I love the weird and wonderful and this story is definitely that. I have taken most of the information from, Agnes Bowker’s Cat; Travesties and Transgressions in Tudor and Stuart England, by David Cressy. Agnes Bowker, aged 27, daughter of Henry Bowker of Market Harborough, appeared before the archdeacon’s court on 22 January 1569 and […]
Author: peopledetectiveuk
Plague!
Oh Lord save us! A great pestilence is upon us. Reports reached London in 1347 of a terrifying and incurable disease which was spreading from the East. It reached England in 1348 and is thought to have killed millions of people. There are three different types of plague; bubonic, pneumonic and septicemic. The most common […]
The Battle of Waterloo
From: British Military Uniforms by James Laver, published by Penguin I already have a house full of books and you can’t see the floor of my office as it is covered in piles of books waiting to find a space on the overflowing bookshelves. The other Saturday, on my way back home, I passed by […]
7th Leicesters at Dinner April 1915
I love days like today. You look out of the one window and there is a beautiful blue sky and sunshine; you look out of another window and see a dark and stormy sky heading straight for you. When it arrives, it brings torrential downpours, thunder, lightning and even hail and then it’s gone and […]
James Dodds
A while ago I came across this photograph on Ebay. A fine, handsome chap named James Dodds, with his birthdate conveniently written. It’s not often you come across photos with names and dates and I felt sorry for him thinking he must belong to someone’s family. So who was James Dodds? On the back of […]
Working Class Movement Library
One of my favourite archives is the Working Class Movement Library which holds a unique collection of material related to the lives of working class people and the labour movement. The library has a rich and varied collection of material consisting of books, pamphlets, archives, photographs, banners and posters which can help to provide useful […]
Richard III
Richard was in Nottingham when he heard Henry Tudor was on his way through Wales. Richard set out to meet him and arrived in Leicester where he stayed at a local inn due to Leicester Castle being in a state of decay. The inn was originally called the White Boar but after Richard’s defeat the […]
The October Fair
Market Harborough used to hold an annual fair in October. The Fair would begin on 18th October, the eve of St Dionysius, and last for nine days. It was something which was looked forward to for months. The town would be packed with people and stalls selling produce. Farmer’s waggons would bring in people from […]
William Bryan
One of the interesting headstones which survive in St Mary in Arden’s graveyards is this one: Sacred To the Memory of William Bryan Late of Spode in the Parish Of Clun County of Salop Who died Suddenly In Harborough The 31st Day of July 1832 In the 42nd Year of his Age And was Buried […]
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Thomas Cook
Thomas Cook was born in Melbourne, Derbyshire, in 1808, the son of John Cook and Elizabeth Perkins. He was only four years old when his father died in 1812 and later that year, his mother married James Smithard. When his step-father died in 1818, Thomas was taken out of school to supplement the family’s income […]