.jump-link{ display:none }

Tuesday 4 April 2023

A-Z Challenge 2023: Family Traits - C for CRIMINAL

  MyTheme for  the A-Z Challenge 2023  
 Family Traits,  Quirks and Characteristics 
 C for CRIMINAL 
My Husband’s  Great Grandfather  - Aaron Armitage 
 

#AtoZChallenge 2023 letter C

 
Aaron Armitage (1850-1889),  a miner in West Yorkshire    was my husband's great grandfather and with his own father Moses, made frequent appearances before local CRIMINAL courts. The charges -  breach of the peace, assault,  and thefts,  which included such items as a canary, six cabbages, a pig  and a woman’s dress;  also the pursuit of game and rabbits.

A photograph of Moses Armitage, Aaron' father,  courtesy of an internet contact
who was also a descendant of Moses.  

Aaron was the eldest son of Moses Armitage  and Sarah Galloway, with census returns  confirming  the births of a growing family.    By 1861 it was a household of parents and six children under 12 years old - Mary Elizabeth 12, Aaron 10,   Moses, 8, William 6, John 3 and Ann 6 months.  The 1871 census saw  four more siblings on the scene – Sarah Ann 8, Benjamin 6, Ada 5 and Albert 3; a household of eleven with eldest daughter Mary Elizabeth no longer living at home. The three eldest sons  - Aaron 20, Moses 18 and William 16 were all coal miners, like their father.

A search on the  British Newspapers Online at FindMyPase was revealing on the  criminal activity of both  Moses and his sons

1857 - "The Sheffield Daily Telegraph"  of 8th December reported that Moses Armitage  was charged with stealing "a favourite canary", the property of Mr Jeremiah Fisher at the Horse and Jockey Inn, Dodworth.  He was sentenced to Wakefield House of Correction for two months, hard labour. 

1858 -  Moses Armitage and his brother Joseph Armitage were charged with assaulting P.C. Richards at Dodworth.  Fined 5 shillings with costs. 


1864  - Moses eldest son Aaron had an early brush with the law.  At the age of 13, he was charged and found guilty  of  causing an obstruction on the railway, with Leeds Assizes sentencing him  to one  month's  imprisonment and six strokes of the birch. 

His conviction was recorded in the England and Wales Criminal Register (available on Ancestry).  “. Fined 5 shillings with costs."
 
1868  - "The Barnsley Chronicle" of 18th July reported Aaron as being charged with the pursuit of game.  He was fined 20s plus costs or 14 days imprisonment by default.


1869  - Aaron was a witness in the case of three men  charged with breach of the peace . In the witness box, Aaron admitted that " he had been charged many times with various offences". As reported in  "The Barnsley Chronicle".


1869 -  In this instance Aaron was the victim of "violent intimidation" in a dispute at the coal pit, where reductions in wages resulted in many miners had gone on strike, and violence erupted between-union and non-union members.  Aaron and his brother William were attacked as they left their home at 5am to go to work. The attackers were sent to prison. ("The Sheffield Daily Telegraph"  29th July)

1870 - "The Barnsley Chronicle": 18th June   reported  Aaron being charged with  trespassing a field and doing damage.

 1872 - "The Sheffield Independent" of 6th January reported "Two Scrapes" involving  Aaron - for leaving his employment without giving notice and for pursuing rabbits. 
 

1875 - Aaron Armitage was charged with assault and biting a man on the nose  at a Dodworth pub.  He was described as "a bulldog of a man".  Fined £5 which he could not pay so was sentenced to prison for two months. (Barnsley Chronicle: 3rd April)


1875 Aaron Armitage "an old offender" was charged with  stealing a pig, value £2 15s.  Committed to Wakefield Prison for six months.  (Sheffield Daily Telegraph: 9th November).

Moses, senior,  died 26th February 1878, aged 54, with  his son Aaron continuing his downward spiral into crime.

1884  - On  June  7th 1884, "The Barnsley Chronicle" reported  that Aaron Armitage was charged with assaulting Fergus Sykes (his brother-in-law)  and was  fined 1s plus costs - total 17s.
 

1884 - A month later the same newspaper on 5th July reported  that Aaron had been charged with assaulting Charlotte Lawson  and fined 10 shillings  plus costs.


1885 - A more serous charge was to follow when Aaron was accused of  violently assaulting Sarah Ann Cuthbert, and with  his brother John stealing a dress to pawn, the property of Sarah Ann Cuthbert - as reported in "The Leeds Times" of 6th June. 
Aaron was sent to Wakefield Prison, with the description of him as "5’6” in height with brown hair and with a cut on his forehead and burn marks on his shoulders." 

"The Barnsley Chronicle" gave a particularly detailed graphic, blow by blow  account of this domestic assault. 

Yet two years later, 36 year old Aaron  married the same Sarah Ann Cuthbert, (at 21 years old, fifteen years his junior) on the 16th of May, at All Saints South Kirkby - Sarah's  mother being Charlotte Lawson.  On 3rd of January 1888  Aaron's daughter Alice was born, (my husband's grandmother) but before she marked her third birthday, her father was dead.  

Aaron died 26th October 1889 with his certificate giving the cause of death as Fracture of the Lumbar Vertebrae, one year and eight months a Lumbar Abcess"   - which sounds a very painful condition. I did wonder if  Aaron had suffered the fracture as a result of a mining accident, but have found nothing to bear this out - or had it resulted from one of his many brawls?  Interestingly  the death certificate named  as Informant C. Lawson - his mother in law.

This was a classic case of the newspapers online being  an invaluable  source of information on an ancestor.

Further Research 

It would be interesting  to find out more about mining in the Barnsley area in the late  19th century.  Some of the CRIMINAL activity  committed by Aaron and other members of his family  seem to us today a bit laughable, but were some of those thefts a consequence of a large family going hungry?     Both working  and living conditions must have been very, very harsh.


*****************

Onto D  for DEVOUT
 
 
****************

6 comments:

  1. The bonus of having criminal ancestors is the amount of information available about them. Looking forward to reading more about your family traits during the challenge.
    https://bestbookishblog.com/

    ReplyDelete
  2. Quite a litany of misbehaviors. I had to wonder about that "six strokes of the birch" as an 1864 punishment -- and about Sarah Ann marrying her abuser.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Wow! Quite the history.

    My A to Z Blogs
    DB McNicol - Small Delights, Simple Pleasures, and Significant Memories
    My Snap Memories - My Life in Black & White

    ReplyDelete
  4. Maybe Aaron and Sarah lived with the mother-in-law, hence her signing the death certificate. It might have been the luckiest thing for little Alice to lose her father at such a young age. I hope she did not go into a life of crime and violence also.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Family history is so fascinating - from criminals to saints and everything between.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Thank you all for your responses. Yes, it was certainly amazing what I managed to find from the tiny piece of information on Alice’s marriage certificate - thanks to newspapers online. Very fortunately Alice led a blameless life, married, had one son and three daughters including my husband’s mother.

    ReplyDelete

Thank you for your comment which will appear on screen after moderation.