Ancestry UK

Town Bridewell, Saffron Walden, Essex

Up until 1798, the Saffron Walden Town Gaol appears to have also operated as a Bridewell, or House of Correction. From 1798, however, following the enlargement of the town's workhouse was enlarged, a bridewell was established there. The workhouse was located at the top of the High Street, near the White Hart Inn, perhaps where numbers 88-90 now stand.

In 1812, James Neild wrote:

The Bridewell consists of two rooms, in the Workhouse yard; which, at my visit in 1S05, were in a very ruinous state, but rebuilt in 1807. Each is about 10 feet long by 8 feet 6 inches wide, and 8 feet high; with a fire-place, a covered sewer, and iron-grated windows.

Wooden bedsteads are laid on the floors, with straw, and two blankets to each. Water, when wanted, is brought by the Keeper's wife; who is also mistress of the work-house, which is kept extremely clean.

At my several visits here were no Prisoners. Those who are committed to hard labour, in case of finding employment, have only what they earn to subsist on.

Gaoler, William Mynott, Town Cryer. Salary, 4l. 4s.

Prisoners, 1805, Aug. 22d, 1807, Aug. 29th, 1810, Aug. 29th, None.

Allowance, fourpence per day, in money.

Those confined in the Bridewell have one pound and a half of bread daily, sent in loaves from the Baker, and a quart of table beer.

A government report in 1818 indicated that a new gaol and bridewell were shortly to be built in the town. However, that seems not to have happened and the workhouse site appears to have taken on both of these roles.

In 1837, the Inspectors of Prisons reported:

This Prison is within the walls of the Workhouse. The Male Criminals are confined in four Cells; two of which are together, having a Yard. The Cells are 8 feet long, 6 feet 6 inches wide, and 9 feet high. There is in each a barrack bedstead, 7 feet by 3 feet. Two of the Cells open into a Yard, 16 feet by 15 feet, and the others into a Yard, 16 feet long by 12 feet 10 inches wide.

Above the Men's Cells is an Apartment for female Prisoners, the windows of which look into the Yards below, to which the men have at all times access. The Borough contracts with the County for sending a part of the prisoners to Chelmsford, a distance of 28 miles. The cost of conveying a prisoner is £1. 16s. 6d.

The total number of Prisoners confined in the Borough Gaol in 1835 was 15. In the first six months of 1836 there were 17. The greatest number in custody at one time, in 1836, has been seven. During that year, there were 15 prisoners at Chelmsford, at the expense of the borough. At the period of our visit, seven prisoners were in custody.

The Magistrates are prepared to build a new prison, and the County Magistrates in this division of Essex, feeling the great inconvenience which arises from the want of a County prison, are, we believe, disposed to unite with the Borough Magistrates in the erection of a Gaol sufficient for the custody of prisoners committed within their concurrent jurisdictions. This prison is in a very dirty state, and the prisoners appeared to us to be neglected. There is not sufficient room for two persons in the men's barrack bedstead.

No vigilance is exercised in excluding improper books. We found in the Cells a novel, intituled "The Old English Baron," "Paul and Virginia," and "Almoran and Hamet."

At the period of our inspection there were three women in one apartment. Two were hardened "Tramps," who had been convicted of forging Passes, and sentenced to transportation. They were evidently experienced Offenders. The third was a decent servant girl, aged 16, belonging to a neighbouring village, who had been sentenced to a month's imprisonment. She had been well brought up, and her connexions were respectable. She had been, however, for some weeks in close contact with these women, during which she had not had a separate bedstead. This was the more inexcusable as there were several bedsteads in an adjoining room, in which the girl might have been confined apart.

In 1839, it was reported that the corporation had sold the premises, and proposes to contract with the county magistrates for the commitment of the prisoners to the county gaol at Newport.

Records

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Bibliography

  • Prison Oracle - resources those involved in present-day UK prisons.
  • GOV.UK - UK Government's information on sentencing, probation and support for families.