Monday, 28 May 2012

Wanted: authors for new social history imprint



Calling all writers with a passion for social history! 


I've just joined Pen and Sword Books as commissioning editor of a brand new social history imprint. Pen and Sword (www.pen-and-sword.co.uk) is a successful publisher of military, local and family history titles and the company is looking to broaden their list into other genres. Laura Hirst has also recently joined the company to commission historical fiction, while Eloise Hansen is responsible for archaeology titles.

Our aim for the social history imprint is to publish titles that will appeal equally to social history lovers, fans of historical novels looking a bit deeper and family historians eager to flesh out their research. We want to tell 'people's history', to reveal what life was like in the past for ordinary people through their own voices.

We will be looking to commission a wide range of titles: books on particular periods; collections of personal stories on a theme; accounts of historical scandals or crimes; historical guides immersing readers in specific periods; as well as titles on quirky and unusual historical topics. 

Our first titles will be published in 2014 and forthcoming books feature a wide range of themes, from life on the Home Front to the experiences of a Victorian detective.

As the imprint is still in its infancy I'm open to new ideas, so if you have a proposal that you think might suit the imprint, please do drop me an email to socialhistory@pen-and-sword.co.uk

You can also follow the progress of the imprint on Facebook here

Looking forward to hearing from you!

Jen Newby


Friday, 18 May 2012

Domestic service & duplicity


The housemaid and the confidence trickster: an exclusive guest post from Michelle Higgs, author of Tracing Your Servant Ancestors - out now!


Advertisement for Brooke’s Soap,
The Illustrated London News, 26th April 1890 
(Author's Collection) 
As board and lodging was provided for them, domestic servants could potentially save significant sums of money; this was important for those who wanted to marry. Unfortunately, these savings could attract the wrong kind of man as shown in a London court case in December 1881. 25-year-old Ellen Holley, ‘a fresh, pretty girl’, was a housemaid at a fashionable Park Lane residence where she had worked for six years. She was swindled out of her life savings by Henry Cook, a dancing master using the alias of Pearson.

The Times (11 January 1882) described Henry as a ‘well-dressed man, wearing a heavy moustache and with hair beginning to turn grey’. According to the Western Mail (2 December 1881), he met Ellen when leaving church one Sunday evening and struck up a conversation. After winning her trust, he asked her to go for a walk with him, telling her he earned £4 10s per week, had shares in the Great Northern Railway, and that his employer wanted him to get married.

Carte de visite of a servant inscribed
‘Alice White, 1 October 1892’.

(Author’s collection)
The following Sunday, Ellen met Henry again and he asked if she had any jewellery he could put his photograph in. Trustingly, she lent him her gold watch worth £6 10s which he promised to return. A week later, he did not have the watch but pledged to marry her. Shortly afterwards, he told her he had been security for a friend’s loan and was being pressed for payments. Henry asked how much money she had. Ellen had £47 in the Post Office Savings Bank and £5 on her person (which she gave him). After further assurances from Henry, Ellen gave him £40. Unsurprisingly, he did not keep their next appointment, and after making enquiries with his supposed employer, she quickly discovered he had used an alias.

The Western Mail reported: ‘Instead…of sitting down and weeping and wringing her hands, fair Ellen…put the matter into the hands of the police, with the excellent result that Cook, alias Pearson, was shortly afterwards arrested.’ 

In January 1882, Henry Cook was convicted of obtaining money and jewellery by false pretences at the Central Criminal Court and sentenced to five years’ penal servitude. It turned out he had a wife and six children, and Ellen was just one of many victims.

Justice was done but Ellen’s life savings were not recovered. She was still single on the 1891 census working as a cook for an American journalist, and it is not known if she ever married.



Tracing Your Servant Ancestors is available from Pen and Sword Books or you can pick up a copy from Amazon!

You can also visit her blog or follow her on Twitter @MichelleHiggs11