19 May 2018

THE FOREST OF DEAN BLAKENEY GANG IN THE 1880'S.



The Blakeney 'Gang' in the 1890s

In the 1890s it was claimed by the local establishment that a group of men from the Blakeney Hill area were exercising a system of terrorism over the inhabitants of the Forest. There were questions asked in the House of Commons. The Deputy Surveyor of the Forest of Dean, Philip Baylis, who resided at Whitemead Park, Parkend, thought the situation serious enough to ask for a troop of cavalry. Instead the Chief Constable, Admiral Henry Christian, only sent eight additional officers. 
To understand these actions today, it has to be seen as a part of the continuing struggle by Foresters which resulted in a number of violent confrontations and covert actions between the Crown and commoners in the Blakeney area.

Trouble had started in 1893 when Philip Baylis was appointed Deputy Surveyor. He was determined to rid the Forest of commoners permanently and to extend the enclosures in the Forest up to the statutory limit which had been the cause of the riots back in Warren James's time.
A census of Forest of Dean sheep in 1898 recorded that commoning was carried out by 236 people with a total of 10,851 sheep. His threat of a complete ban fanned the flames of rebellion in the Blakeney area.
In early May 1895 Blakeney's vicar, Alexander Pringle, a supporter of the Deputy Surveyor, wrote a letter to the local press in which he claimed that the area was becoming notorious for its 'exceptional lawlessness'. He related that there had been numerous acts of atrocious cruelty to horses, donkeys, and sheep, as well as fowls stolen, the motive being to drive out from their privilege of pasture other persons in the Forest. He went on to claim that the police authorities, from the Chief Constable downwards, have done their best, but hitherto had failed. He concluded by saying "In exceptional circumstances there ought to be exceptional law, for the condition of affairs is worse than in Ireland."
For our 19th century ancestors, poaching on private land was often a matter of survival and it was no surprise that they often came into conflict with local landowners and their gamekeepers. Historian, David Jones, wrote that the poacher was ... such an ordinary figure, an accepted and normal part of rural life. In the second quarter of the nineteenth century poaching was widely regarded as one of the fastest growing crimes in Britain, and, unlike arson, highway robbery, cattle-, horse- and sheep-stealing, it continued to be a prominent and permanent part of the rural scene even in the 1880s and 1890s.

Poachers were overwhelmingly working people, and in the Forest, usually colliers. This was a classic case of a social crime which the Magistrates and the landowners were determined to stamp out. It was also convenient for those in authority, when writing to the newspapers, or addressing Parliament, to lump all those in opposition from the Blakeney area, as a 'gang'.

It is also important to remember that those magistrates were often also the major landowners in the area with a vested interest in extending the enclosures.

The name most commonly associated with the 'Blakeney Gang' was Walter Virgo. Born in 1845 to farmer, James Virgo and his wife Charlotte Yemm, he had six brothers and four sisters. He came to the attention of the police from 1869, with his offences including poaching, drunkeness, carrying a gun without a licence, sheep-stealing and brawling. During the 1890s his sons all appeared in  front of the magistrates charged with similar offences.
In 1893 he was, not for the first time, in conflict with Philip Baylis. The Deputy Surveyor's keepers had impounded some of Walter's sheep which were later rescued on a night raid at the pound. Baylis retaliated by impounding more of the sheep and placed a fine of 3 shillings on each of them. Walter Virgo swore revenge.
Baylis at that time wrote - "This man Walter Virgo is one of a family that has a most notoriously bad character in the Forest - and I am informed that Walter Virgo has been convicted of sheep stealing and has also on two other occasions been tried at Gloster for offences but acquitted - and at present he and other members of his family exercise a system of terrorism over the inhabitants of the Forest and it is commonly stated that if other people incur their displeasure or turn animals out on the Forest by which the pasturage used by the Virgos would be lessened, the animals are either driven over quarries - or killed or injured or some other injury inflicted.

George Rowlinson from Cinderford, a Methodist minister and the local miners' trade union leader, and Sydney Elsom JP from Yorkley, also a Methodist minister and leader of the Freeminers, were highly critical of the comments, and those of Baylis's supporter, the vicar of Blakeney, Alexander Pringle. They accused them of becoming hysterical and vastly exaggerating the outrages to try and tar the whole Forest community with the actions of a very small minority in an attempt to justify enclosing the Forest. At the same time they did condemn the actions of the Blakeney men. 
The heavy police presence in the Blakeney area soon resulted in clashes between police and locals. On the evening of April 30th, 1895, two of the sons of Walter Virgo, Aaron (26) and Moses (28), and their friend Evan Davies, were walking towards the Swan Temperance Hotel in Blakeney around midnight when they were stopped by some policemen who included PC Newport and PC Jones. They were asked about the contents of a bag they were carrying. The encounter soon developed into a brawl between the trio and a number of police. PC Newport and Aaron Virgo both finished up with injuries. It turned out that the bag had only contained stinging nettles. When arrested the brothers claimed that during the encounter they had been roughly handled by the police officers and brought a charge of assault against PC Newport. 
Convicted at Littledean Court of assaulting PC Newport, the Virgo brothers each received a prison sentence of one month's hard labour, and Evan Davies a ten shilling fine for assaulting PC Jones. The charge against PC Newport was dismissed.
Philip Baylis later alleged that if there had not been other constables present PC Newport would have died in the assault. 
Evan Davies was to have another encounter with PC Jones. In September 1895 he was appearing at Littledean Court again. Fisherman Henry Davies, and his sons, Harvey and Evan, were charged with being in possession of an unseasonable salmon.
PC Jones gave evidence that he was on duty at Milcombe Head on the 5th of September when he saw the three defendants coming up the Severn in a boat. They came ashore at Milcombe Head. Harvey Davies was carrying a bag and when asked what was in it he said " a fish". The constable asked to see it and when shown an 18lb salmon said he would have to take possession of it. Henry Davies then produced a glass bottle from his pocket and threatened to knock the constable's head off. PC Jones eventually took possession of the fish plus three nets. Henry and Harvey were both fined £5, plus 10 shillings, the value of the fish.
On the night of 9th February 1896, locals near Blackpool Bridge heard three loud explosions. The next morning, workers employed by Messrs Williams of Cinderford, the timber merchant who had the contract for fencing and enclosing Blakeney Hill, found that the firm's steam sawing machine had been dynamited.  Baylis was in no doubt that the Virgos and the Blakeney Gang were to blame, and the Forest Commissioners went on to offer a reward of one hundred pounds for any information. No one came forward to claim it. 
The next major event took place only two months later. In the early hours of April 3rd 1896 a worker at the New Fancy colliery noticed part of the woodland on fire near the Lodge at Russell's enclosure. He alerted John Hatton the keeper residing there who quickly rounded up other keepers and woodmen to beat out the fire. As soon as they had dealt with that blaze their attention was drawn to another.
The Dean Forest Guardian later reported that "it appears that the outbreak occurred at several  places simultaneously, and no sooner had the men put out one blaze, than their attention was attracted to another, and this went on for hours, and in the opinion of one authority, somewhere before mid-night on Saturday, somebody deliberately made at least thirty fires in the district referred to" 
When, next day, Philip Baylis examined the damage he reported that fifty separate fires, over a line between two and three miles long, had been started in the enclosures. Most probably "by some person or persons carrying a small lamp such as miners use and just pushing it into the dry fern where there happened to be a suitable place." He went on to say that had the wind not died down and some light rain fallen, this attempt to burn down the Forest would have succeeded. He was in no doubt that this was the work of the 'Blakeney Gang'.
Baylis used these outrages in an attempt to put pressure on the Forest Commissioners to enclose the Forest. He claimed that the Virgos were the main beneficiaries of the right to common. The Commissioner decided that he was being misled by Baylis and urged him to compromise. 

In June 1898, a memorandum by Sir Edward Stafford Howard, the Commissioner for the Forest of Dean, signaled the end of Baylis's ambition to have all sheep removed from the Forest. He wrote - "the number of persons keeping sheep as well as the number of the sheep themselves is very much larger than I had been led to expect, so that the matter will have to be dealt with very carefully and by degrees, no wholesale prohibition being in my opinion possible. It will be desirable to take means to let the owners of sheep know that their animals have no legal right in the forest but are only there on sufferance ... Apart from this, and so long as the rightful commoners do not step in to prevent it, the Crown will not interfere with the sheep." 
Walter Virgo died in 1903. He is buried at the Blakeney Tabernacle, an independent chapel and surrounded by others who were involved in the 1890s disturbances.
There was no way that he, his family or workmates would have attended the Anglican Church at Blakeney where their enemy, the Reverend Alexander Pringle, preached.