Living in Sin

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Living in Sin Page 15

by Ginger S Frost


  11 Justice of the Peace, passim, 1850–1914; Wohl, ‘Sex and the single room’, 209.

  12 L. Davidoff, ‘The separation of home and work? Landladies and lodgers in nineteenth-

  and twentieth-century England’, in S. Burman (ed.), Fit Work for Women (New York: St

  Martin’s Press, 1979), 68–92.

  13 Reports from Commissioners on the Laws, ‘Minutes of Evidence’, pp. 7, 32, 82.

  14 The Times, 25 February 1890, p. 12; Devizes and Wiltshire Guardian, 27 February 1890, p. 6;

  first quote from Guardian, second from The Times.

  15 Justice of the Peace 12 (1848), 644; 16 (1852), 799.

  16 Reports from Commissioners on the Laws, ‘Minutes of Evidence’, pp. 34 (for quote), 59; see

  also pp. 96–7.

  17 Ibid., pp. 12, 96.

  18 Ibid., pp. 16, 97; for clergy marrying within the prohibited degrees, see pp. 8–9; 12; 15–16;

  77–9.

  19 Justice of the Peace 68 (1904), 188; and Reports from Commissioners on the Laws, ‘Minutes

  of Evidence’, p. 10.

  20 D. Torr, Tom Mann and His Times (London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1956), pp. 23, 41; C.

  Tsuzuki, Tom Mann, 1856–1941: The Chal enges of Labour (Oxford: Clarendon Press,

  1991), p. 8.

  21 Oxford Chronicle and Berks and Bucks Gazette, 5 July 1890, p. 7; The Times, 3 July 1890,

  p. 7.

  22 NA, HO 45 9978/X51597; The Times, 20 November 1902, p. 14.

  23 NA, HO 45/7026, 15 January 1861.

  24 The Times, 7 July 1901, p. 9; Justice of the Peace 65 (1901), 428.

  25 NA, HO 45/9393/49503; emphases in original.

  26 The Times, 20 December 1844, p. 8; S. Mumm, ‘“Not worse than other girls”: The convent-

  based rehabilitation of fallen women in Victorian Britain’, Journal of Social History 29

  (1996), 530.

  27 Conley, The Unwritten Law, pp. 121–2; L. Jackson, Child Sexual Abuse in Victorian England

  (London: Routledge, 2000), pp. 36–50.

  28 Justice of the Peace 48 (1884), 92.

  29 R. Clarke, ‘Marriage within the prohibited degrees’, Justice of the Peace 26 (1862), 334;

  Reports from Commissioners on the Laws, ‘Minutes of Evidence’, p. 13. See also ‘A marriage

  of affinity’, Justice of the Peace 68 (1904), p. 521.

  30 11 Law Reports, Queen’s Bench Division (1848) 173–204; The Times, 15 June 1847, p. 7.

  31 30 Law Reports, Magistrates Cases (1861) 197–201.

  32 Reports from Commissioners on the Laws, ‘Minutes of Evidence’, p. 32.

  33 Woods v. Woods (1840), 163 English Reports 493–8, quote from p. 497.

  34 One was a bigamy case involving marriage with a deceased wife’s niece in 1872; Reg. v.

  Al en, 1 Law Report, Crown Cases Reserved 367–77; 36 Justice of the Peace 820–2. The

  other, in 1894, involved the marriage of a nephew with his aunt, which had taken place in

  1843; Re Shaw, Robinson v. Shaw 2 Law Reports, Chancery Division 573–75; 71 Law Times

  78–81.

  35 Reports from Commissioners on the Law, ‘Minutes of Evidence’, pp. 3–5.

  Copyright © 2008. Manchester University Press. All rights reserved.

  36 161 English Reports 1064–6; quote from 1066. See also Cretney, Family Law in the Twentieth

  Century, p. 43, note 37.

  69

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  Frost, Ginger S.. Living in Sin : Cohabiting as Husband and Wife in Nineteenth-Century England,

  Manchester University Press, 2008. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nscc-ebooks/detail.action?docID=1069613.

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  living in sin

  37 Wil iams v. Bryant (1769), LPA, Court of Arches Reports, D291, Case #10003, 70–85; D

  293, Case 10004; Aughtie v. Aughtie (1810), 161 English Reports 961; Andrews v. Ross (1888),

  59 Justice of the Peace 900–1; quote from p. 900. See also Women’s Suffrage Journal 16

  (1885), 93.

  38 Reports from Commissioners on the Laws, ‘Minutes of Evidence’, p. 24.

  39 Ibid., pp. 24, 67; NA, HO 45/B2853.

  40 D. Holman-Hunt, My Grandfather, His Wives and Loves (London: Hamish Hamilton,

  1969), p. 261.

  41 Reports from Commissioners on the Laws, ‘Minutes of Evidence’, pp. 82, 28, 76.

  42 Holman-Hunt, My Grandfather, pp. 277–82; A. Clark Amor, Wil iam Holman Hunt: The

  True Pre-Raphaelite (London: Constable, 1989), pp. 211–14.

  43 E. M. Forster, Marianne Thornton: A Domestic Biography, 1797–1887 (New York: Harcourt,

  Brace and Company, 1956), pp. 189–217.

  44 Reports from Commissioners on the Laws, ‘Minutes of Evidence’, pp. 8, 23, 22.

  45 Ibid., pp. 10–11, 68.

  46 Hill v. Crook (1873), 6 House of Lords Appeals Cases 265–86; In re Harrison (1894), 1 Law Reports, Chancery Division 561–8.

  47 Clark Amor, Wil iam Holman Hunt, p. 227.

  48 See, for example, Pawson v. Brown (1880), 44 Justice of the Peace 233; The Times, 6

  November 1879, p. 4; and Brook v. Brook, Chapter 1.

  49 Reports from Commissioners on the Laws, ‘Minutes of Evidence’, pp. 74–5; quote from p.

  74.

  50 Ibid., p. 10.

  51 Clark Amor, Wil iam Holman Hunt, pp. 240–1; D. Holman-Hunt, My Grandmothers and

  I (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1960), pp. 100–1.

  52 Forster, Marianne Thornton, pp. 206–7; 211.

  53 Holman-Hunt, My Grandfather, p. 283; Reports from Commissioners on the Laws, ‘Minutes

  of Evidence’, pp. 25–6, 65.

  54 S. Weintraub, Four Rosettis: A Victorian Biography (New York: Weybright and Talley,

  1977), p. 210; Reports from Commissioners on the Laws, ‘Minutes of Evidence’, p. 9.

  55 Forster, Marianne Thornton, p. 196.

  56 Reports from Commissioners on the Laws, ‘Minutes of Evidence’, p. 13.

  57 Ibid., pp. 71, 2.

  58 Ibid., pp. 67–8, 26.

  59 Holman-Hunt, My Grandfather, pp. 283–4; Weintraub, Four Rosettis, p. 210.

  60 Reports from Commissioners on the Law, ‘Minutes of Evidence’, pp. 9, 81–2.

  61 Reports from Commissioners on the Law, ‘Appendix’, p. 145.

  62 H. Quilter, Is Marriage a Failure? (New York: Garland, 1984), p. 27.

  63 Reports from Commissioners on the Law, ‘Minutes of Evidence’, p. 68; Watson and Watson

  v. Faremouth and others, Annual Register 53 (1811), 136–7.

  64 Reports from Commissioners on the Law, ‘Minutes of Evidence’, pp. 70; 97.

  65 Lord Bramwel , ‘Marriage with a deceased wife’s sister’, Nineteenth Century 20 (1886),

  403–15; Lord Coleridge, Tract #13 in ‘What the Liberals say’, Tracts Issued by the Marriage

  Law Defence Union (London: Marriage Law Defence Union, 1884), 10–13; Atlay, Lives of

  the Lord Chancel ors, II, 355.

  Copyright © 2008. Manchester University Press. All rights reserved.

  66 E. Clarke, The Story of My Life (London: John Murray, 1923), pp. 232–3; W. H. Hunt, et.al.,

  Deceased Wife’s Sister Bill: Letters from Wil iam Holman Hunt, Sir Frederick Pol ock, and

  j

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  Frost, Ginger S.. Living in Sin : Cohabiting as Husband and Wife in Nineteenth-Century England,

  Manchester University Press, 2008. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nscc-ebooks/detail.action?docID=1069613.

  Created from nscc-ebooks on 2019-06-18 23:44:10.

  affinity and consanguinity

  Others (London: Marriage Law Reform Association, 1901), pp. 26–9.

  67 Reports from Commissioners on the Law, ‘Minutes of Evidence’, pp. 4
–5.

  68 Ibid., p. 9 (for quote); The Times, 14 December 1844, p. 8; 21 December 1844, p. 6; 23

  December 1844, p. 7; Staffordshire Advertiser, 21 December 1844, p. 2.

  69 Reports from Commissioners on the Law, ‘Minutes of Evidence’, p. 14.

  70 The Times, 3 June 1875, p. 7; 26 July 1875, p. 10.

  71 L. Davidoff, Worlds Between: Historical Perspectives on Gender and Class (London: Polity

  Press, 1995), pp. 206–26.

  Copyright © 2008. Manchester University Press. All rights reserved.

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  Frost, Ginger S.. Living in Sin : Cohabiting as Husband and Wife in Nineteenth-Century England,

  Manchester University Press, 2008. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nscc-ebooks/detail.action?docID=1069613.

  Created from nscc-ebooks on 2019-06-18 23:44:10.

  4

  Bigamy and cohabitation

  Because of the strict divorce law in England, few unhappy couples

  could end their unions legal y. Thus, many couples lived apart, either

  by mutual consent or because of desertion. These separations could

  be long standing, and sometimes one or both of the partners wished to

  remarry. Such marriages were bigamous and a felony at English law. Most

  couples would not open themselves up to these charges and so cohabited

  or parted, but others took the risk, apparently a substantial number.1

  According to the Judicial Statistics of England and Wales, bigamy trials

  occurred 5,327 times between 1857 and 1904, an average of 98 per year. As

  the population rose, bigamy cases also increased, but not as quickly. The

  average number in the 1850s was 85; in the 1890s, 103; and in the early

  twentieth century, 112. Either bigamies declined, or the authorities ignored

  more cases by the end of the century. All the same, almost every assize saw

  one or two bigamy trials.2

  Though these numbers are not huge, bigamy remained one of the

  largest category of ‘offences against persons’ each year. And these were only

  the bigamies that the authorities prosecuted; far more often, bigamists faced

  no penalty. Gail Savage has found that in divorce cases using bigamy as a

  grounds, only one in eight was prosecuted.3 Anecdotal evidence backs up

  this statistic. John Skinner, a rector in Somerset in the early 1800s, recorded

  the story of a man who went to the East Indies, leaving his wife behind. She

  was about to remarry, having had three children with her lover, when he

  returned. After an unsuccessful attempt at reconciliation, the man ‘married

  a Timsbury woman by licence at Bristol’. Though Skinner admonished the

  wife for cohabiting, he did nothing about the husband’s bigamy. At the

  other end of the century, Guy Aldred’s estranged parents both married

  bigamously after his father deserted the family in 1889, and neither faced

  Copyright © 2008. Manchester University Press. All rights reserved.

  criminal charges.4

  In other words, a small minority of bigamies, possibly one in five,

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  Frost, Ginger S.. Living in Sin : Cohabiting as Husband and Wife in Nineteenth-Century England,

  Manchester University Press, 2008. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nscc-ebooks/detail.action?docID=1069613.

  Created from nscc-ebooks on 2019-06-18 23:44:10.

  bigamy and cohabitation

  made it to the courts. Stil , the historian has little choice but to use criminal

  cases to study bigamy. Thus, this chapter is based on 304 bigamy cases

  between 1760 and 1914, most between 1830 and 1900, from newspapers and

  law reports.5 I was unable to uncover any strong regional differences in

  the treatment or reasons for bigamy. Undoubtedly, local communities did

  have variations, but they do not emerge in the often brief reports of bigamy

  trials. As a result, this chapter will deal with overall patterns of behaviour,

  using the trials as a window into attitudes towards marriage, cohabitation,

  and the law.

  Judges and juries assessed the causes and consequences of cohabitation

  through these cases. Unlike in violence trials, the actors in bigamy cases

  agreed on both ‘bad’ and ‘good’ bigamies, as did the wider community.

  All were convinced that happy bigamous marriages were preferable to

  miserable, legal ones. The couples defied the strict divorce laws but still

  regarded marriage as better than cohabiting, risking prison sentences to be

  ‘man and wife’. Unfortunately, since the marriages were illegal, they could

  not avoid the problems of unwed cohabitation, especial y when the families

  were poor.

  Bigamy and criminal law

  Bigamy, a criminal offence since the reign of James I, did not receive

  statutory attention until the Offences Against the Person Act of 1828, which

  made marrying another person while a first spouse was alive a felony. A

  revision of the penal code in 1861 included necessary changes due to the

  Divorce Act of 1857 (remarrying divorced persons could not be convicted

  of bigamy) and guidelines for sentencing. To succeed, a charge of bigamy

  had to have proof of both marriages, preferably the marriage registers. The

  first marriage could not be proved simply by the testimony of the spouse,

  since spouses could not testify against each other in a criminal trial.6

  However, others could testify to the wedding, and prosecutors preferred to

  have both the registers and witnesses as evidence.

  Bigamy prosecutions had a good chance of success. The conviction

  rate between 1857 and 1904 was almost 80 per cent, slightly higher in the

  mid-Victorian years and slightly lower at the end of the century. If the

  state had both licences, defendants had difficulty refuting the charges, but

  exceptions existed. The most important of these, enacted in 1828, was that

  a bigamy charge failed against anyone who had not heard from her or his

  spouse for seven or more years. The second marriage was invalid if the first

  Copyright © 2008. Manchester University Press. All rights reserved.

  spouse was alive, but the defendant was not criminal y guilty. In addition,

  the invalidity of the first marriage (for instance, if within the prohibited

  73

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  Frost, Ginger S.. Living in Sin : Cohabiting as Husband and Wife in Nineteenth-Century England,

  Manchester University Press, 2008. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nscc-ebooks/detail.action?docID=1069613.

  Created from nscc-ebooks on 2019-06-18 23:44:10.

  living in sin

  degrees) was a successful defence, but not that of the second marriage,

  since it was invalid by definition.7

  Over time, juries and judges accepted other defences. For instance,

  if the bigamist had honestly believed that her or his first spouse was dead,

  juries often acquitted. And, even if found guilty, defendants used this plea

  to mitigate the punishment.8 Eventual y, judges began to argue that intent

  was one of the factors in determining guilt. In a case in 1869, the Appeals

  Court overturned a conviction of a female bigamist, because they insisted

  that the question of intent should be left to the jury.9 All the same, the

  point did not become se
ttled law until 1889, in Reg. v. Tolson. In this case,

  the High Court of Justice quashed the conviction of Mary Ann Tolson for

  bigamy, on the grounds that juries had every right to consider intent when

  reaching their verdicts.10

  Despite these helps to the defence, most defendants were convicted

  in the nineteenth century. I have verdicts in 280 of my 304 cases. Juries

  convicted in 225 and acquitted in 55, a conviction rate of 81 per cent.

  Defendants were largely male – 249 of 304 cases (82 per cent). Both of

  these figures agree with the Judicial Statistics, though men are slightly

  over-represented in my group; men made up almost 79 per cent of the

  defendants overall in the period 1857–1904.11 In addition, juries convicted

  men at a higher rate. Of the 208 cases with male defendants and a verdict,

  177 were convictions and 31 were acquittals, a conviction rate of 85 per cent.

  Of the 54 female defendants, 37 were convictions and 17 acquittals, a 68 per

  cent conviction rate. Women also had lower sentences than men. In the

  1840s, eight men were transported, and three received sentences of a year

  or more, while the three women got two months or less. By the 1860s, men’s

  punishments had diminished but were still higher than women’s. Five men

  received three to seven years; six got six to twelve months; nine got one

  to three months; and three received sentences of two weeks or less. In the

  same decade all nine guilty female defendants received sentences of two

  months or less. In the 1880s, twelve men received one to ten years in prison,

  while all six of the women defendants served only a few days. Obviously,

  bigamy was a much more serious crime when the defendant was male.

  The Judicial Statistics show that punishments for bigamy were usual y

  mild. Throughout the 1850s and 1860s, only a minority of defendants spent

  more than a year in prison for bigamy, an average of 15 per cent of those

  convicted between 1857 and 1869. This percentage grew slightly larger over

  the course of the Victorian period; between 1885 and 1900, 19 per cent of

  bigamists received a year or more. At the same time, those who got no

  Copyright © 2008. Manchester University Press. All rights reserved.

  punishment or short sentences also increased. Those who received a month

  or less were almost 25 per cent of the defendants in the 1860s, 29 per cent in

 

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