Men of the first Home Guard

This guest blog has been written by Bill Openshaw. Bill will be talking about his new book To The Call Of Bugles: A history of the Percy Tenantry Volunteers 1789-1914, at Cramlington Library on Tuesday 10 October at 2pm. Book on Eventbrite nlandlibs.eventbrite.co.uk/

If you were to utter the words ‘Home Guard’, to many it would conjure up images of the likes of Corporal Jones or Captain Mainwaring from the classic tv comedy, ‘Dad’s Army.’ The real Home Guard of the Second World War, however, were not the bumbling old fools as portrayed in the tv program. In truth, many were experienced military men and although too old for the regular armed forces, still had something to offer in defence of our nation.

One hundred and fifty years earlier, our ancestors found themselves in similar circumstances as a French Revolutionary army that had swept Europe in the 1790’s, now prepared to cross the English Channel, volunteers were called for. In 1803, the threat came from the boggy man himself, Napoleon Buonaparte. In 1797 the last invasion of Britain occurred. The French plan had been to send a large force to Ireland and assist an Irish rebellion, while two smaller forces would land near Bristol and Tyneside. It was believed that the working classes of Britain would rise up against their masters and allow the two invasion forces to march to the manufacturing area of Manchester. Despite the plan failing, due to bad weather and the Royal Navy, a successful landing was made in Fishguard in South Wales. The French had not foreseen the John Bull spirit of the British people.

Although this small invasion force was fooled into surrendering to a smaller British Militia and volunteer force, the fear of invasion was increased. The government therefore again called for volunteers in 1798 and again in 1803 to meet the threat of Napoleon.

The men of Northumberland came forth in proportionally more numbers than many other counties. The first to stand forward were the men of Berwick in June 1794 followed in January 1795 by the Newcastle Loyal Volunteers. As a result of the Fishguard incident, by 1798, seventeen volunteer corps had formed in Northumberland, such as the Morpeth Volunteer Infantry (123 men), North Shields and Tynemouth infantry (157 men), Seaton Delaval Infantry (60 men), Wallington & Kirkharle Cavalry (43 men). The largest of these was the Percy Tenantry Volunteers who would by 1803, number 1500 men. They were raised by General Hugh Percy, the 2nd Duke of Northumberland.

Who were the men that stood forward to serve in defence of their families and country. Most of their names are recorded within the surviving muster lists that can be found within the Northumberland Archives. The records often display their place of abode and sometimes their occupation. For people compiling a family history, they can be a useful addition to the family story. A little digging can unearth all sorts of information.

For instance, the Rev. James Birkett was one such volunteer who served as a sergeant in the Percy Tenantry infantry. The curate at Ovingham church, he ran a boarding school of some note and surprisingly his image was found in the collection at Woodhorn.

EP 102/46

Joseph Lamb was a Captain with the Percy Tenantry Riflemen. In 1798 he served with the Loyal Axwell Cavalry but in 1803 joined the Duke’s corps along with his brother. Amongst other things, he owned the Northumberland Glass works in Lemington. He was a fervent anti-slavery supporter and became Mayor of Newcastle in 1836.

NRO 599/2 & 3

Other men of note to be found amongst the muster rolls of the Percy Tenantry are William Hedley and Timothy Hackworth. These two men built and designed the first locomotives including the ‘Puffing Billy’, engines that would change the world. Perhaps they served by the side of one of your ancestors.

NRO 599/2 & 3 – Some Annals of the Lambs: A Border Family

NRO 02659/5 – Appointment of Joseph Lamb as Captain in Percy Tenantry Volunteers

Bridge End Maternity Hospital, Corbridge

This blog has been researched and written by Hilary Love, one of the volunteers on our maternity care project. Project volunteers are researching maternity care in Northumberland with particular focus on Castle Hills Maternity Home, Berwick, and Mona Taylor Maternity Home, Stannington. We are also researching in less detail some of the other Maternity Homes in the county. This blog provides a brief history of maternity provision at Bridge End Maternity Hospital, Corbridge, Northumberland.

The project is supported by the Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust Bright Charity and the Northumberland Archives Charitable Trust. We will be posting more blog content from the project over the coming months.

NRO 4144/28 

Bridge End Maternity Hospital started life as a large end terrace late 19th century house. It was extended prior to 1938 to serve as a maternity hospital. Two late 19th century terraced houses on an adjacent site are thought to have been used as staff accommodation. Upon closure the building became a public house and has since been split into private apartments.

The fifty-first Annual Report of the Executive Committee of the Northumberland County Nursing Association, for the twelve months ended 31st March 1948, was written on the eve of the transfer of the domiciliary midwifery and general nursing services to the County Council and the dissolution of the County Nursing Association. Care Committees were formed to function from July 1948. The report sets out information about the Hospital just before it was became part of the new National Health Service. We learn that in March 1948, 18 patients were admitted, including one for ante-natal treatment. The Maternity Hospital had 13 beds. The hospital fees make interesting reading:

Public Ward – members £2 12s 6d per week; non- members £3 10s 0d per week.

Semi-Private Wards – members £5 5s 5d per week; non- members £6 10s 0d per week.

Private Wards – “Blue” Room £12 12s 0d per week; Others – £8 8s 0d per week.

We also learn about the future management of the Bridge End Maternity Hospital – “When the Regional Hospital Board takes over the hospital on July 5th, it will come under it will come under the Management Committee of the Hexham Group of Hospitals and we hope that the local interest which has served it so generously and well since it was started in 1931 will continue to support it in whatever ways may be opened in the future.

Grateful thanks are recorded to Miss Harrison, the Matron for 13 years, and to the staff.”

Sir John Dick (1721-1804): Merchant, Diplomat and Art Dealer 

Digital copy of black and white engraved portrait of Sir John Dick, Baronet of Braid (1721-1804), NRO 07148/1

Last October, I began a Northern Bridge funded placement as part of my PhD at Newcastle University cataloguing and researching the second American letter book documenting the trade of Ralph Carr (1711-1806), an eighteenth-century Newcastle merchant. After completing the catalogue, I came across a collection of letters within the broader Carr-Ellison papers containing the letters of Sir John Dick, a life-long friend of Carr’s who benefitted from the latter’s generous patronage during his early years and went on to pursue a mercantile and diplomatic career. I spent the remainder of my placement cataloguing Dick’s letters and was fascinated by its contents. 

Sir John Dick was born in Newcastle upon Tyne in 1721, baptised on 2nd February at the parish of All Saints, the son of Andrew Dick and Janet Durham who had married at the parish on the same date in 1716. Andrew Dick (1676-c.1744) was a hostman in Newcastle, being apprenticed to John Blackett on the 18th November 1700 and admitted as a member to the Company of Hostmen of Newcastle upon Tyne in 1708. The Newcastle Hostmen were a powerful group who controlled the monopoly of the coal trade from the Tyne through a charter granted to the Company in 1600 by Elizabeth I and their dominance continued until the mid-eighteenth century. Although Dick’s younger brother, Durham Dick, was also admitted a member of the Company in 1737, John followed a mercantile path through the patronage of Ralph Carr (1711-1806).  

The Dicks and the Carrs potentially met through the involvement of both Andrew Dick and Ralph Carr in the coal trade and their mutual connections through powerful North-East families. Carr was also admitted as a member to the Company of Hostmen in 1739,  but had been a member of the Merchant Adventurers – another powerful guild in Newcastle controlling the shipping trade from its port – since his indenture to Matthew Bowes in 1728, being admitted a full member a decade later. Carr provided young John with an education and was involved in sending him abroad sometime around 1740, where Dick did some business for Carr at Dunkirk and then entered into trade from Holland.  

View of the city and port of Livorno, or “Vedutta della città e porto de Livorno,” 1790-1800. Held by the British Library.  

At Rotterdam, Dick was tasked by the English Board of Trade with the transportation of Protestant settlers to Nova Scotia to counter the French Catholic population and establish the new colony under General Edward Cornwallis (1713-1776), the newly appointed Governor of Nova Scotia. Shortly afterwards in 1754, Dick was appointed to the position of Consul at Leghorn (Livorno) in Italy, which was reported in the English national press. Livorno was a free port and Dick was tasked with huge responsibilities overseeing trade and navigating conflict between different nations. Beyond his diplomatic duties, he traded in art and antiquities, acting as agent for Thomas Anson of Shugborough, champion of the Greek revival movement and collector of sculptures. Amongst the various items Dick sent to Anson were a pair of Corsican goats, which Dick stated were called “Miufri” and thought they would be considered “somewhat curious in England”. The goats were possibly obtained through Dick’s correspondent, Pasquale Paoli (1725-1807), the Corsican patriot and leader. James Boswell (biographer of Samuel Johnson) described the animals in his Account of Corsica: The Journal of a Tour to that Island (1768) which is dedicated to Paoli; Boswell was a friend of Dick’s and acknowledges the contributions of his friend in the preface to the work. Dick’s prestige in the art-world is highlighted by his inclusion in Johan Zoffany’s The Tribuna of Uffuzi, commissioned by Queen Charlotte.

Johan Joseph Zoffany, “The Tribuna of Uffizi”. 1772-1777. Held by the Royal Collection Trust. Sir John Dick is depicted second from the left with his Order of St Anne pinned to his right-hand side, with George Nassau Clavering-Cowper next to him (far left).  

As well as dealing in art, antiquities and other curiosities, Dick was trusted by his network of aristocratic friends and correspondents to carry out their business and supply them with information from his many contacts. George Nassau Clavering-Cowper and Sir Horace Mann each wrote to Dick on several occasions for assistance regarding a missing package of diamond earrings worth £1000 (roughly £150,000 in today’s money) purchased for Cowper’s wife. Several of Dick’s correspondents asked to loan money, sometimes large sums, including Paoli who requested Dick loan him £1500 in 1783. Dick even supplied his friend Prince William Henry (younger brother of George III) with news of the French Revolution as it was rapidly unfolding in the 1790s. Dick was rewarded for his diplomatic efforts by other royalty, receiving the Russian Order of St Anne from Catherine the Great some time around 1770 for his conduct in assisting her fleet during the Russo-Turkish War (1768-1774). Catherine expressed her approval of Dick in a letter addressed to George III (written in French), a copy of which is contained in the collection of Dick’s letters. 

Catherine’s gratitude to Dick may have expanded beyond just diplomatic duties, however, when he was accused of participating in a conspiracy to kidnap and arrest Princess Tarakanova, a pretender to the Russian empire. Tarakanova (known by many other names) emerged in Paris in 1770s under the name of Princess Vladimir, claiming to be the illegitimate daughter of Empress Elizabeth, upon whose death Catherine’s husband, Peter III, took the reign (Peter was ousted by Catherine just six months later). Catherine appointed one of her military officers, Count Alexei Orlov – who had assisted her in overthrowing Peter – to capture and arrest the pretender from Livorno. Orlov seduced the pretender princess to board his ship on the pretence of a marriage proposal, and once aboard Tarakanova was swiftly arrested and sent back to St. Petersburg where she died imprisoned in 1775. That Orlov played a key role in assisting Catherine is undoubted, but accusations arose by contemporaries that Dick – who at this time was stationed in Livorno and was a friend of Orlov’s – assisted in the capture of the Princess.  

Two publications in the 1790’s – Giuseppe Gorani’s Mémoires Secrets et Critiques des Cours […] d’Italie (1793) and Jean-Henri Castéra’s La Vie de Catherine II (1797) – accused Dick and his wife, Ann Bragg of Somerset, of entertaining Tarakanova whilst she was with Orlov and helping with the arrest. Dick denounced any active participation in the scheme, as recalled in the Historical and Posthumous Memoirs of Sir Nathaniel William Wraxall by Henry B. Wheatley (1884). Wraxall (1751-1831) recounts a dinner party of 1799 in which he asked Dick about the accusations put forth by Castèra, and produces a long speech by Dick in which he explained the circumstances and denied any knowledge of the situation. Although Wraxall accepts Dick’s explanation, he highlights how unusual it was for Dick to not put forth any of his own accounts disproving the charges against him at the time.  

In all events, Dick’s consulship ended shortly after in 1776 when he resigned his post and returned to England. He did not rest up, however, and took up the post of Comptroller of Army Accounts in 1781 just months after the death of his wife. In 1768 Dick enhanced his own status by claiming a dormant baronetcy from his great-great-grandfather, Sir William Dick of Braid, upon the supposition he was the sole male heir of this lineage. Dick’s grandfather Andrew, of West Newton in Cumberland, came from a long Scottish lineage being the son of Louis Dick (also of West Newton) who was the fifth son of Sir William Dick, the personal banker to James VI and said to be the richest man in Scotland. William received his knighthood from Charles I after loaning him £20,000 but met his decline during the Civil War when he was arrested by Oliver Cromwell and died imprisoned and penniless. Dick was granted the baronetcy by Thomas Brodie of Edinburgh with a seal of his heraldry which survives in the collection. 

Document signed by Thomas Brodie, deputy to the Lyon King of Arms of Scotland outlining the entitlement of Sir John Dick to the baronetcy of Braid, ZCE/F/1/11/2. 

Dick died at his London home on the 2nd December 1804. His large legacy and value was widely known. As well as owning 350-acre estate in Surrey at Mount Clare House in Roehampton, now a Grade I listed building, he left behind large sums of cash, with one newspaper reporting his worth as £160,000 upon his death. Dick had no close relatives left after his death – with his wife and siblings predeceasing him and being childless – and so divided his estate amongst four executors: Ralph Carr, the son of his early benefactor and friend; John Cleathing, the son of his secretary; his physician Dr. Vaughan, and his apothecary, William Simons. Carr junior wrote to his father on the 3rd December to inform him that Dick had died after being confined to his bed for thirteen months, and to outline Dick’s legacy. Carr’s letter stated he alone had been appointed the sole beneficiary of the will until just a few months before Dick’s death, when Dick decided (perhaps under the influence of some other friends) to add extra people as executors. Despite dividing his assets four ways, Carr advised his father that many would be left unhappy at Dick’s decision, writing “I fear this will may be considered as capricious & will give very little satisfaction in the world; perhaps there never was an instance where more persons will be disappointed & irritated” [ZCE/F/1/1/2/120]. Dick’s recognition of his old Newcastle friend Ralph Carr and his lifelong friendship of the whole family has found his collection of letters deposited in the family’s archive, and now being catalogued and available will surely lead to some interesting investigations of his life and influence as a prominent diplomat and aristocrat.  

References 

https://www.britannica.com/place/Livorno-Italy “Livorno” Encyclopaedia Britannica, 12 August 2010. 

Staffordshire Record Office. “Bundle of correspondence from Sir John Dick (British consul at Leghorn) and others”. D615/PA/2. 

Andrew Baker, Thomas Anson and the Greek Revival. ttps://andrewbakercomposer.files.wordpress.com/2017/06/shugbook1-211.pdf  

James Boswell, An Account of Corsica: The Journal of a Tour to that Island (London: Printed for Edward and Charles Dilly, 1768). 

Giuseppe Gorani, Mémoires secrets et critiques des cours, des gouvernemens, et des moeurs des principaux états de L’Italie (1794) 

Jean-Henri Castéra, La Vie de Catherine II, Impératrice de Russie (1797)