Female portrait placeholder image

Name: Winnie Bridger

Burial Number: 0442

Gender: Female

Born: 00/00/1884

Died: 6/6/1904

Buried: 11/06/1904

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Story

Winnie Georgina Bridger was born in 1884 in Wandsworth to Reuben Bridger, 34yrs, a Draper, and Winnie Bridger, 24yrs, nee Mollinson: they were married on 28th September 1883 at the Parish Church, Battersea. In 1886 her sister, Amy Florence was born.
Winnie’s parents appear to have separated in the late 1880s.
In 1901, Winnie 16yrs and her sister, Amy 14yrs, were living in Worthing at the home of their Aunt and Uncle, George A. Shipwright, retired draper, and Elizabeth Lucy Shipwright nee Bridger, their father’s older sister. Their address was Kewhurst Lodge, Valencia Road, Worthing.
Winnie Georgina Bridger died at Kewhurst Lodge on 6th June 1904, aged 19yrs.
Her death certificate gave the cause of death as: “Tubercular Peritonitis, Pulmonary Phthisis, Athenia”
On Winnie’s death certificate her father, Reuben Bridger, was described as deceased, but in 1904 he was beginning a 3yr prison sentence.
Reuben Bridger died in 1931 aged 88yrs.

Researcher: Unknown

The Grave

No headstone image available

Location in Cemetery

Area: SWS Row: 5 Plot: 12

Exact Location (what3words): image.glue.struck

Ashes or Urn: Unknown

Headstone

Description:

remainder of inscription has crumbled away

Inscription:

In loving memory of Winnie Georgina Bridger who passed away ...1904 aged '''

Further Information

Birth

Name: Winnie Georgina Bridger

Gender: Female

Born: 00/00/1884

Town: Wandsworth

County: London

Country: England

Marriage

Maiden Name: Not applicable

No marriage information is available for this burial record.

Information at Death

Date of Death: 6/6/1904

Cause of death: Tubercular Pertonitis; Pulmonary phthisis; Asthenia;

Address line 1: Kewhurst Lodge

Address line 3: Valencia Road

Town: Worthing

County: Sussex

Country: England

Obituary

No obituary has been entered.

Personal Effects

Money left to others: No value recorded

Current value of effects: Not calculated

Census Information

1901

George A. Shipwright, 78yrs, and Elizabeth L. Shipwright 67, live at Kewhurst, Valencia Road, Worthing, with their daughter, Amy Shipwright, 38yrs, Nellie Shipwright, 5yrs, granddaughter, and two nieces, Winnie G. Bridger 16yrs and Amy F. Bridger 14yrs.

Miscellaneous Information

Reuben Bridger

Was from a family in the Drapery business and on his marriage certificate in 1883 he gave his occupation as a Draper. The family did not appear in the 1891 census but from 1894 onward Reuben was convicted of multiple offences in the various Criminal Courts of London. He faced charges on five separate occasions between 1894 and 1904, the charges all being related to fraudulently obtaining goods, using embezzlement and forgery to evade payment. He served sentences of 1 month, 3 months, 12months and 1 month before being convicted of another charge of obtaining goods by false pretences in 1904, when he was sentenced to 3 years penal servitude* aged 55yrs. His records show that he was stealing drapery goods, 20yds of ribbon, cashmere and serge fabrics, skirts and on one occasion, knives (for which he received the shortest of all his sentences!)

Imprisonment: Penal Servitude

Penal servitude was a term of imprisonment at hard labour first introduced by the 1853 and 1857 Penal Servitude Acts as a replacement for transportation. It gave judges the discretion to sentence anyone who might otherwise have been transported for less than 14 years to penal servitude. This normally meant labour in a convict prison.

 

Reuben-Bridger-offence-17.8.1901
Reuben-Bridger-offences-1894-1895-1898

Mansion House

Reuben Bridger, 47, was charged before the Lord Mayor with stealing cashmere from Messrs. Luccock and Lupton, warehousemen, of Friday Street, by means of a trick, and with obtaining by similar devices black serge of the value of 17l. from the Fore-street Warehouse Company. It was alleged that the Prisoner had been in the habit of sending orders in the names of customers of firms directing them to transmit goods to be called for at railway cloakrooms, and that in that way he had obtained quantities of property of value. There were said to be cases against him – The Prisoner said he was not guilty – The Lord Mayor committed him for trial.