In 1880 her name [Elizabeth Stride] appears in workhouse records, once at Stepney Union in February and a second time at Hackney Union in April where the word 'destitute' was written beside her entry (1) 1 LMA: Stepney Union; Bromley and Hackney Union Workhouse records: Admissions and Discharge Registers: SH BG/139/003, STBG/L/133/01.Rubenhold, Hallie. The Five (p. 366). Transworld. Kindle Edition.
Stepney union Bromley
Admitted Friday 13 Feb. 1880 Elizabeth Stride born 1834, needle[woman] wife of John, carpenter discharged 13 Feb. 1880 Brought by P.C. 351K taken out by P.C. 145K
Bromley House admission and discharge
Admitted Friday 13th Feb 1880, Elizabeth Stride born 1834, occupation-needle, religion C of E, parish admitted from Ratcliff, brought by P.C. 148K from King David P.S. discharged 13th Feb 1880, charged to Ratcliff parish, taken out by P.C. 148K
STBG/L/132/23 and STBG/L/133/01
Unless I have totally missed it, Hallie Rubelnhold makes no mention of the fact that on this occasion, Elizabeth Stride was brought in and taken out of the workhouse, on the same day, by the police. But she makes a point of telling us that when admitted to Hackney workhouse, Elizabeth was classed as being 'destitute'
I have asked before if women picked up by police on any criminal charge were sometimes sent to the workhouse as a place of remand until a magistrates court appearance. I know homeless women were sometimes sent by police to workhouses, like those picked up in Trafalgar square, and given workhouse tickets in a scheme to keep them from sleeping rough, but I specifically mean those where it is noted they were taken back out of the workhouse by police. Did they then go on to court on a charge of some sort?
In one of three workhouse records I found in 2015 for Alice McKenzie, twice admitted for alcoholism, and once found on Dorset Street, Alice was also admitted for being drunk and discharged in what looks like a note saying 'for court' by PC 256L
Aug 1st 1877 Saint George´s Workhouse, Mint Street Register, 1877-1878 SOBG/106/8
Alice Mackenzie, hawker, church of England, birth year 1846, admitted from St George parish brought in by PC 110L,
charged with being drunk discharged wed Aug 1st -how discharged- (for court?) by PC256L
Presumably there would have been some sort of court record to correspond to this and perhaps there is in the case of Elizabeth Stride too but why was the involvement of police not mentioned about the Bromley workhouse entry for Elizabeth Stride? There may also be a corresponding surviving court record.
Maybe this has been mentioned before already somewhere and I've missed it or just forgotten?
Comment