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‘Some inhuman wretch’: Animal Maiming and the Ambivalent Relationship between Rural Workers and Animals1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 September 2014

CARL J. GRIFFIN*
Affiliation:
C.J.Griffin@sussex.ac.uk

Abstract:

The daily lives of many rural workers were intertwined with animals: those they kept, those in the wild, and those they were employed to work with and care for. And yet despite the importance of this connection, work in rural history has tended, with some notable exceptions, to conceive of animals as fleshy capital, game, or pest. In part this is because the archive does not tend to describe the relationships between workers and animals. This paper contends, however, that the archive of animal maiming offers important detail for beginning to understand the connection. While animal maiming was necessarily rooted in violence, with its various forms essentially involving the mutilation and violation of animals, nonetheless episodes of animal maiming can tell us much about the politics of giving care to animals. Examining episodes of animal maiming also allows us to understand how the non-human helped to constitute the relationships between humans, especially the uneven bond between employer and worker, as well as the complex, and often contradictory, attitudes of rural workers to animals.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

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References

Notes

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38. Formally titled ‘An Act to Prevent the Cruel and Improper Treatment of Cattle’: 3 Geo. IV, v.71. For a study of nineteenth-century legislation regarding animals see Harrison, B., ‘Animals and the State in Nineteenth-century England’, English Historical Review, 88 (1973), 786820CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

39. Hampshire Chronicle, 14th January and 11th March 1797.

40. Archer, ‘A Fiendish Outrage’, 150.

41. The episode was occasioned, so the Maidstone Journal related, by a lame pauper who had been refused relief. The following week, the paper reported that the report they had received may have been ‘dubious’ but did not issue a retraction: 21st and 28th July 1835.

42. Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 14th June 1824 (twenty-one sheep, Idmiston, Wiltshire); TNA, HO 64/5, fo. 85, F. Norrice, Betteshanger to Phillips, 23rd July 1835; TNA, HO 64/5, fos 91–2, same, 13th July 1835 (four ewes and eight lambs, Ash-next-Sandwich, Kent); Kentish Gazette, 30th October 1838 (ten sheep, Ospringe, Kent); Surrey Standard, 22nd March 1839 (twenty sheep, Haslemere, Surrey); Sussex Advertiser, 19th April 1842 (four sheep and twenty-three lambs, Rye, Playden and Iden, Sussex); Sussex Agricultural Express, 24th December 1842 (nine sheep, Guestling, Sussex); Hampshire Advertiser and Salisbury Guardian, 18th January 1845 (nineteen sheep, Great Bedwin, Wiltshire) and 20th May 1848 (198 sheep, Berwick St John, Wiltshire).

43. Archer, ‘A Fiendish Outrage’, 149–50; Shakesheff, Rural Conflict, p. 197.

44. Featherstone, ‘Skills for heterogeneous associations’.

45. While the boy was sentenced to seven years transportation, because of his ‘very tender age’ the sentence was respited, the Judge promising that ‘endeavor would be made to find him a place in the Penitentiary where he would be well-educated, though kept to work.’ Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 14th June and 16th August; Southampton County Chronicle, 19th June 1824.

46. Hampshire Chronicle, 14th January 1797.

47. Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 16th September 1822 and 28th July 1823.

48. TNA, HO 52/2, fos 295–7, T Broadley, Gore Court to J. H. Capper, 31st October 1821.

49. Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 25th November 1822.

50. Hampshire Advertiser, 1st December 1827; Portsmouth, Portsea and Gosport Herald, 21st November 1830.

51. Hampshire Telegraph, 5th March 1821 (bullock, Parkhurst near Southampton); Kent Herald, 22nd June 1826 (sheep, Milton-next-Gravesend) and 10th May 1827 (sheep, Dover); Hampshire Advertiser, 1st May 1830 (cow, Southampton Common); Maidstone Journal, 2nd March 1847 (dog on two occasions, Chatham).

52. Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 10th November 1823 (coach proprietor, Trowbridge); Sussex Advertiser, 5th July 1842 (carrier, Mayfield); Rochester Gazette, 10th November 1846 (blacksmith, Chatham); Sussex Advertiser, 24th October 1843 (marine stores dealer, Worthing); Dover Telegraph, 10th February 1849 (bootmaker, Folkestone); Brighton Herald, 21st March 1840 (beershop keeper, Heathfield).

53. Pigs: Hampshire Chronicle, 21st April 1834 (Headley); Kentish Gazette, 1st September, and Brighton Herald, 2nd September 1809 (Burgate Lane, Canterbury); County Chronicle, 13th October 1829 (near Tunbridge Wells). Cattle: Hampshire Courier, 2nd November 1811 (field near Portsmouth). Horses: County Chronicle, 13th October 1829 (near Tunbridge Wells). Donkey: Sussex Agricultural Express, 25th June 1842 (Wrotham, Kent).

54. Griffin, ‘Knowable Geographies’.

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58. Simpson's Salisbury Gazette, 23rd October 1817.

59. Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 16th December 1822 and 29th March 1824; Shakesheff, Rural Conflict, p. 198.

60. For sources see Kentish Gazette, 9th November 1821 and note 44.

61. Hampshire Telegraph, 20th September 1830; Sussex Agricultural Express, 30th July 1842 and 4th February 1843.

62. Shakesheff, Rural Conflict, p.198

63. Kent Herald, 24th November 1825; Brighton Guardian, 22nd April 1835.

64. TNA, HO 44/23, fos 36–7, Henry P. Powys, Hardwick House, near Reading to Lord Melbourne, Home Office, 5th December 1830; Hampshire Advertiser, 15th September 1832; Sussex Agricultural Express, 18th August and 1st September; Sussex Advertiser, 21st August 1849.

65. Exford, Somerset: all horses poisoned and house set on fire (Hampshire Chronicle, 26th March 1792); Bitton, near Bristol: cow and horse ‘inhumanely houghed and mangled’ and barn set on fire (Bath Chronicle, 7th August 1817); Droxford, Hampshire: mare shot and barns set on fire (Hampshire Chronicle, 15th May and 17th July 1820); Shere, Surrey: two cows and ‘several pigs’ belonging to two farmers and rick and barn fired (Hampshire Telegraph, 20th September 1830); Singledge, near Dover, Kent: hind quarters cut off a sheep and barn set on fire (Kentish Gazette, 20th September 1831); Westdean, Sussex: ducks killed and barn set on fire (Sussex Agricultural Express, 12th October 1839); Plumstead Marshes, Kentish-London fringe: several sheep had ears, tails and legs cut off and their backs and sides ‘mangled’ and attempted arson attack on the farmers’ premises (Kentish Gazette, 26th July 1842); Kennington Lees, near Ashford, Kent: pig's head cut off and barn and threshing machine set on fire (Rochester Gazette, 10th April 1849).

66. Archer, ‘A Fiendish Outrage’, 147–8.

67. Ears: ass, Bentley, Hampshire (Hampshire Chronicle, 11th March 1797); tails: cow, Winchester (Hampshire Chronicle, 8th February 1802); eyes: horse, Stelling, Kent (Kentish Gazette, 17th February 1804); cow, Hilverton, Wiltshire (Bath Chronicle, 23rd December 1824); sheep, Lenham, Kent (Maidstone Journal, 16th June 1829); cow, Brighton (Sussex Weekly Advertiser, 18th March 1822).

68. Hampshire Chronicle, 8th August 1791.

69. Southampton Herald, 6th June 1825 (bull, West Lulworth, Dorset); Western Flying Post, 24th December 1827 (cart horse, Corscomb, Dorset); Hampshire Advertiser, 3rd February 1838 (wether sheep, near Chippenham, Wiltshire); Sussex Agricultural Express, 20th April 1850 (cow, Iping, Sussex).

70. Sussex Weekly Advertiser, 30th May 1796; Hampshire County Record Office, Q9/1/523, Hampshire Midsummer Quarter Sessions 1811, indictment of Moses Anthony; Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 10th November 1823; Sussex Advertiser, 19th September 1825.

71. Kentish Gazette, 29th September 1837; Sussex Weekly Advertiser, 7th November 1808.

72. Kent Herald, 15th May 1835 (mare, Milton); Times, 1st November 1844 (horse, Croydon).

73. Gravesend and Milton Journal, 4th July 1835 (waggon horse, Frindsbury, Kent); Sussex Agricultural Express, 27th October 1849 (horse, Pyrford, Surrey).

74. Hampshire Chronicle, 28th January 1828; Maidstone Journal, 25th September 1827.

75. Sussex Agricultural Express, 25th June 1842; Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 17th January 1791; Dover Telegraph, 30th January 1841.

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77. Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 8th June 1795.

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79. Kent Herald, 22nd June 1826.

80. Kent Herald, 10th May 1827; Kentish Observer, 30th May 1833.

81. Devizes and Wiltshire Gazette, 12th August 1830.

82. Dorset County Chronicle, 18th March 1830.

83. Hampshire Telegraph and Salisbury and Winchester Journal, both 5th May 1823.

84. Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 14th June and 16th August 1824; Surrey Standard, 22nd March 1839; Sussex Advertiser, 19th April 1842.

85. Hampshire Advertiser, 20th May and 19th August 1848; Hampshire Telegraph, 19th August 1848.

86. Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 16th September 1822.

87. Gravesend and Milton Journal, 16th July 1836; Brighton Gazette, 11th September 1828; CKS, QS/BW, 115, West Kent Quarter Sessions Michaelmas 1828, depositions in the case of Charles Bowler versus Thomas Hughes for maliciously killing a cow.

88. Ritvo, The Animal Estate, p. 2.

89. Hampshire Advertiser, 20th May and 19th August 1848; Hampshire Telegraph, 19th August 1848.

90. Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 15th August 1796.

91. Griffin, ‘Cut down by some cowardly miscreant’, 34–6.

92. Sussex Agricultural Express, 26th November 1842.

93. Archer, ‘A Fiendish Outrage’, 150.

94. Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 15th August 1796; Buckinghamshire Gazette, 10th January 1829.

95. Sussex Agricultural Express, 9th March 1850; Sherborne Journal, 27th January 1830.

96. Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 12th September 1819.

97. Hampshire Chronicle, 11th March 1797.

98. Kent Herald, 24th November 1825.

99. Southampton Mercury, 1st May 1830.

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101. Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 14th June and 16th August 1824; Sussex Agricultural Express, 18th August and 1st September 1849.

102. Hampshire County Record Office, Q9/1/523, Hampshire Quarter Sessions Midsummer 1811, indictment of Moses Anthony; Felix Farley's Bristol Journal, 19th May 1821.

103. Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 9th March 1795 (Wishford, Wiltshire) and 21st May 1821 (All Cannings, Wiltshire); Southampton Mercury, 1st May 1830 (Anvil Mill, near Basingstoke).

104. Jackson's Oxford Journal, 21st June 1823.

105. Sussex Weekly Advertiser, 16th June 1800.

106. In one particularly unusual case, shepherd Fisher of Great Bedwin, Wiltshire, was prosecuted for poisoning nineteen sheep belonging not to his employer but to another farmer, Thomas Stagg, in the parish. The reason was that Stagg's shepherd often won a local competition for rearing the most lambs, so, out of professional jealousy, Fisher attempted to check Stagg's shepherd's success by poisoning his sheep: Hampshire Advertiser, 18th January 1845.

107. Sussex Weekly Advertiser, 2nd April 1810; TNA, ASSI 94/169, indictment of James Santer, Sussex Lent Assizes 1810; Kentish Gazette, 12th February 1819.

108. Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 11th August 1817.

109. Sussex Agricultural Express, 11th January 1840; TNA, HO 47/16/55, fos 220–21, Report of Justice Buller on William Ranger, 11th August 1793; TNA, ASSI 31/17, Agenda Book, case of Daniel Ranger.

110. 2 East P.C. c. 22 s. 16, p. 1072.

111. Archer, ‘A Fiendish Outrage’, 152; Griffin, ‘Animal Maiming’, 310.

112. Western Flying Post, 13th July 1829 (Clevedon, Somerset); Hampshire Chronicle, 21st April 1834 (Headley, Hampshire).

113. Sussex Weekly Advertiser, 17th May 1802 (Kingsfold, Sussex); Hampshire Telegraph, 26th July 1824 (near Winchester).

114. Archer, ‘A Fiendish Outrage’, 152.

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117. Brighton Gazette, 15th November 1821.

118. Two cows and several pigs and an incendiary fire: Shere, Surrey (Hampshire Telegraph, 20th September); several pigs and ‘other similar instances to cattle’: Hicksted, Sussex (Rochester Gazette, 6th December); Two horses and threatening letters: Edmonton, Middlesex (TNA, HO 44/23, fos 36–7, Henry P. Powys, Reading to Melbourne, 5th December 1830).

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