What
is a mud-lark?
After
24 hours of constant rain the ground has turned to slush, which seems as
good an excuse as any to post about mud-larks.
In
Victorian times necessity was the mother of invention and many poor people were
driven to extraordinary lengths to make a living. A mud-lark is one such
example, where people survived by scavenging through the mud left by the
receding water of tidal rivers. The Thames is a capitol example as it was a
water-way busy with all types of shipping where there was the potential for
crew or passengers to drop things overboard.
Mundane Treasure
In
London, the mud-larks worked both banks of the Thames, covering a large area
between Vauxhall Bridge and Woolwich. They weren't expecting to find gold,
silver, or precious stones, - their treasure was of an altogether more mundane
sort such as coal, rope, old-iron, copper nails, or even bones. Anything that
might have come detached from a ship, or fallen overboard during repairs, had
value to the mud-lark.
Boldness Rewarded
Sometimes
the mud-lark become over bold, such as one boy (as described by Henry Mayhew,
the chronicler of Victorian life) who got fed up picking up coal from the
shoreline and climbed on board a empty coal barge, where he swept up the leavings.
His endeavor earned him 7 days imprisonment in a House of Correction. Not that
he seemed to mind too much as he remarked that he preferred incarceration to
being a mud-lark, as at least had a meal every night.
Caps for Baskets
Indeed,
the mud-larks arouse Mr. Mayhew's pity as he remarks that at one set of stairs
(down to the fore-shore) he counted a dozen children wading through the mud, aged
between 6 and 12 years old. Muddy slush dripped from their clothes and they
left a puddle where they stood. When their basket was full, they'd remove their
cap and fill it – adding to the general impression of filth and dirt. Spending
all their time in mud, it wasn't worth wearing shoes (not that they could
afford them), but these children felt the cold just like any other.
"It is very cold
in winter, to stand in the mud without shoes."
A mud-lark
The
only positive in the dismal picture, it that mud-larking was an early form of
recycling. The mud-lark sell scavenged
coal to the poor. Whilst the iron, bones, and rope they sold to rag shops. Any
tools, such as hammers or saws, they exchanged with seamen for biscuits and
meat.
A Twist in the Tale
Henry
Mayhew wrote in 1951, and by 1904 although a person could claim "mud lark"
as his occupation, public sensibility decreed it an unacceptable pursuit. The
word however, re-emerged around 1936 when schoolchildren re-invented
mud-larking but with a twist. This time they challenged passers-by to throw
coins into the mud, and then entertained the onlookers by running to fetch (and
pocket) it.
A
recent twist is that metal-detectorists who ply the banks of the Thames looking
for historical artefacts, also call themselves mud-larks. Indeed, there is a London Mud-lark FB page,
where examples of recent finds are shared.
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