From Morecambe Bay to Botany Bay

Naomi Parsons, a new member of the Preston History Facebook group, is a freelance history researcher who for the last two years has been building a database of women sentenced to transportation after being convicted or held at Lancaster Castle. The database includes several women from Preston.

She not only transcribes the records but tells the womenโ€™s stories on her website, as in the following example taken from her โ€˜From Morecambe Bay to Botany Bay โ€“ Convict Storiesโ€™ page:

Naomi Parsons
Naomi Parsons

Jane Kitchen

Jane was born and baptised at Halton in 1819. As a child she attended the Ladies Charity School in Lancaster for six years before taking up employment as a housemaid; first at the house of Rev William Fenton in Bleasdale until his death. Then at John Bowersโ€™ in Bare for two years before moving to John Thompsonโ€™s house in Lancaster before ill health forced her to leave.

She then appears to move to Preston and this is where she commits the first of two crimes leading her to short term prison sentences in Prestonโ€™s House of Correction. Acting as a servant she pretends her โ€˜mistressโ€™ has ordered a bonnet to be sent to an address to be collected; in other words obtaining goods through deception. Itโ€™s around this time, in 1841 she appears on the first census in Back Willow Street (one of the areas with the direst living conditions in Preston). She was living with three other young women aged between 20 and 25 all of โ€˜independent meansโ€™, mostly likely a euphemism for prostitution.

The following year in May, back in Lancaster, Jane โ€˜unlawfully obtained from Robert Allwood, two bonnets, his property value ยฃ1 1sโ€™. Allwood was a linen draper at 5 Penny Street. Once again she had used the same strategy of pretending that she was collecting the order for her employer who would settle the bill. She was arrested and sent to Lancaster Castle where she went on trial at the 1842 Midsummer Quarter Sessions. Found guilty and with a track record of two similar crimes and a gaol report saying she was a โ€˜bad characterโ€™, Jane was sentenced to be transported for seven years.

While in jail at Lancaster, she wrote and signed her own petition, pleading for a reduction in sentence and to stay at Lancaster. In it she sets out her childhood and nine years previous work experience for respectable families before being forced out by ill health. Governor Higgin denies this petition going forward.

Jane Kitchen's medical report
Jane Kitchen’s medical report

Before leaving the jail for Woolwich and the transport ships, surgeon James Stockdale Harrison certifies she was free of all diseases and notifiable conditions and on 28 November she was sent south. Before being boarded on the convict ship Margaret, surgeon Benjamin McAvoy rejected Jane as not suitable to travel due to having a recently opened fistula. She was sent back to Lancaster.

The magistrates back at Lancaster were far from happy about Jane being sent back with no paperwork and having been deemed fit to travel when she left. The Lancaster surgeon stated that she had previously been operated on at Liverpool and whilst her previous ailment had healed, the journey must have reopened it. She was operated on again and once healed would be fit to send back to Woolwich for transportation.

Still in jail in January 1843, Jane again writes a petition, pleading that she not be transported and be kept either at Millbank Penitentiary in London or at Lancaster, also asking that the eight months she had so far served be counted towards her sentence. Her request appears to have been granted with the governor saying make preparations for her transfer to the penitentiary. However, the surgeon doubts the medical officer will accept this due to her recent health issues

It is not then clear whether she was transferred or remained at Lancaster but what is known is that by August 1849 she was free and was getting married to a widowed 62 year old leather currier Henry Almond at the priory church; they appeared to be living together, both listing their address as Penny Street. Her unique signature on the wedding register and her jail petition match. The couple then move through to Preston where they live out their lives, having, and losing a number of children. By 1871 Jane was widowed and working as a confectioner, herself passing away in 1881.


Thereโ€™s a great deal more to discover on Naomiโ€™s website: https://lancastrianresearch.co.uk


Discover more from preston history

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave a Reply