Monday 29 March 2010

Preston - Joseph Livesey

That was really great input about Joseph Livesey, Peter, especially the list of 'things I dont like to see'. To my mind that really sums up Joseph Livesey, the great caring person. He was wealthy, and to satisfy his social conscience he could have just given money, but no, he actively participated in helping people.

To illustrate this point I have included two extracts from Livesey's writings.

'Many a score of beds I have seen without a single blanket; sometimes with no covering but a thin cotton sheet....Few could believe how poor families sleep unless they saw it'. (Preston Temperance Advocate 1826).

Joseph Livesey also wrote in his autobiography about the 'orphans of Roach Bridge' (children brought by John Watson from the Foundling Hospital in London - 'Poor squalid deformed beings, the most pitiful objects I think I ever beheld.'

Thursday 18 March 2010

Preston - Poverty: Smells & Stuff by Peter Fagg

Just to carry on this theme of squalor & poverty I just want to share two lists I discovered. These were compiled by a Prestonian called Joseph Livesey. He was a dynamo of a man who will be getting his very own post in the future, but for today I want to share his list of "Things I do not like to see" and another one entitled "I don't like the smell from..." I like these lists because they add a sense of smell and everyday life to the Victorian Preston picture.

Remember these were both written in 1838. My remarks are written in italics:

"Things I do not like to see..."
  •  A workhouse funeral almost without attendance.
  • an orphan girl tempted to walk the streets for the purpose of prostitution.
  • a country overseer putting out a poor woman by her shoulders.
  • a poor lad going to the factory very much out of health.
  • the bailiffs carrying the bed and chairs of a poor widow to the obelisk, to sell for rent.
  •  a street of houses nearly all uninhabited. (many families moved in with others so they could share the rent. This was called 'huddling', but left many homes vacant)
  • all the public pumps dry in hot weather.
  • a window blind drawn up on one side twelve inches higher than the other. (Right....now you're getting picky :0) 
  • orange peels thrown on the footpath (!!)
Joseph Livesey, Moral Reformer, Saturday February 10, 1838, p.45


"I dont' like the smell from..."
  • a bedroom where the windows have never been open for days and weeks together (this man obviously never had teenage sons)
  • Dirty straw which has laid some time in a damp cellar.
  • a cart taking away dung from the privies during the day time.
  • wiskets filled with fish upon a coach. (Wisket? I think it is a basket?)
  • the dead carcasses of dogs and other animals thrown into pools of stagnant water.
  • the effluvia from a person who perspires freely but seldom washes. (Try Lynx)
  • a drunkards breath in a morning after a fuddle. (Fuddle = a drinking binge... or so I'm told)
  • a cart laden with gas tar. (What's that??)
  • a corpse kept too long in hot weather. (I hate it when that happens)
Joseph Livesey, Moral Reformer, March 24, 1838, p. 10

Wednesday 17 March 2010

Japanese Group on tour of Lancashire

Blue Badge Tourist Guide Peter Fagg touring with a Japanese Group.

Preston - Poverty 1830s by Peter Fagg

Many of the American Mormon missionaries to Britain in the 1830s & 40s were struck by the poverty they encountered. On their first day in Britain in Liverpool Heber C. Kimball recorded,
"...wealth and luxury abound, side by side with penury and want. I there met the rich attired in the most costly dresses, and the next minute was saluted with the cries of the poor with scarce covering sufficient to screen them ...
Upon arriving in Preston he witnessed some even more dramatic scenes:
"Such sufferings I never witnessed before. The scenes which I daily beheld were enough to chill the blood in my veins. The streets were crowded with men, women and children who begged from the passengers as they walked along. Numbers of the poor, wretched beings were without shoes or stockings, and scarcely any covering to screen them from the inclemency of the weather; and daily I could discover delicate females walking the streets gathering up the animal refuse, and carrying it to places where they could sell it for a penny or half-penny. And thus they lived through the winter." (Whitney, p. 189)
In a letter to his wife, Orson Hyde observed:
They are extremely poor, most of them not having a change of clothes decent to be baptized in, but they have open hearts and strong faith. We have taught them nothing about the gathering for they have no means to bring them to America, let alone procuring a place…. The brethren will frequently divide the last loaf with us, and will do all in their power for us… They are very kind to us where we are, but their circumstances will not allow them to do much for us without pay. I have frequently seen the tender and delicate females with their old pails or baskets in the streets gathering up fresh horse dung with their naked hands, and then go and sell it and get a penny or two’s worth of bread for themselves and hungary [sic] children… (Barron p. 97)
In January 1840 Wilford Woodruff arrived in Preston and observed:
The streets were crowded with the poor both male and female going to and from the factories with their wooden clog shoes on, which make a great rattling over the pavement. The poor are in as great bondage as the children of Israel in Egypt. (Woodruff, p.405)
So...
the above quotes are the voices of LDS missionaries. What about the other voices? What were local observations of these same scenes? I'm just going to share one quote with you today for you to compare.

The following comes from the pen of Rev. J. Johns of Liverpool as recorded in Joseph Livesey's paper the Moral Reformer printed in Preston on Jan. 27, 1838:
"Within these few months, I have seen, what, had I not seen it, I could not have imagined.  ...Few could have seen the scenes which have passed under my eyes (especially during the month of the late trying winter) without feeling that the times has indeed arrived, when man should go forth to the relief of his brother.
Mothers, newly become such without a garment on their persons, and with infants nearly as naked, lying upon straws or shavings, under a miserable covering, without fire or food, or the means of precuring them; children taken from their schools, in order to earn by begging...
...mothers of families only able to provide necessities for their children by pawning their little all, or by incurring debts whereever they could be trusted.
...infirm and aged people, who were shivering out the last hours of life in absolute want of everything that could sustain or endear it.
Sobering stuff!!

Sources
Barron, Howard H. Orson Hyde: Missionary. Apostle. Colonizer. Horizon Publishers, Bountiful, Utah (1978)
Livesey, Joseph. The Moral Reformer. Preston Jan. 27, 1838 p. 26
Whitney, Orson. Life of Heber C. Kimball. Bookcraft, Salt Lake, Utah (1888)
Woodruff, Wilford, Wilford Woodruff Journals, edited by Scott G. Kenney. Midvale, Utah, Signature Books, 1983.