did not suggest she solicited money for seeing her daughter, they added she did not need to as people automatically gave a customary  coin as they left. While the case was in the news, visitors were plentiful. Naturally there was suspicion the case was faked or indeed that poor Ellen was drugged in order to make money for the family. However the descriptions of the cottage interior certainly don't suggest a family that had much money for luxuries. If they were sitting on a fortune, it's curious they all still went out to work (and it was hard out in all weathers manual work for Ellen's step father and some brothers) and chose to live in a house considered damp and rickety, with basic furniture and clothes. In 1876 a nuisance abatement notice was made against the cottage by the Board of Guardians as it was in a dirty and dilapidated state. This gave the owner seven days to put it right. (The interior of the cottage was universally described as simple and clean, the nuisance appears to be the drains)

Similarly one oft quoted visitor was suspicious as he was asked to wait a minute or two before going up to Ellen so she could be made ready.  Anyone with experience of caring for the bed bound would find such an instruction a practical necessity at times, in keeping with maintaining Ellen's dignity. However the vast majority of reports mention specifically that they were shown directly to Ellen's room. A visitor from a local paper in 1873 said that all the villagers doors were ajar when he visited and the Sadlers were no exception. A perceptive point even if the writer got the the girl's name wrong! Another notes there's no door to Ellen's bedroom, only a curtain to keep out draughts. 

In 1873 we are told that Ellen's stepfather earns 12s a week and that two of her young siblings then at home were able to work. This is not much money. No one really knows how much the family recieved in total. The figure of 2s or even £2 a week often quoted was prefaced by "supposed". It was a pure guess that's all. 

Although some later reports say that some villagers has seen Ellen at the window or even in the garden, I can't find any reports from people immediately after their visit who tell us that they have heard this directly from any witness. The local paper reporter who visited for the Wycombe Guardian in 1873 said that his hints to villagers that some imposture night be involved were met with rebuffs that the doctor and vicar knew all about it and were no fools. The villagers pointed out that what the family made from visitors was expended on the  wine used to feed Ellen leaving little profit potential. It's interesting Ann tells him later that after an initial flurry of interest, the number of visitors tailed right off and she'd had no other visitors beyond immediate locals for several months.  If the weather was nice, locals might wander over on a Sunday she said. In the last fortnight she'd had a total of 7d from 3 little girls and two farm labourers on such visits. She was grateful for the support of these poor neighbours. Let's hope she was taking their coins honestly. It is certain they would not have parted with them if they had any doubt as to the case - they could scarcely afford to be generous. Several non locals complained about the awful state of the country lanes leading to the village especially after rain. Even the critics of the Sadlers accepted the tourist trade there was chiefly a summer activity only. 

Ann admitted that many early visitors had asked for a lock of Ellen's hair as a sentimental memento and she'd agreed to their requests, no doubt in knowledge an extra financial gift would come her way. But this wasn't a long term money spinner - when Ellen's hair looked depleted Ann stopped cutting off locks! 

While the vicars involvement may have added credibility to the Sadlers stories at first, he gradually became more sceptical as time went on. He admitted she never showed signs of having been moved and despite his deliberately calling unexpectedly, had never found any evidence of deceit. However he considered the families refusal to have a nurse in suspicious (see below) and so was their refusal to accept parish relief which would have entitled the parish officers to scrutinize their affairs more closely. Considering their previous experience of parish relief, this last point is probably not too damning. Later it's said watchers from Guys hospital had attended the cottage. 

One villager was said to have told a 1875 visitor that Ellen was sleeping because she had been accidentally cursed by her mother who was annoyed with Ellen for not working properly in the fields with her. Apparently Ann had sent Ellen home with the wish expressed she'd never wake again. But the visitor could find no evidence Ellen had ever done any agricultural work. It seems unlikely Ellen was in condition to be much help in this way on her return from Marlow.  Most likely either a story told to a gullible journalist or a half memory of hard-working Ann sometimes voicing frustrating at her seemingly distracted daughters ability to lend a hand at home as she would have been expected to. 


A DEVOTED MOTHER
Ann had Ellen sleep in a little bed in her own bedroom. She was described as very attentive to her girls needs and she certainly seems protective of her daughter who she kept neat and clean. Only Ellen's hair was described as matted and held in a net by one visitor. The mother explained she was frightened of injuring Ellen or causing her pain in the combing. 

Ann was criticized by some for refusing full time nurses for Ellen, or to allow her to go to a London hospital. They thought this evidence some trickery was involved that would be found out if Ellen was removed from her mother's care. Maybe it was but we must also look at things from Ann's point of view. Very many medical men had visited her cottage out of concern or out of a wish to uncover a fraud. Despite much effort they never "found out" any trickery nor did they come up with a definite diagnosis. Ann described at various points some of the tactics used on her sleeping child. She said many visitors in the early days had concealed pins and needles in their hands and jabbed Ellen. Another had caused damage to her eyelids by trying to force her eyes open. Yet another had tried to pull her jaws apart. When a medical man had suggested a change of diet to brandy, Ann had agreed but Ellen had been immediately violently sick, bring up an offensive "black matter". Dr Hayman had suggested a course of then ground breaking galvinism (or electric shocks) while a spiritualist thought mesmerism would unlock Ellen's mind.  Is it any wonder Ann was reluctant to let these medical men loose on her daughter without her protective eye there?

Despite it being well known that numerous eminent medical professionals had seen Ellen, the family still had to deal with enthusiastic amateurs with their own ideas. Ann gave a "crushing look" to a man who after Ellen had been asleep for two years suggested he could inflict a little pain on her to see if she might wake up. As if no one had thought of that before! Ann refused to allow him even a pinch. 

Ann died in 1880 and her inquest was held at the Bull & Butcher pub although those involved also went to the cottage to view Ann's body. The Bull was the place everyone went to ask for directions for Ellen's cottage so they had some increased trade while she was alive. Ann had been suffering the symptoms of heart failure for some time such as dropsy, and died of this. Some reports would later say she'd died of fright due to a storm then raging overhead, had fallen down some stairs or had been struck by lightning itself, none of which was of course true! It does not seen anyone was especially confident that Ellen's stepfather would look after her - he does seem vague when asked at the inquest what plans would be made for his step daughter but of course it was an emotional time. (And is what noted that his work took him out all day and all the family members were also out working.) It was thought likely that married sister Elizabeth Stacey*** would take her in although eventually it was a different sister who would do so. Dr Hayman said then he thought Ellen unconscious. The local vicar Rev T Studholme*, a frequent visitor who had never found Ellen in any position other than her usual, thought she was conscious. 

Naturally the sceptics had predicted that Ellen would miraculously awake in her mother's death. Curiousity seems to have bought a few visitors again to the cottage in the immediate aftermath of Ann's death, which seems rather selfish an imposition to a grieving family. One anonymous visitor whose letter to a friend was quoted in the Reading Mercury says the girl had shown no awareness during the time of the funeral, although there had been a little extra perspiration to be seen on her forehead. He tells us her waist circumference at this point was a little over 9 inches. Any plumpness she had apparently developed was obviously gone. I remember being shown in the 80s a newspaper clipping about Ellen from the Reading Evening Post of 1968. This claimed an elderly woman of the village who was a child at the time of Ann's death, recalled that Ellen had jumped up, dressed herself and gone off to Henley on the day of Ann's funeral never to be seen again, none of which is true! The same paper thought Ellen had woken then gone to live with a neighbour for a few days and then left but as you can see there's ample evidence this was not the case. There's a reason I use only original sources!

The Wycombe Telegraph in 1875, whose reporter went with a medical man said Ann was "not averse to any fair test to ascertain whether her daughter was conscious". Many people took her temperature and respiration rate. The former was almost always very high, the latter roughly normal even though her breathing was feint. Another who returned in the same year, two years after an initial visit, thought he saw Ellen blink. This second visitor was also struck by the fact he thought Ellen had grown and was looking plumper. This shook his initial feeling that the case was genuine. 

A member of the Royal family, possibly the Prince of Wales was supposed by local gossip to have discretely made a visit but there's no contemporary evidence of this. But then what evidence would there be? 

Home secretary intervenes
It's said at some point the home secretary had wrote to Ellen's family reminding them they could face criminal charges if they failed to provide the necessities of life for Ellen. As no one could prove they weren't, nothing came of it. Ann admitted to a visitor she'd recieved the letter but as it wasn't his child, and he'd given nothing to them, it wasn't any of his business!

Ellen Awakes
After Ann's death, her sisters maintained the mums original routine at first. But then they increased the feeds from 3/4 to 5 times a day, then even more. Five months after Ann's death, Ellen began to show signs of consciousness. Small at first but gradually increasing. Progress was slow but she was able to sit up a little and talk a small amount after 2 further months. (Her initial contact had been to squeeze a hand to show she understood what was said to her.) She could remember her life before but nothing of the years spent asleep. If so, the news of her mother's death must have been quite a shock. Her language and mannerisms were described as quite childish despite the fact she was now 21 years old which is interesting. At first she could open only one eye, and the other would remain weak. Some said she had a permanently twitching or wandering eye. Dr Hayman wrote to update the Lancet and reporters again came to call while Messrs Johnson of Henley, photographers, arrived to record her image. 

At the time of the 1881 census she's living with Reuben and Grace and is described as an invalid. Also living with them is Ellen's youngest brother Eli**, born a twin but Samuel had died as an infant. (Her first brother to be called Eli had died, hence the reusing of the name) Two years later the Blackalls were still in the village but would eventually move away.

The news of Ann's death and Ellen's awakening came after a period of several years of silence about the family in the papers. That's not to say locals did not continue to take an interest, but as a money making ploy it seems to have continued long after public interest had moved on. 



Fakery?
As mentioned above very many people tried to catch out the family and did not succeed in doing so. It's hard to believe anyone could survive so long on a diet so restricted, gruel or no. However the first instance of Ellen's illness did not occur under her mother's roof but that of employees family. Ann also told some people that Ellen's father, and his brother had both suffered from prolonged if less extreme periods of unbroken sleep. In the case of the brother it was a week, and for the father one month or three weeks before his early death. A third said a brother of Ellen had spent 6 months in a drowsy state (according to others that was her uncle!) It's frustrating that no one seems to come forward to ever confirm or deny this. Some kind of genetic illness can't be ruled out if any of those stories were correct. Perhaps Ellen experienced more periods of wakefulness than her family wanted to admit while still suffering from an illness. 

Afterwards

After her awakening, Ann is supposed to have worked creating beadwork at home. She remained relatively small and slight but is said to have recovered adult manners and speech. 

It's wonderful to learn that Ellen was well enough to marry and subsequently have children of her own. She wed farm labourer Mark Blackall /Blackwell in 1886, brother to Reuben. They lived in Fawley, Barkham and Caversham, where Ellen died as an elderly lady in 1946. 

Other sleeping girls
One consideration mentioned related to the potential fakery of Ellen's illness is where the family got the idea from? Well sleeping girls feature often in the press in those years and before eg Sarah Carter of Stapleford was apparently fed via a quill during a long sleep in 1829 and French and German examples. 

Sleepers from a later period include the Canadian Eva Rock who was said to have been woken after a two month sleep in 1901 by means of  beating her skin with a needle- bristled brush made white hot! And the Cheltenham Sleeping Maid who died in 1897 shortly after being woken briefly when doctors blistered her neck. There are many, many more to be found, some subsequently exposed as hoaxes, many not. 

*Turville vicar Studholme would find himself engaged in a scandal himself in 1891. His son Robert was accused of forcibly seducing his father's young Sunday school teacher and  choir mistress Emma Ayres leaving her pregnant. She took him to court for maintenance and it was granted at the highest possible rate due to the magistrates considering it to be as General Higginson in the chair put it, "a most disgraceful case". 

**Eli Sadler spent a lot of time living around Medmenham and Hambledon and was a talented horseman and agricultural worker, winning many prizes in local shows for his ploughing, equestrian skills and vegetable growing. Several times in the Edwardian era he won prizes for having the neatest labourers cottage and garden. 

***Elizabeth Stacey was married to bricklayer William Stacey of Marlow and lived in Great Marlow many years. She had been living opposite Ellen at the time of Ann's death however. They returned to Marlow a short while later. In 1882 William was jailed for a violent assault in Eton Place - you can read more about this here

Written and researched by Kathryn Day. 

SOURCES:
Briggs, No Fear, No Favour (Bucks Free Press, 1986)

Woods, Horatio C jun, Nervous Disorders and their treatment: A Treatise (J P Lippincourt 1896)

Bucks Chronicle and Bucks Gazette  8th April 1854, 8 Mar 1873, 27 March 1875, British Library Archive. 
Bucks Advertiser and Aylesbury News, 3 July 1880, as above
Reading Mercury 30 December 1876,  5 June & 24 December 1880, 
Falkirk Herald 7 August 1880, as above. 
Henley Advertiser 26 Feb 1881 
Henley and South Oxfordshire Standard 31 July 1896;
Bristol Times and Mirror 3 March 1873, as above.

FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SGVR-4FM : 9 November 2019), Ann Sadler, Stokenchurch, Buckinghamshire, England; citing Stokenchurch, Buckinghamshire, England, p. 13, from "1851 England, Scotland and Wales census," database and images, findmypast (http://www.findmypast.com : n.d.); citing PRO HO 107,

FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M7V3-V51 : 3 March 2021)

England and Wales Marriage Registration Index, 1837-2005," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2D7Q-NTB : 13 December 2014), Elizabeth Sadler, 1864; from "England & Wales Marriages, 1837-2005," database, findmypast (http://www.findmypast.com : 2012); citing 1864, quarter 3, vol. 3A, p. 577, Wycombe, Buckinghamshire,

FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KXS5-BF1 : 26 June 2022),

South Wales Daily News 6 Feb 1875, as above
Boston Spa News  12 March 1875, as above. 
Birmingham Mail 1 July 1875 

The Courant collected edition 1875, internet archive.org. 

England and Wales Marriage Registration Index, 1837-2005," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2D5C-G9N : 13 December 2014), Grace Sadler, 1877; from "England & Wales Marriages, 1837-2005," database, findmypast (http://www.findmypast.com : 2012); citing 1877, quarter 4, vol. 3A, p. 809, Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, England, General Register Office, Southport, England

England and Wales Census, 1881," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q27Z-BZ46 : 13 December 2017), Ellen Sadler in household of Rueben Blackall, Ibstone, Buckinghamshire, England; from "1881 England, Scotland and Wales Census," database and images, findmypast (http://www.findmypast.com : n.d.); citing p. 1, Piece/Folio 1468/106, The National Archives, Kew, Surrey; FHL microfilm 101,774,607.

England and Wales Census, 1891," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:71PD-ST2 : 22 February 2021), Ellen Blackall in household of Mark Blackall, Barkham, Berkshire, England, United Kingdom; from "1891 England, Scotland and Wales census," database and images, findmypast (http://www.findmypast.com : n.d.); citing PRO RG 12, Berkshire county, subdistrict, The National Archives of the UK, Kew, Surrey.

Morning Herald, London 19 Jan 1829, as above. 

The Spiritualist, 19th Feb 1875, digitised by Google. 

The Lancet, collected edition 1880 & 1881.  

Reading Evening Post 28 November 1968. 

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