Hi All,
Up until WW2 Kent hop pickers got paid in "Hop Tokens". It was only when the hop-pickers were "paid off" at the end of their stint that the tokens were converted to cash. E. Scott of Hunton used printed cards, and John Day of Scott's Farm, Hunton, used perforated metal tokens.
The use of tokens improved the farmer's cash flow and also stopped the pickers from moving on, but the tokens did have a certain cash value in local shops and pubs.
The attached is from "Essays in Kentish History" by Margaret Roake (1973).

It would appear from this that Eddowes and Kelly could only have bought the jacket and boots in Maidstone on their return journey to London. So John Kelly's story that they hadn't done well at hopping and were just as penniless as when they left London wasn't true. Unless, of course, he meant they were penniless because of buying the boots and jacket. But who buys new attire and then walks the thirty five miles to London, a feat they accomplished in one day? And him in his new boots. Ouch!
Thoughts please.
Regards,
Simon
Up until WW2 Kent hop pickers got paid in "Hop Tokens". It was only when the hop-pickers were "paid off" at the end of their stint that the tokens were converted to cash. E. Scott of Hunton used printed cards, and John Day of Scott's Farm, Hunton, used perforated metal tokens.
The use of tokens improved the farmer's cash flow and also stopped the pickers from moving on, but the tokens did have a certain cash value in local shops and pubs.
The attached is from "Essays in Kentish History" by Margaret Roake (1973).
It would appear from this that Eddowes and Kelly could only have bought the jacket and boots in Maidstone on their return journey to London. So John Kelly's story that they hadn't done well at hopping and were just as penniless as when they left London wasn't true. Unless, of course, he meant they were penniless because of buying the boots and jacket. But who buys new attire and then walks the thirty five miles to London, a feat they accomplished in one day? And him in his new boots. Ouch!
Thoughts please.
Regards,
Simon

I didn't mean to sound as if I was correcting you! I get carried away sometimes. It's all very well for me because I live a couple of miles up the road and my husband's a grower, but most people wouldn't know what the area was like if they didn't live there!
It is very quaint and charming out here in the sticks. I live in a very small (although getting bigger unfortunately) Medieval village, where they still have the yearly pagan bonfire parade, a la Wicker Man (although we only burn effigys of famous people and not policemen - well not usually) and we have a genuine haunted pub that was partly built in the 13th century, and was having the latest modernizations down in the 17th. Lol.
......her apron was supposedly pretty filthy and Walter Dew described as so black you could hardly see what colour it was. (pinch of salt there) but her hands and nails were certainly turgid -

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