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  • Horse Meat Dealers

    Click image for larger version  Name:	D68EF216-73E4-4E7F-B9D6-67C1771C56BD.jpeg Views:	0 Size:	61.7 KB ID:	753881

    A very amusing illustrated article with the title “Horseflesh Meals for Londoners” appeared in the Daily Mirror on 21st January, 1904. It described the unsuccessful attempts of a reporter to obtain a horse meat steak in an upmarket restaurant or raw horseflesh from a back street horse meat dealer.

    Having first failed to find a restaurant able or willing to serve him a steak Arc-de-Triomphe, he consulted a London trade directory and found a lengthy list of Horse Meat Salesmen therein:

    “Once more there was an “embarrass de richesses,” for there are a column and a half of dealers in horse meat in London.

    Dealers in horse meat do not carry on business in the main West End thoroughfares, and our reporter, now faint and starving, set out to find one in a back street.

    He found one, but although almost overcome, he made a fresh start and tottered on to the next address for the dealer in horse flesh proved to be nothing more than a ‘cat’s meat man’.

    Luckily it was not far, but there also there were no succulent looking joints, no clean butcher’s counter, but only another ‘cat’s meat shop’ with a crowd of anxious cats sniffing round the door.

    It was too late to go farther, and our reporter went in and learned that A DEALER IN HORSEMEAT AND A ‘CAT’S MEAT MAN’ are one and the same thing.

    “Never heard tell of anyone eating ‘oss. No not in thirty years,” said the proud owner, who was slicing up a large chunk of brown meat and fixing it on little wooden skewers.

    “I reckon it’s not good for anything but cats and dogs. You see, an ‘oss ain’t got no gall, and gall’s what keeps the blood good.”

    “Beside’s an ‘oss ain’t got no brain.”

    “Tuppence ‘apenny a pound we sells it at and all ready cooked too. That’s cheap enough.

    Our reporter’s only excuse was that he was really very hungry!

    But what becomes of the eighty tons of horseflesh which is sold every week in London? Surely it is not all eaten by cats and dogs.”
















  • #2
    Click image for larger version  Name:	41AD0ECC-DAE6-4FDB-B1A8-6923D3C5648E.jpeg Views:	0 Size:	146.5 KB ID:	753883

    Of course, the reporter could have saved his shoe leather with a bit of thought.

    The 1895 Post Office Directory above lists 40+ Horse Meat Salesmen - including a Mrs Maria Forsdike of 57, St George Street. Common sense should have told the Mirror reporter that these businesses were not all selling or processing raw horse flesh. He need only have looked under C for ‘Cat’s Meat’ and finding no entries under that heading, have realised that CMM’s were advertised under the more dignified description of Horse Meat Salesmen.
    Last edited by MrBarnett; 03-23-2021, 04:14 PM.

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    • #3
      Click image for larger version  Name:	7543C04B-F805-4210-A4D1-6120ADB89832.jpeg Views:	0 Size:	13.3 KB ID:	753885

      In fairness to the clueless Mirror man, he didn’t have the advantage of being able to check out the entries on the 1891 census. If he had, the truth of the matter might have dawned on him.

      The canny folk at the Census knew better, as they demonstrated when they amended Maria Forsdike’s (Ma Lechmere’s) occupation in 1891.


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      • #4
        Ma Lechmere ran a cat’s meat shop selling horse meat that she had obtained already boned and cooked from either Harrison, Barber or one of the smaller cat’s meat wholesalers who imported cooked horse meat from the provinces.

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        • #5
          I have seen references to wagons loaded with cooked provincial horse meat standing outside Liverpool Street Station - next door to Broad Street Station interestingly.

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          • #6
            Knackers did not give away bones to their customers. Selling a horse carcase with its bones in place would have been throwing away a valuable commodity - valuable to the knacker, who would have processed the bones into oils and fertiliser, but of no use at all to a cat’s meat man/woman running a small shop in a back street.

            The boiling of horse flesh was a ‘nuisance’ trade that was heavily regulated and was the main reason that Harrison, Barber’s handful of yards had a monopoly on the activity in London.

            The situation was very different outside of the Metropolis and you can find many press reports of the ‘nuisances’ caused by small-scale knackers/bone boilers in the provincial press. But for some reason, post 1874, no such nuisances are reported on in London other than those caused by Harrison, Barber and its constituent firms. The reason for that is quite obvious. There were no small-scale horse butchers in the Capital.

            But there were plenty of people who carved up pieces of boneless cooked horse flesh to sell as pet food. They didn’t need ‘fined toothed’ saws to do that and they didn’t learn the skill of jointing carcasses.
            Last edited by MrBarnett; 03-23-2021, 04:42 PM.

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            • #7
              Harrison, Barber had the contract to dispose of Pickford’s redundant horses. The manager of Pickford’s Horse Department was on HB’s board.

              One of Charles Lechmere’s sons, a carman who carried cat’s meat, lived for a while in tiny Winthrop Street, a few doors away from HB’s yard in a house that in the past had housed HB’s workers.

              Add that to the cooked horseflesh carts standing outside Lechmere’s workplace, the location of the 1876 accident a few streets away from the ‘chief seat of the London horse slaughterers’ (Harrison, Barber’s head office and three yards) in Islington, and Ma Lechmere’s cat’s meat activities and the overwhelming likelihood is that Charles Lechmere carried cooked horseflesh for Harrison, Barber.

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              • #8
                z0mg

                Are you seriously suggesting that Charles LeCross was NOT subjected to the desentizising experiences reported by some 21st century slaughterhouse workers engaged in killing live animals, since he was a 19th century carman NOT engaged in killing animals or handling carcasses, and therefore might NOT have been a psychopath????

                it's almost as if you think that his mother's occupation three years after the murders has no bearing on his status as prime suspect!!!

                Please stop making sense or I'll have to report this thread

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by Kattrup View Post
                  z0mg

                  Are you seriously suggesting that Charles LeCross was NOT subjected to the desentizising experiences reported by some 21st century slaughterhouse workers engaged in killing live animals, since he was a 19th century carman NOT engaged in killing animals or handling carcasses, and therefore might NOT have been a psychopath????

                  it's almost as if you think that his mother's occupation three years after the murders has no bearing on his status as prime suspect!!!

                  Please stop making sense or I'll have to report this thread
                  Don’t forget the anecdotal evidence that Lechmere’s descendants used to butcher horse carcasses in their back garden in the 1930s. That puts a spanner in my theory.

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                  • #10
                    Click image for larger version  Name:	1CA69D6F-E39C-41EC-9598-70B9F550BE82.jpeg Views:	0 Size:	16.0 KB ID:	753898
                    ‘Rough butcher.’

                    I found this some time ago. It refers to a firm of Romford knackers that a cousin of mine once worked for. The family/local connection is of interest as is the fact that around the turn of the century the firm was run by a woman - Matilda Palmer. I’m not sure if she ever wielded the pole axe herself, but she’s recorded as a horse slaughterer.

                    The relevance to this thread is that my understanding of the job of a knacker doesn’t involve the careful dismembering of horse carcasses. The flesh was roughly hacked off the bones, it was then put into one boiler and the bones were roughly smashed up and put into another. When the bones, having given up their valuable oils, were removed from the boiler they were crushed into a powder which was used as fertiliser. This is a VERY different process from that of a butcher preparing meat for the table with neatly trimmed/jointed bones.
                    Last edited by MrBarnett; 03-23-2021, 06:11 PM.

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                    • #11
                      Click image for larger version  Name:	1D6BFDFC-6CAB-4053-AF32-8DEB4A22DAAD.jpeg Views:	0 Size:	174.3 KB ID:	753900 Apologies for the further diversion, but this photo of High Street, Romford shows a large woman (I think?) looking a bit like Ronnie Barker driving a cart a few yards from Matilda Palmer’s home.

                      The pub sign in the distance on the right is where another Matilda - Crossingham - celebrated her wedding. (White Hart pub)

                      I should add that the cart with its backward slope looks very much like the typical knacker’s cart.

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                      • #12
                        Click image for larger version  Name:	640AA7F4-E6F4-45C1-A442-7534D6EFACD9.jpeg Views:	0 Size:	106.8 KB ID:	753910

                        The 1891 census recorded Maria Louisa Forsdike living at 18, St George Street. That was a small shop on the corner of Artichoke Hill. It’s unclear from maps whether the shop had a yard, but there was a small open area behind it.

                        I don’t have a photo of the shop to hand, but this great photo showing the shops on either corner of John’s Hill (the next ‘Hill’ along) and St George Street gives an idea of the size of the shop on the corner of Artichoke Hill.

                        Are we to believe that Lechmere’s 65-year-old mother was carrying on a ‘noxious’ trade in a tiny shop next door to a pub - and no-one complained about the smell?

                        Cutting cooked horseflesh into cubes and selling it in small quantities to pet owners makes perfect sense - butchering horse carcasses, boiling up the flesh and somehow disposing of the bones doesn’t.

                        The logical conclusion is that Ma ran a retail cat’s meat shop and obtained her product on a daily basis from either Harrison, Barber or one of the two or three independent wholesale horseflesh dealers nearby.

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Kattrup View Post
                          z0mg

                          Are you seriously suggesting that Charles LeCross was NOT subjected to the desentizising experiences reported by some 21st century slaughterhouse workers engaged in killing live animals, since he was a 19th century carman NOT engaged in killing animals or handling carcasses, and therefore might NOT have been a psychopath????

                          it's almost as if you think that his mother's occupation three years after the murders has no bearing on his status as prime suspect!!!

                          Please stop making sense or I'll have to report this thread
                          Now that's sarcasm!
                          Thems the Vagaries.....

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                          • #14
                            Cat’s Meat Men were figures of fun in Victorian society, the butt of jokes and songs. Little wonder then that they preferred alternative descriptions. Horseflesh/horsemeat dealer/salesman were preferred monikers.

                            Jack Atcheler, the legendary Islington knacker, once described himself in court as the ‘purveyor of comestibles to Her Majesty’s canine race’ And on another occasion when a Cat’s Meat man announced that he was a ‘domestic pet’s butcher’ the magistrate asked why he didn’t call himself a ‘feline restaurateur’.

                            Don’t be fooled by Ma Lechmere being listed as a Horse Meat salesman alongside the likes of HB, Currell and Harrison who were in the wholesale business. She had a small shop from which she sold pet food.

                            “What I tell you three times must be true!” LOL

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
                              Don’t be fooled by Ma Lechmere being listed as a Horse Meat salesman alongside the likes of HB, Currell and Harrison who were in the wholesale business. She had a small shop from which she sold pet food.
                              Do you know if the shop was at her home address, or elsewhere? Only there's a mention of a catsmeat shop being on the corner of Cable Street and Backchurch Lane at the time that the Pinchin St torso was discovered in '89, not 50 yards from the archway.

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