New Brumby (SE8909), Lincolnshire
Retford & Gainsborough Times (1881)
[Anon.] (Auth.)
POLICE INTELLIGENCE: BRIGG PETTY SESSIONS: TUESDAY: LARCENY BY MORRIS DANCERS [Messingham and New Brumby, Lincs.]
Retford & Gainsborough Times,
14th Jan.1881, No.559, p.2c
Report of court proceedings. Five men from Messingham entered
a shop in New Brumby "dressed as morris dancers and disguised."
They unsuccessfully asked for money and after they had left, it
was noticed that 2 tins of preserved fish had disappeared. In
court the men admitted the offence but claimed in mitigation that
they were under the influence of drink at the time, a quantity of
liquor having been given to them during the day.
I.T.Jones Collection (1881, T.B.Wright, R.Sutton & J.E.Cross)
Rev. T. B. Wright (Judge); Rev. R. Sutton (Judge); Rev. John Edward Cross (Judge)
Larceny by Morris Dancers: Register of Brigg Petty Sessions
I.T.Jones Collection,
Recorded 11th Jan. 1881, Ref.L4-2
The register of Brigg Petty sessions is kept in Lincoln Castle. It records that the five
men mentioned in Retford and Gainsborough Times (1881) were found guilty of stealing goods
to the value of 1/7d from premises in New Brumby on 6th January 1881 (Thursday). The only
other interesting information is that the tins were actually lobster and salmon! The three
signaures are those of the adjudicating justices.
I.T.Jones Collection (1983, I.T.Jones - c)
Mr. Idwal Jones (Col.)
Larceny by Morris Dancers: Notes
I.T.Jones Collection,
Written 1983, Ref.L4-1
Retford and Gainsborough Times (1881) gives details of a hearing of Brigg Petty Sessions
at which 5 men from Messingham were charged with stealing two tins of preserved fish from a
shop in New Brumby. It was claimed that they came into the shop dressed as morris dancers
and had asked for a copper or two but the shopkeeper declined to give them anything.
Information on who the men were and what they had been doing might be obtained from court
records or from census returns. I could not look up the Lincolnshire Chronicle for 1881 in
the Lincoln Library when I visited in 1983 because it had been sent away to be microfilmed.
This research is described in I.T.Jones (1983)
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