Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Prosperous plasterer or pauper polisher?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Prosperous plasterer or pauper polisher?

    Evening all!

    Here´s one of todays longest posts. Please bear with me, though, since I believe I´m onto something quite interesting!

    I have spent some time digging for Joseph Fleming on the net; being a Swede, I do not have access to the many British archives, and so I have to make do with netfishing.

    My interest has mainly been to learn about reformatories and such, since the thread revealing information on Evans/Fleming at the Stone Asylum displays a number of oddities. I think the best way to find substantiation for some of the information offered on the thread, is to look for Fleming in the reformatory records. I have made some progress, but this thread is for something different, something I stumbled over and was amazed by.

    Joseph Fleming has been traced censuswise, and there is an impressive amount of information about him. Chris Scott has posted this bit on the 1881 census:
    ”By the time of the 1881 census, Joseph had left home and was living in lodgings in 61 Crozier Terrace which was in Homerton, north east of Bethnal Green. By this time he is listed as following his father´s trade as a plasterer.”

    Another piece of useful information provided by the same Chris Scott is this, an account of the Joseph Flemings born at the approximate time that he was supposed to have been born, in March 1859:

    “1858
    John Joseph Fleming 1858 Jul-Aug-Sep Weardale Durham
    Joseph Fleming 1858 Oct-Nov-Dec Guisborough Yorkshire - North Riding

    1859
    Joseph Fleming 1859 Jan-Feb-Mar Stourbridge Shropshire, Staffordshire, West Midlands, Worcestershire
    Joseph Fleming 1859 Apr-May-Jun Bethnal Green Greater London, London, Middlesex
    Joseph Fleming 1859 Jul-Aug-Sep Hunslet Yorkshire - West Riding
    Joseph Fleming 1859 Jul-Aug-Sep Penrith Cumbria, Cumberland

    1860
    Frederick Joseph Fleming 1860 Jan-Feb-Mar Isle of Wight Hampshire, Isle of Wight
    John Joseph Fleming 1860 Jul-Aug-Sep Lambeth Greater London, London, Surrey
    Jonah Joseph Fleming 1860 Jan-Feb-Mar Westminster St Margaret Middlesex
    Joseph Fleming 1860 Apr-May-Jun Wakefield Yorkshire - West Riding, West Yorkshire
    Joseph Fleming 1860 Jul-Aug-Sep Lambeth Greater London, London, Surrey
    Joseph Fleming 1860 Oct-Nov-Dec Manchester (1837-1924) Lancashire
    Joseph Fleming 1860 Oct-Nov-Dec Stockbridge Hampshire, Wiltshire
    Louis Joseph Fleming 1860 Jan-Feb-Mar Halifax Yorkshire - West Riding, West Yorkshire
    William Joseph Fleming 1860 Jan-Feb-Mar Stafford Staffordshire”

    The one we are interested in is of course the Bethnal Green Joe on the 1859 birth list. He is the boy who supposedly grows up to be the seemingly well-to-do plasterer of Crozier Terrace back in 1881.

    What I stumbled over, and would like to direct your interest to, is a listing of the residents of Poplar Union Workhouse, apparently a part of the 1881 census, that is the very census in which we find Joe the plasterer. For in that listing, among the paupers, the mentally ill, the blind and the sick, I found Joseph Fleming. He is listed as an unmarried male, 21 years of age, an inmate of the workhouse with a birthplace described as Bethnal Green, Middlesex. I fail to see how this could be any other Joseph Fleming than the one we are looking for. He is not listed as a plasterer, though; his occupation is given as “French polisher”. A French polisher was working with wood, mahogany not least, polishing and varnishing it to give a shiny and durable surface. It was a common enough occupation back in the 1880´s.

    I really don´t know what significance to read into all this, just as I don´t know if I´m the first to spot the entry – it seems incredible, since it is there on the Internet. The site is www.workhouses.org.uk and it offers loads of interesting information.

    Finally, leaving you to ponder and pursue all of this, I cannot resist adding this snippet, from the Daily Telegraph of October 4, 1888:
    “As showing the vigilance with which the police all over London are watching for any suspicious signs an incident which occurred at Charing-cross is worth mentioning. A constable noticed a man leaving a coffee-shop carrying a bundle which appeared to have bloodstains upon it, and the man had also stains upon his hands. He was promptly interrogated, but he explained that he was a French polisher, and that the stains on his hands and on the parcel resulted from his work. These explanations having been found accurate he was allowed to proceed on his way.”

    So, friends, what have we got? Two Joseph Flemings from Bethnal Green? Or one, staying at Crozier terrace AND in Poplar workhouse? It is all very confusing, but I hope that we can mutually shed some light on it all.

    All the best,
    Fisherman

  • #2
    A fascinating find, Fish, and very well sleuthed on your part.

    I know there was a Joseph Fleming born in Bethnal Green (I think) who was listed as a "boot finisher", and who was undoubtedly a seperate entity from "Mad Joe", but I'm not sure whether this job title and that of a "French polisher" were interchangable. Certainly the Joe we're interested in was capable of job-diversity, as witness his apparent transition from plasterer to "costermonger" and thence to dock labourer. No reason why he couldn't have done a spot of French polishing on the side.

    Best regards,
    Ben

    Comment


    • #3
      But why is he listed as two different entries in the same census? It makes no sense at all.

      Moreover, if the two Flemings were indeed two different people, there is one of them missing in the birth entries, implying that this one may have become a Joseph Fleming AFTER his birth. It invites all kinds of conspiracysmelling suggestions, does it not?

      Maybe we should also keep in mind that the more credible guess is that the Poplar workhouse Fleming was added to the inquest early in the year 1881 - he would have turned 22 in March if he is our man - and I cannot see how he could not be...?

      This is driving me up the walls. And the name of Joseph Fleming is becoming more and more suspicious the more you look into him!

      The best,
      Fisherman
      Last edited by Fisherman; 01-31-2009, 12:23 AM.

      Comment


      • #4
        One question that becomes very vital here is how the census was performed. It could reasonably not have been allowed to drag out for any longer time, since that would have made sure that many people were added more than once to the listings, since there would have been an ongoing migration at all times.
        So, if the census was a quick affair - how did Joe manage to live in two places at the same time. And under apparently radically different circumstances too...?

        Let´s hear it from the guys and girls who know how the census was established!

        The best,
        Fisherman
        Last edited by Fisherman; 01-31-2009, 12:39 AM.

        Comment


        • #5
          Hi all -

          It's not unheard of for someone to appear twice in the same census, but in this case I would have to suggest that there were, in fact, two Joseph Flem(m)ings.

          Here, for the sake of comparison is, plausibly, the other one:

          1861: 31 Turville Street, Bethnal Green St Matthew
          George Flemming, head, m, 40, shoemaker, b. Sheffield, Yorkshire
          Sarah Flemming, wife, m, 41, b. Bethnal Green, Middlesex
          George Flemming, son, u, 17, shoemaker, b. Bethnal Green, Middlesex
          Charles Flemming, son, u, 14, wood chopper, b. Bethnal Green, Middlesex
          Joseph Flemming, son, u, 3, b. Bethnal Green, Middlesex

          1871: District Bethnal Green Workhouse School St Matthew
          Joseph Flemming, inmate, 11, scholar, b. unknown
          Sarah Flemming, inmate, 6, scholar, b. unknown

          1881: Poplar Union Workhouse (= All Saints Poplar, district 42)
          Joseph Fleming, inmate, u, 21, French polisher, b. Bethnal Green

          Regards,

          Mark

          Comment


          • #6
            There were at least two Joseph Flem(m)ings born in Bethnal Green in the same year, it appears. One - "James Evans" - was the son of Henrietta Fleming and husband Richard Fleming, a plasterer. The other - Joseph Flemming, with two "Ms" - was the son of James Flemming, silk-weaver, and Eliza (also a silk-weaver). The latter Joseph appears in the 1871 Census as an inmate at the Bethnal Green Workhouse School, and I suspect it is he who ended up in the Poplar Workhouse as a french polisher in 1881. His lowly family trade, and his early "career" in a workhouse school, all point to the same conclusion.
            Last edited by Sam Flynn; 01-31-2009, 01:26 AM. Reason: Mark - our posts crossed!
            Kind regards, Sam Flynn

            "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

            Comment


            • #7
              Thanks for that, Mark! This "alternative" Joseph, though, would have been born in 1858, and it seems there is no such birth registered for some reason. Also, he drops two years, travelling from 1861 to 1871. Of course, it may be just the one year depending on when the census and the workhouse school entries were made. Still, given the company of a Sarah Flemming, it seems that the girl may be reflecting her mother´s name, strengthening your case.

              One thing that is dropped alongside that year or two, is of course one of the "m":s in "Flemming", but that may have a very simple explanation.

              All in all a reasonable suggestion - but it would be nice to find the missing bits and pieces to wrap things up!

              The best,
              Fisherman
              Last edited by Fisherman; 01-31-2009, 01:48 AM.

              Comment


              • #8
                Whoa, Sam - was that Joseph Flem(m)ing number two or three...?

                The best,
                Fisherman

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                  All in all a reasonable suggestion - but it would be nice to find the missing bits and pieces to wrap things up!
                  Thanks, Fisherman.

                  I'm concerned that you're looking for perfection, though. The poor kid was in the workhouse school by 1871. I'm not sure where his parents were, and to be honest I haven't looked to find out, but it's quite plausible that there was no relative around to pinpoint the precise date of his birth. Whichever functionary provided the enumerator with the information would have been entirely comfortable in the knowledge that they had provided a reasonable ballpark estimate of Joseph's age. This isn't fraud, or deliberate misinformation intended to provoke the frustration of historians of the future: sad to say, within the workings of Victorian state institutions at census time, it's just the way life was.

                  You can take it or leave it, and Sam's nearly-matching suggestion of an "alternative" Joseph Flem(m)ing is at least as compelling as mine, but I'm sure that all these examples show the importance of a bit of leeway and lateral thinking in making sense of the censuses.

                  Regards,

                  Mark

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                    Whoa, Sam - was that Joseph Flem(m)ing number two or three...?
                    Number two: born in 1859, same year as the one born into the plumbing family.
                    Kind regards, Sam Flynn

                    "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Mark writes:

                      "I'm concerned that you're looking for perfection"

                      I prefer perfection, Mark - but I can easily see the sense in not craving it.

                      "You can take it or leave it"

                      I´d opt for taking it, as it stands. It would seem the more reasonable choice.

                      All the best,
                      Fisherman

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Hello Fisherman,
                        I agree our Mr Fleming is a intresting candidate, infact both Marys Joes are.
                        However I feel that if he is to be taken as a serious suspect two factors have to be established.
                        A] His proven height.
                        B] An expert at determining height in sketches in comparison to surroundings.
                        The latter remark refers to the sketch showing the service at Leytonstone cemetary, [ kellys funeral] I have always maintained that the male figure nearest to us, and bending slightly appearing to lay his wreath is a man of stature, he simply looks head and shoulders above the rest , look at his thigh and calf length...
                        Most casebook members have put this down to a trick of the eye, but I am not convinced.
                        We have the priest Father Colomban described somewhere, as 'A giant of a man', however unless the priest was not wearing his correct attire, it would appear not to have been him.
                        So could it be a possibility that Joe Fleming could have been present, and the priest and him were confused with one another?
                        It surely is a possibility that the party of eight mourners, consisted of six women that were made up of a representive of McCarthys, and the woman that knew her in the court, and attended her inquest, and both the men in her life in recent times the two Josephs.
                        That being the case we would have two major suspects present, and who knows it would not then be beyond the realms of possibilty that the 'infamous' grave spitting took place .
                        Regards Richard.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Births did not have to be legally registered until 1875, so many births, particularly in the East End and other poverty stricken parts of the metropolis went unregistered. Always a problem for genealogists. There were several namesake Flemings as well as namesakes for all the other major players. Decide on which Fleming is the ONE. Order some certificates and try to match up names addresses etc with census records and asylums. Miss Marple

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Hello Miss M,
                            Originally posted by miss marple View Post
                            Decide on which Fleming is the ONE.
                            It's clear enough - to me, at least - that the plasterer with whom Mary Kelly was involved was the Joseph Fleming born in 1859 to Richard Fleming (plasterer) and Henrietta (née Mason/Masom). The same Joseph who went on to become a plasterer in his own right and was registered as such in the 1881 Census, when he was a lodger at Crozier Terrace, Hackney - and the same Joseph Fleming who would later go by the alias "James Evans".
                            Kind regards, Sam Flynn

                            "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              ... well, of course, it's fairly obvious isn't it?

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X