St Peter Port Town Hospital Journals

by Alex Glendinning


The Journals are now in the care of the States of Guernsey Island Archives Service and are almost totally intact from the 18th century onwards. They have been indexed from 1743 to 1856 with work continuing up to 1900.

Until 1990 the Archives were housed in a ward at St Peter Port Hospital, which was otherwise more or less deserted (except for a prison exercise area) and has now been converted to a police station.


The East Wing in 1999


Built in 1741 and extended in 1824, in it's time it has served as both a place of healing and a poor house. The first sight that greets the visitor inside the front entrance is a window at ground level, covered in bars, with the legend "Solitary Cells" emblazoned on the wall above it. These cells were once used to punish runaways from the poorhouse .

The Journals were one of the first records the Archives were asked to look after. As well as recording details of the inmates and patients, the books also contain lists of purchases of food and raw materials.

Example Entries
30 June 1838: "Samson Toy (Note 1), born in the Parish (of St Peter Port), son of an Englishman, a drunk, aged about 50 was admitted to the Hospital after being recommended by the Douzaine." Clearly they had got fed up with fishing him off the pavement ! He must have been freed at some stage because on 14 November 1839, " Samson Toy - ivroque et fainéant (lazy and a drunkard) was arrested by the police and sent to the House of Separation." Out he went and back again! 15 June 1840 - " readmitted after living a life of debauchery".

On 11 September 1840 Samson Toy and William Bell were sent to Plymouth to serve in the Royal Navy. They got drunk at the first opportunity, sneaked aboard the Man O'War San Joseph and slept there overnight. Both were arrested and sent back to Guernsey unwanted on the 18th !

On 26 October 1842 he was sent to the House of Separation for 3 months for breaking out and going on the run for 15 days and given remission on 30 January 1843. He was freed on 9 December 1843 and 16 days later, on the 25th, was "found in need and brought in, just in time for his Christmas dinner". Sampson was freed again on 22 July 1844, but ended up back in the House of Separation by 8th August.

The House of Separation
A vivid description of appears in a letter to the Treasurer of the Hospital from Mons. M.A. Bazille Corbin - surgeon, dated 6 January 1845: "Gentlemen, I beg to direct your attention to the crowded and offensive state of the House of Separation. This building was intended for the reception of 24 persons; but, of late upwards of 30 have often been crowded into it; many of these are obliged to remain night and day in the same rooms, whilst the sewers, which have been constructed immediately under the lodges omit exhalations which frequently cause an almost insupportable stench.

I therefore submit to your consideration whether it be not expedient to enlarge the premises, so as to render them proportionate to the number of inmates; and also whether it be not necessary so to alter the disposition of the sewers, that those confined in the House of Separation be not subjected to the additional and unjustifiable punishment of living in a stinking and unhealthy atmosphere.

Another and a most important motive for enlarging the premises is, that at present there is no room for classification. The young offenders, and those but little advanced in the career of vice, are crowded together in the same apartments with old and hardened criminals and generally leave the place more demoralised and vicious then they entered it; thus rendering the establishment a house of deterioration and corruption, rather than a house of correction".

Emigrants
By 1846 Samson's daughter had been picked up 'off the streets' unable to make a living any other way than prostitution. 10th September - Elizabeth Toy (Note 2) , aged 22, the daughter of Sampson Toy, described as a "prostituée", was admitted suffering from "la maladie vinerienne".

Many of the poor emigrated to Canada, the UK and Australia, if their fares could be paid by the trustees of the hospital . Sampson and Elizabeth both took advantage of the scheme. He left Guernsey on 21 April 1845 to go to the Gaspé and Elizabeth on 27 August 1847, boarded a ship to Demerara in British Guiana, South America.

Other emigrants included Julia Easterbrook, Susanne Kendricks and her baby daughter. They, along with 16 others all went on the same ship (the Onyx, under Captain Jones) to the same destination, Adelaide, South Australia on 26 June 1848 "of their own free will, having been equipped with money and everything necessary for such a long journey" (Note 3).

Julia was a charge of the Constable. On 7th November 1847, aged 15, she was "received by the Treasurer and admitted provisionally - daughter of Jean Easterbrook who has returned to England"; so she began her time in the Poorhouse as a charge on the Parish. I discovered one other entry for her, on the 11th January 1848 "Julia Easterbrook aged 16, daugher of an Englishman, returned from service due to bad behaviour".

Susanne was first admitted on 31st December 1847 aged 22, "native of St Peter Port, daughter of the deceased Mr Jean Kendrick who was from Brixham and had resided 26 years on the Island, was pregnant and admitted at her own request." On 26th February 1848 the Journals record "an illegitimate daughter born" - the baby, also named Susanne, was baptised at the Hospital Chapel on 15 March the same year. So, when she began her journey to Australia she was but 3 months old.


Extract from Eye on the Past in Guernsey
Chapter 11 - The Town Hospital
For full chapter listing go to: My Books

Note 1. Samson (b. circa 1787) was the son of another Samson Toy (bap. 11.9.1757 at Illogan in Cornwall - son of John Toy and Elizabeth Stone) and Jane Furze, whose only record I have is a burial in St Peter Port on 17.9.1828.

Note 2. Samson married Margaret Le Lievre of Alderney 5.11.1812 at St Peter Port Parish Church and had seven children. Elizabeth was the sixth, baptised there 10.7.1825. Before the Poorhouse he was a shoemaker. His son Joseph established a family in Alderney, but the line is now extinct there.

Note 3. These folk and others are also recorded in "Guernsey Emigrants to Australia 1828-1899" by David W. Kreckler. Published by La Société Guernsiaise, Candie Gardens, St Peter Port, Guernsey GY1 1UG. ISBN 0 9518075 5 2 . Price £ 12.50 plus p&p.

Review from the Channel Islands Family History Journal No. 71 (May 1996)

I have to admit to jumping on this book with some enthusiasm when it arrived for review, having had a long term interest in the Cohu family of Guernsey, who have spread all over the world. This publication does not disappoint. David Kreckler has been collecting references to emigrants from Guernsey newspapers for some years but this is much more than just an alphabetical list of them. He has made an effort to trace the immediate origins of each person recorded and to find out what happened to them on arrival, both from local and Australian sources. When two emigrants married in Australia, or came at a different time from other relatives, there are cross references. Ships' names are recorded, their dates and places of departure and arrival and the master's name.

Referring to Andrew Cohu, we learn that he was 28 and the master of an English registered vessel, the Fame, in 1853. She was the smallest ship to make the run, at 61 tons, departing from Guernsey on August 12 1853 and arriving in Adelaide January 26 1854. He settled in Melbourne and his place of origin (Kings Mills, Castel), subsequent marriage, the birth of his first child and his death are all noted, culled from notices in the Guernsey Comet and the Gazette. His wife was Eva Le Page of Guernsey and the entry refers us to her arrival (aboard the Secret in 1854). Her entry then introduces us to her brothers: Charles, who was on the same ship, and Peter and George, who arrived the previous year aboard another vessel. Their dates of birth, parents' names and appearances in the census of 1851 are also given.

It is a fair bet that most Guernsey families will have at least one entry in this book, others have many (there are 16 Le Pages) and it is a useful addition to the growing number of research sources devoted to family history. Alex Glendinning.


States of Guernsey Island Archives Service | My Books | Research in the Channel Islands FAQs | Alex Glendinning's Home Page