Showing posts with label Louis Hervey d'Egville. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Louis Hervey d'Egville. Show all posts

Sunday, 5 February 2012

Denial Of An Impudent Vagrant

On Tuesday 19 September 1854 James Hervet d'Egville was accosted in the Tything, Worcester, by a stranger. The man claimed to be related to him and demanded sixpence.

In 1854 the average weekly wage of an agricultural labourer was 10/8 (for those of you who don't remember the pre-decimal currency of the United Kingdom that's ten shillings and eightpence or about 53 pence). Sixpence (2.5 pence) had a good deal more spending power then and would certainly have bought a couple of pints. The average price for a gallon of beer in that year has been calculated as about just over one shilling and sixpence (7.5 pence) [1].

James was born in Worcester in 1813 to Louis Hervey d'Egville (1786-1857) and Mary Davis (1791-1846). Peter Harvey Gooding d'Egville was born in 1803 to George d'Egville and Mary Reid (who appear to have married in 1803). Consequently the man who accosted James in the Tything was probably his first cousin.

James might not have known that Peter was his cousin. George was committed to the institution of marriage and entered into serial wedlock as his wives wore out and died. His progeny are extensive and he did not invest in their futures; unlike his brothers.

Peter Harvey Gooding d'Egville was certainly a pest. There are other instances of petty crime which are recorded around the Midlands and I'm uncertain if it were he who instigated an insurrection in an East Anglian workhouse.

The Worcestershire Chronicle 27 September 1854
The British Library Board

1. An extensive Excel spreadsheet of prices taken from the data series which were collected by Professor Gregory Clark and used in three publications were re-formatted by Peter Lindert 10 April 2006 can be downloaded here. Citations are provided in the spreadsheet.  

Wednesday, 20 July 2011

Society Dancing

Society Dancing
Fashionable Bodies in England, 1870-1920

Theresa Jill Buckland is Professor of Performing Arts in the Department of Performance and Digital Arts at De Montfort University. Last week she launched her book, Society Dancing: Fashionable Bodies in England, 1870-1920.

Theresa says, "There are two pictures of Louis D'Egville junior in the book taken from the Tatler 1911, a couple of pages on Louis (father and son) plus a little background. It should help I hope to provide a wider context for their dancing activities and where they stood in terms of status."

No one is better qualified to write this book than Theresa. I found her paper "Edward Scott: The Last of the English Dancing Masters" (Theresa Jill Buckland Dance Research: The Journal of the Society for Dance Research Vol. 21, No. 2) an incisive and valuable source of information on the professional and social world of Louis (father and son).

Louis (father and son) in this instance refers to Louis Hervey d'Egville (1819-1892) and Louis Hervey d'Egville (1855-1927). Louis (son) was grandfather to Alan d'Egville Stott of the South African Air Force who was killed at the age of 24 on the Warsaw supply missions of August 1944. Which ties neatly with yesterday's posting. Any semblance of order or structure on this blog is entirely illusory.

Society Dancing
Fashionable Bodies in England, 1870-1920
Theresa Jill Buckland
Palgrave Macmillan
13 Jun 2011
9780230277144
Hardback
264 pages
Price £50.00