Poaching

Poachers and gamekeepers
Poachers apprehended by gamekeepers, from the Illustrated London News, 1896

When land and the wild animals on it ceased to be common property and hunting became a sport rather than a means of subsistence, poaching began. It was especially pursued in those areas where the rights of ownership were claimed by conquering overlords such as the Saxons, Danes or Normans. Under their rule, areas of suitable countryside, once common land, were set aside for the sport of venerie, the hunting of deer, boar and other roiall bestes. Penalties were severe, even death, for anyone taking game illegally.

During the 18th and 19th centuries, deer stalking, salmon fishing, grouse and pheasant shooting and hare coursing, took place on enclosed private land and gamekeepers and water bailiffs were hired to protect the game. The poacher therefore, not only had to catch his prey but also avoid being caught himself and man-traps and spring guns also lay in wait.

Poaching is still carried out today, much of it on a commercial scale. Fish are stunned with explosives and electricity, deer shot with automatic firearms while the amateur poachers of our countryside hunt and kill for their own use, or for the price of a drink, using well-tried methods of snaring pheasants, tickling trout and ferreting for rabbits. In the Bourne area, deer poaching has been evident in recent years and the 400 acres of ancient forest on the outskirts of the town, which are inhabited by large numbers of fallow deer, have been a favourite hunting ground.

There was a particularly nasty incident in March 2003 in which a fawn was found tied to a gate where it had been mauled by dogs. Forestry officials said that there was evidence that poachers dazzled the deer with powerful lamps and then let their dogs loose to bring it down until it could be killed, a barbarous practice that needs to be stamped out with the full force of the law. The fawn in this case suffered a long and lingering death and it was thought that the carcass might have been left behind as a warning to farmers and gamekeepers that they can and will be violent if disturbed.

Another case of poaching was reported in October 2012 after a number of deer carcasses were discovered around the villages of Irnham, Swinstead and Edenham, near Bourne. The animals had been gutted and prepared by whoever killed them and then moved near to the road and hidden, apparently awaiting collection. Police kept watch and one carcass was collected. Three people were subsequently arrested on alleged poaching offences and a vehicle impounded. As a result, the a public appeal was issued asking people to help by reporting any further suspicious sightings of a similar nature.

During the 19th century, the laws against poaching were strictly enforced by the magistrates, most of whom were usually wealthy landowners and often included the lord of the manor. Colonel William Parker, who lived at Hanthorpe House, near Bourne, had extensive land holdings in the area and he also sat on the Bourne bench as a justice of the peace. Poaching at that time had been a particular worry for him and his gamekeepers had strict instructions to be on the alert for anyone trespassing in pursuit of game, the official term for poaching, and early in 1886, the opportunity came to prosecute as a warning to others to give his land a wide berth in the future.

The case was heard at the petty sessions held at the Town Hall on Thursday 11th March but as Colonel Parker was an interested party, he was unable to sit as a member of the bench on this occasion when the county magistrates were Lord Aveland, chairman, another wealthy landowner in the area, the Rev George Carter, Rector of Folkingham, Captain Henry Smith, of Horbling, William Earle Welby, of Bainton House, Stamford, and Christopher George Peacock, of Greatford Hall.

There were four defendants, John Robert Bettinson and Thomas Mason, farmers of North Fen, Bourne, William Grey, a farmer of Scottlethorpe, and Arthur Hardwick, a butcher of Bourne, who were all charged with trespassing in pursuit of game on lands at Morton belonging to Colonel Parker on February 15th.

The law relating to poaching was first explained to the court by the prosecuting solicitor, Mr James Atter of Stamford, who then outlined the details of the case against the four men. He added: “Colonel Parker is very friendly towards all the neighbourhood and if the defendants admit the charge and make an apology, he will be quite satisfied.”

But the charges were disputed by their solicitor, Mr Robert Toynbee of Lincoln. “They were on Colonel Parker’s land”, he said, “ but they were not in pursuit of game. I have consulted with my clients and they wish the case to proceed.” The hearing therefore began with the calling of witnesses to support the prosecution.

Charles Handford, a labourer, of Morton, was the first to take the stand and he told the court that about 3 pm on the day in question, he was in Alford’s Drove holding two dogs for My Grey. He went on: “Mr Bettinson had a greyhound and Mr Mason also had one. Two hares were killed on land adjoining Colonel Parker’s. I heard Mr Robinson tell the defendants not to go on Colonel Parker’s land or Mr Freeman’s. Bettinson said, ‘Oh, you be ------; you want all the hares.”

William Fowler, a labourer, corroborated Handford’s evidence that the defendants had been warned and Thomas Walpole, working foreman for Colonel Parker, gave evidence that he had seen the four men hare coursing.

Mr Toynbee, defending, contended that the defendants being on the land with dogs was not an offence and the bench would have no jurisdiction unless it was clearly proved that they were there, as charged in the summons, with the intention of pursuing game. He told the bench:

It was a great pity that an explanation was not offered to Colonel Parker at the time because I am sure these proceedings would never have been instituted. I think I can satisfy the bench that although they were admittedly on the prosecutor’s land, they were not there in pursuit of game and, in fact, they refused to course a hare pointed to them upon Colonel Parker’s land. For many years, there has been a public coursing meeting down at Morton Fen and up to this year there has never been any prohibition on the part of the owners or occupiers for the purpose of coursing. But I do not dispute, of course, that it is open to an owner to change his mind. There was a large party at the coursing meeting and defendants, among others, crossed Colonel Parker’s land in order to reach a field where the coursing took place. No coursing took place upon the prosecutor’s land and the hares mentioned by the witnesses could be satisfactorily accounted for.

William Mansfield, a butcher, of Church Street, Bourne, said that he was one of the coursing party. He went on: “We crossed three reaches of land belonging to Colonel Parker while coursing but kept all of our dogs, six in number, under control until we reached land belonging to Mr Cox. A hare was started and killed but no coursing took place on Colonel Parker’s land. We were warned not to go upon his land but crossed it because it would save us going a distance of two miles. I have no doubt that Colonel Parker would cross my land if he wanted to do so when shooting.”

John Harris, a labourer, John George Batterham, a farmer, or Morton, John Knight, labourer, Henry Goodyear, farmer, of Austerby, Bourne, and Henry Kingston, brick maker, of Morton, gave similar evidence. One of the defendants, John Robert Bettinson, said that they coursed three hares but never looked over or disturbed game on Colonel Parker’s land. Under cross-examination, he denied that they were warned not to go upon Colonel Parker’s land. “I did not take notice of what fields we entered”, he said. “I was looking after the hares.” Bettinson then refused to answer further questions from Mr Atter and said: “I am not going to be cross-hoppled about. You have baffled the other witnesses into saying anything but he will not do so with me.”

Mr Toynbee, defending, said that concluded the case as he would not be calling any of the other defendants. The magistrates then retired and on their return, the chairman remarked that the bench considered the case. Lord Aveland said: “As Colonel Parker only wished to have trespassing on his land stopped, we will inflict a small penalty.”

Each of the four accused was fined 10s. and ordered to pay £1 4s. 2d. in costs. The case had taken two and a half hours.

Today, it would not have made the courtroom and if it had, the outcome would have gone to appeal and been upheld. Reading the evidence closely, it is apparent that Colonel Parker was very angry about the hare-coursing meeting but he was up against members of the community who were sufficiently wealthy to brief their own solicitor and defend the case. One wonders just how long the dispute had been simmering but the prosecution appears to have brought it to a head after several months, perhaps even years. The crucial point of the case comes in the summing up by Lord Aveland who, in telling the court of Colonel Parker’s intentions, revealed that he had discussed the matter with him and this is totally unacceptable in law. One can imagine them dining together and agreeing that these bounders must be taught a lesson, convicted and punished, but not so severely as to cause them hardship but sufficiently to act as a warning as to their future conduct.

Colonel Parker was not from the upper classes. His father was the son of a shopkeeper who inherited his money and land from his mother's employer [she worked as his housekeeper] who later adopted him. Even the army commission he held was merely an honorary one with the South Lincolnshire Militia and he never heard a shot fired in anger. But he obviously had pretensions to grandeur and considered himself the lord of the manor of Hanthorpe, even Morton, where the family had a vault in the parish church. With such humble antecedents, it is a pity that he did not exercise more restraint when a few farmers and other lovers of hare coursing crossed his land.

The landed gentry reigned supreme at this time but their power was not to last and it took the Great War of 1914-18 to make men realise that service at the big house was not the only way to earn a living. That conflict sounded the death knell for many of our stately homes and the power their owners once commanded. Colonel Parker died in 1909 and Hanthorpe House was never the same again. His wife died in 1922 and the house stood empty for long periods until the Second World War of 1939-45 when it was requisitioned as accommodation for German and later Italian prisoners of war and then, after another period of neglect and dilapidation, the property was finally pulled down in 1951. There are no surviving members of the family.

FROM THE ARCHIVES

A melancholy circumstance occurred at Witham-on-the-Hill, near Bourne, on Thursday afternoon the 18th ult. Between three and four o'clock, a gamekeeper of Colonel Johnson, M P for Boston, discovered three men who he believed to be in pursuit of game in a copse between Carlby and Witham: two of them escaped, and the third on being challenged also ran off: the gamekeeper pursued and fired at the running man, who received the charge of shot in his back and loins, and fell. He was conveyed to the public house at Witham, and a surgeon procured from Bourne, who pronounced the life of the man to be so much in danger from the wound as not to admit of his being removed. The man stated himself to be from Liverpool: but it is believed that he, and the associates with whom he was first seen by the keeper, were from the neighbourhood of Spalding, and that they were engaged in poaching. The wounded man had a musket with him, but no powder or shot was found on him. We hear that he has sufficiently recovered to have been able by stratagem to make his escape from Witham. - news report from the Stamford Mercury, Friday 2nd January 1824.

John Wade and Robert Dexter, both of Thurlby, near Bourne, have been committed to Folkingham House of Correction for three months by Sir John Trollope and the sitting magistrates at Bourne for poaching. - news item from the Stamford Mercury, 7th January 1831.

Henry Cox, a labourer, working on the Great Northern railway works at Essendine, was convicted at Bourne on the 18th inst. of poaching in the parish of Careby and in default of a payment of £2 fines and costs, was committed to the House of Correction at Folkingham for one month's hard labour. - news item from the Stamford Mercury, Friday 24th October 1851.

William Williamson, Thomas Stanton Skinn, William Grummitt and William Wyles, all of Bourne, were charged with trespassing in search of game, without a certificate, in the parish of Bourne, on 20th ult. John Camm, a labourer and assistant keeper, said he saw them and asked them what they were doing. They said they were looking for a hare. They ran a hare from Mr Osbourn's land but did not kill it. Cross examined: "I am employed by Mr Pochin's head keeper." Joseph Camm said he was a keeper. He did not see the offence committed. Mr Stapleton, who defended, urged that the men did not intend to break the law. Fined 10s. and costs 8s. 9d. each. - news report from the Grantham Journal, Saturday 7th March 1874.

John Roots, head gamekeeper in the employ of the Baroness Willoughby de Eresby, charged William Stanger, labourer, of Bourne, with stealing one steel trap on 10th of February last at the parish of Edenham. John Roots stated that he missed a trap from a rabbit burrow on the estate and had reason to suspect the prisoner of having stolen it. From information he received, he went to the prisoner and asked for the trap. Prisoner replied: "If you will come with me I will give it to you." Prisoner gave up the trap which he had buried in a field. In answer to the charge, the prisoner admitted the offence and also admitted filing the trap to obliterate the maker's name. He was sent to prison for fourteen days, hard labour. - news report from the Grantham Journal, Saturday 4th April 1874.

HEAVY SENTENCE FOR A LINCOLNSHIRE POACHER: At Bourne Petty Sessions on Thursday, John Brown, a notorious Lincolnshire poacher, living at Bourne, was charged with poaching on the estate of Lady Willoughby d'Eresby, at Edenham, on Sunday night. The prisoner was caught poaching by some keepers and watchers and taken into custody. The magistrates considered the case proved, and committed the prisoner for three calendar months' imprisonment with hard labour, and ordered him to find sureties of £20 for 12 months, or in default serve a further term of six months' imprisonment with hard labour. This makes Brown's 30th appearance at Bourne police court and he has, in addition to having been committed to prison for several terms during the last 11 years, paid in fines and costs £83 1s. 7d. - news report from the Lincolnshire Chronicle, Friday 3rd September 1886.

At the Kesteven Petty Sessions held at the Town Hall, Bourne, yesterday, a navvy named Edward Hodson, working on the new railway line now being made in South Lincolnshire, was charged with night poaching on the estate of Lord Willoughby de Eresby in Grimsthorpe Park. The gamekeepers were watching shortly before midnight and the prisoner and some companions came up to the spot where they were secreted. When within two or three yards, the keepers sprang out and a desperate fight ensued. Hodson struck the head gamekeeper on the head and also on the back of the hand causing him to release his hold. The poachers then ran away but were followed by the keepers. Another fight took place, prisoner using his stick freely. Eventually he was captured and it was found that he had two nets, a number of pegs used by poachers, some stones in his pockets and nearly a dozen rabbits in a bag. The other men got into a bed of ferns and escaped. Prisoner pleaded guilty and was sentenced to six months' imprisonment with hard labour. - news item from the Nottingham Evening Post, Friday 28th August 1891.

Magistrates of Bourne, Lincolnshire, have just sent a woman to jail for 14 days with hard labour in default of paying a fine and costs for an offence under the Poaching Prevention Act. This is the first instance recorded - at any rate in recent years - when a woman has been committed for poaching at the South Lincolnshire police courts. - news item from the Bath Chronicle and Weekly Gazette, Thursday 29th December 1892.

On Christmas Eve at midnight, four gamekeepers on the Earl of Ancaster's Grimsthorpe preserves near Bourne, were suddenly confronted by two poachers. One instantly fired, shattering keeper Summers's arm. Two of his comrades bound the limb and then took him to Corby, whence he was conveyed to Stamford Infirmary. Amputation was found to be necessary and the patient's condition is precarious. The fourth gamekeeper, named Peat, meanwhile pursued the poachers, one of whom pointed a loaded gun in Peat's face and threatened to shoot him if pursued. On Sunday, the police captured the poachers, Smith and Bradley, who were on Monday brought up at Castle Bytham and charged with attempted murder. The prisoners were remanded. - news item from the Western Gazette, Friday 30th December 1898.

REVISED OCTOBER 2013

See also    Colonel William Parker     Crime and punishment

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