Descendants of John Edward Bridges

See: Descendants | Notes

Up to the great-grandchildren.  

John Edward Bridges, died (Witness(1806): marriage, Robert Gallaway Abbott and Martha Hideman Bridges ca 1783-1868) .
Married to Martha Hideman, died

... with

Total: 12 individuals (spouses not included).


Notes 

2 (Martha Hideman Bridges ca 1783-1868)
M H S - 84yr., widow of Edward Scutts, a stock broker, from Senile Debility. William Griffin: registrar.

Sources:
- birth: BMD (Deaths)
- spouse 3: Lambeth 4 321 / Banns [1837 Dec 03/10] Lambeth St Mary
- death: Wandsworth 1d 321
- burial: London Births & Baptisms 1813-1906

2-1 (Robert Gallaway Abbott )
PCC Will for Robert Gallaway Abbott drafted in Nov 1820 in Bengal, but proved in 1822.

2-3 (John Hayward Scutts 1779-1853)
[J S baptized SS Philip & Jacob, of Gloucester Lane, father a cooper. BMD states John Hatward Scutts but Marriage Certificate states John Hayward Scutts.] [MS 11936/474/940068 4 March 1818 27 Queen Street Limehouse (Wade dealer in marine stores; Scutts cooper.] [MS 11936/472/927340 27 1817 - 27 Queen Street (Wade, dealer in marine stores); house bottom of Queen Street (Scutts, cooper)]. [Declaration of the merchants, bankers, traders, and others of London October, 1819. J H Scutts & William Gadsen, Queen Street, Limehouse Coopers. London Gazette, Tuesday Oct 02 1819 - Partnerships Dissolved.] [Middlesex Sessions Sept 1820. Morning Chronicle - Tuesday 21 September 1824. ILL TREATMENT OF CHILDREN - Catherine Irving & Ann Irving her daughter was placed under a charge of having cruelly treated three children who were placed under their care as pupils - Mr. Adolphus opened the case to the Jury. The defendant Catherine Irving, was a person who had been employed by a Mrs. Bathurst in the direction of a small charitable institution, supported by that Lady, where a number of young children were boarded and educated at a cheap rate. While she was in that institution no blame could be attached to her conduct but it was afterwards that the cause of the present prosecution arose. She had subsequently set up another school on the same principle and it was for the mode of treatment she then persued that she and her daughter now appeared before them. John Scutts - I am the father of the children mentioned in the indictment by the name of Elizabeth, Sophia and Matilda Scutts; I agreed with the defendant Catherine Irving to take my children at 9s a week, she lived then opposite St. Giles Church; She was to board, wash and lodge them; I was to find them in bed and bedding; I asked her how she could afford to take them at so small a price and she said a Lady of Gift made up for the deficiency; This was on the 17th of September; for the first three months they were quite well; I used to see them every day; at the end of that time I discovered that one of the children had got the itch; the children were pretty well in body; that child died, the other children lived; I never had the bed and bedding back; Catherine Irving was then known by the name of Weeks. Eliza Scutts a pretty interesting looking child of 10 years now appeared; My Father sent me and my two sisters to Mrs. Irvings; they used to beat us very much sometimes with a stick and sometimes with their fists; the stick was as thick as a man's thumb; they used to beat my sister who died, very much and left marks on her; we were beaten occassionally three times a day; we only learned to read four times while I was there; my sister who died used to walk double after she was shoved over the scraper by Miss Irving; we had plenty of victuals then; four of us slept in a cupboard; six children slept in the bed that my father gave us; Cross examined by Mr. Phillips; We never told my father, becuse they threatened to beat us if we did. Re-examined; I used to go to bed at twelve o'clock at night or one o'clock in the morning; I used to be sent out for all manner of things; some gentleman used to come of a night; the bed was not long enough for us. Martha Williams; Saw Sophia Scutts before she died, and was of the opinion that the child died of a hurt on the back, and the itch it had got; the other two children were covered with ulcers; - Cross Examined; I did not catch the itch though I handled the children; the ulcers seemed to be of long standing. John Scutts now stated that he caught the itch from the children. Mary Rodwell; was a married woman, and knew the prisoners at the bar; I put a boy and a girl, my children, at their school; five shillings and six pence a week was to be paid for them; I went every other day to see them until January 1824; then went to Oxford, leaving the children under their care; when I returned I found both children in a state of starvation, all covered with wounds, and one of them had lost the first joint of one of her toes; I did not take them away from the school because my husband was living with one of the defendants, Catherine Irving; he continued living with her until the morning she was taken; my children were sent home then by the defendants; I went to Oxford by my husband's consent; When I had got my children I took them to the parish doctor, Mr. Burgess; he is still attending them; Frederick Hunt, one of the children, was all over bruises when taken to the Police Office; - Cross Examined; During the four weeks after my return from Oxford, I went every day to the house of the defendants; They took me before a Magistrate because I wanted my husband, I called at the house of the defendants and broke one of the doors to their room to pieces; I came and told my husband that old mother Irving was an old wretch, and unless he turned her out of the house, I would break the windows; I never told John Dale that Mrs Irving was an old wretch, and kept a house of ill fame; For the fortnight after I returned from Oxford I dined every day with Mrs Irving, if you can call it dining; During that time the children dined with me at the table; part of the time I brought my dinner with me; Some days I did not; Some days when I went to the house without anything I was not allowed to see the children; Re-Examined; Since the return of my children to me I have supported them by the allowance made by my husband, by order of the Magistrate; Charles Otto, a boy of eight years called; I was put to school to Catherine Irvings; I never had victuals enough; she used to beat me once or twice a week; there used to be black and blue marks on my back; she used to beat me with a stick and her fist; there were four of us slept in the same bed; she pawned a pair of my boots; she asked me to let her; I did so; I have never seen them since; I dont know when it was I went there; Cross-Examined; Sometimes we had bread and butter, and cheese, and pudding; but not altogether; we had breakfast at eight o'clock in the morning, dined at one o'clock or three o'clock, and drank tea at five o'clock and eight o'clock; we used to take a quarter of an hour at breakfast and dinner, and ten minutes at tea; we went to bed sometimes at eight o'clock and sometimes at nine o'clock at night. Joseph Burgess, the medical at St. Giles Workhouse; I saw Otto, Hunt, Bray and Rogers, who were children in the house of the defendants; I went there in consequence of a request by the parish officers; I found about ten children in the room, some looked thin; those boys I have mentioned were there; they were dirty and squalid and diseased with the itch; they were all dressed; The defendants were in the same state; Frederick Hunt was covered with bruises; and his head full of vermin; he appeared to have been without food for some time; Wm. Richard Big; - I am assistant overseer at St. Giles parish; I went to the house of the defendants, and found the children in a deplorable state; some were eaten up with the itch. Otto was hardly covered in clothes; when Hunt was taken to the Police Office he ate some bread and milk with great eagerness; there were two bedsteads without bedding; in one room there was an infant wrapped up in some bed clothes; the children all seemed starved. Mr. C. Philips then addressed the Jury for the defendants ; The charge against his clients was one of the most important, and dreadful, if it had been supported in the manner of the indictent, and the Opening of his Learned Friend would lead them to expect; That had by no means been done, it has been said that the children had been cruelly treated by these defendants; if this had been so, the parents must of been aware of it; for they, according to their own account, had been in the constant habit of calling to see their children; If here had been any of the loathesome and disgusting appearances which the statements of the witnesses make them imagine, where were the eyes of the parents not to have seen them ? And if they saw them. where were their hearts, their feelings, that they could allow their unhappy offspring to labour to labour so long under complicated misery? The tale was too enormous for any reasonable being to believe. In fact the accquittal of the defendants was demanded by the evidence of the witnesses for the prosecution; The children had given an account of the meals they had, and when they remembered the scanty pittance which the penury of their parents would allow to be paid for their support, could it be expected, that they were to be supplied with the delicacies of the season? As to the beating, he need not make any observation, for the Jury, as fathers, must well be able to judge the evidence of that point, whether the chastisement was more than the forwardness of the children would reasonably require, He should leave the case in their hands, perfectly convinced, that the verdict that they return must be that of Not Guilty. The Chairman; having recapitulated the evidence, told the Jury, that the smallness of the sum paid by the parents for the maintenance of the children formed no part of the case as it regard the verdict they should find. The defendants had undertaken to perform a certain contract, and if they had not done so, the renumeration could not be urged as an excuse for such conduct. Whether unjustifiable cruelty had been exerted towards them in their mode of treatment, was for them to determine, and as they were convinced either of the affirmative or the negative so they would find their verdict. The Jury found both the defendants Guilty - Judgement deferred till the last day of the Sessions.] [Sussex Advertiser, Monday 24 October 1825. Remarkable Occurrence. On Monday last, about four o'clock, Mr. J. H. Scutts, in the employ of Messrs. Thorrington and Robut, City Road, was going from the City Road to Kingsland, when he saw child fall into the canal, and by his exertions, with the assistance of T. Attwood, the lock-keeper, got the child out, after being nearly 20 minutes under water. The child was taken to Mr. Broakes, surgeon, City Road, and by his skill was, about two hours, restored to animation, and is in a fair way of recovery. The child is above six and a half years old.] [Category: Official Appointments and Notices. London Metropolitan Archives LABG 140/13: Examinations as to Settlement (Rough), page 143. 29 Nov 1847 John Hayward Scutts, 1 Sun Court, Princes Road [Lambeth], wife Martha nee Ideman, married Lambeth Old Church 25 Dec 1837. No cert[ificate] produced.Ex[aminan]t has 1 son [named] Henry Alfred 16yrs b:Spring Place, Wandsworth Rd. Ex[aminan]t belongs to Limehouse and was passed from Camberwell to there 15yrs ago & had weekly relief in money for 12 months while living in Lambeth. In Lambeth 10 years. Ex[aminan]t has lived at 1 Sun Court 2yrs, Barrett St 2yrs and Spring Place several years. sub dist]. [St.Margaret - John Scutts 73yrs., cooper. Workhouse 10 Dean Street. Advanced age. Certified in attendance - T. Thompson, 6 Brewers Green, Westminster 17th June 1853 - Registrar: William Ernie Needham].

Sources:
- baptism: Bristol Diocese Baptismal Registers Vols.8-10 Index & Transcripts 1754-1812
- spouse 1: Bristol Diocese Marriage Registers Vol:9 1754-1812 / IGI M019005
- spouse 2: Lambeth 4 321 / Banns [1837 Dec 03/10] Lambeth St Mary
- death: Westminster 1a 191 / The London Gazette [1819]

5 (Alfred Henry Scutts ca 1830-ca 1913)
Census 1881-91-1901 Kent. A H S - 84yr.

Sources:
- birth: London Metropolitan Archives LABG 140/13 Examinations as to Settlement (Rough) page 143
- spouse: N Aylesford 2a 403
- death: Strood 2a 688

5-1 (Charlotte Jenkins ca 1832-ca 1900)
C S 68yr.

Sources:
- birth: BMD (Deaths)
- spouse 2: N Aylesford 2a 403
- death: Strood 2a 335

6 (Alfred Charles Scutts 1854-ca 1926)
Census 1871-81 Kent. A C S - was a cooper by trade and ran the Prince Albert PH in Northfleet, Kent during the 1880's. A F C - 70yr.

Sources:
- birth: N Aylesbury 2a 275
- spouse: N Aylesford 2a 681
- death: West Ham 4a 292

6-1 (Mary Louisa Gardiner ca 1857-1940)
M L G was reputedly of French Jewish descent. M L F - 83yr.

Sources:
- birth: BMD (Deaths)
- spouse 1: N Aylesford 2a 681
- spouse 2: Gravesend 2a 2105
- death: Essex S.W. 4a 485

7 (Ellen Scutts 1856-ca 1878)
E S - 22yr.

Sources:
- birth: Census 1861-71 London (Surrey)
- baptism: Thames & Medway Baptisms
- death: N Aylesford 2a 271

8 (Charlotte Scutts ca 1859-ca 1934)
C H - 75yr.

Sources:
- birth: Wandsworth 1d 437
- spouse: Census 1881-1901 Kent
- death: Strood 2a 887

8-1 (Jonas Hiscock ca 1855-ca 1918)
Jonah H - 62yr.

Sources:
- birth: BMD (Deaths)
- spouse: Census 1881-1901 Kent
- death: Strood 2a 1014

9 (John Hayward Scutts ca 1862-ca 1936)
J S - 73yr.

Sources:
- birth: N Aylesford 2a 317
- death: Strood 2a 1223

10 (George Frederick Scutts ca 1865-)
Sources:
- birth: N Aylesford 2a 363

11 (Edward Scutts ca 1867-ca 1906)
[Western Mail, Monday 19 September 1898. "A Nephew from America". How a man imposed on people at Eastbourne. Two remarkable charges were heard at Eastbourne Police-court on Friday against a man described as bookbinder, thirty-nine year of age, who goes under the various names David Franklin, Scutts, Roberts, Rehoe and Turner. Of fixed abode, is said to be native of Northfleet. The first charge that of obtaining by false pretences from George Erridge, a fisherman, living in Latimer Road. According to the evidence of prosecutor, he met prisoner, a total stranger, in the bar of the Beach Hotel on August 3. Reluctantly he consented to a drink with him, but finding him good company, accompanied him to the Ocean Wave. Here prisoner surprised him suddenly asking "Where's auntie?", observing that was "Frank Turner, from America."It happened that prosecutor's wife had a nephew of that name in America, that the claim of relationship appeared genuine. They walked home together, and when prosecutor's wife appeared the prisoner ran to her and kissed her, saying, "Hello, auntie, how are you? I am your nephew from America." To his grandmother, whom he also kissed, prisoner said. "Mother was always asking about you." The prisoner afterwards said they would not go out that day but stay in and have a drink. He also said he wanted to get his luggage from the station. At half-past seven in the evening prisoner produced a purse, saying, "I have a £75 cheque here, and I want you to go upstairs with me to lock it up." He asked for the key and the purse was put alongside some money belonging to the witness in the cupboard. Prisoner took the key and remarked. "Now I know it will be all right." He asked the witness to lend him a sovereign on the cheque, which he did. Witness afterwards went out to get a tin of salmon for the prisoner, who on his return was gone. Mary Ann Erridge, wife of the previous witness, said the prisoner, when saw her, exclaimed "Here she comes; she is just like mother." adding "What! Don't you know me your nephew, Frank Turner from America?" Witness replied, "You're not him." He said. "Oh yes I am." Whenever the subject of his friends and relations was introduced he did not seem clear, and pleaded that he was worried. She afterwards opened the purse, which contained two pieces of much-worn paper, but no cheque. Evidence was given to the arrest of prisoner at Watling, and to his violence, after which he was committed for trial. Prisoner was further charged with obtaining 8s. from Elizabeth Shoesmith of Meads, Eastbourne, on August 26 with intent to defraud. Prosecutrix said prisoner represented himself to be her husband's brother's son from Yorkshire. He stayed the night, and the next morning borrowed 8sh., till he could go into the town to get some money due to him. Asked if he had anything to say, the prisoner said he had been unfortunate. He came from Portland, where he had been doing penal servitude. He did not believe it was right when he was in drink. Drink was the cause of him being there. He wished it to be entered on the depositions that he was very sorry for what he had done. Prisoner was committed for trial on this charge. Chief-constable Plumb said he had eight other cases against the prisoner, and in more than one the last shilling had been given to him. The Bench thought it was sufficient for the prisoner to be committed on the two charges.] [E S - 39yr.]

Sources:
- birth: N Aylesford 2a 378 / Census 1901 Military
- death: Strood 2a 388

12 (William James Scutts ca 1871-ca 1934)
W J S - 63yr.

Sources:
- birth: N Aylesford 2a 406
- death: Gravesend 2a 739

13 (Frederick Louis Scutts ca 1874-ca 1946)
F S - 72yr.

Sources:
- birth: North Aylesford 2a 444 / Thames & Medway Baptisms
- spouse: Gravesend 2a 1583
- death: Chatham 2a 1740

13-1 (Sarah Amelia Hoad ca 1880-1956)
S A S 76yr.

Sources:
- birth: Fulham 1a 307
- spouse 1: Gravesend 2a 1072
- spouse 2: Gravesend 2a 1583
- death: Dartford 5b 381

- connections 1, friends 1