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Bodmin Jail

Dionne Haynes • 9 May 2022

A jail with a grim past

Last week, hubby and I enjoyed a fascinating trip to Bodmin Jail. I’m fascinated by prisons, so when I saw the sign for Bodmin Jail on the way home from a day trip to North Cornwall, it was an opportunity too good to resist. Hubby was less keen when I suggested the slight detour, but after a delicious Cornish Cream Tea at The Jolly Hangman Tavern, he was as keen as me to see what the jail offered.

Bodmin Jail was built in 1779 during the reign of King George III, during a period of extensive prison reforms. It was the first English prison to house inmates in individual cells. It segregated men and women, provided light airy living and working conditions, and gave inmates access to hot water. During Queen Victoria’s reign, the prison was demolished and a new one built on the same site. In the late 19th century, it became a naval prison but closed in 1927. However, during World War II, the jail provided sanctuary for the Crown Jewels!

Now, it’s a fascinating museum providing insight into the darker side of the prison’s history, including the horrific overcrowding of cells (despite the intention to house inmates with one to each cell!), appalling food, the punishments doled out to the inmates and even the incarceration of children for something as trivial as stealing a blanket on a bitterly cold day.

The jail experience begins with a fabulous tour with special effects and sets the tone for wandering at will among the old Victorian cells flanking a long corridor. There are plenty of information boards, props and tableaux in the cells that give a flavour of how terrible the conditions were for many of the jails’ inmates. Although many were genuinely bad people, too many were desperate individuals who took desperate measures to feed their children or keep a roof over their heads.

Bodmin Jail has hosted 55 executions for crimes that included murder and stealing. These were often public spectacles and people would travel considerable distances to witness a hanging. From 1901, the hangings were more private affairs, and a fully functioning authentic Victorian Hanging Pit is one of the more chilling aspects of the tour. The last person to hang was William Hampton in 1909, found guilty of murdering his girlfriend after an argument. It was a strange feeling, looking through the open doors into the deep pit below, knowing that many lives ended abruptly in that particular hanging shed. 

Gruesome, but captivating!
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by Dionne Haynes 22 August 2024
Amelia Earhart was an American aviation pioneer. As a child, she was considered a tomboy because of her spirit of adventure and pursuits that included climbing trees and hunting rats with a rifle. She also played basketball and took an auto repair course. With the help of her uncle, Amelia built a ramp (inspired by a roller coaster she had seen in St Louis) and secured it to the top of the toolshed. This was the "runway" for her first “flight” in a box that served as a sled. With several bruises and a torn dress, Amelia climbed out of the box and announced, 'It’s just like flying!' After a 10-minute experience flight at an aerial meet in Long beach, California, Amelia was hooked. She worked a variety of jobs to pay for flying lessons and earned her pilot’s licence in 1923. After that, this remarkable woman set several aviation records. She was the first woman to fly at an altitude above 14,000 feet, and in 1928, she left Newfoundland to become the first woman to fly across the Atlantic Ocean. She was a passenger for this flight and Wilmer Stultz was the pilot. Amelia was the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic, and she was the first woman to fly nonstop across the United States. In 1930, she set a record for flying speed, reaching 184mph and breaking the previous record of 156mph. In June 1937, Amelia Earhart took off from Oakland California with her navigator, Fred Noonan. Their intention was to fly around the world heading in an eastbound direction to make Amelia the first pilot to circumnavigate the globe. They reached Lae, New Guinea, on June 29th, having flown 22,000 miles. They had 7,000 miles remaining to complete the mission. Amelia and Fred left Lae on July 2nd, heading for the next refuelling stop at Howland Island. They were never seen again. No one knows what disaster befell them. Did they crash into the Pacific Ocean and perish? Did they survive a crash and make it to land, only to perish as castaways? The disappearance of Amelia Earhart and her navigator remains one of the great unsolved mysteries of all time, but she remains the best-known female aviator in the world.
by Dionne Haynes 10 July 2024
Leonardo da Vinci was a genius from the renaissance period. He was born in Italy on the 15th April, 1452. An artist and inventor, Leonardo had a great fascination for nature and animals. He is famous for painting the Mona Lisa and The Last Supper, and for inventing a flying machine. He had a thirst for knowledge, but did you know that this gifted man did not go to school? Leonardo learned to read and write, and was educated to an elementary level of mathematics, but it was by observing his Tuscan countryside that Leonardo learned about the natural world. On the 8th of July, 2021, a drawing by Leonardo da Vinci sold at auction for £8.8 million ($12.1m). The image of a bear’s head is tiny at 7cm x 7cm, and dates back to the early 1480s! The drawing was created using silverpoint, a tricky technique that involves pressing a silver stick to paper with a delicate touch. This was not the first time this little gem sold at auction. Sir Thomas Lawrence sold the same drawing at Christie’s in 1860 for the princely sum of £2.50! This talented man was a painter, sculptor, architect and engineer. He created many technical sketches, including designs for pumps, mechanical apparatus and military weapons, and he produced many detailed anatomical drawings after careful study of the human form - and dissecting human corpses. Here’s another fascinating fact - Leonardo da Vinci wrote backwards. This wasn’t to encrypt his notes, but to avoid smudging his writing and ruining his journals because he was left-handed. King Francis I King Francis I was a great admirer of Leonardo da Vinci’s talent. He named him “Premier Painter and Engineer and Architect of the King” and offered him the use of the Château of Clos Lucé, in Amboise, Loire Valley. Leonardo spent the final 3 years of his life at this beautiful château, working on projects for the king, and surrounded by eager students.
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In 1990, a gang of criminals pulled off the biggest art heist in history. Two men dressed as police officers walked into a museum in Boston at 1.24 a.m. and overpowered two night security guards. They duct-taped the guards to a pipe and a workbench in the museum's basement and announced, “Gentlemen, this is a robbery.” In the space of just one hour, they removed 13 valuable artworks that would be worth $500 million in today’s money. Despite the offer of a huge reward, the stolen paintings were never recovered. They included works by Rembrandt (see the photo of his missing painting "The Storm on the Sea of Galilee"), Vermeer, Degas and Manet, but for some reason, the robbers made no attempt to steal the most valuable work in the museum: a painting by Titian hanging in a gallery on the third floor of the building. The museum still has the empty frames hanging on the walls as an eery reminder of the unsolved crime. Thirty-four years later, the FBI investigation is ongoing. If you have any information leading to the recovery and return of the stolen paintings, there’s a $10 million reward on offer...
by Dionne Haynes 31 January 2024
Shrove Tuesday will soon be here and many of us will enjoy a traditional pancake or two! Pancakes were popular in the Tudor era too, but they were a little different from the ones we enjoy now. Modern pancakes are made from a basic mixture of flour, eggs and milk whisked together, perhaps with a little oil and a pinch of salt. Whisking makes a smooth batter, which is then fried to create one pancake at a time. I prefer my pancakes served with a light sprinkling of sugar and a generous squeeze of lemon. You might like yours with fruit and ice cream or even a savoury filling. Tudor pancakes were made with thick cream instead of milk, 2 or 3 spoonfuls of ale, cinnamon and ginger. They were baked in a pan over a low heat, turned and baked again until the mixture was as dry as it could be without burning. Adding ale and using cream resulted from Shrovetide marking the end of the Seasonal celebrations that started with Christmas. Lent followed, therefore Shrove Tuesday was an important day for using up dairy products before fasting. 31 January 2024
by Dionne Haynes 22 November 2023
These days, there is little seasonality for our food. Modern growing techniques and the ease of international transportation mean that we can purchase most ingredients every month of the year, such as asparagus in winter or almonds in spring. They usually don’t taste as good as something grown locally and freshly picked, but they are available. For the Tudors, the seasons dictated what was on their trenchers and plates. Tudor housewives spent much of the summer drying, salting, pickling and preserving foods, and filling their store cupboards in anticipation of the winter months when fresh produce would be in short supply. By spring, their palates would be tired of dried and salted foods and they would be eager to eat fresh food again. Poor autumn harvests would have left the Tudors desperate during the winter. Poor wheat yields left grain stored empty, pushing up the availability and price of flour and bread. Torrential downpours in August and September would have turned fruit to mushy rot on trees, leaving little to dry or preserve. Coastal folk might have considered themselves more fortunate - they were able to eat catch fish or forage on the beach for winkles, cockles, limpets and shrimps. But the average Tudor relied on the weather for a good harvest. Putting food on the table was no mean feat. The arrival of spring put colour on trenchers with delightful recipes such as tarts made with marigolds, primroses or cowslips. Or how about salmon with violets, and whiting with green herb sauce, followed by a delicious cheese tart? Summer was a time of abundance, especially for fruit. Strawberries and cherries were eaten fresh, while gooseberries and plums were cooked or used in tarts. Then, when autumn came around again, the food shifted once more from fresh to salted and preserved.
by Dionne Haynes 23 October 2023
Unlike sausages, peas carried no social stigma in the Tudor era and graced the tables of rich and poor alike. Peas grew in fields and dried on the plants, and were used in thick stews such as pease pottage. Garden peas featured later in the Tudor period and had white flowers and large seeds, whereas the field peas had brightly coloured flowers and smaller pods. Physicians labelled peas as “gross, windy and hard to digest” but said they were kinder than beans to the stomachs of the affluent. Sausages graced the tables of medieval merchants or members of the better off lower classes, but English gentry declined to eat them until the early modern period (from about 1500 onwards). Sausages often featured in carnival-like celebrations but became symbols of sexual license, representing male sexuality and masculinity in general. Illustrations from the late 1500s show fat men brandishing sausages while a thin woman defends herself with a fish. The images capture the religious conflicts of the time between meat-eating Protestants and fasting Catholics at Lent. The first known use of the word “sausage” dates back to the middle of the 15th century to describe minced or ground meat mixed with spices and seasoning, formed into a patty or enclosed within a cylindrical skin. Grains or breadcrumbs might also be added as fillers. Sausages are popular all over the world, but did you know that an Akkadian cuneiform tablet from Mesopotamia records a version of a sausage from around 4,000 years ago?
by Dionne Haynes 22 September 2023
No one knows what the Mayflower looked like! Mention the Mayflower today and most people will conjure an image of the Mayflower II docked in Plymouth Harbor, MA. But that ship is a “best guess” of how the original small cargo ship might have looked. In the 1950s, JWA Upham Ltd’s shipyard in Brixham, Devon, built the Mayflower II based on information supplied by American naval architect, William A. Baker. Baker undertook five years of research to determine the likely layout of the original ship. He used scant references made to the Mayflower in surviving Pilgrim documents (e.g. William Bradford’s writings and Edward Winslow’s journal known as Mourt’s Relation), images from paintings made in the seventeenth century, and written descriptions of other ships built at around the same time. Baker’s research formed the design plans for the magnificent Mayflower II . Despite the replica being a best educated guess, the Mayflower II has become a widely recognised depiction of the original Mayflower . The replica is also a popular tourist attraction at Plymouth Patuxet Museum in Massachusetts. It's time I booked a trip to the U.S.A. – I have a yearning to see that little ship!
by Dionne Haynes 9 August 2023
“Thou shalt not wear silk!” Did you know that during the Tudor era, there were strict laws about what you could and could not wear? Your rank and social status dictated the standard of dress and quality of fabrics you might choose for your clothes. In 1509, a law was passed which stated that you may not wear silk if you’re below the rank of a knight’s son. This is something I have had to keep in mind whilst writing the sequel to Mawde of Roseland . It has been tempting, on occasions, to throw in the odd piece of silk, but fear not, I made it through without succumbing 😂. Breaching that so-called “Act against the wearing of Costly Apparel” attached a hefty punishment. Wearing silk unlawfully attracted 3 months’ imprisonment and a fine of £10 per day for each day of infringement. That might not sound a lot nowadays, but a Tudor tradesman took a whole year to earn that sum! Few lower ranking Tudors would have been able to afford the luxury of silk clothing, but for those who risked it, there is little evidence to suggest the rule was enforced. As a schoolgirl, I was chastised for wearing a skirt with too many pleats. I believe I had 3 when only one was permitted, or something like that. So, I can't help thinking that if I had been a Tudor who had saved enough pennies, I might have been tempted to sneak something luxurious into my wardrobe and push my luck with that rule...
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