No. in Admissions Register: | 339 |
Date of admission: | 27 June 1866 |
Whence received: | Stafford |
By whom brought: | - |
On what terms: | - |
Friends interested in him: | - |
Description: | |
Height: | - |
Figure: | - |
Complexion: | - |
Hair colour: | - |
Eyes colour: | - |
Perfect vision? | - |
State of health: | - |
Able-bodied? | - |
Sound intellect? | - |
Use of all limbs? | - |
Had cow or small pox? | - |
Particular marks: | - |
Cutaneous disorder? | - |
Scrofulous or consumptive? | - |
Subject to fits? | - |
Age last birthday: | 12 |
Illegitimate? | - |
Birthday: | - |
Birth place: | - |
Has resided: | Wolverhampton |
Parish he belongs to: | - |
Customary work and mode of life: | - |
Schools attended: | - |
By whom and where employed: | - |
State of education: | |
Reads: | Imperfectly |
Writes: | Not |
Cyphers: | - |
General ability: | - |
Offence: | Stealing 8d |
Circumstances which may have led to it: | Bad company |
Date of sentence: | 6 July 1866 |
Where convicted: | Newcastle |
Who prosecuted: | - |
Where imprisoned: | - |
Sentence: | 21 days prison (hard labour), 5 years at Saltley |
Previous committals and convictions: | Felony (10 days) |
Father's name: | William Allen |
Occupation: | Was a miner, but is crippled |
Residence: | Bissell's Buildings, Walsall Street, Wolverhampton |
Mother's name: | Ann Allen |
Occupation: | Charwoman |
Residence: | - |
Father's character: | Nothing known against |
Mother's character: | Nothing known against |
Parents dead? | - |
Survivor married again? | - |
Parents' treatment of child: | Not known |
Character of parents | - |
Parents' wages: | Mother 2s 6d per week |
Amount parents agree to pay: | None |
Superintendent of police (to collect payments): | - |
Relatives to communicate with: | - |
Person making this return: | - |
Estimate of character on admission: | - |
Character on discharge: | - |
When and how left the Reformatory: | - |
11 July 1866 There is a brief report of the crime in the Wolverhampton Chronicle and Staffordshire Advertiser Saturday 11 July 1866 p.6 col.3: COMMITTAL TO A REFORMATORY.-Wm. Allen [first name given erroneously thus], a boy thief, twelve years of age, was brought up on remand from last week, on the charge of stealing money from the shop till of a person named Rhodes, a baker, in Canal Street. The prisoner had been three times previously convicted of felony. Mr. Spooner sentenced him to 21 days' imprisonment, and at the expiration of that term to be sent to a Reformatory for five years.
28 June 1871 Licensed to work for our late tailor, J Hardwick
26 July 1871 Discharged
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