Sunday 11 January 2015

The secret wife of Edwin Mole aged 35




I've just finished reading "The King's Hussar" by Edwin Mole; a very readable and fascinating account of a cavalryman's lot during the latter half of the nineteenth century. Mole is a good research candidate because of his relatively unusual name and, furthermore, he has surviving service papers in WO 97 which, for the most part, tie in perfectly with his narrative.


Edwin Mole seems, from his own account, to be a reasonable man. He received a Long Service and Good Conduct Medal in 1888 and his narrative contains fascinating insights into army life. I was particularly interested in his account of his time in Bangalore in India, a city I also lived in for a number of years.

He was obviously very fond of his first wife who died during childbirth in India in 1878 but he makes no mention at all of his second wife, Agnes Manley Morton, whom he married in 1881. She was a good deal younger than Edwin but, for whatever reason, does not warrant a single mention (whereas his house-boy, Harry, rescued from the side of the road, gets many glowing and affectionate references).

It would appear from surviving paperwork which picks up where his army narrative leaves off, that Edwin Mole had a somewhat troubled later life which included spells in various asylums. He married for a third time in May 1891 (although note that the census taken a month earlier, records Edwin and Fanny Mole as husband and wife). Fanny was 18 when he married her, although her age is over-stated as 26 on the 1891 census return.

Edwin Mole lived to a ripe old age, dying on 3rd August 1937 aged 90. He left his estate to the surviving daughter from his first marriage. Details from his long life, gathered from a variety of sources, are noted below.

I thoroughly recommend this memoir (easily available on Amazon) which, in many ways, reminded me of Frank Richards' Old Soldier Sahib and the British Army in India a couple of decades after Edwin Mole left the country.

Edwin Mole's army papers survive in WO 97 and can be accessed online through Findmypast.



1847
Born. “My father [John Mole] was formerly a small farmer at Dudley in Worcestershire, but in 1852, when I was about seven years old, he left the country and came up to London…” He was probably born in 1847 according to subsequent census returns
1851 [1851 census return, 26 Cross Street, Dudley, Worcs]
Three year old son of John Mole, 28-year-old baker, and Sarah Mole, 30-year-old domestic. Also a sister, Annie Maria aged 1.
1861 [1861 census return, 7 Rose Gardens, Hammersmith]
13-year-old son of John Mole, 39-year-old labourer, and Sarah Mole, 40-year-old laundress. Edwin is a butcher, 11-year-old Annie Maria, 9-year-old Moses, 7-year-old Simeon, 3-year-old Sarah Jane.
27th July 1865 [Service record, WO 97]
Home. Attests aged 18 years
5th-6th Nov 1866 [Service record, WO 97]
Imprisoned
1st-2nd March 1866 [Service record, WO 97]
Imprisoned
31st July 1868 [Service record, WO 97]
Good Conduct Pay at 1d
31st July 1871 [Service record, WO 97]
Good Conduct Pay at 2d
8th November 1871 [Service record, WO 97]
2nd Class Certificate of Education
12th October 1872 [Service record, WO 97]
Promoted Corporal
18th March 1874 [Service record, WO 97]
Promoted Sergeant
1875 [Irish Marriages – FamilySearch]
Marriage to Margaret McAvoy in Dublin North
4th January 1876 [Service record, WO 97]
India
1st April 1876 [Service record, WO 97]
Commenced Deferred Pay
29th December 1876 [British in India baptism record]
Daughter, May Elizabeth Mole, born
1st February 1877 [British in India baptism record]
Baptism of daughter May Elizabeth Mole at Holy Trinity Church, Bangalore
[May Mole later married Horace William Pettman in 1905. Appears on 1911 census with husband (aged 32) two sons, George Horace Pettman (1907-1986) aged 4 and Margaret Mary Pettman (1910-1992), aged 8 months. Husband, Horace W Pettman died in 1914. Re-married Martin R Dunn in 1918. May Elizabeth Dunn, nee Mole, died 1960 in Bromley. Daughter married Charles R Gaunt 1931. ]
31st July 1877 [Service record, WO 97]
Good Conduct Pay at 3d
1st-4th October 1878 [Service record, WO 97]
Tried and reduced [to] Private. Sentence remitted.
5th October 1878 [Service record, WO 97]
Sergeant
Forfeited 1d GC Pay
14th October 1878 [Service record, WO 97]
Birth of second daughter. “Ten days after my court martial my wife presented me with another little daughter…” [Page 161]
14th October 1878 [British in India burial record]
Death of first wife, Margaret Mole, aged 25 years and 4 months, from acute mania, Bangalore.
15th October 1878 [British in India burial record]
Burial of Margaret Mole at Bangalore Trinity Church
October 1878 [The King's Hussar, Page 162]
Death of new-born daughter “… the infant following its mother very soon afterwards, I sent my little daughter home to England, where I knew she would be happy and well cared for with her aunt…” [Daughter’s birth and death not found in British in India records.]
5th October 1879 [Service record, WO 97]
Restored 3d Good Conduct Pay
26th June 1880 [Service record, WO 97]
Appointed Troop Sergeant Major
27th January 1881 [Service record, WO 97]
Marriage to Agnes Manley Morton [aged 20, daughter of Edward Evans Morton], Trinity Church, Bangalore. [Agnes born 24 Dec 1860 at Black Town, Kamptee, daughter of Inspector Edward Morton and Emma Rosa Morton. Died Edmonton, Middlesex in 1937]
26th February 1881 [Service record, WO 97]
South Africa
1st December 1881 [Service record, WO 97]
India
1883 [Service record, WO 97]
Musketry, Secunderabad
3rd January 1884 [Service record, WO 97]
Home
31st July 1886 [Service record, WO 97]
Entitled to 4d Good Conduct Pay
1st September 1886 [Service record, WO 97]
Transferred Suffolk Yeomanry – Permanent Staff
13th September 1886 [Service record, WO 97]
Permitted to extend his service beyond 21 years
3rd February 1888 [The Ipswich Journal, British Newspaper Archive]
Henry Manby of Church Farm, Burgh, summoned by Edwin Mole, sergeant major of the Ipswich troop of the Loyal Suffolk Hussars for not paying 26s. fine… Bench orders payment of fine and 10s. costs.
17th May 1888 [Service record, WO 97]
Awarded LSGC with gratuity
1st July 1888 – 24th July 1888 [Service record, WO 97]
Further service
5th April 1891 [1891 census, Liberal Club, Wiltshire]
Aged 42, club steward. Husband of Fanny [Luxton] Dean, aged 26. George Dean, a 16-year-old billiard marker, and 49-year-old Harry Stevens, a widowed cloth worker, are also at the same address. Note that Edwin and Fanny did not actually marry until the following month.
17th May 1891 [LMA records]
Marriage to Fanny Luxton Dean, aged 18. Fanny’s birth registered 4th quarter 1872 at Dartford. Died 1947, Kensington, London.
16th September 1893 [Bedfordshire Times and Independent]
Review of the recently published, “A King’s Hussar”.
30th December 1893 [Leicester Chronicle]
Review of the recently published, “A King’s Hussar”.
4th January 1894 [York Herald, British Newspaper Archive]
Review of the recently published, “A King’s Hussar”.
20th January 1894 [Sheffield Evening Telegraph, British Newspaper Archive]
Extensive and positive review of the recently published, “A King’s Hussar”.
22nd January 1894 [Birmingham Post, British Newspaper Archive]
Review of the recently published, “A King’s Hussar”.
24th January 1894 [Derby Mercury, British Newspaper Archive]
Review of the recently published, “A King’s Hussar”.
27th January 1894 [Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser, British Newpaper Archive]
Review of the recently published, “A King’s Hussar”.
1901 [1901 census. Cold Storage, Purfleet Wharf, St Ann, Blackfriars]
Aged 53. Clerk and caretaker; also Fanny Mole aged 28, housekeeper, born Swanley, Kent.
18th January 1904 [Baptisms, St Mary’s, Spital Square, Middlesex]
Birth of daughter, Minnie Ellaline Mole.
1905 [Electoral Register]
9 Norton Folgate, dwelling house, Whitechapel, Tower Hamlets
31st August 1908 [UK lunacy patients, admission registers]
Admitted to Napsby Asylum
21st November 1908 [UK lunacy patients, admission registers]
Discharged from Napsby Asylum
24th August 1910 [UK lunacy patients, admission registers]
Admitted to Essex Asylum
9th December 1910 [UK lunacy patients, admission registers]
Discharged from Essex Asylum
Admitted to London Asylum
1911 [1911 census return]
Aged 70, married. Patient, City of London Lunatic asylum and Still House; Stone, near Dartford; formerly house decorator
18th December 1913 [UK lunacy patients, admission registers]
Discharged from London Asylum
1915 [Electoral Register]
Dwelling house, Westminster, Marylebone West
8th February 1917 [Central Criminal Court. Calendars of Prisoners]
Edwin Kempson Mole, poultry farmer aged 70, charged with “Marrying Fanny Luxton Dean, his wife being then alive.” Found not guilty and discharged.
3rd August 1937 [National Probate Calendar]
Death of Edwin Kempson Mole “of 175 High Street, Harlesden, Willesden, Middlesex”. Died at “Twyford Lodge, Willesden. Administration London 13th January to May Elizabeth Dunn (wife of Richard Martin Dunn). Effects £410 5s. 6d.”


The original edition of "The King's Hussar", published in 1893, carries a portrait of Edwin Mole, above. The undated photo I have used at the top of this post shows 14th Hussars on the march and probably dates to the early 1900s. 

Do you have an Edwin Mole in your family? I offer a fast and cost-effective military history and British Army research service and would be happy to assist. Click on the Research tab (or this link) to contact me directly.

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