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Showing posts with label MacLean. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MacLean. Show all posts

Sunday, October 17, 2021

The Stewart Forgery Scandal

 

This grave was erected by James Cranborne Strode esq of Court Garden House in Marlow, for his loyal servant John Stewart who died Mar 13th 1827, age 65. Note: Strode said he had put the age of 65 on the grave as a sort of "best guess" from what Stewart had told him of his life. A brighter image is below.


John was the gardener at Court Garden and the aftermath of his death seemingly without an obvious inheritor caused a sensational criminal case. He was Scottish, unmarried and died without a will. He had spoken of a brother but nothing had apparently been heard of this relative for some time, some believing him dead, others that he had long ago emigrated to America. Some years passed with no one claiming Stewart's estate, which included some valuable stocks. His personal belongings, including receipts relating to the purchase of the stocks were sent to the Strode family attorney Mr Pickering of London, for safe keeping and there they remained. The laws at the time meant that if no dividends were claimed on stocks for 10 years, the unclaimed money, and the stocks themselves were transferred to a fund for paying off the national debt. This is what happened at first to that belonging to Stewart. But relatives could claim them back under certain circumstances.  This gave rise to a woman purporting to be Elizabeth, a previously unknown sister of the deceased, and Stewart's sole heir.  She claimed to have recently returned from America, where she had gone many years before with her aunt. On arriving back in Bristol, she had asked a family friend named Mr Jones who had accompanied her on the return from America, to travel down to Marlow and deliver a letter to her long lost brother. This he attempted to do but on making enquiries found that Stewart had died. He returned to the sister, delivered the news and then returned to America. Elizabeth claimed the money and stocks back with the help of 36 year old solicitor William Henry Barber. 


Or so Elizabeth's story went. But Jones was really Joshua Fletcher and the enquiries he made at Marlow were not to trace a long lost brother for his friend, but to gain information to establish a false claim to the estate. He used what the locals told him to invent a sister, and got a Mrs Richards to play the part. He provided a birth register entry for  the brother and sister, using what is believed to be a real John and Elizabeth Stewart, only ones born in Marleybone rather than Scotland. 


Suspicion was raised when "Elizabeth" on receiving the £630 in the form of a cheque from a stockbroker on the sale of the stocks, asked for all of it to be transferred immediately into gold. The stockbroker had not had such a request with such a large sum before as people usually preferred ready money.  But solicitor Barber laughed this off, claiming his clients were foolish, and apprehensive of a war so preferred the security of gold. Then both Fletcher and Barber were involved in two other similar cases involving forged wills and the impersonation of a missing beneficiary. Fletcher, Barber, Mrs Richard's two married daughters Georgianna Dorey and Lydia Sanders (Saunders) and son in law fishmonger William Sanders were all arrested for involvement in one or more of the frauds. The trials followed each other, with "Elizabeth" (Mrs Richards) dying before they began. 


A number of Marlow men went to London to give testimony about the questions asked by "Jones" - namely William Windsor, James McLean and William Holmes. Chief among them though was Greyhound landlord Henry Hyatt. He also said that solicitor Barber had visited Marlow under a false name. ("Clarence Peckham") although he had given his correct address in London and Hyatt had visited him there when on business in the City. The prosecution said Barber was fully involved with the fraud, but he said he had acted in good faith and after all "Elizabeth" had been granted administration of her alleged brothers affairs. He denied using a false name and claimed innkeeper Hyatt was misremembering old events. When arrested, letters written by "Jones" to a Scottish parish asking for a certificate relating to a marriage register entry were found in Barbers papers. This was significant as Jones had asked for the entry to be altered so it matched the details on the birth records for the Marleybone brother and sister which he had used to prove Elizabeth's claim. He said the mothers name should be changed for Janetta to Jane as it was the English version. The Scots refused. It seems the fraudsters had been caught on the hop by the fact Stewart was clearly Scottish when they claimed an English birth for the siblings. 


Stewarts former employer, Strode said he had never heard of a sister. His solicitors had initially refused to co operate with Barber as he had not provided the birth certificates (certified entry of birth register) he asked for. But on being presented with the fact Elizabeth was granted administration they handing over the documents in their keeping. When Barber then tried to claim for unpaid wages for the long dead Stewart from Strode, he wrote back to say he did not believe in the sisters claim and nothing further was heard. Barber said this was because the amount owed was not significant. 


All were found guilty except Barber in the matter relating to Stewart. But it was different when the court got to the second fraud case, relating to an Ann Slack. I won't go into detail of this, but the result was that this time the court did not believe Barber acted in innocence, and he was found guilty along with all the others bar William Sanders who nevertheless plead guilty relating to a third fraud.  Barber was sentenced to transportation for life along with Fletcher and I believe he was actually sent to Van Diemens Land. But he was then granted a pardon, which caused outrage in some quarters. Barber was however then struck off on the basis of wilful blindness about the antics of his clients. The fact he was in possession of a letter from them asking for evidence to be tampered with (the Scots marriage record in the Stewart case) was regarded as especially damning. William Sanders was sentenced to 7 years transportation and Lydia Sanders and Georgianna Dorey to two years imprisonment each. It was believed to be Lydia who - not very convincingly - acted as the "aged" Elizabeth at the stockbrokers and Bank of England, the older Mrs Richards being in poor health. 


It does not seem that Stewart's real sibling ever was traced. "Jones" was taken to see the gravestone in Marlow Churchyard that is shown above and made note of the inscription that you can still just about be read. So this is the story behind the innocuous grave. 



- Sacred to the Memory of John Stewart who died March 13th 1827 aged 65 years. "Erected by order of James Cranborne Strode of Court Garden to whom he was a faithful and attached servant". 


More crime related posts can be found under the General Marlow History menu  here

All mentions of someone on the blog can be found listed on the Person Index in the top drop down menu. There are now over 6,000 people mentioned there. 

Some images of other graves erected in the memory of faithful servants in Marlow can be found here


 SOURCES

John Bull, Vol 24 (J C Bunney 1844)

The Spectator Vol 17 1844, digitized by Google. 

The Legal Observer Digest and Journal Vol 40, (Spettigue and Farrance 1850) 

The Examiner: A weekly paper on politics, literature, music, and fine arts. 1844. Bavarian State Library, digitized by Google. 

Carrington, Frederick Augustus. Reports on cases argued and rulex Nisi Prisi .. (S Sweet, 1844)


©Marlow Ancestors. 

Monday, July 19, 2021

Many Female Ironmongers

 There was an ironmongers in Marlow High Street [Great Marlow] when I was a very small child. Little did I realise then that the building had been used for that trade for well over 150 years by that time.

First known occupier of the premises was James Maclean in 1824. In 1833 his premises consisted of a house, shop, and garden with an annual value of £13. He married twice, the second time to Elizabeth who according to her obituary was born at Munday Dean Farm.

James was a brazier and tin plate worker as well as an ironmonger. He died in 1860 as an old (nearly or a little over 80) and "much respected inhabitant" of the town the Reading Mercury newspaper said.

His wife Elizabeth took over the shop full time. She was one of the first Marlow inhabitants to buy shares in the Great Marlow Railway Company which brought trains to the town.

In 1884 13 year old George Cook alias Payne was sentenced to 10 days hard labour for obtaining a knife from her by false pretences. The next year William Harrison got a month's hard labour for stealing eight pairs of gloves from her premises worth a shilling each. Presumably these were work gloves of some kind. 

Elizabeth was by then advanced in age and by 1888 her niece Susanna Goldswain was shop manager for her. Susanna had lived with her aunt and uncle for some years, probably always assisting in the business.

Elizabeth died in 1890 age 92. She, her husband James and niece Susanna are all memorialised on the same gravestone in the churchyard of All Saints, Marlow. 

Another female ironmonger was soon in the premises - widow Eliza Newman. What experience she had in ironmongery is uncertain, her husband Charles* had been a brewer's clerk at Wethered's Brewery further down the High Street before his premature death at the age of 48. Whether she was a fast learner or did have some kind of previous experience Eliza made a success of the shop in the few years she ran it before retiring to live in Glade Road with her son Charles Junior. It is noted that Eliza herself was behind the counter the majority of the time - she had not merely put her name to the business. While she retired from actively running the shop by the 1901 census the business continued as "Newman and Chalk". Eliza's daughter Mary had married gardener Sidney Chalk and he was now behind the counter. Sidney's and Mary's son Cyril was a prominent local historian who very kindly when I was only about 3 years old allowed me to go upstairs in this shop and view my first historic photos of Marlow, from his personal collection thus helping to spark my passion for local history. 


Above, Eliza Newman's former premises. 


And in an ad from 1905. 



Sidney Chalk successfully sued the railway company in 1902 after he had a nasty fall at Bourne End Station on his way onto the Marlow train. The £95 damages were substantial for a trip fall at that time. The station was poorly lit and the carriage had pulled in, unusually, more than a foot from the platform without there being any warning to be careful given to passengers. It's surprising that no one else had an accident on the same gloomy evening! Sidney was on his way home from a Unionist political meeting in Slough at the time.

Eliza Newman died in 1906. The shop continued as an ironmongers for long afterwards.


*The mother of Charles was née Goldswain so that it is likely that the Maclean and Newman families were relatives at least of sorts.

Eliza Newman was née Haines. She was daughter of Elizabeth and James Haines of High Street Marlow. Her dad was a boat builder and engineer, who has a dedicated post here

Post written and researched by Charlotte Day.

To find all mentions of a person on this blog see the Person Index.

To see another historic ironmongers premises, see here.

You can find the historic occupiers of other shops and houses in Marlow by looking on the "Specific Shops, Streets Etc" option on the menu or under Pub Related for hotels, pubs, beer sellers and inns.

Some Sources:

Reading Mercury 28th Jan 1860. Bucks Herald 21st June 1890 and 1st February 1900.Buckingham Examiner 12th April 1884. Copies held at the British Library and accessed by me via the BNA April 2021.

Original property records held by my family and transcribed by me.

Census 1841-91. Transcribed by me from microfilm.

Marriage certificates.

GRO Death Registration Index. 

©Marlow Ancestors. You are very welcome to reuse this content for family or local history purposes with credit to this blog and a link here so that me and my sources remain credited. Thanks!


Sunday, November 22, 2020

1833 Great Marlow Parochial Assessment Part Two

 Updated by Charlotte October 2023

The original handwritten working notebooks used to compile the parochial assessment have been in my family for a time but are now very fragile so I thought I'd better transcribe them for posterity. The books were used for corrections to this information up to circa 1839 and include slotted in correspondence on the issue.

This is part 2 of many parts dealing with the houses and buildings. 

Post by Charlotte Day.

©Marlow Ancestors. You are very welcome to quote from / use this transcription for family and local history purposes with credit to this blog.


Town houses and buildings

High Street, West side continued


Format is =

Name

Description of property

Annual value


Any notes or comments from me in square brackets


John Meadows [a draper. Retired 1839]

Dwelling house and garden

£8

Stable and loft 

10 shillings

Barn

£1

Shops and dwelling house

£14

*****

Ralfs [only bit of name given] [property owned by the family from before 1826]

Dwelling house, yard and large garden

£22

*****

Mayor [Again this is the whole name given. Almost certainly a butcher].

House and garden

£6

*****

Susannah Clark [Grocer and tea dealer who also ran a coach. Present here 1830. Widow.]

House and garden

£8

*****

John Broome [he seems out of his proper place in the assessment. Died aged 89 in 1845. John was of Irish birth and had spent 26 years in the East Indies before returning to England in 1807. This return date precludes him from being the John Broome of Westthorpe Little Marlow in 1793]

House and garden

£11

*****

Robert Colbourne [Surgeon. I have a copy of the will of a Robert Colbourne that is this man's father. A transcription of it is here].

House, yard, stable, pleasure ground and garden

£26

*****

James Field [he ran a school, was a tailor and became Post Master. The wills of himself and his wife are available on the blog here].

Dwelling House, school room, offices and garden

£22

*****

William Harding [shoemaker and beerseller]

The Turks Head beershop [also known as the Saracen's Head], house, yard and garden

£10

*****

James Maclean [tin plate worker and ironmonger].

House, shop, and garden

£13

*****

Samuel Carter [shoemaker]

House, yard and garden

£15

*****

Richard Hawkins

House and other buildings

£12

****

Joseph Grey [a tailor]

House

£6

*****

John Moss 

House, Kitchen with room over Smith's shop, stable, large workshop, sheds, yards, foundry, gardens and part of house adjoining [John and his wife are the subject of a biographical post on the blog here. His main business premises described above as workshops, foundry etc were down by the Mills later and I thought at this time too but he is listed High Street which was his home address so not sure. He also a little later rented some arable land, stables etc in Spittal Street]

£21

Barn and part of a yard by the Meeting House [Oxford Road]

£2 10 shillings

Gardens by Oxford Lane [modern Oxford Road]

£3

*****

James Coster

House and garden

£12

******


To be continued

To search for people on this blog look at the Person Index option on the drop down menu.



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