Rachel Kate Williams, the daughter of James Williams and Sarah (nee Davies) of Rose Cottage, was born on 1st October 1871.
Edward Bellamy married Kate (I believe that this was the name she mostly used) and having researched Edward’s life, I thought that even though he was not a Glascoed resident, his story interested me so I wrote a biography of his life.
My Uncle Arnold, told me about some of his father’s many relatives .. And one who left the greatest impression perhaps was of an elderly relative that they visited on a holiday to Somerset (or somewhere near) .. Who had been a prison warder – in fact the Chief Warder in the prison he worked at, in the West Country. Apparently he had been moved to this prison after some disturbances (or other challenges) and had “sorted it out”! (I later found that the prison in question was Wandsworth prison).
When they met (in around 1951, my Uncle recollected), the relative was an elderly man. He showed Uncle Arnold (and my Grandfather) a “Cat o’ nine tails” … explaining that the worst thing that the prison service ever did was to ban the use of it on prisoners! It left quite an impression on Uncle Arnold, although fortunately not a physical impression! This must have been Edward Bellamy, my Grandfather Ernie Pitt’s Uncle (by marriage). I love it when a couple of seemingly unrelated pieces of information coincide to weave records I’ve found with oral history like this.
Let’s look in more detail at Edward and his life.
Edward was born on the 4th December 1873 at Corfe, Somerset and was christened at Corfe Parish Church on Christmas Day 1873.
His parents were Arthur Bellamy (born c. 1850 at St. Decuman’s, Somerset) and Jane (nee Lovell) who was born at Washford, Old Cleeve, Somerset some 4 years earlier. His father Arthur was a gardener and died in 1902 at Corfe. His mother, Jane, died two days before Armistice Day on 9th November 1918. Both were buried at Corfe parish church.
Edward was brought up in Corfe and by the time he married Kate Williams on 28th September 1896 at Corfe, he was working as an Assistant Master in the Workhouse. I assume that this was Taunton Workhouse, which is just under 4 miles from Corfe.
They moved to Usk at some point after the marriage (perhaps so that Kate could be nearer to her parents, James and Sarah?) where Edward became the Innkeeper of the Queen’s Head, Usk. He was certainly the Innkeeper at the time of his first son, Edward Arthur Bellamy’s baptism (24th May 1898) at St. Mary’s church, Usk.
An entry in the County Observer in 1900, indicated that the family probably moved away from Usk in February 1900. The article in the 17 February 1900 edition, recounted that at the Usk Petty Sessions the previous Thursday, the Usk Petty Sessions had heard the following petition: “An application was made by Edward Bellamy, landlord of the Queen’s Head beer- house, Usk, for a transfer of the licence to John Price, of Cardiff. Testimonials having been produced and commented upon the application was granted.”
An article from December 1933, that we will refer to later in this pen portrait stated that Edward had worked for the Prison Service for 33 years. So it seems likely that the family moved to Birmingham in 1900. By the time of the 1901 census they were living at 131 James Turner Street, in the Winson Green district and Edward was an “Assistant warder”. It’s only a couple of streets away from Her Majesty’s Prison, Birmingham, where I assume Edward worked. This must have been their reason for moving to Birmingham.
Their second child, Alfred Ivor Bellamy was born on 5th April 1902 and christened on 2nd July 1902 at St. Chrysostom parish church. Alfred married an He died at St. Pancras registration district in London in 1977 (June Quarter). The family were still at 131 James Turner Street at this point.
They had a third son, Harold, who was born on 4th January 1904 and christened at All Saints’ Church, Hockley, the mother church of St. Chrysostom on 23rd January 1904. They were living at No. 3 Turret, H.M. Prison, Birmingham, where Edward was an Assistant Warder. An interesting address! Sadly, Harold died soon afterwards. His death was registered in the June Quarter 1904 at Birmingham.
Their fourth and final child was born on 31st March 1905 at Birmingham (I assume again at the prison); Edith Lilian Bellamy. Edith married William Llewelyn Filer at Wandsworth in 1935. William was a Prison Officer at the time of marriage. They lived close to Wandsworth prison, so it seems highly likely that he was a former colleague of Edward at the prison. They were living at Banstead, Surrey, in 1939. William worked as a Milk Roundsman according to the 1939 Register entry. Interestingly, William had been born at Pontypool on 18th September 1899. William died somewhere in the Weston-super-Mare registration district in 1972. Edith died on 14th August 2001 at a Nursing Home in Burnham on Sea, Somerset.
The next time that I found Edward and Kate and family was at Shepton Mallet, at the time of the 1911 census. They lived at the beautifully name Convent Cottages, Shepton Mallet (No. 4). It certainly sounded more romantic than the H.M. Prison, Birmingham address. Edward must have worked at Shepton Mallet prison. It was built in 1610 and at the time of its final closure, in 2013, it was the oldest working prison in the UK. It later housed the Kray twins.
It appears that Edward and Kate continued to live in Shepton Mallet until the mid-1920s. It is possible that in the wartime period, Edward may have changed prisons, since after the Americans entered the War in 1917, Shepton became one of their military prisons. Whilst working at Shepton prison, Edward was in charge of a number of notable prisoners, including John Lincoln, who was the last prisoner hanged in Shepton prison, on March 2nd 1926. A petition carrying 50,000 signatures was presented, protesting that Lincoln should note hang since it was surely manslaughter not murder. One of the key pieces of evidence against Lincoln was a letter that he wrote to his fiancee, admitting that he had killed the victim (Edward Charles Richards). Edward gave evidence at court and this is how the Somerset Standard reported his appearance in their January 22nd 1926 edition.