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Showing posts with label Warner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Warner. Show all posts

Monday, November 22, 2021

Bellows, Bricks and Brandy - Reviving the drowned

 People have always bathed in the Thames at Marlow. But many have also lost their lives doing so. The Black Hole, with a reputed depth of 25ft, in the river past Quarry Wood, was an extreme example of a sudden drop in the river bed. But there were other spots where the gently shelving floor fell away, as well as currents, weeds and underwater obstructions.


The task of fetching a body from the river, or looking for a lost swimmer usually fell in practice to someone from one of the boat houses (or the lock keeper) - Shaw's by Marlow Bridge is the one mentioned most frequently. They had a dredger which enabled them to search where human eyes and probes could not. The bodies were usually taken to a nearby inn which would also hold the resulting inquest. The Compleat Angler, and Two Brewers saw a large number of such events. As time passed, the bodies were usually held elsewhere but the inquests were still often in the nearest pub to the place of recovery. (From 1907 the coroner's were requested not to use a public house for an inquest unless absolutely nowhere else suitable could be found.)


Mr Shaw had to use his dredger in 1901 to find the body of one of his own employees, 21 year old William Button of Reading.  William was employed as a waterman. He was bathing after work with two colleagues, from a raft under Marlow Bridge. He suddenly disappeared, presumably after suffering from cramp. A "very good" swimmer, he could not be found by his companions and the dredger was called for. 


Some of the dead were among Marlow's very many visitors who came to enjoy riverside camping or some gentle punting or fishing. Perhaps the saddest case was that in 1906 of Chiswick/Kew Schoolmaster John S Gilbert, and his two adult sons (Frederick 20, an electrical engineer, and Frank 22, a clerk in the Stock Exchange). They had come to the  Marlow area for a short holiday and spent the night camping on the riverbank near Medmenham Abbey. (One source says they were on a small island there.) Frank, a strong swimmer, decided to have a bathe while the others prepared breakfast. But he became tired fighting the current and sank. His dad leapt into the water to save him, but did not resurface. The second son then followed his father into the water - and also failed to come back up. Two  friends of the family who had joined them on the trip witnessed the scene, and one (G A Ackerman) entered the water to assist and briefly managed to get the fathers head above water but ultimately needed rescuing himself. The other, Harry Kentfield, on the riverbank could not swim and  shouted for help. It came too late however. A quantity of weeds in the water tangling limbs was regarded as a possible explanation for such a tragedy. The farm bailiff from Medmenham who recovered the bodies (Robert Keene) however said he could see no significant weeds and thought the men had panicked "and lost their heads". 


Stories of those entering the water and not regaining the surface alive are common. In many cases the reason why could only be guessed at. Some sort of heart attack was a possible cause of death for East Dulwich accountant George Frewin Pinnock who came to Marlow to do some business for grocer A E Howard. George was staying at the Compleat Angler and decided to enjoy a quick swim in the back waters there. He took a dip and almost immediately came up face down in the water. Sadly his wife had died of heart disease just a few weeks before. (1902)


The area to the front of "The Anglers" next to the old Marlow bridge also caught many victims. Another Compleat Angler guest that died there was minor poet and Pigots Directory representative William Rowlinson in 1829. William was from Manchester and was in the area gathering information in order to compile the next Pigots Directory, a listing of businesses etc. He was staying at the Compleat Angler and went swimming with one of the proprietor William Creswell's young sons. It seems Rowlinson got cramp because despite being a strong swimmer, he sank and Creswell could not find him in time. The dead man may not have lived in Marlow but the expression of grief at his accident suggests he had made a strong impression and many friends during his visit (s) here. The Quakers of Wycombe began to raise a subscription for his young widow (he was 24) and his small son and daughter. They also intended to pay for a stone to be erected over his grave at Bisham church. Forty years later it was said the grave was not marked. Perhaps not enough was raised or the money may have been used for a memorial closer to his home. (See note 1 below for more on Rowlinson)


Given the toll of victims, it's not surprising the Royal Life Saving Society visited Marlow Lock in 1910 to give demonstrations about how to save a person from drowning.


Once ashore the methods used to revive someone recovered from the water usually involved rubbing the person over to stimulate circulation and if they came round, issuing them with some alcohol such as brandy. In 1783 the Royal Humane Society issued instructions on how to deal with a person feared drowned. In the accompanying directory of surgeons listed residing within riverside areas, George Trash of Marlow is included. The recommended actions for George to follow include removing the victims clothes should they be wearing any (male river swimmers usually were nude) and then taking the victim to the nearest inn or failing that somewhere else that could offer a warm bed and a large fireplace. A sort of CPR was suggested with artificial respiration and a slight press to the chest when it could be seen the lungs had inflated. The use of small bellows up the nostril in preference to mouth to mouth respiration does date the advice a little! Attempts to stimulate the patient included giving them a vigorous shake of the limbs, applying hot bricks or tiles to the palms and soles of the feet and rubbing the skin with salt or flannels sprinkled with rum or other spirits. You could also try tickling the nose with a feather, rubbing a heated warming pan up the spine, and in the case of a child laying the little soul between two healthy adults in the hope of gently warming them back to life. Another reason to chose a pub to take the victim to was the strong chance they had a brew house (as it was still the era alcohol was made on the premises). This was needed as the last step if all the other methods to revive the swimmer had failed. The body should be surrounded by warm grains or placed in a deep warm bath in the sort of container a brew house might have. They would then wait several hours in the hope of what must really have been a miracle recovery. It's interesting that the Society in local branches raised funds to reward those who made the effort to search for the drowned or drowning and those who took the unfortunates in. The surgeons who were members of the society would attend those retrieved from the water free of charge. This encouraged those in charge of the victim not to delay in summoning medical assistance. 


Moving forward a century to 1880 - the Rev Charles Voysey  did a demo in Marlow of the New Patent Life Preserver. "For complete convenience in wearing and perfect efficiency in buoyancy power" it was said.  This was perhaps not the most quick to use life saver. It relied upon having the opportunity to "carefully" mix an acid and alkali powder which was then put into pockets held within 3 waterproof sacks. These were stitched inside someone's clothes or strapped on to a webbing belt, 2 on the front, the other to the rear of the wearer. When the mixed powders touched water, the reaction released a gas. This inflated the sacks and kept them up for some 50-60 hours or so it was claimed. The set of 3 pouches and powder cost 10s 6d. 


A Selected few other victims

NB This post does not include information on suicides in the river, or probable suicides. 


1836 - Frank Faulkner, eldest son of school master William Faulkner, age 21. Faulkner senior often took the boys of his school to bathe in the Thames. On this occasion, Frank was visiting Marlow having recently started a physicians practice in London. He went swimming with his brother and a friend. It seems his strength failed, and his two companions very nearly died too trying to save him. 


1861 - Ellen Leary, age 59, hawker of cotton, stay laces, needles etc, lodging at Marlow. Her basket was found floating between near Bisham. She is believed to have slipped off the tow path when "not quite sober."


1868 -  John Frederick Nolan of Ireland, house painter working for a London builder employed at Thames Villa. He could not swim and intended to bathe only but he did not realise that the gently sloping river bed gave way to a sharp drop and he tumbled out of his depth. 


1888 - Helen Frances Warner, married daughter of Mrs Haig of Marlow Place. Drowned near Temple while bathing with her two sisters. She got out of her depth. 


Researched and written by Kathryn Day. 


Related posts:

Little lives lost in the Thames - Child drowning victims here 

Bargemen of Marlow here

Biography of Robert Shaw who recovered a huge number of the drowned here

Floods in Marlow History, and plans to "embank and canalize" the river between Marlow & Henley here

History of Compleat Angler here

Avert your eyes, bathers about! Victorian nude bathing at Marlow and swimming races here here


To find all mentions of an individual here use the A-Z person index in the top drop down menu where you will find over 2,700 people currently listed. Other posts about everyday life in old Marlow can be found here


SOURCES

Harland, John (ed) - Lancashire Lyrics, (Whitaker, 1866)

Smith, James - The Mechanic Or Compendium of Practical Inventions vol 2 (Caxton press 1809.)

Royal Humane Society - The reviving of Persons apparently dead by drowning (- RHS London, 1783)

Medical Times Gazette, Vol 2, 1873. Digitised by Google. 

GRO Death registration index. 

Maidenhead Advertiser August  1 1906, British Library Archive. 

Windsor & Eton Express, 26 September 1829 as above

Reading Mercury - 9 November 1861. As above

Berks Chronicle - 27 Jun 1829 As above

Bucks Gazette 20 July 1901. As above

Bucks Herald 14 August 1880, As above


Slough, Windsor and Eton Express August 4 1906


Notes 

1. Rowlinson (Rawlinson) had contributed poems to the Literary Gazette and regional publications, including some written in what was described as East Lancashire dialect. One was called "Remember me". He had started work as the clerk in Messrs Cardwell & Co cotton warehouse in Manchester ("Newmarket buildings")


©Marlow Ancestors


Tuesday, August 3, 2021

1700s Chapel Street People

Updated May 2024

I glean every possible will and property record to gather the names of those who lived in Chapel Street, often called Chapel End, in the 1700s. The date next to each name is the date I find reference to them in Chapel Street but they may have been there earlier and later too. This post focuses on the occupiers rather than the owners of property. In most cases in the 1700s the two were not the same thing. The precise buildings cannot usually be identified but I am working on it! Getting the names of any occupiers at all is an enormous task.

I likely have more people to add once I have sifted through my mountain of research notes and will update this post as I can.

Note: the boundary of Chapel Street and Spittal Street was very fluid so some properties in Chapel Street can appear in records as being in Spittal Street and vice versa. It was not uncommon in the 1700s and earlier for Spittal Street to be entirely ignored as a street address and for all properties there to be described as Chapel Street or Chapel End even down as far as the Market Square end.


William Baker, a grocer. Occupier 1797. Unknown if owner. On the site of a shop used as a grocers for over 100 years previously to that. I am trying to identify more precisely which property this was. 

Francis Beck. Tenant of a cottage 1742.

James Bird. Tenant. 

Robert Bristow / Bristowe. Tenant of a cottage South side 1791.

Edward Broadway. Tenant 1782.

Martha Camden [nee White] 1795. Her mother Amy White below part owned this property. Who owned other part/s unknown. Sister of Jane White below.

John Collins tenant of a cottage 1798.  

Mark Cutter. Tenant 1743 of a cottage. In 1733 the same cottage had been in the occupation of John Phillips.

Thomas Davison. Occupier North side 1710.

Widow Eagle. Tenant, Chapel End 1795.

George and Ann Faux. Alias Fox. George was a schoolmaster who had his own private boarding school. Resident 1750s- death 1797. Prospect House which was often given as Chapel End in the 1700s but was really in Glade Road near the corner with Little Marlow Road (a continuation of Chapel Street). Wife Ann. After their time there the school moved to the end of Wycombe Road and then to Marlow Place. 

James & Anthony Field, 1786 - drapers*

Widow ?Gray? 1730. Not the owner of the property she occupied.

John Hammerton. Owner of house there in his will 1716. Basket Maker. Wife Jane inherited life interest in the property then it went to their son.

Thomas Hester. Occupier 1748.

Robert Howard. Occupier North side 1745, East of the White Hart. This may be Robert Howard junior son of Robert Howard senior of Bisham. That Robert junior inherited two cottages in Chapel Street in the will of his father proved in 1744, though these were only to come to him after the death of his mother. The two cottages in that will were the ones mentioned in this post as occupied by William Hubbard and Francis Beck.

William Hubbard. Tenant of a cottage 1742.

Thomas Langley. Owner and occupier 1723. A sawyer.

John Lawes tenant, Chapel End 1760 and 1798. This may not be the same property on both occasions and it is possible given the 38 year gap in dates that the earlier John Lawes is the father or uncle etc of the later John Lawes rather than the same man. His premises were previously occupied by Joseph Loveless and Thomas and Mary Sears. See below. Note Added September 2021: this property was actually in Spittal Street, though described as Chapel End. As I said above there was no consistency when describing properties in these two streets which run into each other.

Joseph Loveless alias Lovelace. Appropriately given that name he was a "laceman". Tenant of a house 1754, which had previously been occupied by Thomas Sears whose business he had bought. Probably but not definitely North side. Property later occupied by John Lawes. Note added September 2021: this property was actually in Spittal Street which as I explained above was routinely described as being part of Chapel Street in the past. The two roads run into each other.

Robert Menday. Tenant of White Hart, North side of the street 1732. A Mr Menday was running the pub in 1745 which may also be Robert.

John Phillips. 1733. Not owner. By 1743 his cottage was occupied by Mark Cutter above.

Mary and Thomas Sears. He was a lace maker. Occupier 1748. Unknown if owner. Home and business premises in one. Mary was a widow and occupier of the property alone in 1751. She was no longer resident there in 1754. Joseph Loveless alias Lovelace had bought her husband's business and taken over occupation of the Sears' premises. By 1760 the occupier was John Lawes. See above. Note added September 2021: this property was actually in Spittal Street as we would call it today but little effort was made to distinguish between these two continuous streets in the past.

William Stevens, bargeman. Will proved 1730. Owned his own home.

Thomas Taylor. Occupier North side 1745. 

Richard Tovey. Occupier North side 1710.

Thomas Wal..er. Tenant. Chapel End. 1798. [Walter? Walker?]

Ann and John Warner. Tenants 1788. 

Carter Webb, a cordwainer. Occupier 1748. Unknown if owner. He was no longer resident in the same premises in 1760.

William Weedon. Or possibly Wooden. Tenant of a cottage South side 1791.

Amy White, widow. Owner and occupier of a cottage. 1795. Will proved 1796. Left this property to her daughter Jane White.

Jane White. 1795. Her mother Amy White above part owned this cottage. Who owned the other parts is unknown. Sister of Martha Camden above.

* With big thanks to friend of the blog Linda Green for this information. (London Archives Royal & Sun Alliance Insurance records CLC/B/192/F/001/MS11936/334/515799)

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I have previously published a post on the 1700s residents of Quoiting Square here and Dean Street here. High Street 1700s residents are here and Oxford Road here.

My recreated trade directory for 1700s Marlow and Little Marlow is here

Recreated 1600s trade directory Part One and Part_two

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

©Marlow Ancestors. You are very welcome to reuse this research for family or local history purposes with credit to this blog and a link here.


Monday, June 7, 2021

Bencombe Farm, Marlow Bottom

 

Description: 1944 = mixed farm with farmhouse and two staff cottages. Modern: used as a brewery.


Historic Occupiers=


1883= Edward Batt Curteis. He had moved to Shottesbrook Berkshire by 1886.


1887-1908= James Chilton. Kept pigs and poultry as well as cows and grew walnuts, peas, swedes and turnips as crops. In 1888 a cart his young employee was driving in Marlow High Street ran out of control and damaged some shop fronts. James and his wife hosted the children of the Marlow Baptist Sunday School for tea and fun at the farm in 1889. Wife Elizabeth, as was traditional on farms, was the one who raised the poultry. Two of her birds were stolen from her in 1898 by William Clark who was jailed for 14 days with hard labour as a result [Reading Mercury, 8th Jan 1898, British Library]. Thefts of crops from the fields of Bencombe Farm and other Marlow Bottom premises happened regularly as it was then a quiet spot. Farm suffered a reasonable fire in 1905, and another rick fire the next year which was put down to arson. In 1907 James was convicted of employing underage Charles Cooper on the farm. Sold up his farm stock and house stuff across the years 1907-1908 as he was retiring.


1909-1927= Abel Dell. Wife Alice (née Warner, married St George's Hanover Square London 1889). Abel was a many times prize winning raiser of beef herds. Also dairy. In 1912 he bought at an auction at Henley Town Hall a cow forcibly sold off to pay the withheld taxes of Suffragette campaigner Miss Lalacheur. The event was disrupted by Suffragette protesters outside and inside the Town Hall [Henley and South Oxford Standard 3rd May 1912, British Library]. Abel was also at Hill Farm Marlow 1899-1908, at least. He went bankrupt in 1927 and died in 1935. Alice died in 1936.

1938-39 at least= Morris, Dell and Co. Richard Dell born circa 1890  lived in. The farmhouse also acted as a boarding house at this point. Only one cottage seems to have then been in use for staff. It was occupied by Alfred Gomme and his wife Ethel plus more lodgers.

1958 in use as a poultry and turkey farm.

Researched by Charlotte Day.

Many other farms from Marlow and Little Marlow have similar posts to this on the blog. They can be found listed under the "Specific Shops, Streets...Etc" option on the menu here

To find people on this blog use the A-Z Person Index option- Thousands of people are mentioned.

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



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...