Living in Sin

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Living in Sin Page 17

by Ginger S Frost


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  living in sin

  for support to explain her actions. Her first husband, Henry, ‘had … been

  imprisoned for neglecting to support her and her children.’ Her second

  husband stayed only a short time, since he lost his job. Her third, James

  Foggart, final y proved to be a provider. Henry prosecuted her, but Justice

  Denman gave her only five days; apparently, he agreed that she needed a

  breadwinner.34 The emphasis on providing was so great that some men

  continued to support their children, even if their wives had ‘misbehaved’.35

  Working-class marriage, then, could be a strife-torn experience, as

  many historians have found.36 Youthful choices often proved disastrous,

  and some people could not find a congenial partner even with second and

  third choices. Although most couples stayed together, a minority refused

  to continue in poisoned relationships. Historians of nineteenth-century

  working-class marriage have justifiably concentrated on the majority of

  couples who continued to live together, despite violent conflicts. But the

  evidence of bigamy cases partial y revises the argument that working-class

  people expected little more than dogged companionship in marriage.37

  Obviously, several modes of behaviour wrecked working-class marriages.

  Poor husbands and wives accepted more sexual infidelity and violence than

  middle-class couples, but they had limits. Unhappy spouses divorced with

  their feet for drunkenness, adultery, violence, and even incompatibility.

  These ‘self-divorces’ did not show a contempt for matrimony. On

  the contrary, bigamies were strong evidence of people’s attachment to

  marriage. Despite miserable experiences, many risked prison to create

  new ties. Often, the illegal unions were more successful. For neighbours,

  bigamous unions had advantages as wel , because they provided stable

  families in the place of those with constant bickering. Examples of happy

  second unions abound in the records; in fact, second wives sometimes

  refused to prosecute, forcing the magistrates or police to do so.38 Some

  people needed a first mistake to find a congenial mate, but the law did not

  allow for such experimentation. As Justice Lawrance remarked, ‘He could

  never countenance the doctrine that if a man could not live happily with

  his wife he was entitled to … commit bigamy. At that rate, a great many

  men would be leaving their wives and marrying some one [sic] else.’39 The

  judge’s discomfort was palpable; when an illegal union was more successful

  than a legal one, judges had to deal with the consequences.

  Wider kin and community

  The attitude of family members towards bigamous unions varied by

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

  circumstances. The relatives of wronged spouses were usual y hostile,

  either to defend a deserted spouse or to protect a second one. As stated

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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

  above, families of either the first or second wives instigated many cases.

  Even when they did not start the prosecution, they testified for their

  relatives.40 A father, in particular, would take any chance to punish a man

  who had ‘ruined’ his daughter, as many examples attest.41 Though parents

  predominated, siblings were also important. Anna Campbel ’s brother

  prosecuted her bigamous husband; Mary Greene’s sister was the main force

  in the prosecution of William Sheen.42

  Nevertheless, some family members actively supported bigamous

  unions, depending, again, on circumstances. Edward Jones’s daughter

  defended her father’s decision to remarry illegal y, since her mother had

  refused to return to him despite his appeals. Some family members even

  participated in fooling second spouses. Robert Green, a carman, was

  married when he courted Alice Gabbetie. Alice heard that Robert was

  already married shortly before the wedding, so she went to Green’s mother’s

  house to find out the truth. Green denied it, and his mother told her ‘he

  was single, and could, therefore, do as he liked.’ When Annie discovered

  the truth, she was so angry that she prosecuted both Greens, though the

  authorities dropped the charges against the mother.43

  The most difficult and conflicted situation for families were bigamies

  within the family fold. These cases could lead to bitter divisions with

  extended kin, showing the limitations of family forbearance. Joseph

  Moran, an engineer, married his sixteen-year-old cousin in 1854, though

  he was already married to Rebecca Bridger. ‘After the second wife’s relatives

  found out that prisoner had a wife then alive, and spoke to him about it, he

  said they might do their worst – they could only give him three months.’

  This response made a private settlement impossible, so the case went to

  court, and Moran received nine more months than he expected. John

  Curgenwen married his first cousin in 1852. They lived together only a year

  before she returned to her father’s house, and Curgenwen shipped out to

  the Crimea in 1854. She did not see him for the next ten years; clearly,

  the family members had little desire to meet again. Curgenwen remarried

  in 1862. When he was posted to Cornwal , his extended kin discovered

  his marriage and prosecuted him. Despite the long passage of time, the

  bitterness remained.44

  Stil , the case of Benjamin Toombs of Surrey shows that marriages

  within the same families did not always lead to predictable divisions.

  Toombs married Letitia Rudge in 1814 after lodging in her parents’ house

  for some time. Benjamin apparently became attached to many of the

  members of Letitia’s family, including wider kin, during his marriage.

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

  He soon left Rudge (apparently for sexual misconduct). In May 1830, he

  married Mary Ann, Letitia’s first cousin. Obviously, Mary Ann knew that

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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

  Benjamin was already married, yet she did not hesitate, nor did her father

  protest. Only her brother objected, which was why Benjamin ended up

  in court.45 This kind of support was unusual, but it does indicate that

  families disagreed about how best to deal with failed relationships. Mary

  Ann’s father preferred to keep Benjamin, an in-law, in the family, over

  Letitia, a blood relative, whom he forbade Mary Ann to see. Letitia’s ‘base’

  behaviour made her a less desirable family member than her estranged

  husband, and, indee
d, Letitia did not object to the new arrangement, since

  Benjamin continued to support her. These tangled family alliances made

  for a difficult court case.

  As with families, neighbours and friends considered the reasons

  for the separation before they condemned bigamy. ‘Misbehaviour’ of the

  first spouse was crucial, and neighbours expected the man to provide

  for the first spouse as well as his new family, as many of the above cases

  indicated.46 Also, the bigamist must be honest about her or his past. In

  fact, if the bigamist did not volunteer the information, someone else often

  did. In Leeds, Elizabeth Gil son’s neighbours told her that her fiancé, Alfred

  Windsor, a labourer, was a married man, though she married him anyway.

  In Dalton, John Jessop, a hay dealer, married Kate Boucher, even though

  his wife was alive. At the trial, Kate claimed she knew nothing of his first

  wife when they married, but two witnesses testified that they had told her

  the truth, with the warning that ‘she would be a fool to marry him’. Even in

  the arguably more anonymous realms of London, neighbours intervened,

  if in indirect ways. Jane Willis received an unsigned letter after her wedding

  to Samuel Potling, warning her that he was already wed.47 On this issue, in

  fact, community standards were stricter than the letter of the law; one case

  in 1838 led to a near riot by outraged female neighbours after the dishonest

  male defendant got off the bigamy charge.48

  In short, notions of ‘right’ behaviour did not follow those of the

  legal system. In some cases a legal y innocent defendant was distinctly

  unpopular. Far more often, a guilty defendant earned public sympathy. Put

  another way, popular definitions of marriage and divorce were wider than

  the law allowed. Similarly to affinal marriages, many people did not see

  any harm in bigamy as long as all the parties were informed about and

  satisfied with their relationships. Annie Waterton told neighbours in Leeds

  that it did not matter that her fiancé, Charles Scoltock, was already married

  because ‘there would be no bother about it as she had asked the first wife’s

  permission.’ This reasoning was particularly popular when both spouses

  remarried; Scoltock argued that since his first wife had a new spouse, he

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

  assumed he could do the same. James Young had a similar defence in

  London in 1907; both of his previous wives had remarried by the time he

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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

  was arrested. The magistrate, unimpressed, insisted ‘Bigamy by both parties

  will not improve his position.’49 But often such mutual partings did make a

  difference to neighbours and kin.

  Defining marriage and divorce

  Most of these couples thought of themselves ‘as husband and wife’, and even

  the newspaper records called multiple spouses ‘the first wife’ or ‘the second

  wife’. Judges, witnesses, prosecutors, and defendants did the same.50 These

  couples resisted legal definitions of marriage and divorce, a phenomenon

  that many historians have explored, though most have argued that the age

  of marital nonconformity was the first half of the century.51 Bigamy cases

  prove that many people had their own definitions of marriage and divorce

  until at least the twentieth century. Nevertheless, Victorian bigamists

  combined a challenge to the marriage laws with a desire for the ritual.

  Couples, especial y women, wanted a wedding to validate their unions,

  echoing affinal and consanguineous couples. Paradoxical y, they defined

  ‘marriage’ loosely, defying the authorities, yet at the same time, they

  craved the formality of marriage, thereby seeking the approval of those

  authorities. Especial y to women, marriage was still ‘better’, conferring

  status and security.52

  Examples abound of women who insisted on going through the

  ceremony even though they knew it was invalid. Rhoda Byrne married

  Joseph Courtney, a gardener, in 1900, though she knew he was married.

  She explained, ‘it was better to marry than merely to live with him, and

  therefore he consented.’ John Calvert testified that he told Hannah Metcalfe

  that he was already married, but they had a wedding ‘in order to satisfy her

  scruples’. Women’s insistence on a ceremony showed up in other sources as

  wel . Sir William Cobbett told the Royal Commission on Divorce in 1912

  that the limited nature of divorce led to bigamies because women would

  not live with men without a wedding. Cobbett knew of two men who ‘took

  the risk’ so they could live with the women they loved.53

  Sometimes men initiated the second weddings themselves. William

  Weaver was a former comedian who had reformed into a travelling preacher.

  His first wife was unfaithful, and Weaver lived with Mary Drinkwater until

  his conversion. At that point, he was reluctant to continue cohabiting and

  so married bigamously. In other words, to him, committing a felony was

  less sinful than cohabitation; ironical y, his religious scruples justified his

  law-breaking. Nor was Weaver unique. William Goode was a clerk in holy

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

  orders who had married first in 1860 and then married Isabel a Vickery in

  1876. Isabel a found out in 1878 that he was married; when she confronted

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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

  him, he replied, ‘what he had done might appear wrong in the sight of

  man, but it was right in the sight of God.’ The two had lived together for

  two years before they wed, and even a felonious marriage was superior to

  living ‘in sin’.54

  Part of the preference for marriage came from families, especial y if

  the woman was expecting a child. James Garden, a surgeon’s assistant from

  Bromley, married Caroline Smith because her father insisted on it when

  Caroline became pregnant. In the same way, the married John Arthur

  Rogerson, from Stafford, committed bigamy with a Miss Shekell to ‘save

  her from shame.’55 In short, to avoid one legal stigma, the couple incurred

  another. Nothing could legitimate their children, but the couples did not

  always know this and, even if they did, they still wanted the ceremony,

  since it conferred public validity. As Elizabeth Hutton explained in 1884,

  she married an already wed man ‘because I loved him and to save my name

  with my friends; I did not want to live with him without being married.’56

  Bigamy cases also indicate that self-divorce persisted beyond the
>
  first half of the nineteenth century.57 The simple act of desertion could be

  enough for some men and women; the fact that they lived apart for several

  years, they insisted, invalidated their ties. This belief persisted in the face

  of repeated official denials, because of the confusion over the seven-year

  rule; people mixed up the idea that they could not be convicted of bigamy

  with the idea that they could remarry legal y. In addition to the trials, other

  sources hint at this confusion; Guy Aldred’s mother believed she could

  remarry legal y because her second marriage took place more than seven

  years after her husband’s desertion; she clung to this belief despite her son’s

  exasperated denials.58

  A number of factors constituted a self-divorce. At times, a long

  separation was accompanied by the permission of the first husband or

  wife. Annie Birkhead and Michael Jessop consulted her husband before

  they married, ‘and he told her she was at liberty to get married again’. She

  was apparently telling the truth, since both of her husbands stood bail

  for her. Other times, the couples assumed that if their first spouse had

  remarried, they could do so as wel .59 Such couples were most unwilling

  to accept that these remarriages were not valid. Thomas Bevan, a plasterer,

  married Catherine Wilson in 1848, though his wife was still alive. Catherine

  defended Thomas at his trial and said she would live with him again when

  he was free. The judge protested, ‘“he don’t belong to you, he belongs to his

  first wife.” The witness shook her head, seeming very much to doubt his

  Lordship’s authority as to her right and title.’60 Similarly, Alice Mary Currey

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

  told the judge in Albert Durrant’s trial that ‘he has been a most kind and

  loving husband to me … after this is all settled I am going to live with him

  j

  j 84

  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

  again’.61For many bigamists self-divorce involved quasi-legal sanctions.

 

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