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‘Stolen Goods’: The Sexual Harassment of Female Servants in West Wales during the Nineteenth Century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 October 2008

Jill Barber
Affiliation:
Department of Information and Library Studies, The University College of Wales, Aberystwyth, Wales, UK.

Extract

‘How came I to be his property? What right has he in me, but such as a thief may plead to stolen goods?’ cried Pamela, the virtuous servant maid of Richardson's novel. Pamela was written in 1740, but the assumption that masters had sexual rights over their servants cast a long shadow. The questions Pamela raises about powerlessness and ‘worth’ are crucial to understanding the plight of female servants in the nineteenth century. This study examines why servants were particularly vulnerable to sexual harassment, the consequences of sexual abuse for victims and offenders, and underlying male attitudes which affected both the incidence of assaults and the justice meted out by the courts.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1993

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References

Notes

1. Richardson, Samuel, Pamela (Harmondsworth, 1980), p. 9.Google Scholar

2. See Clark, Anna, Women's Silence, Men's Violence: Sexual Assault in England 1770–1845 (London, 1987)Google Scholar; Jones, D.J.V., ‘Rebecca, crime and policing: A turning-point in nineteenth-century attitudes’, Transactions of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion (1990), p. 107.Google Scholar

3. According to the Registrar General's figures, the rural areas of west Wales, especially Cardiganshire, had the highest ratio of illegitimate births in England and Wales, throughout the nineteenth century. See Davies, Russell, ‘In a broken dream: Some aspects of sexual behaviour and the dilemmas of the unmarried mother in south-west Wales, 1887–1914’, Llafur 3 (1983), 25Google Scholar; Henriques, U. R. Q., ‘Bastardy and the new Poor Law’, Past and Present 37 (1967), 122.CrossRefGoogle Scholar In 1845 the Chairman of the Cardiganshire Quarter Sessions called the jury's attention to the large number of inquests on children, Carmarthen Journal (11th April, 1845).

4. I would like to thank the Leverhulme Trust for funding research on the Llidiardau collection at the National Library of Wales, Aberystwyth.

5. In Cardiganshire 76% of working women were employed as servants compared to 66% in Glamorganshire, where industry provided an alternative. Census of Great Britain 1841: Abstract of the Answers and Returns, Occupation Abstract Part I (London, 1844).

6. See Stone, Lawrence, The Family, Sex and Marriage in England 1500–1800 (London, 1977), p. 646.Google Scholar

7. Carmarthen Journal (19th October, 1866).

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11. Census of Great Britain 1841. Abstract of the Answers and Returns: Occupation Abstract Part I(London, 1844).

12. Henriques, , ‘Bastardy and the new poor law’, pp. 114, 119.Google Scholar This was raised to 13 in 1844 but many children received no maintenance payments, the burden for supporting them falling on impoverished mothers or reluctant stepfathers.

13. NLW, Llidiardau 3/5/10.

14. Carmarthen Journal (8th February, 1867).

15. Anna Clark found that 31% of rapes on servants were carried out by fellow servants; Clark, , Women's Silence, Men's Violence, p. 107.Google Scholar

16. NLW, Llidiardau 9/4/38.

17. Mary Jones was minding the cattle at Tanygarreg, Blaenpennal, where the land of neighbouring farmers consisted of intermingled strips, when she was physically assaulted; NLW, Llidiardau 9/2/81.

18. NLW, Llidiardau 3/5/10.

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29. Carmarthen Journal (26th March 1841).

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33. Horn, Pamela, The Victorian Country Child (Kineton, 1974), p. 88.Google Scholar

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35. NLW, Llidiardau 9/2/26.

36. Robin, Jean, ‘Illegitimacy in Colyton, 1851–1881’, Continuity and Change 2 (1987), 307–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar See also Robin, Jean, ‘Prenuptial pregnancy in a rural area of Devonshire in the midnineteenth century: Colyton, 1851–1881’, Continuity and Change 1 (1986), 113–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

37. NLW, Llidiardau 9/4/3, 3/1/27.

38. NLW, Llidiardau 3/1/21, 23. This abuse was ended by the Poor Law of 1834 which stated that the baby's place of settlement should be the mother's parish, not its place of birth. See the excellent article by Henriques, , ‘Bastardy and the new poor law’, pp. 103–29.Google Scholar

39. Evans, Caradoc, My People (Bridgend, 1987), p. 111.Google Scholar

40. Report of the Commissioners of Inquiry for South Wales: Minutes of Evidence (London, 1844), p. 177.

41. Ibid., p. 203.

42. See Henriques, , ‘Bastardy and the new poor law’, pp. 118, 127.Google Scholar She suggests that the situation was worse in Wales because the bastardy clauses upset the delicate social balance of ‘concession’ preceding early marriage among country girls.

43. See, for example, the ballad of the virtuous, but sophisticated, servant maid who married an alderman, Henriques, , ‘Bastardy and the new poor law’, pp. 127–8.Google Scholar

44. NLW, Llidiardau 14/2/12. There was a gentry family of this name at Ynysmaengwyn, Towyn.

45. Davies, , ‘In a broken dream’, p. 28Google Scholar. Gillis, , ‘Servants, sexual relations and the risks of illegitimacy’, p. 156Google Scholar, says that before 1860 many servants attempted to end pregnancy by abortion. There is no evidence to suggest that it was any less common after this date.

46. Green, , The Morning of Her Day, p. 107.Google Scholar

47. See for example the case of Sarah Johncock: Reay, Barry, ‘Sexuality in nineteenth-century England: The social context of illegitimacy in rural Kent’, Rural History 1 (1990) 238.CrossRefGoogle ScholarHenriques, Also, ‘Bastardy and the new poor law’, p. 128.Google Scholar

48. Carmarthen Journal (19th July, 1867).

49. Green, , The Morning of Her Day, pp. 105–6.Google Scholar

50. Carmarthen Journal (5th March, 1852).

51. Davies, , ‘In a broken dream’, p. 29.Google Scholar

52. Rose, , Massacre of the Innocents, p. 27.Google Scholar

53. For her story see Green, The Morning of Her Day.

54. Carmarthen Journal (19th July, 1867).

55. Carmarthen Journal (4th April, 1845); The Welshman (March 1845).

56. Carmarthen Journal (5th March, 1852).

57. See for example the minute book of G.W. Parry, Chairman of the Cardiganshire Quarter Sessions 1857–70, which contains his rough notes of the cases which came before the court during that period, NLW, Llidiardau 3/14.

58. Jones, , Crime in Nineteenth-Century Wales, p. 79Google Scholar found that the largest gap between incidence and prosecution occurred in crimes of sexual assault.

59. Douglas Hay, ‘Prosecution and power: Malicious prosecution in the English courts, 1750– 1850’, in Hay, Douglas and Snyder, Francis (eds.), Policing and Prosecution in Britain 1750–1850 (Oxford, 1989), p. 377.Google Scholar Hay estimates that over 80% of men accused of raping women were acquitted, and slightly less of those accused of raping children. Jones, , Crime in Nineteenth-Century Wales, p. 80Google Scholar, gives a more conservative figure, estimating that at least 50% of those accused of rape were acquitted.

60. Monmouthshire Merlin (29th August, 1829).

61. NWL, Llidiardau 3/14. SirHale, Mathew, The History of the Pleas of the Crown 1 (London, 1736), 635–6.Google Scholar

62. Carmarthen Journal (5th August, 1831).

63. Carmarthen Journal (8th February, 1867).

64. NWL, Llidiardau 9/4/36–8; 9/2/84–6; Carmarthen Journal (19th March, 1852).

65. Carmarthen Weekly Reporter (25th July, 1905).

66. Ryan, Michael, A Manual of Medical Jurisprudence (London, 1831), p. 182.Google Scholar

67. NLW, Llidiardau 9/4/37.

68. Carmarthen Journal (5th August, 1831).

69. Carmarthen Journal (19th October, 1866).

70. Davies, , ‘In a broken dream’, p. 26.Google Scholar

71. Evans, Caradoc, My People (Bridgend, 1987), p. 77.Google Scholar

72. NLW, Llidiardau 9/4/37.

73. Davies, , ‘In a broken dream’, p. 26.Google Scholar

74. It is thought that Mary Morgan's seducer was a member of the jury that found her guilty at the Court of Great Sessions in 1805.

75. Carmarthen Journal (8th January, 1841).

76. Carmarthen Journal (26th September, 1845).

77. Richardson, , Pamela, p. 172.Google Scholar

78. NLW, Llidiardau 3/14.

79. Carmarthen Journal (19th October, 1866).

80. NLW, Llidiardau 8/2/3.

81. House of Lords, , Hansard 3rd ser., 25 (28th July, 1834), 608.Google Scholar

82. Carmarthen Journal (8th January, 1841).

83. NLW, Llidiardau 9/4/37.

84. Clark, , Women's Silence, Men's Violence, p. 68.Google Scholar

85. Carmarthen Journal (8th February, 1867).

86. NLW, D.T.M. Jones MS. 5287. The ‘ceffyl pren’ or wooden horse, was used to correct matrimonial infidelity, but unpopular bailiffs became common targets. See Jones, R.A.N., ‘Popular culture, policing and the disappearance of the ceffyl pren in Cardigan c. 1837–1850, Ceredigion 11 (19881989), 1940.Google Scholar

87. Stone, , The Family, Sex and Marriage, p. 646.Google Scholar