Hard times at Advent and a sad end

Further light can now be shed on the fate of John Alford, subject of the blog below, which was posted in September 2021 ….

In 1899 John was charged with assaulting and striking his wife Mary at St Teath. She applied for separation, which was granted. John was fined five shillings or a week’s hard labour and told to pay two shillings and six pence a week maintenance (equivalent to just over £21 a week now) for Mary and their children (Royal Cornwall Gazette, 20 Apr. 1899).

Despite obtaining work as a farm labourer in Blisland, John found it difficult to pay this sum. In December 1901 Mary claimed that she had received nothing for 36 weeks. John was duly arrested and brought before magistrates at Camelford. He was charged with refusing to comply with the maintenance order and given a month’s hard labour (Royal Cornwall Gazette, 19 Dec. 1901). This was the third time he was imprisoned on the same charge and probably the reason for his presence in Bodmin Jail at the time of the 1901 census.

John was clearly regarded as a ‘character’ at a time when misogyny was viewed a lot more lightly than now. At the petty sessions, to some amusement, he had ‘made a rambling statement and refused to desist when asked’. The magistrate ‘threatened to commit him if he did not behave’ but John was undeterred. Arrayed in ‘a silk hat and gloves … he left the court smiling, remarking “goodbye all, until I see you again”‘ (Cornish Guardian, 20 Dec. 1901)

In 1902 John, ‘an eccentric person well known at Camelford‘ was in more serious trouble, charged with threatening to murder his daughter Susan, a domestic servant employed by a grocer at Boscastle. John had turned up late at night demanding to see her, having taken against her plans to marry. John claimed he merely wanted to take her to her mother at St Teath, as she was only 18, although from the census and the newspaper report it seems she was at least 20.

Returning to the grocer’s house at 1am John was reported as saying ‘I’ll break your ____ door open and I’ll murder the ___ maid unless you let her come to me’, before being chased off after the grocer set his dogs on him. John got off quite lightly for this, bound over to keep the peace for six months (Cornish Guardian, 14 Nov. 1902).

In the high summer of 1913, John Alford, a farm labourer at Trencreek, Blisland and a ‘very familar figure in the district’ was found dead in a barn, having shot himself through the head. The inquest found a verdict of suicide while temporarily insane (West Briton, 5 Jun. 1913).

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6 thoughts on “Hard times at Advent and a sad end

  1. Interesting there was a Magistrate Court in Camelford, it would have been in the Town Hall, my Son lives there and was a Magistrate in Bodmin and Truro. What a character was John.

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  2. This is interesting but I dispute that we need much sympathy for John or that we should call him a ‘character’. He was obviously very violent towards women, including his wife and daughter, and he also denied them the income he was duty bound to provide. One woman is murdered by their partner every three days in Britain and many women suffer enormous violence and some take their own lives as a consequence.

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