| Inspector
Samuel Burroughs - 1 |
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| Sam
Burroughs was my Great Grandfather and when I first started to research his life all I had
to work with was a few lines scribbled on a rough sheet of paper, the result of a short
conversation with my father many years ago. All I knew was that Our Sam
was a Police Inspector, a poet and a lay preacher. Also that one of his sons had
emigrated to Canada. Not much to go on, but I was surprised just where it would lead
me. |
| The
first stop on the road was that wonderful piece of work the 1881 census. Looking up
Burroughs Manchester showed le famille Burroughs ensconced at 12 Russell Street
Moss Side. Sam was 33, born in Bristol and a police inspector already, his wife
Frances came from Ireland and there were all the little Burroughs, including my own
Grandmother Frances Alice aged 8. |
| The
census also allowed me to calculate Sams date of birth and his probable marriage, so
the next stop was the GRO Indexes which revealed a Samuel Burroughs being born in
Bedminster in 1847. Bedminster was a registration district of Bristol, so that
fitted nicely. |
| Two
other sources proved valuable. The first was the Manchester Police Museum whose
curator and assistants pointed me in the right direction several times. On the first
occasion they provided me with a copy of Sams police record, which showed all his
ranks, when he joined and left and a physical description of him. In addition it
told me he was born in Bristol, and had served in HM Forces before joining the police. |
| The
other source was the IGI Internet search facility. For once I actually got lucky and
a search for Sams marriage produced an entry for 1868 at Manchester Cathedral.
His wife being Frances Newman. |
| So
it all began to come together. Or did it? My Grandmother who should have
known always maintained that Sam came from London. So why did my Sam
Burroughs say Bristol? |
| The
mystery deepened with the arrival of his marriage and birth certificates, together with
his army records. According to his birth certificate he was the son of Lewis
Burroughs, a miner of Bedminster. So far so good, but on his marriage certificate
his father is given as Nathaniel Burroughs a coal dealer. It also showed that he was
serving with the 68th foot at the time of his marriage. And his army record showed
that he had lived at Clerkenwell and signed on at Westminster. Add to which his wife
Frances gave a Salford address which never existed! Now I really did begin to wonder if I
had the right man. |
| About
this time, via the local paper, I also managed to make contact with a long-lost cousin of
mine who had known my Grandmother much better than I did. He presented me with
another problem by sending me two of Sams poems, one of which had obviously been
published but where? According to my cousin the poems were now held by the
Manchester Police Museum and may also have been used by a magazine. |
| But
I first needed to solve the problem of Sams origins. I formed the theory that
Sam had been born in Bristol, but his mother had remarried another Burroughs, and then
moved to London at some point. Again the GRO indexes were consulted, and lo and
behold, there was poor Lewis popping his clogs in 1848 just a year after Sam was born, and
then in 1851 his widowed mother Martha remarries to her brother-in-law Nathaniel
Burroughs! The entries were right next to each other in the marriage indexes. |
| So
my theory proved correct that Sam was born in Bristol but when he married in 1868 he still
believed that Nathaniel was his father. As they say, its a wise man . . . |
| Once
again I returned to the Police Museum in the search for those poems. Unfortunately
they couldnt find them, but they did inform me that Sam had been involved in a major
police scandal in Manchester and there were lots of documents available about that. |
| The
hunt was up and the next stop was Manchester Central Library to read up in the local
papers of the period - 1897. Briefly the scandal involved Sams Superintendent
William Bannister who had a mistress who ran a brothel. Bannister used his
powers to protect her and at the same time drive rival houses out of business. Two
years after both men had left the force the Home Office launched an enquiry and Sam was a
major witness. |
| I
then discovered the whole enquiry had been recorded in book form from the original
transcripts. This was invaluable as the whole of Sams evidence was presented,
including letters and other material only referred to in the press reports.
Furthermore his second wife Annie also gave evidence and I got a brief glimpse of his home
life. |
| But
more importantly I also got to know what Sam was doing in 1897, having resigned from the
force in 1895 owing to his inability to work further with Bannister. Sam had joined
something called the National Vigilance Association and was now the secretary of the
Manchester and Northern Counties branch. |
| As
I discovered, the NVA, whose name speaks for itself, was formed in the late 19th century
in response to the W T Stead Pall Mall case. This was the notorious case whereby
Stead, editor of the Pall Mall gazette , went out and bought an 11 year old girl and
smuggled her out of the country. His aim was to highlight the appalling ease with
which young children could be procured for immoral purposes. Steads trial
raised a storm of moral outrage, one outcome of which was the NVA. |
| But
where could I find their records if any? A quick search at Manchester produced some odds
and ends, but none of them mentioned Sams name. Then once again the Internet
came to my rescue. Dialling up the John Rylands University Library I entered the
keyword: Vigilance and was rewarded by the title of a book: Vice &
Vigilance a history of vigilant societies. The bibliography listed the sources of the
material and stated that the records of the NVA were to be found in the Fawcett Library in
London. |
| The
next step was obvious and I managed to persuade a London researcher to bore himself rigid
by going through the records. It was well worth while as apart from copies of the
written reports furnished by Sam about fairs and theatres and affiliation cases, it also
provided me with the information that he resigned from the Association in 1898 after just
two years of work. |
| To
make matters worse it become plain that the whole family had decamped from Manchester
around 1900 and I could not find them anywhere in the local area. And to make
matters worse still neither could I find the death of Sam or his wife Annie anywhere in
the GRO indexes, despite trawling through them three times! |
| So
now I had two main problems, where did the family go in 1900 and when and where did Sam
die? |
| I
realised I might answer both questions in one go. I knew that when Sam had retired
in 1895 he had claimed a pension from the police force. In those days pensions were
paid directly from the Watch Committee and any change of circumstances of the pensioner
had to be notified to the committee. So back once more the Manchester Library to
look up the minutes of the Watch Committee. Unfortunately though, the printed
minutes do not cover all the business of each meeting, much of it being abbreviated under
the heading of Further Business |
| There
was only one thing for it, I had to get at the original minute books. |
| This
proved surprisingly easy. A letter to the Town Hall was answered by an e-mail
explaining that the books I required were stored in the book room and available for
inspection on any weekday. They did warn me however that the book room was no place
for the faint-hearted or anyone who didnt like getting their hands dirty! |
| How
right they were. A few days later I presented myself at the Chief Executives office
and was taken down to the cellar. Anyone familiar with Manchester Town Hall will
know it is a High Victorian building, with an interior like Camelot and cellars like the
Lubianka. After what seemed an age descending a spiral staircase going ever deeper
into the gloom, we arrived at a solid steel door, which creaked open to reveal the dark
and mysterious Book Room. |
| I
followed my guide through the various stacks until he flicked on a light switch and
revealed a row of shelves disappearing into the distance loaded with huge, dusty
volumes. It was like the library at the Unseen University. With a smile he
left me to it. |
| Half
an hour later found me stripped to the waist, perspiring freely and covered in red dye
from the crumbling bindings. But the volumes were fascinating as the Watch Committee
really ran Manchester in those days. As well as being responsible for the police and
fire service, they supervised such things as pawnbrokers licences, street traders,
theatres, parades, shows, paraffin sellers and hackney carriages. In fact almost
every aspect of life in a big city came under their watchful eye. |
| But
I was here for a purpose, and after wading through 20 years of minutes, I found what I was
looking for. On the 28th August 1919, the Watch Committee were informed of the
death of ex-Inspector Samuel Burroughs. His death occurred on the 3rd of January
1919 in - Atlantic City New Jersey. |
| I
stood stunned for a moment, partly because I had found what had taken me months of
searching to find, but also by the place he died. What on earth was a strait-laced,
teetotal, Methodist ex-police inspector doing in Atlantic City? It was like the Archbishop
of Canterbury dying in Blackpool. There had to be an explanation. |
| By
now I had begun to see the Internet as a primary source of information, so I immediately
placed a message on the soc. genealogy and MLFHS newsgroups, asking for some help in
America. Very shortly afterwards two kind people: Mary Price and E Cunningham
volunteered. One of them obtained a copy of Sams death certificate within a
few days a great improvement on the time taken over here while Mary Price
obtained details from the Census of 1920. |
| Together
the two documents showed me that Sam had not been alone, but had obviously gone over there
with his son Frederick in 1913, the entry date shown on Freds census return.
Sams death certificate was also full of information, not least showing me that his
second wife Annie had predeceased him and the place of his burial Pleasantville -
which is the first town on the mainland from Atlantic City. |
| But
I still had a further mystery, where was Sam before 1913? Then it dawned on me that if I
traced the marriages of his other children, it may show where the family was. |
| Back
to the GRO indexes. His eldest son Frederick had married aged 21 in Manchester so he
was no use, but then I saw mention of John Charles Burroughs marrying in Holborn in 1898.
Could it be? Yes it was. His marriage certificate shows Samuel Burroughs,
Inspector, as his father and the address as Goswell Road. |
Sam Burroughs II |