Monday, 21 November 2016

The Horror of Gaol Through the Ages

Gaol Through The Ages

One or two of my ancestors seem to have had a shady past !
Gaol has its own history, not a very pleasant one but it became fascinating reading in the end.
From the feudal systems devised by strong leaders of men, who could cut off your hand for stealing or hang you for rape there evolved an agreed series of punishments and laws to enforce them.....the journey too those laws is filled with  horrors I had never believed possible.

It caused me to look at the system and the conditions those of my ancestors who fell foul of the law, would have experienced and endured and as a result I discovered some facts and aspects that have both fascinated and horrified me in equal measure. 

The early history of Wales with its raids from the Irish for slaves, The Vikings for slaves, treasure and eventually land and settlement, and the English to gain strongholds........ is almost a thing of the past though there would be Saxon raids to come as yet.

William the 1st has invaded and raised many of his Norman Knights to power throughout England. In 1073 from his base as the Norman Earl of Shrewsbury; Roger Montgomery leads raids into Wales devastated Ceredigion and established Montgomeryshire.

This is where  many of my ancestors are known to have been born, and died in a succession of centuries.

William the Conqueror begins the Doomsday Books in 1086 which results in 35 books.

Roger Montgomeryshire built many defencive castles along the Welsh border including Clun , Shrewsbury, Ludlow and Oswestry. Roger died in 1095 and unrest and reforms followed for many years. Henry 111 eventually brought a measure of peace to the Welsh Borders but not without cost and in the meantime Gaol is being birthed and Wales is entering into the Justice System of Britain.

To gain a perspective of the actual population in Wales I looked at the overall population of the world in the 11th C and discovered it was 0.31 Billion.....for the whole world. In Britain that meant roughly 5.5 million people spread throughout the land and according to the Doomsday Book the Welsh Marches had about 3 people per square mile as a population. Such is human nature that there will always be those who step outside of the guides, the rules, the demands of those in power and so punishments , justice if you will.....became The Law :-

One has to remember that for many centuries people where living in slavery. The common man, the 'smallfolk' where more often than not slaves, indentured or villagers who owed their entire livelihood to the Lord of the Manor, whoever that might be.

The Lord could change overnight as Kings bestowed land on their favoured Knight, passed decrees for Earldoms and the like.

The people were forced to take arms and War . If his Lord called upon him, he was forced to render his goods and chattels at the Lords behest. To refuse was a crime and the laws that became common to the land where based on common treatments of people perceived almost as cattle, they had no rights, or very few.

Say something that the Lord didn't like and risk having your eyes burned out of your head or your tongue ripped from your mouth. Be caught stealing and have a hand chopped off or be hung as a felon.

By the 12th century these conditions still prevailed as did war; both countries and fiefdoms warred frequently. Lord against Lord, King against King. Many wives dreaded the spring equinox (March 21st) the coming of spring meant men left home after helping with ploughing the land...to go to war. Those who survived would come home again in the autumn to help with the harvest but many a family where left without a man.

Times where changing, commerce had begun to hold the leverage over the Kings purse, he didn't want wars anymore, he wanted goods to trade, foods stuffs and rare oils, herbs and spices. Trade meant the need for workers, and people had begun to demand rights and the world changed. 

It continued to change over the centuries. Slowly but surely slavery of the common man was left behind ( so it was thought, evidence proves otherwise sadly in our modern world) but the indentured servant, the people living on the land of the manor and the agricultural labourer where increasing and with that the need for laws and reforms.

The Freemen where gathering power by the simple aspect that more Freemen where being created or born to Freemen and as they did, they added to the cause for more reforms to come into being.

The law was enforced during the 12th to 19th centuries in a manner which in our modern world would be considered inhumane. In those times if you where a criminal you where seen as being not much more than an animal, and treated accordingly. 

If you had the misfortune to be locked away in the early centuries then it was the Tower or the Dungeon, cold, dark and above all places a place where you had no rights.There was also the Cage a small metal construction that didn't allow for a body to bend, lie or stretch but squashed the person in an uncomfortable position guaranteed to cause discomfort. Which was then placed on a rampart or a place where the weather added to the discomfort and food and water where denied. Also the infamous Oubliette, a dark hole where the prisoner was lowered down into what was literally a hole where the prisoner died in the dark, no creature comforts of any kind.

Torture Chambers are not a media mad creation, they truly existed and people where Racked, Pressed, cut, had various devices clamped onto their body parts or ripped parts of the body off, burned out, cut out or pressed into their defenceless flesh.

Gaols themselves in the beginning followed the same conditions and actions as their previous structures what we now consider to be torture and inhumane was a common event both to extract a confession or information or as part of a punishment.;-

Gaols ,where places where it cost you money to eat, to have a blanket or fuel to keep warm. You wore your own clothes and friends or family could bring you food.  you had no-one to feed you?, then you paid the gaoler and if you had no money...you begged through the bars to passers bye or you starved. You paid to have your shackles removed or the manacles you had been transported in and you paid for a candle...literally you paid for everything and that would include bribes to various gaolers to guarantee your good treatment.

You rubbed shoulders with murderers, rapists and debtors and thieves alike and many suffered the bullying, the dominating by stronger, harsher, and more physically abusive persons. Being incarcerated with many people to a cell, which was often a simple structure of bars around a space often with a window so you could beg from passers bye. Some prisoners would be allowed to sell things at the prison gates.3.

A cell as modern day gaols are was a rarity.  Rape was known to happen to inmates, as was 'bloody murder' and the insane where as likely to be in your Gaol as the sane. Fleas, typhoid, cholera, lice and all manner of ailments where rife though mice and rats would be as likely to be seen as a food source as anything else. If you had no money then it was quite possible for a prisoner to starve to death, to dehydrate, and if the luckless soul was placed in the darkest of the cells , without money for candles then they would have no light source at all.

In 1166  HENRY II  built the first Gaols including Newgate Prison in London. He also established the first modern Jury of '12 good men and true' and the first legal text book which later helped form the Common Law of the land.

By1215 - The Magna Carta was signed by King John the brother of King Richard the 1st. This marked the beginning of English judicial rights. The Magna Carta stated:-

Article 39 - "No free man shall be arrested, or imprisoned, or deprived of his property, or outlawed, or exiled, or in any way destroyed, nor shall we go against him or send against him, unless by legal judgement of his peers, or by the law of the land."

If you refused to a trial by Jury you where put straight into prison and stayed there until you agreed to a trial.

The status of a prisoner at that time was often determined by his wealth, you paid for everything while in Gaol. Kings however rarely paid for their crimes King John misdeeds included hanging 28 sons of rebel Welsh chieftains he had been holding hostage, and starving an enemy's wife and son to death in prison. Hugh Despenser was considered a famous criminal, he was executed as a traitor. He had become one of the richest men in the kingdom by killing his enemies and seizing their lands in South Wales.

By the 1400's enough people live in villages and towns that vagrancy has become a problem and Houses of Correction are built .

These early reform buildings are filled quickly and become a common need in building a new town.

Of Welsh descent, Henry Tudor in 1485, gained the English throne and was crowned King Henry VII.The support of the Welsh people ( who hoped he was the Mab Darogan) wanted him to restore Britain to the Brythons. His coronation led to the cementing of Wales into the English administrative and legal system under his son, Henry VIII. .2.

Around 70,000 people suffered the death penalty during the reign of Henry VIII. That penalty was carried out in several different methods.

Beheading ( the person laid their head on a block and it was hacked off with an axe),

Hanging (from the gallows which where often built in sight of the cell where the prisoner was kept.) ,The convict was placed in a horse drawn cart and blindfolded. The noose was then placed around his/her neck, and the cart pulled away and the criminal dangled until they died, a long drawn out process of strangulation, painful in the extreme. It was common for friends or family of the convicts to help speed the process and put them out of their misery by pulling on their legs. Sometimes the most serious offenders were hanged near the place of their crime, sometimes as a lesson to those who lived there, sometimes so Justice was seen to be done.

Deep concern at the disorder and sometimes the riots which occurred at such scenes contributed to the 1752 Murder Act.

Burning ,being found guilty of treason or petty treason meant Women were sentenced to be burned alive at the stake. Executioners where known to have strangled women with a cord before lighting the fire. In 1790 burning at the stake was abolished and replaced by drawing and hanging.

Being 'Pressed' (A prisoner would be laid in a hole and a plank or a large flat stone placed on top of them, then stones where thrown on top of this until the person was crushed to death) , If you chose not to answer charges this form of punishment was used with the added aspect that a sharp stone would be placed beneath your spine so the weight snapped your spine eventually, to add to your agony. Commonly used for those believed to be ‘against the church or Head of state.)

Boiled alive ( to be physically boiled alive in a big bowl or cauldron of hot water).

It was in the 16th Century that the Guillotine was still in use in the city of Halifax.

Drawn and Quartered. A man found guilty of treason would be sentenced to be Drawn (dragged) to the place of execution on a Hurdle. Once there he was hanged, cut down still living, and then disemboweled. The stomach would  be slashed open the entrails where often 'wound out of him' an excruciating pain. Then castrated, beheaded and quartered. The last convicts to be sentenced at the Old Bailey to be drawn and quartered were known as the Cato Street Conspirators( 1820) though it is believed that only part of the sentence was carried out. .1.

Lesser crimes had some pretty torturous methods of punishment.

Between the 12th and 15th Centuries .Slitting of ears, breaking of limbs, so as to make amputation necessary, castration. beating or cutting out of eyes, the cutting off of hands, fingers (except the thumb) where all still considered 'just means' to punish the felon.

Whipping , often while tied to a tree stump or a whipping frame in the late 1700's but before that a whipping was meant to not only cause pain and 'bloody the back' but to shame and for this the person was stripped to the waist (men and women) and whipped down the length of the central street of the city/town/village.

Having limbs cut off such as a hand if you stole.

The Scolds Bridle or Brank which was a metal cage with a tongue depressor locked around the head.

M.F or T being branded into the flesh, usually on the thumb for Murder, Felon or Theft. Convicts who successfully pleaded and those found guilty of manslaughter or 'benefit of clergy', instead of murder, were branded on the thumb so that they would be unable to receive this benefit of justice more than once. Between 1699 and January 1707, those convicted of theft were branded on the cheek, but this meant convicts where almost unemployable and in 1707 they went back to the thumb. The last sentence of branding at the Old Bailey in London was in 1789.

You could be manacled to a T shaped wooden device by the hands (Pilloried) or the locking planks of the Stocks around the feet and passers bye could torment you. The pillory turned so that all the crowd could get a good view. They could and did express their disapproval of the offence the prisoner was displayed  for by pelting them with blood and guts from slaughterhouses, rotten eggs , dead cats, rotten fruit and vegetables, mud and excrement, stones or bricks and some died from the abuse. It was common for friends and sometimes local law keepers to have to form a ring around the person being Pilloried to protect them from too much abuse. In the Stocks the prisoner had the use of their hands to deflect missiles.

The Ducking Stool which was especially for Women accused of witchcraft, a stool attached to the end of a long pole, balanced on a fulcrum to allow the prisoner to be 'dipped or ducked' into water until they drowned or not to prove their innocence, if you drowned you where not a witch if you didn't drown you where a witch and hung or burned.

The Drunkards Cloak which was a large wooden barrel strapped over the person, their hands and feet pushed through holes cut into the barrel and forced to walk around 'wearing the drunkards cloak.

Those convicted of coining and petty treason were sentenced to be drawn on a Hurdle through the town. The man would be mounted on the inverted V shaped wooden block, his legs tied beneath and his hands and dragged over the earth and cobbled streets to be shamed and (badly) bruised.

Elizabeth 1st and subsequent monarchs continued with these punishments during their reign.

Going to Gaol.

Being sent to Gaol was a different set of horrors to be faced. In the early prisons you wore your own clothes, and where fed by your family or friends, or else you paid the Gaoler, not until 1840 would there be the Prison Uniform, the homespun cloth stamped with black arrows.

The  " Bridewell "or house of correction, was a 16th Century design both to punish and reform petty criminals  with a short period of gaol and hard labour.

In the 1700s ,too many criminals where being sent to the gaols and a solution was found in Transportation. Sending a criminal to another country to work off their sentence was seen as a method of removing the problem entirely.
  
Up until the outbreak of The War of Independence in America (1775) 50,000 criminals , where transported to penal colonies in America, then the war began and prisoners were sent to penal servitude in Australia.

The First Fleet arrived in Botany Bay on 22 January 1786 with 736 (some records say 786) prisoners, followed by three large fleets between 1787 and 1791. and is considered a landmark event in the colonial history of Australia. Among the 548 male and 188 female convicts aboard the First Fleet were two Welsh women and four Welshmen, the prison colony they were part of came to be known as New South Wales. Over 160,000 people were transported and there was no distinction between men or women or children, the youngest Transported is recorded as being 9 years of age. During times of war the criminal could be sent to fill the ranks of soldier and sailor and where they would be sent to the front line more often than not.

Overcrowding began to be a real problem and decommissioned boats called HULKS where brought into use originally used as holding prisons for those waiting to be transported. Many people died on the journey, which could take between four and six months with the convicts living in conditions so bad that even some of the Captains of the ships complained. Cholera and Typhoid which had been rampant on the Hulks was often brought on board by the prisoners and many hundreds died in the crossings. In 1851 Gold was discovered in Australia and fewer criminals where transported, the last transportation's recorded is in1868.

Imprisonment: Hard Labour

Many convicts were sentenced to a term of gaol and hard labour. Those imprisoned sometimes worked a water pump or on dredging the Thames and in the naval dockyards. Some were sentenced to work on ballast lighters..

The Death sentence

It is recorded that The Death Sentence was given for crimes as diverse as horse stealing, pick pocketing, stealing bread, rape, murder. In the matter of Rape and Murder more often than not the person was executed swiftly but for lesser crimes, even though the Death Sentence had been passed the criminal was then ,Transported. Up to 60% of those sentenced to death where executed during the late 1700's early 1800's but many felt the sentence itself was harsh and the criminal would be Transported , usually for 7 years for each crime. 

What was considered heinous crimes punishable by death ranged from what one would expect, for instance murder too cutting down a tree and it wasn't until 1823 that the death sentence was rescinded for acts such as  Horse Stealing to Stealing Bread . Sir Robert Peel cut the amount of acts punishable by death to some 100 where previously the number of crimes linked to that sentence was in the region of as many as 200 when he first took office .

Though some of the old style punishments had fallen into disfavour, other punishments began to be used, some of which drove the prisoner mad literally.

In 1779 in lieu of branding, a clause in the Penitentiary Act allowed a fine to be levied .Fines were frequently used following this, often in conjunction with a term of imprisonment.

Defendants who pleaded insanity in 1843 where following the dissemination of the "M'Naughton Rules" , the number of defendants receiving this sentence increased considerably.

The changes needed, perceived as being necessary where called Reforms, several people where renowned for the Gaol Reforms. 

Prison Reform Campaigners

 John Howard of Bedford (1726 - 1790) As High Sheriff of Bedfordshire, Howard studies prison conditions for 17 years. In 1777  He proposes that gaols should be healthy and disease-free, and that gaolers shouldn't be charging prisoners for sustenance. His book called The State of the Prisons in England and Wales, is influential but not put into practise in any real sense until the 19th Century. He had studied prisons in Europe where prisoners in general had one man one cell, and where fed by the authorities. The Howard League for Penal Reform - still influential today - is named after him.

In 1815 Gaolers are finally forbidden to charge inmates for food and Magistrates are informed they will in future inspect the prisons themselves.

In 1817 Elizabeth Fry began to work tirelessly to encourage Reforms in the penal system for women. She clothed and gave work to women, particularly Newgate Prison, instigated schools and her many observations where heard as evidence in Parliament. She influenced Sir Robert Peel in his Prison Reform Acts of 1823.

By 1835 there are proper Prison Inspectors and by 1877 all the staff  have been salaried.

Prisoners worked anything up to 10 hours a day in many prisons. From the beginning of Gaols being created the prison population had been seen as a cheap source of labour and many knew what it was to break stones in quarries, or untwist hemp and many other diverse productivity's but from 1839 it is possible to read of in depth details of the many structured reform works prisoners are involved in .

Prisoners lived and worked in their cells 24 hours a day , 7 days a week, and were  allowed out for exercise once a day. Many prisons used a system of isolating the prisoners, sitting in 'booths' in church, at the dinner table, even in working situations the prisoner was isolated, cells where individual now and some of the prisoners suffered this 'separate confinement and where driven mad. It would be 1922 before The Separate Confinement is abolished.

Mid 1800's the wooden "guard beds" with wooden pillows were what the Prisoners slept on for the first 30 days of their sentence.

Not until 1843 was there a regulation directive as to the food prisoners where given, until 1815 the prisoner paid for his or her food and it had resulted in many starving to death in some cases dehydrating to death. The food reforms meant that though it was a monotonous diet the prisoner would at least receive a regular intake of food and drink. This reform was slow to become simply because the powers that be where reluctant to have prisoners better fed than the poor outside the prison.


1948 - CRIMINAL JUSTICE ACT .This is the base for all subsequent reforms and future guidelines concerning Gaol.

.1.

There are regular reports recorded of pardons from 1739 until 1796 and of executions from 1743 until 1792 which are available to read through a variety of sources notably Crime and Justice websites.

.2.

The Laws in Wales Acts of 1535–1542 annexed Wales to England, which abolished the Welsh legal system, and banned the Welsh language from any official role and status, from this time no Welshman could speak his home language in his defence, being unable to understand English (in which case not understanding the charges made) was not considered a defence. Though those laws relaxed in time it is not until 1993 that the Welsh Language Act of 1993 places the Welsh language on an equal footing with English and not until the Government of Wales Act 2006 granted powers to the Welsh Government to enact some primary legislation that Wales is allowed to create laws of its own pertaining to its needs.

.3. Rodgers 91).

Written by:-

Susan Morrison-Jones 2012

Resources.

david-pilling.suite101.com/penal-transportation-to-australia-1700s1800s-a140692

oldbaileyonline.org/static/Punishment.jsp#corporal

news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4887704.stm

inverarayjail.co.uk/the-jails-story/life-in-jail.aspx

Criminal Registers Published by Ancestry

wikipeadia.com

The Transportation Act of 1718

Bound for America. The Transportation of British Convicts to the Colonies, 1718-1775” by A. Roger Ekirch.

McConville, S, “A History of English Prison Administration: Volume I 1750-1877 “(London, Boston & Henley: 1981)

 The National Archives

Looking for Footeman

I researched the Footeman line of my family and came to an exhausted ending. Here are my thoughts on the Footman Line ending with the mysterious Jeame:-

In 1597 Jeame Footeman marries Elizabethea Partredg and they have a son James in 1599. The mystery of where Jeames comes from is shrouded in the history of Shropshire. It is 1599 and Jeame dissappears from the records at this time. 

Historically Fatzman/ Footman  and other spellings appear in London and a few other places during the 1400 - 1500's but not in Upton Magna where Jeames begins his records. until the early 1500's.

I have searched a thousand Footeman, Foottmann,Fotteman,Fattmann, and variations. One thing that stands out is that at the time Jeamie first appears in Upton Magna, there is a Swedish family named Fatzman and Jeamie is apparently the Swedish spelling for James. I have not been able to access the Swedish records other than in Ancestry which have proved zero results no matter how many permutations I use. I have therefore abandoned the research for the time being but Viking ancestors is a possability.

Fuutman or Fatzman is also possible of other origins though I believe through reasonable assumption Sweden is the probable origin as it is at this time Swedish immigrants begin to appear throughout England in small groups. Records show the timing to be about right and as always I stand to be corrected, simply 'voicing' a hypothesis.
Fatzman/Fuutman/Fatzmann/Fotman /Fotzmann became Fotteman and Footemann and finally Footman over time and I am almost certain now that these particular ancestors came from Sweden. 

The description of the area as given  in The Handbook Of Shropshire and Cheshire is the following :-

 Shropshire, as viewed from its physical aspect, is well fitted for its position on the Marches of Wales : the Welsh portion possessing all the features of a mountain-land ; the English, of fertile plain and rich farming country. There is so much variety in Salop that it may be considered an epitome of England, for it contains, within the compass of a few miles, all the chafacteristics of an Alpine district in miniature, while at the same time within sight of orchards, gardens, and farmhouses.
From this very variety of scenery, which, of coui-se, depends mostly on the geological formation, Shropshire has come to be regarded as a typical district by the geologist, who will find within its borders a complete history of the Palaeozoic formation. The mountain-region is principally found on the Welsh, or western side. On the S., the Radnorshire hills are continuous with the Forest of Clun, from whence the high grounds nm, with but little intermission, into the noble range of the Longmynd and the Stiperstones, the latter keeping tip the connection with the mountains of Montgomery- shire, and the former abruptly ending at the beautiful valley of Church Stretton. On the other side of this valley is the equally picturesque, though not so lofty, series of Hope Bowdler, Garadoc, Ragleath, and Lawley, separating the Church Stretton valley fix>m Apedale, which joins it lower down at an acute angle, and Is sheltered on the E. by the very characteristic ridge of Wenlock Edge. The latter commences, near Craven Arms, in a series of very striking wooded terraces, and nins diagonally across Shrop- shire until it is brought up by the great gap of the Severn Valley, near Coalbrook Dale. To the E. of it is Corve Dale, from whence hilly, un- viii I.
"Handbook for Shropshire and Cheshire"SHEOPSHIRE AND CHESHIRE. WITH MAP.
AEIV EDIT/ON. LONDON: A A\> JOHN MUREAY, ALBEMARLE STREET. 1879, XOKDON: printed BT WILLIAM GLOTTES and sons, STAMFORD STREET, AKD OHARIKO CB0S6.

That it is possible that Footeman (all variations) have ancestry in Sweden is a possability. I find no referance prior to the 1500's though I looked through all the lists , even The Abbey War records.
Footeman is not a common name in England, I find absolutely no referances to any variation of the name prior to the 1500 and the majority of the referances stem from Shropshire with no others perceived by me within the researches anywhere other than London and the occasional village.

In the Family Search site Footeman is often recorded as Fattmann as late as the mid 1600's and again no other area has the name recorded, always it returns back to Oswestry, Upton Magna or some village close bye.
Without referance to Swedish records I am afraid the researches end here for now.
Susan Morrison Jones.2012
ref
Family search .org
Ancestry.co.uk
Google Search.

Local libraries online researches varying from Sweden Fattemann/Fatzman/Footemann/Fotzmann.

The Life,Work and times of the Agricultural Labourer in Britain

                     Devon Ancient Forest Woodley 2015 Copyright Susan Morrison Jones

                          The Agricultural Labourer and His Family.



In 1700, the national economy was mostly based on agricultural production. The Agriculture Industry employed most of the workforce of the whole of Great Britain, The population of England and Wales was 5.5 million people at that time, the greater proportion being in England.It is known that in England 75% of the population was employed in Agriculture 

The proportion of Agricultural workers in Wales was believed to be higher still than in England . The work was the lowest paid in the country and the practise of a 'tied cottage' meaning the house was lived in only if you worked for the owner, was common. Gangs of labourers often travelled from farm to farm during seeding or harvest which is why, when looking for ancestors many appear to be living on several farms over the years. It was not wealth but work which made the farm their 'home'.

No mechanical or technological help was available to the average worker, he relied almost entirely on Oxen which in those times were much smaller animals than one sees in modern Britain circa 20th C.Sometimes Horses could be used, again animals smaller in size than modern day and his own strength.

Where previous to  1694 the barter system had been the dominant way to obtain items and occasionally a coin or two minted by various Kings. The Bank (as we know it 2016) developed in the 17th century.*(1) The Bank of England was founded in 1694 and so our Agricultural Labourer was paid in Coin of the Realm.)

 The majority of labourers were hired on a day to day basis as "wage labourers", earning about one shilling a day (5p in 2016).In the 1700s,(and throughout the agricultural history) extra money could be earned during Harvest time and the whole family would be involved for several weeks from Hay gathering to seeds. Their day would last from  12 to 15 hours of hard physical labour.
  
For the lucky Agricultural Labourer he would be able to work year round for a single farmer, he would be housed in a cottage owned by the farmer himself and the tied cottage meant that labour wages included the cost of rent and so wages where lower still than the national average.
   
Of course living in a tied cottage could be a dangerous situation as any problems with the 'boss' could mean losing the home and with little or no intervention from external sources a family could literally be thrown out of their home in a matter of hours and of necessity need to apply to the Parish for help. This would take the form of food, sometimes clothing though not shoes as most children would be barefoot and it was common for feet to be wrapped in old rags and simply bound to the foot) later in history an application to the Parish resulted in living in The Workhouse.(3)


The Agricultural worker was for the most part on equal footing for pay with other workers until the mid 1700's when a diversity began to show as larger towns and Cities began to develop and work became available offering better wages than those of the rural areas.From then the Agricultural Labourer who steadily became the worst paid members of the workforce , a situation which continued into the late 1900's.
  
The adult man would be expected to carry out many duties, his fitness was important, from digging ditches to drain land, to building the new hedges and later the famous Welsh stone walls as the Enclosure Acts came into force.His ability to dig for many hours rough and often stony ground, lift and carry stones and cart huge amounts of soil and debris. To use the tiller, the scythe the spade with vigour and strength. To be able to drive the oxen which where little more than the size of a modern day calf in Medieval times, to be able to cause a horse or an oxen to pull to draw the ploughs and to be able to walk for miles, was desperately important.The alternative was to starve, literally.

  
In Powys, Cattle where the dominant bred animal with Sheep a close second. The Herdsman and The Drover where often one and the same person and his knowledge of the beast and its needs where as important as his ability to herd and drive.Many weeks walking took place when Cattle had to be moved, in Powys the Cattle went to Shrewsbury and from there to the Midlands to fatten then on to London more often than not.


Cattle needed to be fed and that meant a constant attention to growing Hay for food and Straw for bedding as well as roots such as turnip for winter feed. Sewing fields meant first they needed ploughing, on poor farms the men used a wooden plough and it is possible if a horse wasn't available or an Oxen then the man himself would 'pull his weight' in harness with others. Then the sewing and the growing began then the reaping.Hay needed to be stacked for the winter and Turnip to be stored and Potatoes and other roots for winter feed for both animal and human.The water meadows needed to be planted for the early spring. If there was an orchard that too would be tended as would the fencing to keep out vermin.
  
Hunting was also part of his labour, keeping rabbits in huge warrens was a common practise in Wales. Rabbit was a valuable source of meat and the skins which made fine capes for the wealthy but warmth and cover for the poor.Clearing fields of stray rabbits, keeping the weasel and the fox away, hunting the wild boar and the wolf in the forest meant men where needed, wanted, necessary and in the 1700's agriculture was labour intensive.
  
Owen in 1603 wrote A man doth sand for himself,lime for his son and marl for his grandchild (Owen 1603). This single line explains that the Farmers were knowledgeable of the need to restore land when agriculturally used . Even in Elizabethan times the farmer was aware of soil exhaustion.

Though the actual methods of farming where changing dramatically from the two field system to the three field system, with one field left fallow every year to recover its richness. This was causing added time to the Agricultural Labourers work load.

It also means that our Agricultural Labourer knew he would be Liming soil, Manuring Soil or Sanding it, one way or another...it was hard work.Forests to be cleared, Buildings to be repaired for the stock to be housed. Though it was common in the cottages called Longhouses (a single story building) to bring the personal livestock of the labourers into the home keeping one half of the building for the livestock,one half for the humans the shared heat of them keeping warmth in the freezing winters.

Typical stock for the labourer to keep himself would be a pig for meat, a goat for milk, Hens for Eggs, Bees for Honey and a Dog for protection of the livestock.Cats where feral, living wild in the barns and stock pits to keep rats and mice down. A good fighting dog could earn the worker extra money at one of the local dog fights held for entertainment in those days, or bear baiting.However a loss of any one of those animals meant that the family would have a hard time in the coming months.It was a rich Labourer if he could afford a Milch Cow. Goats milk and Sheep's milk where more the labourers source.

In the majority of households it was necessary for the whole family to contribute to the food, the clothing, the sustenance on all levels The labourer's wife was usually a working woman, and children too were put to work at an early age.Ten and twelve hour days where common and as soon as a child was able to walk, and follow instructions then the child worked alongside Father or Mother wherever possible.
  
The children where often the gatherers of fruits and roots, helping with the gathering of hay and straw. Following the men in the fields perhaps to kick the soil over the seeds the men had sewn or gathering the hay as the men scythed it down.

Children where used for watching the livestock,looking for wolves and foxes.(1)

The girls were expected to work alongside their mother in a variety of handicrafts and household chores.The woman's domain was as hard and as labour intensive as the mans and often while pregnant year after year.The boys, from about the age of seven, as they became stronger, would be working beside their father 10 or 12 hours a day, doing a full day's hard work contributing to the family budget.

Schooling was almost unheard of for labouring classes,any who did receive schooling usually only did so for a few scant years. (2)
  
Children were expected to work with adults and work hard. The Agricultural Labourer would work from sun up to sun down, sleeping as soon as it became dark, rising as soon as Cock Crowed at the rise of the first light.
  
Where the man of the house was responsible for cutting wood for the fire and mending any walls or fences, his days labour was long and tiring. His rest would be a necessity and the Housewife had her own duties to perform.The first being a hot meal for her husband, waiting on the table, ready for when he came in exhausted from his long hours work.

The Woman of the house and the children made heavy contributions to the home life.As soon as a child was old enough, amongst the duties would be gathering wood some for kindling some for sometimes to make wattle fences.Gathering fruit from hedgerows and woodlands included a lot of berries and some nuts, the Burdock Plant and wild mint and other herbs and wild foods, the mushrooms and the Beech Mast and Acorns for both Pig and human to eat.As soon as a child was 7 or more they began to work alongside the adults leaving those duties for younger children. When no child was available then those duties where taken up by the Housewife.
  
The boys working with Father, the Girls would be graduating to larger contribution to the home, carding wool or weaving, plaiting. Straw or sifting it free of dust as it was used for bedding and for plaiting into mats and hats as well as crosses for church or corn dollies to sell at the country fairs. 
Making Cheeses and Butter. Perhaps gathering willow withes or rushes to weave into baskets for the home. Washing fleeces to make wool, carding and preparing it, winding it and the arts of sewing and household duties for the table, like feeding the hens or the ducks and Geese. 
Brewing the vinegars and the beers for those able to do so or making cider from pears or apples. Wines where made from hedgerow fruits and leaves and medicines too. Food had to be kept for a long time without the benefit of modern day conveniences of refrigerator or tins. Food was dried, jammed, jellied, smoked,pickled,jarred.jerked.and stored in soil in underground cellars or small tunnels.Packing good food for winter was a time consuming work.

 Diet was meagre and often boring. One hot meal a day was common with Oat gruel to break fast and a stew (pottage) for supper of whatever vegetables where available.The daily needs where always for fuel and for food and water.Water was more often than not from a well or a local stream and that too had to be brought to the house, few people had a Well close by. Many shared a water supply with a neighbour and keeping the well clear of dead animals, from rats to the unwary hedgehog and the insects and other fauna was as much of a daily job as scourging the house for fleas ,mice, rats, and bats.Wells where simply holes in the ground , often a danger to an inquisitive child or straying animal.It was rare to see a well enclosed by a wall with the movie styled winch and rope with a bucket, it was a rope, a wooden pail  and hard labour to drop, fill and haul to the surface.

Clothing and footwear where  usually home spun . The housewife would weave loose woollen cloth to make skirts and finespun was usually bought but money being a scarce commodity meant often the labourer wore rags for working in and it was common for both men and women to strip to the waist to preserve clothing just as men walked barefoot to work to save there one pair of boots for the hard work they did.

The thrift of being poor meant that everything was recycled right down to the smallest cloth scraps which where made into patched clothing and ultimately patch worked covers for the bed. Sack cloth was woven from the roughest of thread and made into a mattress stuffed with straw for sleeping on.If you where lucky then one would be stuffed with feathers though they could also house many fleas and other livestock if the feathers hadn't been boiled first.

Washing clothes was a communal activity for the wives if they lived close enough, people gathered at streams or in larger places special wash houses but for the Labourers family washing was often in a local stream and  for those with a little more material goods a boiler in the back yard. Out in the yard would be the 'kettle' a big metal bowl used to make tallow for candles, soap for washing, rendering fat and if wool was being cleaned that too and the dyes for wool and cloth. 

With life itself consisting of much work towards simply sustaining life a day off being rare, it was enjoyed to the full .A day at a Fair or for celebration was special, planned for, anticipated with great excitement. 

Many people enjoyed cockfighting and bull baiting, Bear Baiting existed as did Dog Fights .There where other sports such as Bare Knuckle Fighting when a man would fight another for money but in the country the Fox Hunt was not considered a sport as such. The Fox killed livestock at a time when the loss of one sheep or one hen was an enormous loss the Fox was an enemy that had to be killed.

Though Riding to Hounds was fox hunting for the Rich as an entertainment there are historical records that show that Bear hunting took place.

The occupation of Rome in the early centuries had added to the variety of the wild beasts available. The escapees from the menageries of the Roman Fort had continued to breed in the wild giving us Pheasant for example and other animals.Dogs too had a reputation, they where working animals not often pets and could be savage beasts as cruel in there attacks as any wolf pack. Dogs becoming feral was a problem for both mankind and for his sheep and cattle.In some areas the Big Cat is referred too and as Romans used Lions and Cheetahs in their war the occasional big cat escapee is a probability not just a guess ! Even today in 2016 the stories of Big cats up in the hills continues.
  
The Romans had introduced fallow deer to Britain, just for hunting and along with the native Wild Boar (a very dangerous beast) and sundry other animals, actual hunting was for both food and sport and the agricultural labourer would be brought in as a beater, banging and shouting to drive the game towards the hunters.

 Rabbit, hare,duck,swan,rooks,thrushes,crows,pheasant and many other animals where the sport of the common man as much as the Lord of the manor, dependant on the rules laid down by the Lord , then some of these fowl and beasts where the province of Lords and Gentry only, those available to the Agricultural Worker where a welcome addition to the food sources.
  
Wild horses evolved from escapees too and Wales had many wild horses which could devastate crops if the herds started to gallop around the land.Shepherds had need to be able to catch and kill such beasts as they would attack domesticated animals. Wild bears and wild boars eventually died out along the centuries but wolves remained a problem for some time until the early 1800, stray wolves where still being killed in Wales at that time. 

Sundays where generally the Lords Day and a day of rest except during Harvest though even then the Labourer was expected to attend his masters church of choice for service.

Wales rural communities where largely self supporting which was not necessarily the case elsewhere.
  
Retirement was unheard of. A Man could expect to work until he died, being 70 meant lighter work perhaps, but you still worked.Living to a great age was unusual though.The average lifespan of an adult was 32 years in the early 1700's rising to 39 years (though in 1720 it dropped to 30 years due to widespread disease.) After 1800 the average age for an adult to live to was 40. During 1727-1730 and again during 1740-1742 epidemics swept through England and Wales causing a massive peak in mortality in the early crisis as much as 88% increase above the norm and in the second crisis an average of 40% above the norm mortality . The Barret family however have an unusually longevity in the male line throughout history bar accidents. Infant mortality is high and Mothers dying in childbirth is frequent but those surviving this, tend to live beyond the national average by several decades.
  
County MP's where elected in those times by persons known as *the 40 shilling freeholders* and eventually if you had a house and a hearth and didn't receive poor relief you could vote in an election. Each county seems to have had a variety of reasons why a person could or could not vote.

As a result the occasional member of my ancestors shows up in registers other than Parish ones and frequently the words indicate a strong Agricultural tradition within the hierarchy of the family and the occasional Reeve or sometimes a closer relationship to the Lord of the Manor is indicated.

Church records, registers and sometimes records personal to a wealthy family have gifted information throughout the searches for years before the 1500's.

The Parish Register which is often the sole source of genealogical information for some areas was begun in England wales and Ireland in 1538 but not until Rose's Act in 1813 where the registers printed and kept more or less uniformly the same from parish to parish.In Wales as little as 1 in 3 parishes kept records during the 18th Century.The change in religion also played a part in lack of birth information as Non Conformist beliefs where widespread throughout the British Isle for many years. Religion was not followed as strictly as it became so in the 19th Century.

Agricultural Labourers would tend to follow their employers religion out of respect/ possibly fear...we will never truly know. 

An act known as Hardwickes Act 1753 made only marriages conducted by an Anglican Clergy recognised as valid'

The lowest rate of population growth appears to have been in agricultural areas with towns and cities and especially those with large manufacturing places supporting a fast population growth as well as an influx of people moving into the areas to obtain work.

In the 18th century drinking tea became common even among ordinary people and Smoking clay pipes  and taking snuff where also part of personal enjoyments.Though drinking alcohol was still a social event with public houses or rather in those days it was called a Tavern, available, the Housewife would also brew various country wines, mead, cider and ales.However in Wales no tavern sold alcohol on Sundays this being seen as The Lords Day, a holy day.
  
Next to cattle/ sheep and the  agricultural trade came the woollen industry. It began to become important as the cloth trade moved up into mid and North Wales in the 16th Century. Run by The Drapers Company of Shrewsbury which was based throughout Machynlledd. Mewrioneth (now Gwynedd),Montgomery and Denbigh. A survey in 1747 shows £100,000 of out put which though not massive (Yorkshires output being in excess of 2 million for example) was an aid in creating work for an ever growing population. With Slate mines,(over a million slates sold in 1688 alone) Coal Mines,some tin and Copper and the ever present fishing industry on the coast work was available. Not financially lucrative but it kept families fed. Why was it so important that other work was available ? because technology was about to spread its wings over the farmers lands.

Shrewsbury controlled the whole of North Wales cattle industry.The agricultural Labourers work became less labour intensive throughout the 1700's as the Industrial Revolution began to produce machinery. This would make some of the work possible to do, with one man instead of ten. Slowly the big cities and the towns began to demand more workers for the increasingly diverse products being created, invented and demanded. People began to migrate and families began to live many miles away from each other. This was possible as transport such as trains where invented and better built coaches, roads and new towns began to develop and the Agricultural Labourer, looking for work...began to migrate.

 In 1752 our Agricultural Labourer along with the rest of Britain's inhabitants gained an extra 11 days age when the old Julian Calender was changed to the Gregorian Calender we are familiar with today 2012.The 2 September 1752 was followed by 13 September.


(1) Quoting William of Malmsbury relative to wolves in King Edgar's time "He, Edgar, imposed a tribute upon the king of Wales exacting yearly three hundred wolves. This tribute continued to be paid for three years,but ceased upon the fourth, because 'nullum se ulterius posse invenire professus;' it was said that he could not find any more";that is, in Wales'

Be that as it may the Wolf was not totally extinct until the 1700's possibly even the 1800's and with little or no real information available the people would not know of extinction, but they would know of deaths, hunts, and all the tales and the fears of a wolf and so a Shepherd watched for all the predators, including the Wolf.
  
(2)Though broader minds had begun education for the ordinary working people; here and there throughout Wales and England, it was not a common practise.
  
(3)The Workhouse in Forden had a reputation for being one of the better ones, yet men lived in one area, women in another and children in another ,a child from 2 years was not deemed to need its mother. Food was rationed and everyone had to work to earn the right to stay. The House of Industry as Forden Workhouse was known used the Whip as a punishment for misdemeanours and the Scolds Bridle.

 Quoted from:-

ancestryaid.co.uk/boards/family-history-genealogy-information/5839-agricultural-labourer.

MaryC

In the 18th century, travel as we know it today was usually neither desired nor under- taken by the labouring classes, isolated in their village communities except for an occasional journey of a few miles to a nearby village or market town. Parish records show that many would be born, married and die within the confines of their small world, and our labourer would not have the level of national and world news that we enjoy today. He would have scant knowledge of the events of the time that moulded the destiny of Britain and the world outside. Such things as the American and French Revolutions and the Scottish Jacobite risings in the mid-1700s would pass him by, unless he was personally involved. It might be months or years later that news of these events would filter through to him. Yes, there were newspapers, but few agricultural workers could read or write.

  
written by

Susan Morrison-Jones 2012
rewritten 2016


 * (1) King Charles I confiscated the gold which London merchants had deposited at the Mint for safety in 1640. (Instead the people began to deposit their money with goldsmiths  they gave receipts for the gold in the form of notes promising to pay on demand.The goldsmiths capitalised on the fact that not all of their customers withdrew their gold at the same time.So it was possible to issue notes for more gold than they actually had. They could then lend money as well.

BIBLIOGRAPHY:

Ashton, T.S. - ‘The Industrial Revolution 1760-1830’ Oxford University Press [1948]

Flinn, M.W. - ‘An Economic and Social History of Britain Since 1700’  Macmillan

[1963]

Hill, C.P. -  ‘British Economic and Social History 1700-1975’ Edward Arnold [1977]

 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Agricultural_Revolution

 Mark Overton is Professor of Economic and Social History  BBC
  
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/british/empire_seapower/agricultural_revolution_01.shtml
  
Society and Economy in Modern Britain 1700-1850  By Richard Brown
  
http://www.cepr.org/meets/wkcn/1/1679/papers/Brunt-Dennison-Simpson_Chapter.pdf
  
http://www.geevor.com/media/teaching%20resources/coal%20mining.pdf



Introduction

                                                                 Susan Morrison Jones

My blogspot on Genealogy of the family lines stretched my research to the limit. I discovered it wasn't enough to write George Barrat 1770 -1847  Ag Lab.... I wanted to know what an Ag Lab 'was'....it turns out to have been Agricultural Labourer and that told me almost nothing. So off I went on the old internet trail to discover more and more and even more.
Eventually I had so much data, much of it repetative that I lost patience and wrote my own version out of sheer frustration.

Truthfully the articles here are a compilation of (and recorded and recognised) vast quanitites of other peoples work. I take what I wish to remember, write it up, add the sources and then do a little creative clean up to present it as an accompnyment to the genealogy site. This is to enable my family to truly understand the amazing strengths and weaknesses of our ancestors. To perhaps keep them in mind, to give a nod to some of our own inherited traits but more than anything...to give proper recognition to the people whose strength of purpose and in some cases sheer guts to survive...made me and in turn my own descendants possible.


So in recognition of George Barrat my 6th Great Grandfather I wrote my article on Agricultural Labourer. Not the best piece of work I've created, but an honest one, because it was about my own family and in the end, I was left open mouthed with both amazment and shock at the sheer brutality of life in those days.

ENjoy if you will, a journey written for the emotions of recognition and appreciation of the people more than the date or the wealth they did or did not possess, articles about family...
regards
Susan