Judy Middleton 2003 (revised 2023)
copyright © Royal
Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
Part of the Crew of the Revenue Cutter Hound on the Beach at Hove by Edward Fox Snr c1810 |
‘SMUGGLER’ – A wretch who, in defiance of the laws, imports or
exports goods without payment of customs – Dr Samuel Johnson
(1709-1784)
Smuggling was a lucrative trade for some inhabitants of old Hove. It is not surprising when you consider Arthur Young’s comment in 1813 that a night spent smuggling could earn a man seven shillings, whereas an ordinary labourer could only expect to take home each week from sixteen pennies to eighteen pennies, which did not even amount to two shillings. Quite often the two occupations were combined with men working on farms during the summer, and smuggling on dark, winter nights.
The Owlers (wool smugglers), illustration by Paul Hardy from The Smugglers (1909) by Charles C. Harper |
John Wesley, on a preaching tour of Sussex, wrote in December 1773, ‘They will not part with the accursed thing, smuggling.’ In 1787 William Pitt, speaking in the House of Commons, made the astonishing claim that out of 600,000 gallons of brandy imported into this country, at least 400,000 gallons had been smuggled in with the subsequent loss of tax revenue.
The 18th Century
The Sussex Weekly Advertiser (10 April 1780) carried the following story;
‘On Friday evening some of the men belonging to
the Shoreham Customs House cutter fell in with a small party of
smugglers laden near Hove, and on finding them unwilling to deliver
their goods fired upon them and shot one horse dead upon the spot and
wounded another, upon which the smugglers delivered up their goods.’
On the 15 April 1782 The Sussex
Weekly Advertiser reported a large contraband siezure by Shoreham Customs Officers at Portslade.
copyright © Royal Pavilion & Museum,
Brighton & Hove An early 1800s painting of the coastline of Portslade with a distant view of Shoreham Harbour, a landscape ideal for smuggling activities, the windmills on the right are in Copperas Gap, Portslade. Painting attributed to Frederick Ford |
There was a particularly bloody encounter on 7
June 1787. Philip Jenden, Excise Officer at Horsham, together with
three men surprised a large body of smugglers (around 150 it was
claimed) all mounted and laden on the beach near Hove. Although
heavily outnumbered, and without a word, Jenden charged forward,
slashing his sword about. When some badly wounded smugglers shouted
‘Murder’ the rest of them beat a hurried retreat, leaving behind
them twelve horses and 167 casks of spirits.
One of the smugglers, Henry Bonner of Preston, died, and the fearless Philip Jenden was charged and convicted of murder. He was due to hang at Horsham in August 1787, but fortunately the king sent him a free pardon. Meanwhile, some Brighton inhabitants decided to set up a fund to support Bonner’s widow and four small children. T. Kemp M. P. led the way with two guineas, and Nathaniel Kemp and Mr Smithers donated a guinea each.
In April 1789 revenue officers seized 130 casks of
spirits on the beach near Hove. In February 1791 William Curtis,
lately employed as a labourer, was suspected of smuggling in
Hampshire and a reward of £150 was offered for information leading
to his arrest.
Sussex Weekly Advertiser reported on the 10 November 1794 of the death of Thomas Tippin of the Sussex Militia after he discovered a small tub of gin on Hove beach.
Before the establishment of coastguards, a few
riding officers attempted to combat smuggling along the coast. In tax
returns for 1792-1795 it was recorded that Thomas Langridge, a riding
officer, lived at Portslade, and several of his children were
baptised at St Nicolas Church, Portslade.
On 10 October 1819 some Customs officers spotted a suspected smuggling vessel off Hove, and gave chase in a galley with two of the crew from the Hound revenue cutter. In the suspected vessel they found 225 tubs of gin, 52 kegs of brandy, and one keg of shag tobacco. While the revenue men were thus engaged, nine of the quick-thinking smugglers climbed overboard and rowed ashore in the captain’s galley.
Drawing by Paul Hardy (1909) Smugglers in their Sussex smocks were called - 'Batmen' because they carried staves or cudgels as weapons, which were the same size as 'cricket bats' |
But after landing safely opposite Hove Street, two of the smugglers were captured. This was not the end of the affair because the remaining smugglers ran through the village shouting and raising the alarm. Soon a large body of smugglers descended on Hove beach and rescued the captives, hitting the unfortunate revenue men with large sticks and stones. A reward of £200 was offered for information but a cloak of silence descended, and nothing more was heard about the affair.
On 20 October 1827 a smugglers’ barque landed 50
kegs of Hollands on Hove beach opposite Brunswick Terrace. There was
a fierce fight, and several members of the coast blockade were
injured. It was also supposed that two or three of the smugglers were
either badly wounded or killed.
copyright © Royal
Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
Brighton Herald 29 September 1832 |
In 1835 the coastguard prevented goods being landed near Hove turnpike gate where around 30 to 40 men were assembled ready to carry off the goods. Instead the tubs were landed on the Chain Pier.
copyright © Royal
Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove The above article from the Brighton Herald for 6 July 1850 refers to the coastline between Brighton and Shoreham |
copyright © Royal
Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove Brighton Herald 18 October 1851 |
An Amusing Anecdote
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Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
(St Andrew's Old Church, Hove, was rebuilt in the 1880s) |
“The story goes that one Hove Sunday the vicar in full canonicals went to the church to do his office. To his surprise, the bell was not ringing, and on his enquiring the reason from the sexton, that artist calmly informed him that he made a mistake, and that it was Preston Sunday. The vicar stuck to it that he was right, and the sexton as stoutly maintained that he was wrong. The vicar would not admit that he was in error, and ordered the bell to be rung for service. ‘It’s no use, sir’ said the sexton at last. ‘You can’t preach today.’ ‘Why not?’ demanded the angry parson, ‘Because the church is full of tubs and the pulpit’s full of tea.’ ”
Other Hiding Places
There were other places for hiding contraband too. There was an old malt-house on the corner of the road leading to the sea at Hove, and the trick was to conceal the tubs under a thin layer of malt. When the time was right, the tubs moved up to the smugglers’ cave at the junction of what is today the Old Shoreham Road and Sackville Road. This cave was situated in an old chalk pit, and there was a cleverly disguised entrance to a double cave – the inner cave was reached by a passage from the outer cave. The caves remained until the 1890s.
According to Tom Hicks, who was told the story by Mr Lister, Hove’s one-time Chief Librarian, the caves were re-discovered quite by accident. The entrance was well concealed under a mass of ivy, elder, nettles and blackberry bushes. A man kept his hens in the chalk quarry, and he became puzzled when as they scratched about, some would disappear and then re-appear. An investigation revealed the existence of the smugglers’ caves.
Hove Street
The
Ship Inn was
a favourite meeting place for smugglers from both Hove and Brighton.
All Hove people understood the meaning of the smugglers’ proverb
’Moonshine under the hearth; moonshine under the horse’s belly’,
referring to other places where smuggled spirits were hidden.
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Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
The original Ship Inn in Hove Street (later re-built) |
A Dead Smuggler?
At the beginning of June 1930 some workmen employed by Hove Corporation were digging shingle when they discovered a human skeleton. The exact position was 33-ft south of the revetment wall of the Kingsway and opposite 3 St Aubyn’s Gardens – the site later occupied by the King Alfred. The shingle was covered by 6-in of earth and grass, but the shingle was around 7-ft deep at this point. The skeleton was was 3-ft below the top of the shingle.
Mr E. Cecil Curwen thought that the male skeleton was likely to have belonged to a man killed by the Excise men, and buried where he fell. If he had been a drowned sailor, he would surely have been buried in consecrated ground. Mr Curwen described the man as having been aged around 30 and was 5-ft 4 ½ in tall with short forearms; he had excellent teeth.
The Crab
House
copyright © G. Osborne An Edwardian view of Crab House, Southwick, in the background is Copperas Gap, Portslade. |
There used to be a small house on the north bank of the canal at Southwick called the Crab House, almost opposite where The Gardens, Southwick, is today, and local tradition held that a smugglers’ tunnel started from there.
Old-time Portslade residents have told me that the entrance to the tunnel was actually in the bank, and local children knew all about it. However, the children were prevented from exploring it because if the occupant of the Crab House spotted them, he would chase them away.
Secret Passages
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Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
The ruins of St Leonards, Aldrington, were a favourite haunt of local smugglers, the
church was situated in a wide open landscape with views of the sea.
In 1814 the official figure for the population of Aldrington was
‘one’, a male who lived one mile from the ruins, the church was
rebuilt in the late 1870s.
|
In 1940 Mr Edwards, road sweeper, was busy at work on the coast road at Portslade / Southwick, when there was a rumbling noise and he fell through the surface into an underground tunnel. There was some attempt at exploration, but there were pockets of gas present, and it was deemed too dangerous to continue – besides there was a war on. However, it is interesting to note that later on men of the Canadian Army established a post there. As for Mr Edwards, he was killed during the war in a bombing raid while he was chopping wood in Stanley’s yard.
In
1975, during excavation work connected with a new road surface at the
east end of High Street, Portslade, an underground passage was
discovered leading from the ancient house Kemps.
copyright © G. Osborne The Halfway House appears in the centre of this Edwardian photograph, at the south end of Station Road, Portslade. |
In August 1998 a 20-ft hole suddenly appeared outside the Halfway House in Station Road. The hole was 5-ft in circumference and a council spokesman said ‘Our highways people think it could be an old smugglers’ tunnel because it leads to something of a chamber.’ Southern Water stated that it was not in any of their records. Andy Burns, publican of the Halfway House said he had taken a look himself, and it looked like there were three tunnels leading off at the bottom. It is possible that there may have been a connection with the old Crown Pub that was situated south of the coast road at Copperas Gap, and an underground passage was believed to start there.Rudyard Kipling lived 5 miles from Hove in Rottingdean, from 1897 until 1902, Kipling was well versed in local history, and his poem, A Smuggler’s Song paints a vivid picture of the illegal activities of the 18th and 19th centuries along the Sussex coastline.
Watch the wall my darling, while the gentleman go by ! illustration by Paul Hardy from The Smugglers (1909) by Charles C. Harper |
If you wake at midnight, and hear a horse’s
feet,
Don’t go drawing back the blind, or looking in the
street,
Them that ask no questions isn’t told a lie.
Watch
the wall my darling while the Gentlemen go by.
Five and twenty
ponies,
Trotting through the dark –
Brandy for the
Parson, ‘Baccy for the Clerk.
Laces for a lady; letters for a
spy,
Watch the wall my darling while the Gentlemen go by!
Cooper, William Durrant (1812-1875), The Genuine history of the inhuman and unparalleled murders of Mr.
William Galley, a custom-house officer, and Mr. Daniel Chater, a
shoemaker, by fourteen notorious smugglers, with the trials and
execution of seven of the criminals at Chichester, 1748-9
Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Harper, Charles C. The Smugglers (1909)
Kipling, Rudyard, A
Smuggler’s Song
Mr G. Osborne
Royal
Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
copyright ©
J.Middleton 2023
page layout and additional research by
D. Sharp