


SCHOOLBOY’S THEFT OF A WATCH July 13, 1912
At Hitchin Petty Sessions on Tuesday, Frank Wray, a schoolboy aged 12 pleaded guilty
to stealing a silver watch and chain valued at 15/-
January, 1901
Ernest Cannon, carrier of Preston, was summoned under the Highway Act with being
at such a distance from his horses and van as to not have control of the same at
Hitchin on December 21st and was fined 10/-
ALLEGED CRUELTY TO A HORSE February 9, 1901
At the Petty Sessions on Tuesday, George Freeman, labourer of Preston, was charged
with cruelty to a horse at Hitchin, by causing it to be worked in an unfit state
and Frank Brown, farmer of Preston was charged with causing the animal to be ill-
SETTING FIRE TO A STACK AT PRESTON February 9, 1901
William Andrews (45) labourer, pleaded guilty to an indictment for setting fire to a stack of wheat, the property of Alfred George Piggott at Preston on 31 January. Mr Earle, who prosecuted said that the prisoner had set fire to and destroyed a stack worth £75.
(The prisoner was seen near to the stack a little while before the fire broke out. Being charged, he said “I did set fire to it. Don’t know what made me do it”. The prisoner, it seemed, had worked a few days for Mr Piggott a few months ago.) It was only fair to say that had not the prisoner admitted his guilt, there would have been some difficult in tracing the culprit.
The police in reply to his Lordship said they knew nothing against the prisoner except that he was discharged from the Army 20 years ago for committing a felony. The learned judge, in passing sentence of 12 months hard labour said he had been guilty of one of the most wicked things he could do.
Mr Earle said that it had just come to his knowledge that the prisoner had an accident some two years ago and had been queer in his head ever since. Supt. Reynolds having verified this statement, his Lordship said he must take it into consideration and he should reduce the sentence to one of six months hard labour.
ACCIDENTAL DEATH July 13 1901
On Wednesday evening a man named Edward Wilson died at the Hospital (Hitchin) from injuries received by falling down a new well which is being sunk at Temple Dinsley. While he was being lowered down, he by some means, fell off the chair and was very severely injured. He was removed to hospital as quickly as possible and everything that could be done for him was done but he never rallied. The deceased was a Luton man and leaves a widow and eleven children.
October 12, 1901. Charles Gray, a labourer, was summoned for trespassing in search of game at Preston on September 29th but the complainant asked leave to withdraw he case and this was allowed.
November 23, 1901. Arthur Sutton, William Bath, Frederick Cannon, Arthur Fairy, Ernest
Smith and Frederick Gray, boys, were summoned for throwing stones on the highway
at Hitchin on November 3rd. Pc Burt spoke to seeing the boys throwing stones at Walworth
Road, near the railway bridge. The boys denied the charge. Each was fined 1/-
November 30, 1901. Ebenezer Fox, labourer of Stevenage, was charged with trespassing in search of conies at Ippollitts on September 2nd. A game keeper named Ralph Barnes said that about seven o’clock in the evening he heard a noise in Wain Wood and concealed himself. A few minutes later he saw the defendant and his brother (Albert) come out of the wood. The defendant fired at a rabbit and then took the gun to pieces and gave part of it to his brother. On stopping the defendant, the gun stock and ten cartridges were found in his possession. The brother got away without being searched (though his pockets looked bulky).
The defendant said his brother was not there and it was not true he fired the gun off. He was not in Wain Wood on that occasion. He had leave to shoot rabbits on Mr Dew’s farm as they were doing him damage. At this point the defendant’s brother came into court and was told there was a warrant against him for his share of the transaction. The complainant asked for an adjournment to call new witnesses. The brothers were fined £1 and costs or one month’s imprisonment in default.
December 7, 1901. Frederick Armstrong of Preston Hill Farm was fined 5/-
STRAW PLAIT MAKING IN HERTFORDSHIRE AND BEDFORDSHIRE -
(Taken from a report by Red Van 2 in Hertfordshire issued by English Land Restoration
League) The women of Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire are largely engaged in another
sorely sweated industry – the making of straw plait. The work is paid for by the
score yards at from 1 1/2d or 2d (for four straw rustic) to 5d; or for the most difficult
kinds such as 16-
A woman whom the lecturer interviewed at Hemel Hempstead was making “7-
!If I commence about nine in the morning”, said the woman, “and leave off at nine
at night, doing some housework between-
Where this sort of work is largely done, the homes of the labourers are grievously
neglected and intemperance is said to be prevalent. There is no doubt that the dealers
form a ring in whose hands the poor workers are absolutely helpless. When the Red
Van visited Tring Plait Market on September 8th, the dealers taking advantage of
the fact that the barley harvest was nearly over, and that many men whose wives were
plaiters were out of work, were reducing the already starvation prices by a halfpenny
or more per score yards. The hat-
FARM LABOURERS’ DWELLINGS 17 February 1894
It is widely felt that the condition of the farm labourer is still very far from what it ought to be. Recent legislation in the form of Allotment Acts, Acts for the better housing of the working classes, Free Education and Parish Councils are evidence of the interest taken in his welfare. And though it is to be feared that some of these Acts have been shaped and passed more with a view to electioneering contingencies than through a disinterested desire to benefit the agricultural worker, still, the fact remains that they are evidence of the expressed will of the country on the subject. It is our duty to welcome them as such and to extract what good we can from them.
The condition of the dwellings of farm labourers differs considerably in various parishes. Where the whole or greater part of the parish, with all the cottages in it, belongs to a wealthy proprietor who takes a personal interest in his estate and those who dwell in it, the cottages and gardens of the labourers leave little to be desired. But in the case of smaller estates, where the cottages occupied by the labourers do not belong to the owners of the estates on which they work, but to small owners, a very different state of things exists. And it is to this condition of things that many of the evils from which the agricultural labourer is now suffering may be traced.
And here it may be advisable briefly to refer to some of the causes which have led to the present state of things. It was doubtless a direct encouragement to thrift that a poor man should be enabled to invest the savings of years in the purchase of a cottage or cottages. He found in this way, an investment which not only gave him a good return for his capital but added the additional pleasure of enabling him to gaze daily upon the fruits of his labour and care. Nor can the owners of estates be justly blamed for contributing to if not preventing this state of things. They found cottage property a very expensive possession. That their labourers could get cottages somewhere else and relieve them of the worry and expense connected with housing them was in the days of the unenlightened conscience something to be thankful for.
But consider how the system has worked. Many of these cottages were built on small
plots of ground filched from the waste, or on other tiny plots of ground (for land
has always been difficult to acquire) so small as to be utterly incapable of forming
a garden for the cottage and of growing vegetables sufficient for the requirements
of the occupant. The owners also, tempted to obtain as large a return as possible
for their outlay, in some cases sub-
It is true that the Sanitary Authority has power to condemn houses that are unfit for human habitation, and can cause them to be closed. This is what Dr Turner the Medical Officer for Health of the Hertford Rural Sanitary Authority says in a recent report: “The housing of the working classes is a matter of great public importance. The question however is one with which it is exceedingly difficult to deal. It appears a simple matter to condemn a house as unfit for human habitation and cause it to be closed. But it must be remembered that there are a certain number of persons in the district who must be housed and must be housed too within a reasonable distance of their work and that a cottage pulled down or closed is not necessarily rebuilt or repaired and made fit for habitation, because the rent which an agricultural worker can afford to pay does not make the erection of houses, such as would in these days be considered fit to live in, remunerative as a speculation.
Dr Turner here puts his finger on the main difficulty of the question – the great scarcity of decent cottages and the impossibility of meeting that difficulty by building cottages as a remunerative speculation. Not very long ago a cottage was condemned in the district of the Hertford RSA and the occupant, a hay binder who earned good wages had to go into the Union (workhouse) for a time with his wife and family because there was no other cottage vacant.
It may be said that the Sanitary Authority has power to erect cottages at the expense of the rates where they are required but it is to be wondered at that in these depressed times every effort is made to keep the rates down and not impose additional burdens. For it must be patent to everyone that what cannot pay the individual is far less likely to pay a public body when carried out at public expense. And the erection of cottages by the SA not only means a heavy burden on the rates but it is a burden which must be felt to be unjust and iniquitous by most of the ratepayers. So why are additional cottages necessary? Simply because one or more landowners have not on their own estates cottages sufficient to house the labourers whose work is a necessity if their estates are to be worked as they ought. And it is these landowners who would be specially benefited if cottages are built. In other words, the rest of the ratepayers are to be taxed in order that these may be able to have cottages for their labourers to occupy.
Ought it not to be laid down as an axiom that every agricultural holding should have upon it cottages sufficient for the housing of the labourers who are necessary to work it? A tenant who takes a farm expects that his homestead should contain buildings for the stock, the produce and the implements to use on the farm. Why is there so little thought about the housing of the labourers without whom all the rest would be worthless?
But supposing that all are agreed upon the principle that every farm should contain a sufficient number of labourer’s cottages, how is this reform to be carried out? The impoverished land owner is not in a position to do so. His burdens at present are greater than he can bear. Might not the State be reasonably expected to give him some help in carrying out what would be a benefit to the whole community, more especially if it could be done without making any material addition to the rates or taxes?
What then would be the cost of carrying out such a scheme as this and what might
reasonably be expected of the landlord? It may be taken for granted that an agricultural
labourer in most parts of Hertfordshire is unable to pay more than £4 10/-
An allotment is but a poor substitute for a garden and there is very little demand for allotments amongst agricultural labourers, at least in Hertfordshire. His daily work is too hard and the hours of labour too long to allow him to trudge off to an allotment to which he has to convey manure, seed, tools and everything else which may be required when he returns home tired and wearied after the labours of the day. But give him a decent home and a garden around his house and more will be effected than can be done in any other way to improve his condition. Nor is it the labourer who will be benefited. How often now is the farmer heard to complain that it is the want of decent cottages which causes the dearth of superior labourers. While the landowner, by the grant of a piece of land which comparatively is worth little and by fencing it will see his property improved and the condition of the labourers on his estate greatly benefited.
In the carrying out of such a scheme as this may be found perhaps also the solution of some of those economical difficulties which are causing so much anxiety at the present time. Take for example the exodus of the young country labourer to the large towns. How many such would remain in the villages were the condition of their homes improved? And how many having tasted the disappointments which await them in the large towns would gladly return but for the thought of their overcrowded homes and the uncertainty of always finding work? But with more room and decency in their homes and a garden of a size which would enable them to employ their labour profitably should work on the farm become slack, many would be thankful to get back once more to their native village.
Then there is another aspect of the question. At present the best girls in the families
of labourers go into service and having acquired habits of decency, comfort and self
respect can seldom be induced to return and settle down in the wretched cottages
to which they were once accustomed. The girls who remain at home are certainly not
the most hard-
Such are some of the benefits which would result from the carrying out of a scheme of the kind suggested but it would have to be made compulsory if any general good were to arise from it. Some competent authority could easily be found to decide as to the number of cottages required on each holding. In some cases there is little doubt the landlords would erect the cottages at their own cost, in others they may wish to have the loan so arranged that capital and interest should be paid off in a certain number of years; while in other areas, the interest on the money lent would remain as a permanent charge on the estate.