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Monday, October 27, 2025

Don't take that tea! Drinks in 1700s Marlow

 This is a companion piece to my Food in 1700s Marlow

The fact that a Marlow house had a well of its own was a fact worth advertising to potential buyers and tenants as the norm for Marlovian households was to share wells with multiple others. They would continue to do so even in the 1800s. The Thames was the only water access option for some. While their friends would sympathise with anyone in this situation this wasn't because they had to use river water as such- for some recipes it was thought superior- but because fetching it involved more of an effort. Rainwater was gathered but not thought suitable for all purposes.

A thirsty traveller might take a few gulps of cool water from a stream (such as those at nearby Bisham) to slake their thirst but plain water was otherwise far from bring a normal drink in the 1700s. What Marlovians wanted their water for, apart from the obvious washing and cooking usages, was for the making of either hot drinks or alcohol. 

Tea came exclusively from China at the time. It was drunk from a dish early in the century and from a cup later on. It could be bought either from the shops of specialist tea dealers, of which we have found none recorded in 1700s Marlow, or from grocers of which there were definitely plenty in the town.

Green tea including the worryingly named "gunpowder tree" was drunk as well as black tea.

Brass "kettles' were being manufactured at Temple by 1725. The term referred to multiple articles however not just the one we think of as for boiling water. Covered vessels for cooking certain foods such as fish were also "kettles" so it is not certain that tea kettles specifically were being produced there. Most middle income houses had multiple kettles for boiling water as well as cooking kettles. All of these were expensive items so could be left as individual gifts in wills. John Plater of Marlow in his 1737 will left his best kettle to his wife amongst other items. John Duck specifies the tea kettle that he wants to leave his servant is a tea kettle in the 1780s.

The increased use of tea improved recipe books (which you could have sourced from John Howe in Marlow High Street in the 1780s to name one known bookseller of the time). Writers could direct the home cook to add a teaspoon of this or a tea cup of that knowing that most households had those items to hand. Recipe instructions could still be bewilderingly imprecise to modern eyes however with plenty of recipes still containing directions to add simply "not too much" of one ingredient or "a good amount" of another one.

Brian Cowan in his book the Social Life Of Coffee writes that at the start of the century coffee sales far outstripped those of tea but increasingly lower prices for the latter saw it soon overtake it's rival. He also says that by the end of the century many working class families found themselves also able to afford some coffee as well as tea. No coffee house is known in Marlow before the 1800s though it would not be a tremendous suprise to find that there was one here. We know that Marlow men often visited London in the course of their business and there they could not have escaped the pull of the coffee house. The famous Garraways coffee tavern in London hosted the auction of a farm and property in Medmenham owned by William Clayton of Harleyford in 1786.

Green tea including the worryingly named "gunpowder tree" was drunk as well as black tea.

Brass kettles were being manufactured at Temple by 1725. The term referred to multiple articles however not just the one we think of as for boiling water. Covered vessels for cooking certain foods such as fish were also "kettles". Most middle income houses had multiple kettles for boiling water as well as cooking kettles. All of these were expensive items so could be left as individual gifts in wills. John Plater of Marlow in his 1737 will left his best kettle to his wife amongst other items. John Duck specifies the tea kettle that he wants to leave his servant is a tea kettle in the 1780s.

The increased use of tea improved recipe books (which you could have sourced from John Howe in Marlow High Street in the 1780s to name one known bookseller of the time). Writers could direct the home cook to add a teaspoon of this or a tea cup of that knowing that most households had those items to hand. Recipe instructions could still be bewilderingly imprecise to modern eyes however with plenty of recipes still containing directions to add simply "not too much" of one ingredient or "a good amount" of another one.

Coffee served in such premises is thought to have been made to a much lower strength than coffee today. The titles "coffee shop" or "coffee tavern" are a bit misleading. Other hot drinks and sometimes alcohol were also on the menu.

For those who found even weak coffee too much for their constitution a herbal equivalent marketed as "English Coffee" made from an unspecified mix of native plant leaves, bark and roots (probably including chicory and dandelion) could be procured for home use by the late 1700s. This was advertised in the 1780s in the Oxford Journal newspaper which was one of the only Marlow-covering newspapers available at the time and widely read in this town. Supporters of English Coffee had something of an evangelical zeal when promoting its properties. Mr J Lee of London published a treatise extolling it's virtues and trashing its rival beverages. Lee tells us that the regular drinking of foreign, as in true, coffee, rendered many Turks blind and paralyzed by the age of 40 and destroyed the stomachs of the French so that they became unable to gain nourishment from their food. One French nobleman was allegedly so enfeebled by drinking coffee he could no longer walk across a room before his wise physician banned him from coffee and thus reinvigorated him. Tea was singled out for even harsher criticism with Mr Lee quoting from the Commons speech of William Young in which it was  stated that "if the poorer sort of people made tea their constant food, there would be but few poor in the land in a very short time as nothing could so effectively shorten their days as that perniciously deadly herb tea". Young thought drinking tea as dangerous as drinking gin, which given the moral panic over gin drinking in the 1700s was saying quite something. Nervous disorders were quite unknown in England prior to the introduction of tea the pamphlet thundered. Now thanks to it people were becoming so enfeebled and nervous they could not work and were slowly dying from this slow acting poison. To buy English Coffee you had to visit a single supplier near St Paul's in London but the long term advertisement of the product in the Oxford local press suggests that this was a worthwhile expense for the manufacturer and that people were being drawn in by these ads and coming to London from the local area to buy it. The stagecoach from Marlow's Crown dropped you in Fleet Street within walking distance (providing you were not incapable of walking thanks to your coffee drinking that is) of St Paul's so if any of our townsfolk felt the urge to buy English Coffee, they could.

Hot chocolate was a luxury drink. It was rather different from our modern hot chocolates as it was usually made with the addition of beaten eggs. Often other thickeners such as ground almonds or pistachios were also included. These thickeners were added in such quantities that their hot chocolate sounds more like a thick sludge than a drink. You wonder how many supposedly dainty 1700s ladies accidently greeted their visitors with a "chocolate moustache"! And it was ladies that were characterized as particularly fond of the beverage. It was always drank spiced. Pepper and cinnamon formed the most common spice combination but some recipes added cardamon or ginger instead of the pepper.

The rich might drink chocolate at any time of day, including at breakfast. It was drunk from special chocolate cups and prepared in a dedicated chocolate pot. Before pouring out the mixture was whipped up in a chocolate mill. 

Home cooks usually prepared the drinks from "cocoa nuts" but ground cocoa was also available.

Hannah Glasse in her 1748 best selling cookbook offered a recipe for fake hot chocolate which I suspect fooled nobody. It was made from sweetened milk thickened with beaten eggs and flavoured with cinnamon. Probably quite nice but I don't think she and I would have been friends for very long if she served that up to me when I was expecting chocolate.

The desire to fake it came from the high cost of the product. A pound in weight of ground cocoa cost more than an agricultural labourers weekly wage. That was before you added the necessary expensive spices to it. 

Chocolate could be bought in the early 1790s from grocer come soap boiler Mr Rackshaw in Henley Market Place and no doubt from several retailers in Marlow itself too. Marlovians could also write directly to London cocoa suppliers to have the nuts sent directly to their homes.

Cow's milk as a stand alone beverage was seen as suitable for infants and invalids only. Almond milk was made in the 1700s as a beverage for the delicately stomached and was also used in cooking. The most common drink recommended for the sick was "beef tea" which was the strained water that beef had been boiled in. It's use as a home remedy for the weak would remain almost universal for more than a century after this era.

Lemonade was a still drink rather than a fizzy one in the 1700s. Charlotte Mason in her The Ladies Companion of 1777 offers up two recipes for it. Both included oranges as well as lemons. I've tried one of the recipes and it is delicious! 

The lemonade recipes contain sugar but hot drinks by no means necessarily did in the 1700s. The poor could not have afforded to use it and guides to hot beverage preparation, especially hot chocolate, aimed at the wealthier do not always suggest sweetening them. All sugar in this period came from the West Indies and was produced by slave labour.

For those that wished for a stronger beverage, larger Marlow houses were sometimes advertised as having their own detached brew houses. Borlase school trustees decided to build a "new" brewhouse to provide for the pupils at the northern end of the West Street schoolhouse in 1735. It was also still common for public houses and inns to brew ale and beer on their premises rather than to buy from a brewery. Mary Phillips later called Mary Dark through her second marriage, landlady at the Lower Crown in the High Street, was one such independent brewer. Her brewhouse was to the rear of inn.

Traces of the pubs and inns that existed in early 1700s Marlow are thin on the ground and you have to be vary wary of making the mistake of presuming that any pub is an old just because it occupies an old building. The conversion of an older house into a pub occurred all the time historically. We know that a the Crown in Market Square, existed from the dawn of the 1700s as did the Lower Crown aka Crown and Broad Arrow in the High Street, the Black Boy in the former Church Passage and the Three Tuns also in the High Street. An early pub called the Bear in the High Street is not recorded after 1735. Much later a pub of this name was re-established elsewhere in the town.

By the later 1700s much more information is available and we can say that the Ship and the Coach and Horses by those names were then trading in West Street. The Two Brewers in St Peter Street was well established as was the still very small Compleat Angler across the river. The little remembered Bowl and Pin nestled by the river. In Spittal Street the Greyhound existed under it's earlier name of the White Horse by the end of the 1700s. There was  earlier in the 1700s a pub of the same name in West Street. In Chapel Street sat the White Hart (landlords here). It is reasonably probable, though not certain, that the Jolly Maltsters in Dean Street, the Chequers in the High Street and a inn of an unknown name in Chapel Street were all already in existence by the end of the 1700s. 

Pubs in Marlow, especially the two Crowns were used for auctions of both residential and business properties as well as for the meetings of those organising the local road tolls. Tenants often met their landlords or their agents in pubs in order to pay over their rent. The Upper Crown was also the place to pick up sale particulars for any property being sold at auction elsewhere in the area.

Marlow had a brandy merchant in 1781, Henry Crockford, who was also a tallow chandler. Charlotte Mason advised her readers how to flavour purchased brandy with cherries, or more exotically, pineapples. At around the same time as Henry Crockford traded in Marlow, so too did Benjamin Moore as a wine and spirit merchant.

Housewives routinely made up their own wines from elderflowers, raspberries, currants, raisins, gooseberries, cherries, oranges, cowslips and, more unusually, birch sap. If supplies of all of the above failed one recipe book had a recipe for wine of .....turnips.

At well-to-do dinners the ladies remained for 15 minutes with the gentleman before withdrawing to take tea, coffee or chocolate. The men remained together consuming alcohol for a period before joining the ladies. If any 1780s Marlovians were stuck for a toast High Street bookseller John Howe sold a guide to them plus "bacchanalian" songs for rowdier gatherings. You can read more about what John Howe sold in Kathryn's post.

Wethered's Brewery started in the later 1700s (using water from the Thames!). At Little Marlow / Well End there were numerous Roses involved in brewing. When Ralph Rose junior retired from that business in 1773 all of his equipment was sold off. It included a horse powered wheel which would have been used either for grinding malt or pumping liquids. Usually this would be housed in a separate building within the brewing premises.

As well as drinking their beer 1700s people sometimes used a mixture of it and water to stew or boil meat, especially beef. Presumably this was for flavour's sake but it is hard to tell as cookery writers of the era rarely explain their recipes.

Researched and written by Charlotte Day. 

Related posts: Food in Victorian Marlow. More general Marlow history posts can be found listed in this Index. Posts specifically about 1700s people and places in Marlow are indexed here.

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


Some Sources:


London Metropolitan Archives, Record= CLC/B/192/F/001/MS11936/296/452209LevelItemDate1781 Nov 29 From collection ROYAL AND SUN ALLIANCE INSURANCE GROUP.

Oxford Journal March 1778. British Library Archives via the BNA. Reading Mer ury 26th November 1786 as previous.

Cowan, Brian. The Social Life of Coffee: The Emergence of the British Coffeehouse. Germany: Yale University Press, 2008.

Glasse, Hannah. The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy: Which Far Exceeds Any Thing of the Kind Yet Published, Containing ... to which are Added, One Hundred and Fifty New and Useful Receipts, and Also Fifty Receipts for Different Articles of Perfumery, with a Copious Index. United Kingdom: W. Strahan [and 25 others], First published 1748. I used the 1784 edition.

Roe, J. Lee. A Treatise on the English Coffee: With Catalogue of Cures Annexed. By J. Lee Roe. United Kingdom: Printed and published for the proprietor, no. 9, Silver-Street, Fleet-Street., 1778.

Will of John Plater, PCC, proved 1738. Transcribed by me from a copy held at the National Archives, Kew. Will of John Duck 1785, ditto.

The Lady's Companion: Or, an Infallible Guide to the Fair Sex. Containing, Observations for Their Conduct Thro'all Ages and Circumstances of Life: in which are Comprised All Parts of Good Housewifry, Particularly Rules, and Above Two Thousand Different Receipts in Every Kind of Cookery .. The Fourth Edition, with Large Additions. United Kingdom: T. Read, 1743.

Monday, October 20, 2025

Mary Church Will - Medmenham 1770

 Mary Church widow of Medmenham proved 4th October 1770.

[She was the widow of Thomas above].

Says sick and weak of body but of sound and perfect mind and memory.

She wishes to confirm and ratify a deed her husband and she lately made to ?declare? or ?..? the uses of a fine [not a fine in the modern sense but a property transaction].

To her youngest daughter Grace the featherbed, tables, chairs and all other furniture in the chamber testator now has.

Eldest son Thomas gets another bed in the hall chamber with the bedstead bolster and other furniture belonging to it [furniture in this context meant fittings and accessories]. 

All her children get equally share and share alike her stock, crops of corn, grain and hay, utensils and implements of husbandry, cattle, household goods, furniture, chattels and all other personal property after debts and funeral expenses paid. If any of the children express displeasure at this they lose their share.

Sons Thomas, Richard and Mark made the will's executors.

Mary made a mark rather than sign.

Witnesses =Leah Wood, Richard Jenkins,  Thomas Atkinson clerk to Mr Newell of Henley.

CODICIL written the same day.

She is seized of the fee simple of a messuage or tenement with a garden and appurtenances in the parish of Cookham which is let at £2 15 shillings a year. Two rooms and a pantry have lately been added to this property. Mary wills that her daughter Grace receives Mary's rental income and profit from this for her natural life. She is to pay a proportional part of the land tax that will be due on the property.

Witnesses as above.

Sons Thomas and Richard granted probate with third son Mark allowed to claim the same right if he came to the probate court and applied. It was not uncommon where multiple executors are named for only one or two of them to travel to the probate court to get the grant of probate, it presumably having been agreed between them that winding up the deceased estate didn't in fact need all of them and they trust each other enough for only some to act. It can also be because one of the executors was far away, unwell or infirm or just plain too busy by the time the testator died so no longer felt themselves to be a suitable executor. The court nevertheless always reserved them future power to execute if they were living unless they came to the probate hearing and formally renounced their role.

The will of her daughter Grace is already in the blog here. Mark, Grace's brother, features in this will.

Mary was the widow of farmer Thomas Church who died earlier the same year.

This will summary was created from Charlotte Day's transcription of the original p.c.c will held at the National Archives Kew.

We focus on Marlow but try to include some surrounding area content. Over 100 will summaries are available on this blog. See the Will Transcriptions Index. More Medmenham related posts are indexed here.

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

Monday, October 13, 2025

Rev S R Wilkinson - The man for treats and trips

 If there was one man in Victorian Marlow who did more than any other to bring a little fun into the lives of it's youngsters, rich and poor, it must be the Rev Sheldon Robert Wilkinson. Rev Wilkinson was the proud possessor of the means to show to the public "dissolving views" by his oxy hydrogen limelight. Before moving pictures, this was the most exciting way to see images. He was able to project the pictures on to a large screen in front of the audience. It involved a flame of a mixture of hydrogen and oxygen being used to heat a block of lime. Operating it was therefore something you had to be careful with as there was the potential for explosions to occur. The slide shows were accompanied by a narration (usually read by someone else, Wilkinson needed to concentrate on the light) and sometimes music. It's hard for us to understand just how popular these shows were, but they were a staple of school treats, lectures, and fundraising efforts for decades in Marlow. 


Son of a surgeon and apothecary 

Sheldon Robert Wilkinson was born in 1844 to surgeon and apothecary (as he was initially styled) Joseph Sheldon Wilkinson who was based in Marlow High Street. Wilkinson senior was originally in partnership with fellow surgeon George Rawden Robson but they parted ways and the latter went bankrupt in 1865. Sheldon spent his early childhood in Marlow before moving away to  boarding school followed by Oxford university. When he was ordained, he had to wait for an appointment as a curate or assistant curate and there was not yet a vacancy at Marlow. It was said in a newspaper article on Sheldon's death that his return to Marlow dated from the death of his father in 1861 but while he may have done so for a while he was serving as a curate at Colnbrook in 1871. In this year his mother Abiah died in Brighton where she had retreated in the vain hope of improving her health.  A few months Sheldon begins to pop up regularly in Marlow records so I think the newspaper obituary previously mentioned may have muddled which parents death precipitated Sheldon's full time return to Marlow. He would serve as assistant curate, then curate at Marlow with stints assisting in neighbouring parishes too including Hambledon and Bisham. He was unusual for being a man of the cloth who was a native of the area he was spiritually serving. 

Fun and games for young and old 

I've mentioned that there was scarcely any celebration in Marlow where you could not find Sheldon wielding his magic lantern. If your ancestor went to the national schools or Sunday schools, they would have probably seen a lot of the man. He seems to have been fond of children as he was constantly organizing entertainments for them for the slimmest of reasons. The young lads who were part of the church choir were probably the most fortunate. While it was common for them to receive an annual treat even before Sheldon arrived back in town, he certainly upped the scale of the entertainments. For example in 1873 he hosted the boys at his own home for tea and supper, interspersed with cricket matches, a show of dissolving views and ending in a pyrotechnic display at which the boys were given squibs and crackers to throw about. The day ended with "bumpers of punch" and three cheers for Rev Wilkinson. Not perhaps something that would pass the health and safety requirements these days! And no this wasn't the only time Sheldon liked to treat the young people to some alcohol - he gave them champagne at the 1875 celebration. All of these treats and many others such as  magicians performance for Sunday school children, were paid for entirely out of his own funds. 


The older residents were treated to Sheldon's images at more serious minded lectures and talks, usually in the music room (now the Masonic centre) or the boys school room (church hall, Causeway). In 1875 for example he illustrated a lecture by T S Cocks on the habits of wild animals by showing images of those captive in Regents Park zoo. This was followed by coloured photos taken by celebrated Paris photographers Messrs Ferrier of European capital cities, then an illustrated whimsical story. This was all to raise funds for the church organ fund. On another occasion he supported Marlow's famous engineer Edwin Clark* by illustrating a lecture on bridges, and on another he provided the images for a 4 part course on botany for the Mutual Improvement Society.  


One place you would not find Sheldon providing entertainment were at any of the many non Church of England Sunday schools in town. He was not a supporter of non conformity but of course many of the events he participated were open to all. He was however friendly with Marlow's Roman Catholic priest Canon Bernard Smith***, to whom he was apparently related. 


Other entertainments paid for by Sheldon include seaside trips (also for the choir) and gifts of buns and oranges for poor children at Christmas. He was also an enthusiastic participant in the "Penny Readings" at Marlow & Bovingdon Green where for a penny you got to hear readings of famous books and poems, often with a song thrown in. Sheldon usually contributed Dickens excerpts. 


Sheldon the bee keeper 

When not showing off his dissolving views, Sheldon could be found in the garden of End House tending his bees. He was passionately interested in the subject as he believed that amongst other things it was a usual appendage to a working man's income - always supposing they could afford to get started if course. In 1879 he offered for sale a hive complete with bees for £3 15s. He was obviously successfully at beekeeping as one of his hives was reported to have produced 100lbs of honey in 1895. Unsurprising he walked away with first prize for honey at the Marlow Horticulture Society show that year. His main rival in the show tent was George Sawyer**, but it was a friendly one as he actually employed George as his gardener in 1897 and eventually as assistant bee keeper. George also kept an eye on other Marlow hives for their owners and actually made them too. 


A Farewell

Rev Sheldon died of flu in Marlow in 1900, one of a number of people to do so. He never married. He left a generous gift of £1000 to Marlow Cottage Hospital which was a very large amount at the time. His obituary of course mentioned his extensive collection of "stethoscopic views" . Only a month before his death he had demonstrated a new and expensive magic lantern to the children of Oxford Road infants school, as part of their Christmas party. His "genial and happy disposition" was also mentioned which seems fitting for a man who made so many others lives more fun..


Written and researched by Kathryn Day. 

*More about Edwin Clark and his family is available here

** George Sawyer was well known as a member of the Victorian Volunteer Marlow fire brigade. You can read about the brigade here

***A biography of Canon Bernard Smith is available on the blog here


Related information

To search for every mention if any individual on this blog, use the A-Z person index in the top drop down menu. 

For an index of other posts relating to clergy and churches and chapels of Marlow see here


SOURCES:

Census 1851-1891 from the transcripts of Jane Pullinger, from censuses held at the National Archives.

Marlow Directory and Almanack 1891

Kelly's Directory of Buckinghamshire  etc, Kelly's Directories Limited 1854 & 1883 editions.

Buckinghamshire Express 9th December 1871, via the BNA.

South Bucks Free Press 3rd October 1873. Via the Bucks Free Press Archives.

Bucks Herald 23rd Jan 1875 , 24th Jan 1878, via the BNA.

Reading Mercury 5th April 1879, 29th October 1881. British Library collection.

Bucks Advertiser and Aylesbury News 28th May 1883. British Library collection.

South Bucks Standard - October 9th 1891, August 9th 1895, February 17th & December 8th 1899,  February 1st 1901

Globe, London 1 Feb 1901.

© Marlow Ancestors

Monday, October 6, 2025

Edwardian / WW1 Trinity Road and Trinity Place Part Two

Part One dealt with the odd numbers in this street and is available here. This part contains the even numbered homes and their residents as well as those people whose exact address, odd or even, is not known.

Trinity Road was previously Gun Lane and at times during the Edwardian era was also referred to as "Trinity Lane". Trinity Place was a small cul de sac which lead off Trinity Road and was previously known as Gun Place. It was at times numbered as if it was part of Trinity Road, and sometimes as a separate entity*

This was poor area with most homes consisting of just three rooms (kitchen come family room downstairs and two bedrooms above). Piped water arrived here at the close of the 1800s but not before the only well for the residents had already run dry. Life here was tough and there is some distressing content below which may involve your own particular family.

All the homes listed below were demolished long ago.

It is likely some residents have been missed due to the rapid tenant turnover in poorer streets. We will endeavour to add in anyone found to be missing as research opportunities permit.

Even numbered* properties were on the right as you came in from Dean Street. Numbers given as they were then=

2.) Charlotte (bn circa 1845) and Joseph Budd (bn circa 1848). He worked at the gasworks in nearby Cambridge Road as did sons John and Walter who lived at home. Charlotte's 62 year old maternal cousin, Alfred White who also lived in Trinity Road at an unknown address but likely with Charlotte sadly took his own life by hanging in 1907. His body was found by a telegraph boy in the yard of Mr Lovell the builder (off the High Street). Charlotte gave evidence in the resulting inquest. She said that she thought Alfred intellectually impaired. He was deaf and had trouble speaking. As a result of this he had been known as "Dummy White". Earlier in his life Alfred had spent time in jail for stabbing George Grace in the arm following a quarrel. By coincidence George had also died by his own hand in Marlow Fire Station. Alfred had become depressed due to unemployment. Instead of help in his worries he had been prosecuted at Maidenhead for threatening to do away with himself on a previous occasion.

Joseph and Charlotte Tubb's daughter Jane features in the Edwardian Trinity Road post Part One.


4.) This brick and tile house formed a pair with no.6. Thomas and Eliza Barnes and their children then Clara and Amos Moody with their children, followed by a Mr Beaver. 

Thomas Barnes was a bricklayer born circa 1860/61. Eliza was born circa 1863, and was nee Cook.  Thomas was earlier in his life attacked in Trinity Road by two men from other Marlow streets. Amongst the projects that he worked on as a bricklayer was the building of the Salvation Army chapel in Crown Road. This was later rebuilt and is now a daycare nursery. The family moved to Chapel Street by 1911. 

Clara and Amos Moody were both born around 1866. Both spent at least some of their childhoods in nearby Dean Street. Amos was the son of John and Elizabeth Moody, Clara the daughter of Caleb and Elizabeth Boot. Clara and her living-at-home daughter Ada were both laundresses when they lived in Edwardian Trinity Road. Amos worked at the paper mills in the Edwardian era but had been a farm worker as a young man. Amos's sister Jane had a very troubled and sad life. She may have lived in Trinity Road for a while early in the Edwardian era with her husband. A full biographical post about her is already on the blog (distressing) here.


6.)Frederick and Charlotte Bailey and their children, then H Tubb, then labourer William Henry Tubb with his wife Mary and their children.

Frederick Bailey was born circa 1866 and Charlotte in circa 1865. Frederick was a drayman at the brewery. Charlotte died in 1909 following a strange incident where a varicose vein in her leg ruptured when she was out at night near the Plough in Wycombe Road. Instead of getting help from the pub or nearby houses Charlotte made her way home, bleeding. Her daughter Annie fetched the doctor. Police from the police station in Trinity Road as they had first aid training but nothing could save Charlotte and she quickly passed away. How her leg came to be injured was investigated. She had just parted company from her husband at that time (he perhaps intending to visit the Plough?). To one person she said someone had kicked her in the leg. To others she said she had just knocked it herself. A trail of blood lead to a horse trough by the Plough but no further conclusions could be arrived at. 

Charlotte was born Charlotte Bowles, the daughter of George and Ann Bowles of Dean Street.

After Charlotte's death Frederick moved with his children away from Trinity Road and became a gardener. They lodged at the Black Horse, Chapel Street. As a teenager Frederick had had to pay a one shilling fine for gambling at cards with his friends in the "recreation ground" (Gossmore). A less controversial teenage hobby of his was playing football for the Marlow Star football team who played in Star Meadow, off Wycombe Road, very close to Trinity Road. He was their captain in 1886.

Mary Tubb was born circa 1888 and William Henry around 1884. 

This house was a brick and tile building which formed a pair with number 4.


8.) In 1907 Samuel Macklow /Mucklow a bricklayer and probable former soldier who was born around 1854 in Worcester and his wife Ann aka "Annie". This Annie was one of the neighbors who rushed to help the dying Charlotte Bailey of no 6 above in 1909. Samuel and Annie lived in Dean Street in 1902 when they were fined with other of the street's residents for abusing and violently assaulting a Bristol man who had come into the town to do a job at the brewery and was lodging in Dean Street. Other outsiders were also employed on the same job and staying in the lodging houses along there. This caused huge resentment amongst the Marlow men who felt work which was rightfully theirs was being stolen from them by strangers. One of the accused Marlow women stabbed the Bristol man with a knife during the fracas but it wasn't clear to the court exactly which woman was responsible. This incident wasn't the first time that Samuel had been convicted of disorderly conduct.

Niece Gladys Sewell was also in household of the Mucklows. She was the daughter of Walter and Elizabeth Sewell of Dean Street and granddaughter of Edwin Sewell who lived at no 12 Trinity Road. See below.


10.) In 1907 Mr G Armstrong, then agricultural labourer John Lovegrove born circa 1861, his widowed sister in law Jane Rockell and Jane's widowed daughter Henrietta Bidmead, a laundress. In 1909 Jane died from heart disease and an ulcerated leg after refusing medical treatment. John found her dead in bed when he came home from work. At some time between 1911 and 1915 both John and Henrietta left this house. Henrietta moved to number 13 on the other side of the street. She was born a Rockell in around 1871 and married William Henry Bidmead.


12.) This property was condemned and demolished in 1932 Edwin Sewell born circa 1846-49 who had come to Marlow from Rickmansworth Hertfordshire as a child with his parents. He moved from Dean Street Marlow to Trinity Road between 1901 and 1905. Wife Ada. Daughter Alice when married lived at no 22, see below. Granddaughter was Gladys Sewell who lived at no 8 Trinity Road.


14.) This property was condemned and demolished in 1932 Hannah Burt an unmarried laundress born around 1871. Her agricultural labourer brother Joseph lived with her as did, early in the era, her elderly mother Harriett. The latter was the widow of Thomas Burt and had raised her children in the Hamlet of Monday Dean near Marlow, at Ragman's Castle on the outskirts of the town, at Boulter End, Flackwell Heath and in Dean Street Marlow. She and her husband were evicted from their Dean Street home in 1897 and may have moved to Trinity Road as a result. She was deaf by the late 1880s. Thomas died early in 1901, before the census. He had been a labourer. Harriett died in 1903. She was at marriage Harriett Boddy. Emma, daughter of Thomas and Harriett appears amongst the inhabitants of Trinity Road without an assigned house number. See at the end of the house listings below.


16.) Also known as 1 Trinity Place Thomas and Ann "Annie" Rockell  and their children. Thomas was born circa 1849 and Ann in around 1850-2. Probable maiden name Frith. Long term Trinity Road residents as a couple and it looks like Ann spent part of her childhood there too.


18.) Also known as 2 Trinity Place Mrs Ann Goodchild, widow born circa 1846. Came from West Wycombe. Her labouring son William James lived with her. Earlier in her widowhood Ann had worked as a chair caner in Marlow.


20.) Also Known as 3 Trinity Place George and Louisa "Lewey" Budd and their children. Early on in the era James Bowles who was described as George Budd's brother in law (born circa 1848) also resided here. George Budd was an agricultural labourer and born circa 1874. Louisa was born circa 1878, the daughter of William and Ann Bowles. James Bowles was marked on the 1901 census as deaf from birth.


22.) Also Known as 4 Trinity Place Thomas Turner and his wife Elizabeth and their children, then in 1907 the newly married couple Robert and Alice Armstrong who had several children in this house, then R Stroud. 

Thomas Turner was a labourer born circa 1866 and Elizabeth in circa 1873. They moved to Chapel Street before 1911.

Robert and Alice Armstrong were both born around 1882. He was a house painter. Alice was nee Sewell, the daughter of Edwin Sewell who lived at no 12. The family later moved to Oxford Road. 


24.) Also known as 5 Trinity Place James and Louisa Cook and their children. James was a bricklayer's labourer born circa 1866. Louisa was born 1870. One of the children was Edith who was found along with other young laundry hands to have been working longer hours than legally permitted at Quarry Laundry in 1908. They started at 8am and should have finished at 4pm but instead ended their working day at 5.30pm. Her employer was fined. It is unknown whether this extra work was actually welcomed as an opportunity by Edith or whether she was being exploited.


26.) Also Known as 6 Trinity Place. Thomas and Mary Langley then Arthur and Beatrice Bowles, then Beatrice Bowles as a widow.

Thomas Langley was born around 1867 and Mary in around 1868. He was a labourer. She was nee Mary Louisa Edwards. She spent her childhood in Trinity Road. Her parents were Caroline and James Edwards.

Arthur Frederick Bowles was a gardener born circa 1884. He was a casualty of the first world war, dying in hospital at Bedford of pneumonia in 1918. He had served in the Labour Corps according to the newspaper reports as to his death and the Oxford and Bucks Light Infantry according to his grave. As a teenager Arthur was found to have stolen some partridge eggs from private property. One of his co-accused was Thomas Rockell son of Thomas and Ann Rockell of no 16 above.

Beatrice Bowles was at her 1907 marriage to Arthur Beatrice Usher.


Residents whose house numbers are unknown or questionable=

Florence Collier and her children resident 1912. She was fined for swearing at them.

Charles and Mary Edwards. Residents 1901. He born circa 1870 and she in 1871. They had with them "adopted child" Dorothy Bright born circa 1897.

Sophia Edwards resident 1901 Trinity Road. Born circa 1834. Widow of William Edwards. Had lived in Trinity Place in 1895 and Trinity Road earlier. Kept pigeons in her back yard.

Mrs Harriett Elizabeth Groves who slit her throat with a razor in what was ruled as a fit of "temporary insanity" in 1911. She was taken to the Cottage Hospital but could not be saved. Wife of Alfred Groves, a labourer. Harriett was Harriett Ford at marriage. She was in her 27th year when she died.

Henry and Emma "Emily" Harris who lived Trinity Road on the 1901 Census with Mary Ann Burt age 20, Henry's stepdaughter and their other children. Henry Harris is not to be confused with the close-in-age Henry Harris, saddler and harness maker of Spittal Street. Henry of Trinity Road (bn circa 1857-59) was a worker at the brewery while his wife Emma (bn circa 1857) was a furrier. The family including Mary Ann Burt left Marlow for Langley Marish in Bucks where Henry worked as a farm carter by 1911. Emma was nee Burt and though born in Flackwell Heath had spent some of her childhood in Marlow. Her sister and widowed mother both lived at no 14 Trinity Road, see above. Emma was a servant as a teenager.

Sarah Ann and Joseph Hiscock. Trinity Road residents in 1909 but in Dean Street by 1911. Some of their children were born in Winchester Hampshire. Joseph was that classic Dean Street occupation - a vegetable hawker. Sarah worked at Quarry Laundry. When the owner went bankrupt in 1910 he owed money to many of his employees including Sarah. The court ordered him to pay them.

Alfred and Elizabeth Hopgood both originally of Reading lived in this street in 1911 but had left the town by 1915. Alfred was born around 1863 and was a building labourer. 

Mary Loftin born circa 1835 resident of Trinity Road 1901. Mary was a widow who worked as a charwoman. On the census she says that she was born at Bledlow Ridge. She died in 1907. Widow of William Loftin a gas / engine fitter. The couple were also living in Trinity Road at the time of his death in 1896 and previously. They had married late in life in 1890 when both were already widowed and so had no children together. Mary Ann was at the time of her second marriage the widow of farm worker Joseph Martin. William Loftin had been the lodger in their Trinity Road home.

William Moody who was a resident in 1916 when he was fined 10 shillings for having no light on his cart.

Sarah Slade resident 1901 age 62 with her 24 year old son. Widow of Charles Slade. She had lived in Trinity Road for many years. Charles was fined for being drunk and disorderly in Trinity Road in 1895.

Ada and Eli Smith with their children who moved to Marlow circa 1911 from Wooburn. She worked in a paper mill at Wooburn even after she moved to Marlow  and he was by trade a builder's labourer. This family suffered severe hardship due to Eli's continued unemployment. He was imprisoned for child cruelty at the behest of the NSPCC because of the deprivation the children experienced. The court seemed sceptical about his attempts to provide for them while recognizing that Ada worked very hard. It isn't clear if she actually lived at home during the working week. She told the court that her working hours meant she could not see to things at home anyway. She had sold her clothes and bedding so that the children could eat. Nevertheless the children suffered from vermin, sores, uncleanliness and a lack of education because they had no clothes in which to attend school. The Inspector from Marlow Police Station in Trinity Road collected donations of clothes for the children from other Marlovians. There was virtually no furniture in their "filthy" home, and no fire in winter. The court ordered Ada against her wishes to place the children in the Union Workhouse until their home situation improved and so they could be intensely treated. If she did not take them to the workhouse she too would be jailed, despite the NSPCC saying they did not think any charges against her should be pressed.

Wages were low in this period giving families little chance to save money for emergencies. Children being unable to attend school because they didn't have a full set of clothes still, shockingly, occurred in Marlow in the 1940s. The court's apparently sceptical attitude towards Eli should be taken with some reservations. The privileged men who sat in judgement generally subscribed to the view that you could always find work if you wanted to and that all poverty must be the victim's fault. That those working could be paid so little they could neither fulfill their family's wants nor save for when they weren't in work wasn't within their understanding. Eli, while not in paid employment, made rag rugs which the children hawked in the town, so he was hardly idle. See above under house number 2 for a case of the suicide of an unemployed man. The Smiths moved to Dean Street by February 1912. Ada was at marriage Ada Priest. 

Private Thomas Stroud son of Henry and Sarah Stroud of Trinity Place was killed in action in December 1914 while serving with the Royal Berkshires. He died instantly after being shot in the heart. The news of his death broke locally early the next year. He was also said to be a resident of Trinity Place then.


*Note= Marlow was beyond terrible at organizing street numbering, displaying house numbers, or making sure everyone knew what number they lived at. Some people refused to acknowledge the fact that their home had been officially renumbered and carried on using the old number. Others don't ever seem to have understood what their house's number was even after it was officially given one. Some people without moving house would give a different number for their home every different time they were asked, based presumably on guesswork. I often have to use multiple sources to repopulate an Edwardian street in this town reliably.

Researched and written by Charlotte Day.

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


Similar Posts 

Victorian residents of Trinity Cottages Jeremiah and Emma Harding here

General earlier history of Trinity Road here

Edwardian St Peter Street here.

Edwardian Cambridge Place here

Edwardian Spittal Street and Spittal Square Part One here and Part Two here

Edwardian wedding gifts in Marlow here


Some Sources=

Marlow Town Guide and Almanack 1907 and 1915 editions. Marlow Printing Company.

Bucks Herald February 16th 1916. Reading Mercury Nov 26th 1884 both British Library Archives, via the BNA.

South Bucks Standard and 22nd Feb 1907 , 13th August 1909 and July 8th 1910.

Reading Mercury 16th Nov 1918. Copy at the British Library.

Bucks Free Press Feb 16th 1912, Bucks Free Press Archives.

All 1901 census from the microfilm transcriptions of Jane Pullinger, with thanks.

"England and Wales, Census, 1911", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:X7VP-JRQ : Thu Feb 13 06:47:46 UTC 2025), Entry for Eli Smith and Ada Smith, 1911.

https://buckinghamshireremembers.org.uk/php_scripts/bksidget.php?id=5578

"England and Wales, Census, 1911", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:X7VL-H36 : Thu Feb 13 16:47:53 UTC 2025), Entry for Henry James Harris and Emma Harris, 1911.

"England and Wales, Census, 1911", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:X7VP-JRS : Thu Feb 13 06:35:45 UTC 2025), Entry for Alfred Hopgood and Elizabeth Hopgood, 1911.

"England and Wales, Census, 1871", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QKZ2-ZW5S : Tue Oct 08 17:32:05 UTC 2024), Entry for Thomas Burt and Harriett Burt, 1871.

"England and Wales, Census, 1911," , FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:X7VP-NLV : 22 July 2019), Frederick Henry Edward Bailey in household of Thomas Blewitt, 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.

1905 Williams estate sale papers, copy kindly provided by Adam Baxter of the Marlow Society.

GRO Birth, marriage and death registration indexes, GRO online. Except Marriage of Henry Harris and Emma Burt which was Find My Past https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=BMD%2FM%2F1883%2F3%2FAZ%2F000128%2F092

Personal interview, rent receipt.

PHOTO ID ANYONE?

 Can anyone help a fellow family history researcher Linda identify where this staff photo may have been taken in Marlow? Underneath are some...