Showing posts with label Debtor's Prison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Debtor's Prison. Show all posts
Newspaper Clippings: The Loathsome Cellar
From ARIS'S BIRMINGHAM GAZETTE, 15 January 1844
By the 1840s there was strong critisism concerning the poor conditions of the debtor's prison which was articulated in a number of letters published in Aris's Birmingham Gazette, following are two printed in 1844. One of the main concerns was that the jailors and other prison workers were not paid, so earnt their living by charging the inmates for their food and other basic needs. This had been an issue discussed since the late eighteenth century but was by this time becoming less easy to ignore. The feelings of these anonymous letter writers are communicated through some of the terms they use, such as 'the loathsome cellar', 'the great evils of [the] court', and 'the miserable debtors'. Later the same year the debtors prison was shut down, the public feeling towards the establishment probably having some sway in the closure. It was not till the 1860s that the practice of imprisoning debtors was made illegal.
To find out more about the debtor's prison in Birmingham, and the Court of Requests that housed it, click here to see all previous posts.
Tour of Lost Birmingham Nᵒ.25: Depriving Many a Poor Creature of Liberty (High Street)
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Door of the Debtor's Prison, from the exhibition Birmingham: it's people, it's history at BMAG. |
Visit the now demolished Debtor's Prison and the building that housed it, here. Find out about the Birmingham History Galleries which display this piece, here.
The plaque at the top of the door states "THIS DEBTORS PRISON DOOR STOOD IN HIGH STREET, BIRMINGHAM, DEPRIVING MANY A POOR CREATURE OF LIBERTY. NOTE THE BARS THRO WHICH CHARITABLE PASSERS-BY DROPPED COINS TO THE INMATES". Unlike the main prison, there was alot more sympathy towards the inmates in the debtor's prison, as many in business could be at risk of ending up there if their business dealings did not go well. The Debtor's Prison was tucked down an alley on Birmingham's High Street, inside the Court of Requests building.
Tour of Lost Birmingham Nᵒ.19: Architectural Focus - Court of Requests (High Street)
The Court of Requests is initially thought to have been built as the grand dwelling house for the wealthy John Jennens; it was built in about the 1650s and exhibits some early classical influences. The door surround (top image) is known as an aedicule and consists of two pilasters topped with and arched open pediment which allows for a decorative vase filled with foliage. There may well have been more decoration originally within the pediment. There is no frieze in the entablature.
In the second image you can see the architraves of the sash windows punctured by the dropped keystones which project from the cornice, and the decorative quoins at the corner of the building. You can also see some detail of the brickwork.
You can find out about the history of this building's usage here. The photographs were all taken from about the late 1860s when the building would have been about 200 years old. By that time the building had ceased to be used as the Court of Requests; hence the blind in the enlarged window (top image) stating 'Old Courthouse'. To the left is the alley leading off High Street to Court House Yard where the old house stood. Below is the whole building sitting in Court House Yard with all the later buildings tacked onto it and built nearby.

Photographs used courtesey of the archive services at the Library of Birmingham.
Punishing Debtors: The Court of Requests
Tucked behind the main shops of High Street, down an alley, (as seen in the 1820s illustration above) stood a shabby old building,[1] but one holding onto the remnants of grandeur. It had been built in about 1650, reputedly for the wealthy ironmonger John Jennens, as a smart house and home, and exhibited some good examples of the new classical influences that were permeating into architectural designs at that time; the segmental pediment over the door is particular of the period (see image below). By the 1770s, the building was being used by Benjamin Mansell as a tea-warehouse,[2] though, by the time of the drawing above, the building was used as the Court of Requests, and its basement would have most likely been filled with imprisoned debtors unable to pay what they owed. This close proximity of the incarcerated to daily life is alien to us today. At about the same time as the above image Nathaniel Drinkwater ran a fruiterer's in the Court of Requests yard, and the image itself suggests that there may also have been a brewery, the passage leading to the court was often 'packed along with baskets of goods and boxes',[3] so business and life went on around the building with the prisoners being audible and perhaps visible through the heavily barred windows.
The house had been acquired by the newly homeless Court of Requests in 1784 as the court had originally been held in the room above the Old Cross, a building demolished that year; and had been, since an act of Parliament in 1752, the court dealing with small debts of no more than 40 shillings for the Birmingham and Aston area. Larger debts were still dealt with at the county court. Both at the Old Cross, and at the court’s new home, 72 ‘commissioners’[3a] were chosen from the local area to pass judgement, only three sitting for each hearing, and always on Friday’s. The Court of Requests also shared the building with the town’s magistrates, but in 1807 they moved to the new public offices in Moor Street, and the building became synonymous with the ‘poor debtors’ that it incarcerated. The same year the magistrates moved out the building was also extended and another act was passed so that the court could deal with those with debts up to £5.
There is a definite sympathy in the writing of contemporaries;[4] Walter Showell notes in 1882 that there were 'many [who] are still living who can recollect the miserable cry of "Remember the poor debtors," which resounded morning, noon and night from the heavily-barred windows of these underground dungeons'.[5] How true this was is uncertain, but for any person in business, except the very wealthy, bankruptcy and the prospect of debtor’s prison could be a very real threat, especially as fashions waxed and waned and economies (as today) were uncertain. On the 1841 census, just three years before the prison shut down, there were 24 men and one woman incarcerated in the court of requests. Some were serial bankrupts, such as James Stainton, an ivory and bone turner, and Henry Flavell, a publican. William Luckcock, a jeweller, was most likely related to the wealthier Luckcock brothers whose jeweller’s establishment was on St. Paul’s Square, so there were business owners from all parts of the social spectrum.
The poor conditions of the prison were well known, it had been nicknamed the ‘Louse Hole’, and considering that the poorest inside slept on the cellar floor with only straw, lice were likely not to be the only problem. Some could purchase better conditions, but those were often businessmen who had chosen a spell in prison over paying their debts. In 1827 a report recorded that the paying inmates (paying two shillings a week) still slept three to a bed and that 19 of these men slept in a space only four paces square.[6] Those sentenced to time in the prison and these conditions (at the time when the maximum debt was £5) received 'one day in durance for each shilling due',[7] but no more than 100 days in total. There could be 30 to 40 trials an hour, with about one in ten being sentenced to imprisonment, and there could be no appeal to the verdict.
[*] References available on request.
[3a] Although originally anyone who wanted to could apply to be a commissioner, towards the latter part of the courts use all commissioners were required to have an income from real estate of at least £50 per year of be personally worth £1000.[8] William Hutton (the historian) was a commissioner for about 19 years till the riots of 1791 when he retired his post.
[6] Chris Upton, 'Heavy Punishments 200 Years Ago', Birmingham Post, 14 May 2010, found online here.
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Part of High Street in about the 1820s to 1830s. |
Tucked behind the main shops of High Street, down an alley, (as seen in the 1820s illustration above) stood a shabby old building,[1] but one holding onto the remnants of grandeur. It had been built in about 1650, reputedly for the wealthy ironmonger John Jennens, as a smart house and home, and exhibited some good examples of the new classical influences that were permeating into architectural designs at that time; the segmental pediment over the door is particular of the period (see image below). By the 1770s, the building was being used by Benjamin Mansell as a tea-warehouse,[2] though, by the time of the drawing above, the building was used as the Court of Requests, and its basement would have most likely been filled with imprisoned debtors unable to pay what they owed. This close proximity of the incarcerated to daily life is alien to us today. At about the same time as the above image Nathaniel Drinkwater ran a fruiterer's in the Court of Requests yard, and the image itself suggests that there may also have been a brewery, the passage leading to the court was often 'packed along with baskets of goods and boxes',[3] so business and life went on around the building with the prisoners being audible and perhaps visible through the heavily barred windows.
The house had been acquired by the newly homeless Court of Requests in 1784 as the court had originally been held in the room above the Old Cross, a building demolished that year; and had been, since an act of Parliament in 1752, the court dealing with small debts of no more than 40 shillings for the Birmingham and Aston area. Larger debts were still dealt with at the county court. Both at the Old Cross, and at the court’s new home, 72 ‘commissioners’[3a] were chosen from the local area to pass judgement, only three sitting for each hearing, and always on Friday’s. The Court of Requests also shared the building with the town’s magistrates, but in 1807 they moved to the new public offices in Moor Street, and the building became synonymous with the ‘poor debtors’ that it incarcerated. The same year the magistrates moved out the building was also extended and another act was passed so that the court could deal with those with debts up to £5.
There is a definite sympathy in the writing of contemporaries;[4] Walter Showell notes in 1882 that there were 'many [who] are still living who can recollect the miserable cry of "Remember the poor debtors," which resounded morning, noon and night from the heavily-barred windows of these underground dungeons'.[5] How true this was is uncertain, but for any person in business, except the very wealthy, bankruptcy and the prospect of debtor’s prison could be a very real threat, especially as fashions waxed and waned and economies (as today) were uncertain. On the 1841 census, just three years before the prison shut down, there were 24 men and one woman incarcerated in the court of requests. Some were serial bankrupts, such as James Stainton, an ivory and bone turner, and Henry Flavell, a publican. William Luckcock, a jeweller, was most likely related to the wealthier Luckcock brothers whose jeweller’s establishment was on St. Paul’s Square, so there were business owners from all parts of the social spectrum.
The poor conditions of the prison were well known, it had been nicknamed the ‘Louse Hole’, and considering that the poorest inside slept on the cellar floor with only straw, lice were likely not to be the only problem. Some could purchase better conditions, but those were often businessmen who had chosen a spell in prison over paying their debts. In 1827 a report recorded that the paying inmates (paying two shillings a week) still slept three to a bed and that 19 of these men slept in a space only four paces square.[6] Those sentenced to time in the prison and these conditions (at the time when the maximum debt was £5) received 'one day in durance for each shilling due',[7] but no more than 100 days in total. There could be 30 to 40 trials an hour, with about one in ten being sentenced to imprisonment, and there could be no appeal to the verdict.
[*] References available on request.
[3a] Although originally anyone who wanted to could apply to be a commissioner, towards the latter part of the courts use all commissioners were required to have an income from real estate of at least £50 per year of be personally worth £1000.[8] William Hutton (the historian) was a commissioner for about 19 years till the riots of 1791 when he retired his post.
[6] Chris Upton, 'Heavy Punishments 200 Years Ago', Birmingham Post, 14 May 2010, found online here.
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