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confessor
to do penance by going once a week,
bare-footed and bare-legged, to a
cross near
Wigan, two miles from
the hall, and it is called
Mab's Cross to this
day.
You
can see in Wigan Church the
monument of Sir William and
his lady, which
tells
this sad story, and also the
cross--at least, all that
remains of it--the steps,
a
pedestal, and
part of the shaft--in Standisgate,
"to witness if I lie." It is
true that Sir
William
was born ten years after the
last of the crusades had ended;
but what does
that
matter? He was probably fighting
for his king, Edward II,
against the Scots, or
he
was languishing a prisoner in
some dungeon. There was
plenty of fighting in
those
days for those who loved it,
and where was the Englishman
then who did
not
love
to fight for his king and
country, or seek for martial
glory in other lands, if
an
ungrateful
country did not provide
him with enough work
for his good sword
and
ponderous
lance?
Such
are some of the stories that
cluster round these crosses.
It is a sad pity that
so
many
should have been allowed to
disappear. More have fallen
owing to the
indifference
and apathy of the people of England in
the eighteenth and
nineteenth
centuries
than to the wanton and
iconoclastic destruction of the
Puritans. They are
holy
relics of primitive Christianity. On
the lonely mountainsides the
tired traveller
found
in them a guide and friend, a
director of his ways and an
uplifter of his soul.
In
the busy market-place they
reminded the trader of the
sacredness of bargains and
of
the duty of honest dealing.
Holy truths were proclaimed
from their steps.
They
connected
by a close and visible bond religious
duties with daily life;
and not only
as
objects of antiquarian interest,
but as memorials of the
religious feelings,
habits,
and
customs of our forefathers,
are they worthy of careful
preservation.
CHAPTER
XIII
STOCKS,
WHIPPING-POSTS, AND OLD-TIME
PUNISHMENTS
Near
the village cross almost
invariably stood the parish stocks,
instruments of rude
justice,
the use of which has
only just passed away.
The "oldest inhabitant"
can
remember
well the old stocks standing
in the village green and can
tell of the men
who
suffered in them. Many of
these instruments of torture
still remain, silent
witnesses
of old-time ways. You can find
them in multitudes of remote
villages in
all
parts of the country, and vastly
uncomfortable it must have
been to have one's
"feet
set in the stocks." A
well-known artist who
delights in painting monks a
few
years
ago placed the portly model
who usually "sat" for
him in the village stocks
of
Sulham,
Berkshire, and painted a picture of
the monk in disgrace. The
model
declared
that he was never so uncomfortable in
his life and his legs and
back ached
for
weeks afterwards. To make the penalty
more realistic the artist
might have
prevailed
upon some village urchins to
torment the sufferer by
throwing stones,
refuse,
or garbage at him, some
village maids to mock and jeer at
him, and some
mischievous
men to distract his ears
with inharmonious sounds. In an old
print of
two
men in the stocks I have
seen a malicious wretch
scraping piercing noises
out
of
a fiddle and the victims
trying to drown the hideous
sounds by putting their
fingers
into their ears. A few
hours in the stocks was no light
penalty.
These
stocks have a venerable history.
They date back to Saxon
times and appear in
drawings
of that period. It is a pity
that they should be
destroyed; but
borough
corporations
decide that they interfere
with the traffic of a
utilitarian age and
relegate
them to a museum or doom
them to be cut up as faggots.
Country folk
think
nothing of antiquities, and a local
estate agent or the village
publican will
make
away with this relic of
antiquity and give the "old
rubbish" to Widow
Smith
for
firing. Hence a large number
have disappeared, and it is
wonderful that so
many
have
hitherto escaped. Let the
eyes of squires and local antiquaries be
ever on the
watch
lest those that remain are
allowed to vanish.
By
ancient law50
every
town or village was bound to
provide a pair of stocks. It was
a
sign of dignity, and if the
village had this seat for
malefactors, a constable, and a
pound
for stray cattle, it could
not be mistaken for a mere
hamlet. The stocks
have
left
their mark on English
literature. Shakespeare frequently
alludes to them.
Falstaff,
in The
Merry Wives of Windsor,
says that but for
his "admirable
dexterity
of
wit the knave constable had
set me i' the stocks, i' the
common stocks." "What
needs
all that and a pair of stocks in
the town," says Luce in
the Comedy
of Errors.
"Like
silly beggars, who sitting
in stocks refuge their shame,"
occurs in Richard
II;
and
in King
Lear Cornwall
exclaims--
"Fetch
forth the stocks!
You
stubborn ancient
knave."
Who
were the culprits who
thus suffered? Falstaff
states that he only just
escaped
the
punishment of being set in
the stocks for a witch.
Witches usually
received
severer
justice, but stocks were
often used for keeping
prisoners safe until
they
were
tried and condemned, and
possibly Shakespeare alludes in
this passage only to
the
preliminaries of a harsher ordeal.
Drunkards were the common
defaulters who
appeared
in the stocks, and by an Act of 2 James I
they were required to endure
six
hours'
incarceration with a fine of
five shillings. Vagrants
always received harsh
treatment
unless they had a licence, and
the corporation records of
Hungerford
reveal
the fact that they
were always placed in the
pillory and whipped. The
stocks,
pillory,
and whipping-post were three
different implements of punishment,
but, as
was
the case at Wallingford,
Berkshire, they were sometimes
allied and combined.
The
stocks secured the feet, the
pillory "held in durance
vile" the head and
the
hands,
while the whipping-post
imprisoned the hands only by
clamps on the sides
of
the post. In the constable's accounts of
Hungerford we find such
items as:--
"Pd
for cheeke and brace
for the pillory
00,02,00
Pd
for mending the
pillory
00,00,06
Pd
the Widow Tanner for
iron geare for the
whipping post 00,03,06"
Whipping
was a very favourite pastime at this
old Berkshire town; this
entry will
suffice:--
"Pd
to John Savidge for his
extraordinary paines this yeare
and whipping of
severall
persons 00,05,00"
John
Savidge was worthy of his name, but
the good folks of Hungerford
tempered
mercy
with justice and usually gave a
monetary consolation to those who
suffered
from
the lash. Thus we
read:--
"Gave
a poore man that was whipped
and sent from Tythinge to
Tythinge
00,00,04"
Women
were whipped at Hungerford, as we
find that the same
John Savidge
received
2d. for whipping Dorothy
Millar. All this was according to
law. The first
Whipping
Act was passed in 1530 when
Henry VIII reigned, and according to
this
barbarous
piece of legislation the
victim was stripped naked and tied to a
cart-tail,
dragged
through the streets of the
town, and whipped "till his
body was bloody." In
Elizabeth's
time the cart-tail went
out of fashion and a whipping-post
was
substituted,
and only the upper part of
the body was exposed. The
tramp question
was
as troublesome in the seventeenth
century as it is to-day. We confine
them in
workhouse-cells
and make them break stones or pick
oakum; whipping was
the
solution
adopted by our forefathers. We
have seen John Savidge
wielding his whip,
which
still exists among the
curiosities at Hungerford. At Barnsley in
1632 Edward
Wood
was paid iiijd. "for whiping of
three wanderers." Ten years
earlier Richard
White
received only iid. for
performing the like service
for six wanderers. Mr.
W.
Andrews
has collected a vast store of
curious anecdotes on the
subject of
whippings,
recorded in his Bygone
Punishments, to which
the interested reader
is
referred.
The story he tells of the
brutality of Judge Jeffreys
may be repeated. This
infamous
and inhuman judge sentenced a
woman to be whipped, and said,
"Hangman,
I charge you to pay particular
attention to this lady. Scourge
her
soundly,
man; scourge her till her
blood runs down! It is
Christmas, a cold time
for
madam
to strip. See that you
warm her shoulders
thoroughly." It was not
until 1791
that
the whipping of female
vagrants was expressly forbidden by
Act of Parliament.
Stocks
have been used in quite
recent times. So late as
1872, at Newbury, one
Mark
Tuck,
a devoted disciple of John
Barleycorn, suffered this
penalty for his
misdeeds.51
He was a rag and bone
dealer, and knew well the
inside of Reading jail.
Notes
and Queries52 contains
an account of the proceedings, and states
that he was
"fixed
in the stocks for drunkenness and
disorderly conduct in the Parish
Church on
Monday
evening." Twenty-six years had elapsed
since the stocks were last
used,
and
their reappearance created no
little sensation and amusement,
several hundreds
of
persons being attracted to
the spot where they were
fixed. Tuck was seated on
a
stool,
and his legs were secured in
the stocks at a few minutes
past one o'clock, and
as
the church clock,
immediately facing him,
chimed each quarter, he
uttered
expressions
of thankfulness, and seemed anything
but pleased at the laughter
and
derision
of the crowd. Four hours
having passed, Tuck was
released, and by a little
stratagem
on the part of the police he
escaped without being
interfered with by
the
crowd.
Sunday
drinking during divine
service provided in many
places victims for
the
stocks.
So late as half a century
ago it was the custom for
the churchwardens to go
out
of church during the morning
service on Sundays and visit
the public-houses to
see
if any persons were tippling
there, and those found in
flagrante delicto were
immediately
placed in the stocks. So arduous did
the churchwardens find this
duty
that
they felt obliged to regale
themselves at the alehouses
while they made
their
tour
of inspection, and thus rendered
themselves liable to the
punishment which
they
inflicted on others. Mr. Rigbye,
postmaster at Croston, Lancashire, who
was
seventy-three
years of age in 1899, remembered these
Sunday-morning searches,
and
had seen drunkards sitting in
the stocks, which were fixed
near the southern
step
of the village cross. Mr. Rigbye,
when a boy, helped to pull
down the stocks,
which
were then much dilapidated.
A certain Richard Cottam,
called "Cockle
Dick,"
was the last man seen in
them.53
The
same morning perambulating of ale-houses
was carried on at Skipton,
the
churchwardens
being headed by the old
beadle, an imposing personage,
who wore a
cocked
hat and an official coat trimmed
with gold, and carried in
majestic style a
trident
staff, a terror to evil-doers, at least
to those of tender years.54
At
Beverley
the
stocks still preserved in the minster
were used as late as 1853;
Jim Brigham,
guilty
of Sunday tippling, and discovered by
the churchwardens in their
rounds,
was
the last victim. Some
sympathizer placed in his mouth a
lighted pipe of
tobacco,
but the constable in charge hastily
snatched it away. James Gambles,
for
gambling
on Sunday, was confined in the
Stanningley stocks, Yorkshire, for
six
hours
in 1860. The stocks and
village well remain still at
Standish, near the cross,
and
also the stone cheeks of those at
Eccleston Green bearing the
date 1656. At
Shore
Cross, near Birkdale, the stocks remain,
also the iron ones at
Thornton,
Lancashire,
described in Mrs. Blundell's
novel In
a North Country Village;
also at
Formby
they exist, though somewhat
dilapidated.
Whether
by accident or design, the stocks
frequently stand close to the principal
inn
in
a village. As they were
often used for the
correction of the intemperate
their
presence
was doubtless intended as a
warning to the frequenters of
the hostelry not
to
indulge too freely. Indeed,
the sight of the stocks,
pillory, and whipping-post
must
have been a useful deterrent
to vice. An old writer
states that he knew of
the
case
of a young man who was about
to annex a silver spoon, but
on looking round
and
seeing the whipping-post he
relinquished his design. The
writer asserts that
though
it lay immediately in the
high road to the gallows, it had
stopped many an
adventurous
young man in his progress
thither.
The
ancient Lancashire town of
Poulton-in-the-Fylde has a fairly
complete set of
primitive
punishment implements. Close to the
cross stand the stocks with
massive
ironwork,
the criminals, as usual,
having been accustomed to sit on
the lowest step
of
the cross, and on the other
side of the cross is the
rogue's whipping-post, a stone
pillar
about eight feet high, on
the sides of which are
hooks to which the culprit
was
fastened.
Between this and the cross
stands another useful
feature of a Lancashire
market-place,
the fish stones, an oblong
raised slab for the display
and sale of fish.
In
several places we find that
movable stocks were in use,
which could be
brought
out
whenever occasion required. A set of
these exists at Garstang,
Lancashire. The
quotation
already given from King
Lear, "Fetch
forth the stocks," seems to
imply
that
in Shakespeare's time they
were movable. Beverley stocks
were movable, and
in
Notes and
Queries we find an
account of a mob at Shrewsbury
dragging around
the
town in the stocks an incorrigible
rogue one Samuel Tisdale in
the year 1851.
The
Rochdale stocks remain, but
they are now in the
churchyard, having
been
removed
from the place where the
markets were formerly held
at Church Stile.
When
these kind of objects have
once disappeared it is rarely that
they are ever
restored.
However, at West Derby this
unusual event has occurred,
and five years
ago
the restoration was made. It appears
that in the village there
was an ancient
pound
or pinfold which had degenerated
into an unsightly dust-heap, and
the old
stocks
had passed into private hands.
The inhabitants resolved to
turn the untidy
corner
into a garden, and the lady gave back
the stocks to the village.
An
inscription
records: "To commemorate the
long and happy reign of
Queen Victoria
and
the coronation of King
Edward VII, the site of the
ancient pound of the
Dukes
of
Lancaster and other lords of
the manor of West Derby was
enclosed and planted,
and
the village stocks set
therein. Easter, 1904."
This
inscription records another item of
vanishing England. Before
the Inclosure
Acts
at the beginning of the last
century there were in all
parts of the country
large
stretches
of unfenced land, and cattle
often strayed far from
their homes and
presumed
to graze on the open common lands of
other villages. Each village had
its
pound-keeper,
who, when he saw these estrays, as
the lawyers term the
valuable
animals
that were found wandering in
any manor or lordship,
immediately drove
them
into the pound. If the
owner claimed them, he had
certain fees to pay to
the
pound-keeper
and the cost of the keep. If
they were not claimed
they became the
property
of the lord of the manor,
but it was required that
they should be
proclaimed
in the church and two
market towns next adjoining
the place where they
were
found, and a year and a day
must have elapsed before
they became the
actual
property
of the lord. The possession
of a pound was a sign of dignity
for the village.
Now
that commons have been
enclosed and waste lands reclaimed, stray
cattle no
longer
cause excitement in the
village, the pound-keeper
has gone, and too
often
the
pound itself has
disappeared. We had one in our village
twenty years ago, but
suddenly,
before he could be remonstrated
with, an estate agent, not
caring for the
trouble
and cost of keeping it in repair, cleared it
away, and its place knows it
no
more.
In very many other villages
similar happenings have occurred.
Sometimes
the
old pound has been
utilized by road surveyors as a
convenient place for
storing
gravel
for mending roads, and its
original purpose is forgotten.
It
would be a pleasant task to go through
the towns and villages of
England to
discover
and to describe traces of these
primitive implements of torture,
but such a
record
would require a volume instead of a
single chapter. In Berkshire we
have
several
left to us. There is a very
complete set at Wallingford,
pillory, stocks, and
whipping-post,
now stored in the museum
belonging to Miss Hedges in
the castle,
but
in western Berkshire they
have nearly all disappeared.
The last pair of
stocks
that
I can remember stood at the
entrance to the town of
Wantage. They have
only
disappeared
within the last few years.
The whipping-post still
exists at the old
Town
Hall at Faringdon, the
staples being affixed to the
side of the ancient
"lock-
up,"
known as the Black
Hole.
At
Lymm, Cheshire, there are
some good stocks by the cross in
that village, and
many
others may be discovered by the
wandering antiquary, though
their existence
is
little known and usually
escapes the attention of the
writers on local
antiquities.
As
relics of primitive modes of
administering justice, it is advisable
that they
should
be preserved.
Yet
another implement of rude
justice was the cucking or
ducking stool, which
exists
in a few places. It was used principally
for the purpose of correcting
scolding
women.
Mr. Andrews, who knows all
that can be known about
old-time
punishments,
draws a distinction between
the cucking and ducking
stool, and states
that
the former originally was a
chair of infamy where
immoral women and scolds
were
condemned to sit with bare
feet and head to endure the
derision of the
populace,
and had no relation to any ducking in
water. But it appears that
later on
the
terms were synonymous, and
several of these implements
remain. This machine
for
quieting intemperate scolds was quite
simple. A plank with a chair
at one end
was
attached by an axle to a post which was
fixed on the bank of a river
or pond, or
on
wheels, so that it could be
run thither; the culprit was
tied to the chair, and
the
other
end of the plank was
alternately raised or lowered so as to
cause the
immersion
of the scold in the chilly
water. A very effectual
punishment! The form
of
the chair varies. The
Leominster ducking-stool is still
preserved, and this
implement
was the latest in use,
having been employed in 1809
for the ducking of
Jenny
Pipes, alias
Jane
Corran, a common scold, by
order of the magistrates, and
also
as late as 1817; but in this
case the victim, one Sarah
Leeke, was only
wheeled
round
the town in the chair, and
not ducked, as the water in
the Kenwater stream
was
too shallow for the purpose.
The cost of making the stool
appears in many
corporation
accounts. That at Hungerford
must have been in pretty
frequent use, as
there
are several entries for
repairs in the constable's
accounts.55
Thus we
find the
item
under the year
1669:--
"Pd
for the Cucking
stoole
01,10,00"
and
in 1676:--
"Pd
for nailes and workmanship
about the stocks and cucking
stoole
00,07,00"
At
Kingston-upon-Thames in 1572 the accounts
show the
expenditure:--
"The
making of the
cucking-stool
8s.
0d.
Iron
work for the
same
3s.
0d.
Timber
for the same
7s.
6d.
Three
brasses for the same and
three wheels
4s.
10d.
------------
£1
3s. 4d."
We
need not record similar
items shown in the accounts
of other boroughs. You
will
still find examples of this
fearsome implement at Leicester in the
museum,
Wootton
Bassett, the wheels of one in the
church of St. Mary, Warwick;
two at
Plymouth,
one of which was used in 1808;
King's Lynn, Norfolk, in the
museum;
Ipswich,
Scarborough, Sandwich, Fordwich, and
possibly some other places
of
which
we have no record.
We
find in museums, but not in
common use, another terrible
implement for the
curbing
of the rebellious tongues of
scolding women. It was
called the brank or
scold's
bridle, and probably came to us
from Scotland with the
Solomon of the
North,
whither the idea of it had
been conveyed through the
intercourse of that
region
with France. It is a sort of iron
cage or framework helmet,
which was
fastened
on the head, having a flat
tongue of iron that was placed on
the tongue of
the
victim and effectually restrained
her from using it. Sometimes
the iron tongue
was
embellished with spikes so as to make
the movement of the human
tongue
impossible
except with the greatest
agony. Imagine the poor
wretch with her
head
so
encaged, her mouth cut and
bleeding by this sharp iron
tongue, none too
gently
fitted
by her rough torturers, and
then being dragged about
the town amid the
jeers
of
the populace, or chained to
the pillory in the
market-place, an object of
ridicule
and
contempt. Happily this scene
has vanished from vanishing
England. Perhaps
she
was a loud-voiced termagant; perhaps
merely the ill-used wife of
a drunken
wretch,
who well deserved her
scolding; or the daring
teller of home truths to
some
jack-in-office,
who thus revenged himself.
We have shrews and scolds still;
happily
they
are restrained in a less barbarous
fashion. You may still see
some fearsome
branks
in museums. Reading, Leeds,
York, Walton-on-Thames,
Congleton,
Stockport,
Macclesfield, Warrington, Morpeth,
Hamstall Ridware, in
Staffordshire,
Lichfield,
Chesterfield (now in possession of
the Walsham family),
Leicester,
Doddington
Park, Lincolnshire (a very grotesque
example), the
Ashmolean
Museum
at Oxford, Ludlow, Shrewsbury,
Oswestry, Whitchurch, Market
Drayton,
are
some of the places which
still possess scolds' bridles.
Perhaps it is wrong to
infer
from the fact that
most of these are to be
found in the counties of
Cheshire,
Staffordshire,
and Shropshire, that the
women of those shires were
especially
addicted
to strong and abusive
language. It may be only
that antiquaries in those
counties
have been more industrious
in unearthing and preserving these
curious
relics
of a barbarous age. The latest recorded
occasion of its use was at
Congleton
in
1824, when a woman named Ann
Runcorn was condemned to endure
the bridle
for
abusing and slandering the
churchwardens when they made
their tour of
inspection
of the alehouses during the
Sunday-morning service. There
are some
excellent
drawings of branks, and full descriptions
of their use, in Mr.
Andrews's
Bygone
Punishments.
Another
relic of old-time punishments
most gruesome of all are the
gibbet-irons
wherein
the bones of some wretched
breaker of the laws hung and
rattled as the
irons
creaked and groaned when
stirred by the breeze.
Pour
l'encouragement des
autres,
our wise forefathers enacted
that the bodies of executed
criminals should be
hanged
in chains. At least this was a common
practice that dated from
medieval
times,
though it was not actually
legalized until 1752.56
This
Act remained in force
until
1834, and during the
interval thousands of bodies
were gibbeted and left
creaking
in the wind at Hangman's
Corner or Gibbet Common, near
the scene of
some
murder or outrage. It must
have been ghostly and
ghastly to walk along
our
country
lanes and hear the dreadful noise,
especially if the tradition
were true
That
the wretch in his chains,
each night took the
pains,
To
come down from the
gibbet--and walk.
In
order to act as a warning to
others the bodies were
kept up as long as possible,
and
for this purpose were saturated
with tar. On one occasion the
gibbet was fired
and
the tar helped the
conflagration, and a rapid and effectual
cremation ensued. In
many
museums gibbet-irons are
preserved.
Punishments
in olden times were usually
cruel. Did they act as
deterrents to vice?
Modern
judges have found the
use of the lash a cure
for robbery from the
person
with
violence. The sight of
whipping-posts and stocks, we learn, has
stayed young
men
from becoming topers and drunkards. A
brank certainly in one recorded
case
cured
a woman from coarse
invective and abuse. But
what effect had the sight
of
the
infliction of cruel punishments
upon those who took part in
them or witnessed
them?
It could only have tended to make
cruel natures more brutal.
Barbarous
punishments,
public hangings, cruel sports
such as bull-baiting, dog-fighting,
bear-
baiting,
prize-fighting and the like
could not fail to exercise a
bad influence on the
populace;
and where one was deterred from
vice, thousands were
brutalized and
their
hearts and natures hardened, wherein
vicious pleasures, crime, and lust
found
a
congenial soil. But we can
still see our stocks on the
village greens, our
branks,
ducking-stools,
and pillories in museums, and remind
ourselves of the customs
of
former
days which have not so very
long ago passed
away.
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