A THREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGATE
DURING JULY AND AUGUST 1829
JOHN WHYMAN
In 1955 and 1966 Archaeologia Cantiana published two examples of
holidays which had been spent specifically touring the county of
Kent, both of which were edited by Dr Felix Hull and have been
reproduced subsequently in Essays in Kentish History. They were 'A
Tour into Kent, 1759', undertaken by members of the Mount family
of London, and 'A Kentish Holiday, 1823', which was enjoyed by
Charles PowelJ, the second son of Baden Powell of Speldhurst and
Hester, when he was sixteen years of age. 1 The purpose of this
article is to reproduce with some commentary and assessment an
1829 diary account of a three week holiday to Ramsgate2 which, in
stark contrast to the earlier examples for 1759 and 1823, is somewhat
unique in providing details of daily expenditure. All three
examples share, however, one interesting feature in having been
discovered among family papers deposited in archive or record
offices.3
Contemporary historical sources on eighteenth- and nineteenthcentury
holidaymaking are noticeably silent on the costs involved,
so that while travel journals, diaries and letters often tell liberally of
the scenery of a place or describe fully its amusements or company,
they rarely, with one or two exceptions,4 comment on the expenses
incurred, except to point out some exorbitant anomaly. To Kent
' See Arch. Cant., lxix (1955), 171-8, and lxxxi (1966), 109-17; or M. Roake and
J. Whyman (Eds.), Essays in Kentish History, (1973), 185-92, 283-91.
1 Journal of an Excursion to Ramsgate in July and August 1829, uncatalogued MSS
Tyler Collection (Ramsgate Scrapbook), Cathedral Library and Archives, Canterbury.
> Respectively Berks. R.0., D/EMT F5, Kent Archives Office: U 934 F8, and
among the papers of Frank Walter Tyler (1871-1955) in the Tyler Collection, the
Cathedral Library, Canterbury. I am grateful to Dr. W. Urry, for having drawn my
attention to this source when he was Cathedral Archivist at Canterbury.
• A good but general e xception occurs in V.J.B. Torr, 'A Tour through Kent in
1735', Arch. Cant., xliii (1931), 279-80, or in Roake and Whyman, op. cit., 183-4,
18£
JOHN WHYMAN
belongs one of the best English examples of pre-Victorian recorded
holiday expenditure. It dates from the end of the 1820s and relates
to a holiday spent in Ramsgate, the journey from London and back
using Thames steamboats which were then plying with great
regularity. In this Journal of an Excursion to Ramsgate in July and
August 1829 there is not only a day-by-day diary account of how the
holiday was actually spent but, in addition, every detail of expenditure
incurred right down to the cleaning of shoes is entered from
20th July to 10th August, 1829. Here was a middle-class seaside
holiday, taken at the height of the season, which recorded very
meticulously the amounts of money spent on it. It is the expenditure
which most calls for analysis and assessment rather than the clearly
stated text of the diary, which requires only a short introduction and
a little elaboration by way of footnotes.
The author, Mr. Benham, was keen on sketching and copying
church monuments and inscriptions and had been to Ramsgate
before in 1826. 5 The other members of his party included his wife,
Charlotte, who was often referred to as Mrs. B. or Mrs. Benham,
their infant child and a servant and nursery maid, Betsy Thornton.
The diary suggests that Mr. Benham had married a somewhat
younger wife and yet, while he did not join her in sea bathing, he
walked almost every morning at an early hour to and from the
church of St. Lawrence. It is possible, too, that he might have
married beneath his station, judging by the numerous references to
Mrs. Benham and her consumption of porter, but equally there are
few clues to the author's own occupation, except that he was
engaged in business in London.
The Benhams in selecting Ramsgate for their holiday in 1829
patronized a prosperous, well-developed and expanding steamboat
resort, which in 1831 was described as 'an extensive, well-built, and
fashionable watering place, frequented by some of the first families
where for the Kentish portion of a long tour undertaken on horseback by four
Cambridge gentlemen there is an overall account of expenditure 'settled and signed
by all four gentlemen' for individual days and periods falling between 26th July and
9th August, 1735.
5 According to the Journal of 705 inscriptions relating to the parish of St.
Lawrence, 99 dated from a previous visit to Ramsgate in 1826. Resulting from the
two visits were 770 inscriptions, viz:
St. Lawrence 705
The New Church (St. George) 9
Monkton Church 30
Birchington 12
St. Nicholas 14
TOTAL 770
186
A THREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGATE
in the kingdom', and being 'somewhat smaller, and less populous
than Margate, ... its amusements are not so lively and numerous,
but are equally inviting to that grade of society who resort thither
for a short relaxation from the anxieties and cares of a metropolitan
life'. 6 A few years previously The Times had noted how 'the
introduction of steamboats [since 1815] has given the whole coast of
Kent, [and] the Isle of Than et in particular, a prodigious lift'. 7
JOURNAL OF AN EXCURSION TO RAMSGATE IN JULY AND AUGUST
1829.
Monday, July 20.
Started at 9.12 from off the Tower Stairs, London in the Magnet
Steam Boat and after a pleasant journey arrived at Margate at ½
past 4 precisely, thence in a coach to Ramsgate which we reached at
precisely ½ past 5. 8 Found our old lodgings engaged,9 therefore
took a sitting room and 2 bedrooms at Mr. Cullen's in Hertford
Place which place was erected in 1813. After having given my friend
Hunt of Burgess's Library 10 a call and taken some refreshment we
retired to rest greatly fatigued by the day's exertion.
6 G.W. Bonner, The Picturesque Pocket Companion to Margate, Ramsgate,
Broadstairs, and the Parts Adjacent, (1831), 146-7.
7 The Times, 28th September, 1824.
• Until well into the nineteenth century passengers bound by water from London
to Broadstai.rs or Ramsgate chose to disembark at Margate thereby avoiding what
was seen to be a hazardous voyage around the North Foreland. This point was
confirmed by Capt. Large, who commanded the City of Canterbury steamboat
belonging to the Herne Bay Steam Packet Co. in evidence on 8th April, 1851, to the
House of Commons Select Committee on the London and Blackwall Railway
Extension to Tilbury Fort, etc. Bill, H.L.R.O., Committee Office Evidence, Vol. 15.
9 A reference to the previous visit in 1826; see above, n. 5.
'0 Burgess & Hunt's circulating library in Queen Street, Ramsgate is listed in trade
directories of the 1820's and 1830's; for instance, on page 406 of Pigot & Co's
London and Provincial New Commercial Directory, for 1823-4, or on pages 857 and
858 of Pigot & Co's National, London and Provincial Commercial Directory, for
1833-4. According to Bonner, op. cit., 162, Messrs. Burgess & Hunt operated in 'a
very convenient and handsome building', which contained in 1831 'a choice and
valuable collection of books, which have l:!een selected with much care and a proper
regard both for amusement and instruction'. In addition 'the proprietors have also an
extensive establishment, where printing is performed in all its branches', apart from
selling 'all sorts of jewellery, trinkets, music, stationery, Tunbridge ware, perfumery,
etc.'
187
JOHN WHYMAN
£ s. d.
Paid Coach from 3 New Millman St. to Tower
Stairs 3 6
Paid Waterman at the Stand for putting in the
Luggage 6
Paid Porterage of Luggage from Coach to the
Wherry 1 0
Paid Waterman to the Steam Boat the Magnet 1 6
Paid for Times Newspaper 9
Paid fares for Mrs. B. and myself 24s., Servant
10s., Infant nothing 1 14 0
Paid Sailors' Box ls., 1 bottle of Port ls., Woman 6d. 2 6
Paid Porterage of Luggage to Ramsgate Coach 6
Paid Coach fare to Ramsgate 3 0
Paid Porterage of Luggage from the Crown Hotel
to our Lodgings 2 0
Total Expense of the Journey 2 9 3
Tuesday, July 21.
Rose at ½ past 6. Walked round the cliffs, up High Street to the
new Church 11 which people were cleaning. Went in and copied the
only Inscription there. . The following odd Notice is on a board
outside the Church:
Notice
it is particularly
requested that no
nuisance be
committed against
the walls of the Church
11 Following the creation of Ramsgate as a separate parish from the old parish of
St. Lawrence by Act of Parliament in 1826, St. George's Church, Ramsgate, was
completed in the Gothic style in 1827 to hold 2,000 persons, at a cost of £27,000,
financed from subscriptions and parochial rates apart from £9,000 donated by the
Church Commissioners. Its tower, 137 feet high, was 'generally admired' as 'a very
prominent feature, ... for its boldness of design and chasteness of execution',
Bonner, op. cit., 146, 157; Picture of Ramsgate, or A Guide to the Various
Amusements, Public Libraries, Building Improvements, etc. of that celebrated
Watering Place, (Ramsgate, 1833), 35; and The Post Office Directory of the Six Home
Counties, (1851), 399.
188
A THREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGAlE
or in the Churchyard
under pain of
punishment as
the act directs.
Returned to the Lodgings. Charlotte, myself and the Servant each
took half a pint of Warm salt Water - Breakfast at 9 - Mine was
the Yolks of 2 Eggs mixed in a Pint of milk and Tea. After
Breakfast walked with Charlotte to Market .... Dinner at 2 o'clock
consisted of roasted Lamb, Peas and Currant and Raspberry Pie ...
After tea Charlotte and I with the child and Servant walked on the
Pier until 8 o'clock . . .. Supper at 9. To bed at ¼ past 10. This
morning wrote to my wife's eldest Sister Phillis Dueroz of 27, Brook
Street, Holborn, London to let them know of our safe journey and
arrival here.
Paid: £ s. d.
7½
7½
4½
9
½ lb. Butter fresh
1 lb. Candles - ½ common ½ Rush Lights
½ lb. Mould Candles
1 lb. Figs
Anniseed Cordial for the Child
2 lb. Loaf of Bread
½ Pint of Milk
1 Pint do.
5 English Eggs
¾ lb. of Lard for Pie and Pudding Crust at lOd. lb.
4 lbs. Flour
1 Pint of Porter (Mrs. Benham)
Baking Pie
2 lb. Loaf of Bread
½ Peck of Peas (Prussian Blues)
1 lb. Black Currants
½ Gallon of Potatoes
1 Leaf of Raspberries
2 lb. red Currants
Cake of Brown Bread
1 lb. Brown Sugar
Salt and Pepper
Goosberries ripe
3¾ lbs. Ribs of Lamb at 9d. per lb.
3
5¾
l½
3
6
7½
10¾
3
1
5¾
4
2½
3
2½
4
2
7
3
1
2 10
11 6¾
N.B. William Alexander Hunt born 15th. Jan. 1789 at Ostend now
of Burgess's Library, Ramsgate.
189
JOHN WHYMAN
Wednesday, July 22.
Rose at 5 and walked to St. Lawrence - turned out Philpot the
Sexton who let me into the Church at ¼ to 6 where I copied the
following Inscriptions. ...A t ½ past 7 returned to Breakfast after
which went with Mrs. B - to market and thence to the Beach
where we each took a chair for half an hour, 12 thence returned to
our lodging. At ½ past 12 to 1 called on my friend Hunt and bought
red ink, pencil and rubber. At 2 returned to dinner which was Soles
fried and Cold Lamb and potatoes and currant and raspberry Pie.
At ½ past 4 after my nap we went on the Pier and saw the Royal
Sovereign Steam Boat from London come into the harbour and land
its passengers.
Paid: £ s. d.
For the cleaning of 1 Pair of Boots 2d. and Shoes Id. 3
1 pint Milk last evening 2
1 oz. Coffee 3
1 pint of Porter for Mrs. B. 3
Bread 5¾
Milk 1 ½ pints 3
Gooseberries ld., cherries ld. , 2
Red Ink 6d., Indian Rubber 3d., Blacklead
Pencil 9d. 1 6
Paid for sitting on Chairs on the Beach 2
1 pair of Soles 1 0
Strawberries 4
4 9¾
12 Ramsgate may well have been one of the first seaside resorts to provide visitors
with an early form of the deckchair. c. 1835 a valetudinarian noted 'I must not omit
to notice Ramsgate Sands (where) for the accommodation of visitors, a number of
chairs (some hundreds) have been placed on them, to a considerable distance - the
charge being only ld. per day, for each person', Sea Side Reminiscences: A Collection
of 'Odd Thoughts' picked up at the Chief Watering-Places on the South Coast of
England, and designed to Assist Strangers and Visitors in their Rambles, (c. 1835), 15.
The chairs seem to have been attached to a Subscription Marquee it being observed
in The Visitor's Guide to the Watering Places, or a Summer Excursion Round the
Coast of England, in Pursuit of Health and Recreation, (1842), 179, that 'chairs are
placed on the Bathing Sands for the sole use of subscribers [with] an attendant to
remove them to any situation'. Certainly Pigot & Co ... for 1833-4, op. cit., 856,
pointed out that the bathing proprietors, Messrs. Barling, Foat & Wells, opposite the
pier gates, possessed 'a splendid marquee upon the bathing sands, furnished with the
London and other journals and approved periodicals'. A subsequent source also
observed how 'near the pier, the visitors who fill the houses in the terrace and
crescent . . . do congregate, seated for their customary three hours on their penny
chairs; the ladies working or reading their well worn novels', MacKenzie Walcott, A
Guide to the Coast of Kent, (1859), 112-3.
190
A THREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGATE
Thursday, July 23.
Rose at 5 and proceeded to St. Laurence Churchyard. . .. Returned
at ½ past 7 to breakfast of Tea and Eggs - after which walked one
hour on the cliff opposite the Royal Crescent. . . . Dined at 2 off
Skate and potatoes and blackcurrant pie. After the Service
walked to see the Gas Co's Works. 13
Paid: £ s. d.
Gooseberries 1
1 Quart of Milk 5
5 Eggs 6
A Poor Man who had lately lost his leg by accident 1 0
2 lbs. Blackcurrants 4
A Dish of Skate 6
1 lb. White Sugar - very indifferent 10
1 lb. Brown Sugar 7
½ lb. Fresh Butter 7
½ pint of Shrimps for Charlotte at tea 2
For a Gauze and Hankerchief for Charlotte's Neck 1 5
For a Gauze and Veil for the Child 1 0
Bottle of Ginger Beer 3
Pint of Porter 3
For Baking the Pie 1
Loaf of Bread 11 ½
8 11½
Friday, July 24.
Rose at 5 and walked to St. Laurence Churchyard .... At 8 returned
to Breakfast of Tea, Eggs and Rolls, after which walked to market
with Charlotte about one hour. ... For dinner shoulder of Lamb,
potatoes and blackcurrant pie. At ½ past 2 went with Mrs. Hunt
13 It was on Monday evening, 30th August, 1824 that 'the town of Ramsgate was
Lighted with gas for the first time', The Times, 2nd September, 1824. This improved
source of lighting was supplied by the Isle of Thanet Gas Light and Coke Company,
the Chairman, Mr. N.A. Austen, reporting to the general half yearly meeting of
shareholders on 17th March, 1828, that 'the progress of the Company's works during
the last six months has been regular and progressively improving', with an increase of
sixteen private customers at Ramsgate; K.A.O. Cobb MSS. Thomas Francis Cobb,
of the Margate brewing and banking family, was then the proprietor of twenty
shares. The Ramsgate Gas Works were listed in Pigot & Co . . . for 1833-4, op. cit.,
858 at Hardres Street, John Wilkinson, superintendent.
191
\
I
JOHN WHYMAN
and her 8 children to Cliffsend Fann beyond Pegwell where we had
tea, and our party 15 in number, including . . . 2 servants, all
en joyed themselves for several hours upon the grass of one of the
fields. Reached our lodging before 9 o'clock all highly delighted by
our treat.
Paid:
Gooseberries ld. , Currants 3d.
Shoulder of Lamb 4 lbs. 14 oz. at 9d. per lb.
1 Gallon of Imperial Blue Peas
4 hot Rolls for Breakfast
Cleaning 1 pair boots and 1 pair shoes
Milk
1 ½ pints of London and other porter
4 New Laid Eggs
Saturday July 25.
£ s. d.
4
3 8
4
3½
3
3
4½
6
6 0
Rose at ½ past 5 and walked to St. Laurence Church. .. .A fter
breakfast went to Market with Charlotte and walked for about an
hour. This being Market day we had an opportunity of observing its
extent. It has 3 divisions - Meat - Vegetables - Fish- and these
were well stocked with every common thing in season. 1
• After
dinner at 2 which consisted of Lamb Pie and blackcurrant pie
walked and saw the Steam Vessel from London arrive in the
Harbour. After Tea hired a carriage and taking up Mr. Hunt by the
way we were conveyed to Birchington, whose Church containing
some old Brasses and monuments we went into, but there was not
sufficient time to allow of my copying anything. Took a glass of
sherry wine at the Powell Arms on account of the coldness of the
evening ...
Paid:
Currants ld. Gooseberries 1 pint 2d.
2 lbs. of Blackcurrants
£ s. d.
3
5
14 In 1833 Ramsgate market, on Wednesdays and Saturdays, was said to be 'well
supplied with excellent meat, poultry, fish and vegetables', being 'frequently attended
by persons from the French coast with fruit, eggs and other articles', Picture of
Ramsgate, op. cit., 37, and Pigot & Co . .. for 1833-4, op. cit., 856. Imported French
eggs poured into Ramsgate in great quantities during June 1828 and were sold in
Canterbury at thirty for ls., according to The Maidstone Journal and Kentish
Advertiser, 17th June, 1828.
192
A THREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGATE
½ lb. of Rump Steak to put in the pie at ls. per lb.
½ pint of Peas - Imperial Blues
Quarter of French Beans
Lettuce
Milk
Cleaning shoes 1 pair
½ lb. of London fresh butter at ls. 6d. per lb.
¾ lb. of Lard at 10d. per lb.
Quarter of Flour
Black Ink
1 pint of Porter
Baking 2 Pies
1 Pint Bottle of Sherry Wine
Biscuits at Birchington
1 Pint of Ale for the Man
Paid the Ostler
The Sexton for viewing the Church
The Carriage
Washing - Drapery
2 pieces of flannel
1 long white frock
1 long white petticoat
1 child's cap
1 coloured apron
Sunday, July 26.
6
3
3
1½
5
1
9
7½
10¾
1
3
2
2 6
2
4
2
1 0
5 0
4
2
2
1
1½
1
15 2¼
It being a very wet and stormy morning did not rise till ½ past 7,
and the weather continuing extremely boisterous and wet prevented
Charlotte and myself from attending God's house. Our servant
however was not to be kept from the duty, she therefore went to the
New Church, 15 thus exhibiting a faithfulness which ought to shame
and stimulate me. . . . Dined at ½ past 1 off cold Lamb pie and
French Beans and Lettuce dress'd with vinegar, sugar and pepper
and Blackcurrant pie.
15 St. George's Church, Ramsgate; see above, n. 11.
193
JOHN WHYMAN
Monday, July 27.
Rose at 6 .... Went to St. Laurence Churchyard .... Returned at ½
past 7 and took Mrs. B- to see the Steam Vessel go out of the
Harbour for London - the weather very rough. At ½ past 8
breakfast on Rolls, Tea and Eggs. After breakfast the weather
cleared and we walked on the Pier. After dinner walked on the
Plains of Waterloo and the atmosphere being remarkably clear saw
the Coast of France very plainly. . . . After Tea walked on the Royal
Crescent. I wrote to the Gas Works this day ... . Took for my
supper ½ doz. figs and milk and after it ½ pint of Gruel - to bed
at 10.
Paid:
Milk yesterday and to-day
Porter yesterday and to-day
Cleaning Boots and Shoes
5 Eggs
¾ lb. Lard for Pie Crust
Rush Lights and Common Candles
½ lb. Salt Butter
Mould Candles
Baking Pie
Red Currants for Pie
Potatoes
Brick Loaf of Bread
4 lb. Bread
A fine fowl for boiling
Red Currants in the morning
2½ lbs. of Pickled Pork at 9d.
One Week's Lodging
Tuesday, July 28.
£ s.
3
1
1 11
d.
10
6
4
6
7½
7½
6
4¼
1
5
3
2
11¼
0
1
8
6
2 2 4½
Rose at¼ to 6. Went to St. Lawrence Churchyard ... Returned at
8 to Breakfast ... After Dinner at½ past 2 joined Mrs. Hunt and
her 8 children and proceeded to Shallows Tea Gardens near St.
Peters 16 where we enjoyed ourselves until ½ past 6 playing and
swinging with the children . . .
16 Described in 1830 as 'a favourite resort with juvenile parties', who 'may bring
their own tea and sugar', where '8d. each is charged for the other ac companiments of
the tea table', G .A. Cooke, A Topographical and Statistical Description of the County
of Kent, New Ed. (1830), xx:x.
194
A 1HREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGATE
Paid:
Currants
4 pair of small Soles for Dinner - very sweet
1 lb. Lump Sugar IOd. and ¼ Tea ls. 9d. for the
Shallows
Bread, Butter and Water and the Use of Table,
etc., in the Shallows Gardens, 6 Adults at 8d
and 8 children at 4d. each
For attendance at the Shallows tho' not demanded
A Box of Anderson's Scot's Pills
1 ½ pints Milk
Cleaning Shoes and Boots
1 pint of porter
3 Hot Rolls for Breakfast
Wednesday, July 29.
£ s. d.
3½
1 0
2 7
6 8
1 0
1 1½
3
3
3
3
13 8
Rose at ¼ to 6 and walked to St. Lawrence Churchyard. Returned
at ½ past 7 to breakfast. . . . Dinner of Boiled Leg of Lamb and
Turnips. At ½ past 4 walked on the pier to see the steamboat from
London arrive and the duke of Wellington happening to be also on
the pier we had the opportunity for the first time of seeing his grace.
After tea at 6 walked to St. Lawrence's and returned round by the
Mills and the Royal Crescent by 8 o'clock when we found the house
locked up and all its inmates out. After walking a short time found
the Servant who let us in. . . . Received a Letter from Miss Phillis
Dueroz of Brook St., Holborn, my wife's sister.
Paid:
Leg of Lamb 5 lbs. at 10d. per lb.
Bunch of Turnips
Letter from London
Fruit 3d. - 2 qts. of Red Currants 5d.
½ lb. brown Sugar for the Pie
Gave a Beggar for Charlotte
Milk
Cleaning shoes
Pint of Porter
¾ lb. lard at 10d.
Baking a Pie
195
£ s. d.
4 2
3
8
8
3½
1
5
2
3
7½
1
JOHN WHYMAN
4 lbs. Loaf of Bread
Washing - 2 pairs of cotton Hose
2 child's pellises
1 do. White Frock
1 do. Pinafore
1 do. Shirt
6 Neckerchiefs
14 Draperies
1 Child's Flannel
1 do. Nightgown
Thursday, July 30.
11¼
2
5
2
1
1
6
9
1
1
10 11¼
Rose at 5 and walked to St. Lawrence Churchyard . . . but had to
way till 10 minutes past 6 before I could wake the Sexton to give me
the Key. . . . At 12 walked to Mrs. Hunt's at Effingham Place, and
thence walked to the pier. Took a boat and were rowed out of the
Harbour for an hour. ... At 5 went to Mr. Hunt's and drank tea
with him and his family.
Paid: £ s. d.
Gave a poor man with one arm only - but suspicious 1
Boathire - one hour 2 0
Blackcurrants 2
A Lettuce 1½
1 lb. Brown Sugar 7
½ lb. Salt Butter being preferred before fresh 5½
1 Quart Milk 4
fu. 3
4 lbs. of Flour 10¾
Cleaning One Pair of Shoes 1
4 11¾
Friday, July 31.
Rose at½ past 5 and went to St. Lawrence's but failed to make the
Sexton hear me knock at his door and, as the Rain came on very
heavily, I thought it better to return . . . Received a Letter from
196
A TI-IREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGATE
London stating that business would not recall me home till Monday
week. Wet and windy the whole of the day therefore Charlotte and
I went only to see the sluices opened in the Harbour. 17
Paid: £ s. d.
Milk 5
furt 3
5Eg 6
4 lb. Loaf 11¼
2 Mutton Chops ½ lb. 5
Cleaning Shoes 2
A Plate of Raspberries 1 ½
For showing us and explaining the Steam Engine 6
Waiting at the Inn at Birchington [?]. 3
½ peck Windsor Broad Beans 3
Saturday, August 1.
3 9¾
Rose at 4¾ and walked to St. Laurence Churchyard. Returned at
½ past 7 and after Breakfast went to Market with Charlotte and
thence to the Beach where we took a chair for an hour .... After
dinner walked in Frazer's Nursery Garden 18 and thence on the pier
to see the Steam Boat come in.
Paid:
Cleaning Shoes
Milk
1 Pint Porter
Baking a Pie
½ lb. of London fresh butter
5 Eggs
£ s. d.
1
5
3
1
9
6
17 Owing their origin to the celebrated eighteenth-century civil engineer John
Smeaton who constructed in 1779 an inner basin as a backwater to cleanse the outer
harbour which was silting up, by means of a cross wall, in which were two sluices,
'the operations of which were amazingly powerful', such that 'they entirely cleared
away the sullage from it down to the chalk, besides carrying out of the harbour's
mouth great quantities of sand', E. Hasted, The History and Topographical Survey of
the County of Kent, Vol. X, 2nd Ed., (Canterbury, 1800), 393. Subsequently
Smeaton's wooden sluices 'got very much out of repair, and at last were closed',
causing dredging to be an ever recurring problem, when Sir John Rennie, as Civil
Engineer to Ramsgate Harbour, presented evidence on 11th July, 1850, to The Select
Committee on Ramsgate and Margate Harbours (660) (1850), 90.
" Listed in Pigot & Co . ... for 1833-4, op. cit., 858, under 'Nursery and Seedsmen'
as Alex. Fraser, Hermitage Nursery.
197
JOHN WHYMAN
Fish
Gallon of Potatoes
3 Pints of Gooseberries for the Pie
Breast of Lamb 5¼ lbs. at 10d. per lb.
Chairs on the Beach
Fruit at the Nursery
Sunday, August 2.
1 6
5
4½
4 4½
2
5
9 4
Rose at ¼ past 7. . . . In the morning and afternoon heard the Rev.
Mr. Elvin at St. Lawrence Church and in the evening Mr. Townsend
at his Meeting House. 19
Monday, August 3.
Rose at ¼ past 5 and went to St. Lawrence Churchyard . . .
Returned at 8 to breakfast after which walked to the sands where
Charlotte bathed . . . . Walked round by Jacob's Ladder. After
dinner it came on to rain and this continued the whole afternoon
and evening confining us to the house.
Paid:
Cleaning Shoes
2 Days Milk
2 Days Porter
¾ lb. Lard 7½d., Baking ld., Rhubarb for the
Pie 6d.
2 lbs. Brown Loaf from the Calais Cottage -
very good
A 4 lb. Common Loaf - very good
Bathing Machine for Charlotte20
£ s.
1
1
d.
2
10
6
2½
4½
11¼
0
19 Apart from the established Anglican churches of St. Lawrence and St. George,
visitors to Ramsgate in 1828 could also elect to worship at 'a handsome chapel of
ease' in Chapel Place which had been consecrated in 1791 by Archbishop Moore,
near to which 'the Independents have a meeting-house', W.H. Ireland, A New and
Complete History of the County of Kent, Vol. 1 (1828), 549. Among the dissenting
places of worship were chapels supported by Methodists, Anabaptists and HighCalvinists.
zo Bathing arrangements and terms were given much publicity as would be
expected in a Picture of Ramsgate (1833), op. cit., 32-3, where it was noted how the
building of a new harbour at Ramsgate had improved the sands, which afforded 'a
198
A TIIREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGATE
Fruit for Mrs. Hunt's children on the Beach
Medicine for myself and the Infant
Week's Lodging
2
1 0
1 11 6
1 17 8¼
Tuesday, August 4.
Rose at ½ past 5 and proceeded to St. Lawrence Churchyard.
Returned to breakfast at 8 after which walked on the Pier. Dinner
at ½ past 1. Confined most of the day on account of the weather ....
Walked with Mr. Hunt to the Library, staid till 8 when Charlotte
called for me and we returned to our Lodging - Supper at 9, to bed
at 10.
Paid:
A Pair of fine Soles ls. 6d. and a Weaver fish 3d.
1 lb. of White Currants - Wall fruit
Paid an aged woman
Paid for washing a Shirt 3d. , a chemise 2d. , etc.
A Memorandum Book
Fine Cabbage - omitted yesterday
A Letter from Ann Balfour
1 lb. Figs
A Packet of Robinsons Patent Groats for Gruel
£ s.
1
1
1
d.
9
3
3
6
0
1
8
8
6
delightful parade for the company upon leaving the machines after bathing', with
'upwards of twenty machines {being] employed every morning during the season'.
Direction posts were placed on the sands 'to prevent persons bathing openly from
approaching the machines or offending the decency of those who use them'. Bathers
waited their tum in 'several convenient waiting rooms' before entering 'cleanly and
comfortable machines, with careful and experienced guides, under whose protection
the most delicate and timid may bathe in safety'. The 'Terms of Bathing' were as
follows:
A lady taking a machine, guide included ............ .
Two or more ladies, guide included, each ........... .
A child taking a machine, guide included ............ .
Two or more young children, ditto, each ............ .
A gentleman taking a machine, guide included
A gentleman bathing himself ....................... .
Two or more gentlemen, guide included, each
Two or more gents, bathing themselves, each ........ .
No bathing on Sundays after 10 o'clock
s. d.
I 3
1 0
1 3
9
6
0
3
9
Judging from the terms so quoted Mrs. Benham would have shared a bathing
machine with at least one other female bather.
199
JOHN WHYMAN
7 Captains Biscuits for Mrs. Hunt
Copy of Burgess & Hunt's Ramsgate Guide21
Milk
Porter
Shoes
½ lb. Salt Butter
Coffee 1 oz.
Salt
4 lb. Loaf of Bread
Wednesday, August 5.
6
2 0
5
3
1
6
3
1
11¼
11 8¼
Rose at ¼ to 6, [and] proceeded to St. Lawrence Churchyard.
Returned at 8. After Breakfast accompanied Charlotte to the Beach
where she bathed after which walked on the Pier and then at ½ past
12 returned. After dinner took a Chaise and proceeded to Margate.
Went over the Infirmary22 and the New Baths on the Fort of which
Baths I bought a view. 23 Met our friend Mrs. Hagger of London on
the Pier and accepted her invitation to tea. Returned through
Broadstairs by 9 o'clock.
21 All over the country but especially in seaside resorts circulating library proprietors
branched out into publishing maps and guidebooks relevant to their localities,
an early instance occurring in August 1777 when Joseph Hall, as Margate's first
librarian, produced a map of the Isle of Thanet, from a survey by R. Bridgen, priced
at 3s. 6d. or 5s. in a case. Some librarians displayed a great interest in and knowledge
of the antiquities and topography of their area even though commercial gain was the
prime motivating force behind publications of this sort. Ownership of printing works
proved to be a considerable asset in this respect as with Messrs. Burgess and Hunt,
see above, n. 10.
'' Meaning the Margate Royal or 'General Sea Bathing Infirmary' or Hospital,
intended for poor people, suffering from scrofula or tuberculosis, coming mainly
from London, which having been founded in 1791 had opened its doors during 1796
at Westbrook, as 'the country's first hospital for tuberculosis', when sixteen patients
were admitted. Within twenty years it had treated 3,756 patients, and by 1833 was
able to accommodate over 200 patients during the summer months, in 'a neat and
plain building of considerable dimensions .... supported by voluntary contributions':
K.A.0., The Original Minutes of the Margate Infirmary, 1791-1793, 15th June, 1792;
C. Dainton, The Story of England's Hospitals, (1961), 93; The Gentleman's
Magazine, lxxxvi, Part I (January, 1816), 17; Bonner, op. cit., 103-4; Picture of
Ramsgate (1833), op. cit., 67.
23 The reference here is to Margate's Clifton Baths which a guidebook of 1828
described as being 'well worthy of notice, being equally novel and extraordinary',
R.B. Watts, A Topographical Description of the Coast between London, Margate and
Dover, (1828), 66. These famous baths were constructed during the 1820's. Their
excavation into chalk cliffs, which began in 1824, involved the removal of about
200
A TI-IREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGATE
Thursday, August 6.
Rose at 6 and continued to copy the inscriptions at St. Lawrence
from ½ past 6. . . . Returned at 8 to breakfast. The following are the
expenses of yesterday.
£ s. d.
Bathing - Mrs. Benham 1 0
A 4 Wheeled Single Horse Carr for Afternoon 9 0
Man Driver 1 0
Turnpike
4½
Put into the Infirmary Box24 10 0
Paid for Walking on the Pier at Margate ld. each25 3
A View of Clifton Baths 1 6
View of do. 2½
Milk 4
Beer 3
Cleaning Shoes 1
Biscuit 1
5 English Eggs 6
½ peck of Broad Rodney Beans 3
Apples for Pie 4
Baking 1
½ a Shoulder of Southdown Mutton 4½ lbs. at 8d.
per lb. 2 10
Quarturn of Flour 10¾
½ lb. Candles 3¾
1 9 3½
40,000 cubic yards of chalk, as the cliffs were cut down to within about six ft. of the
level of the seashore. The baths, etc., were then erected on a base of 'hard rock chalk
. .. cased with brick-work'. For a detailed description of the Clifton Baths as they
appeared in 1830 see Cooke, op. cit., xxx-xxxii.
24 Following on from n. 22 above, problems of finance were ever pressing throughout
the nineteenth century so far as the Royal Sea Bathing Hospital was concerned,
and every financial contribution, however small, was welcomed. Holidaymakers to
nineteenth-century Thanet were encouraged to visit the infirmary and while there to
donate something for its financial support.
" Under Margate's fourth Pier and Harbour Act of 1812, 52 Geo. III c. 186, it was
enacted 'that every visitant to Margate during the months of June, July, August,
September and October, who might resort to the promenade on the Pier, should for
that liberty pay one penny per day', clause lxiv. For the Margate Pier and Harbour
Company, which was constituted under the same Act, this ld. toll was one useful way
of cashing in on Margate's profitable summer trade from 1812 onwards.
201
JOHN WHYMAN
At ½ past 11 proceeded in the Carr we had yesterday (which we
hired for the day) through Cliffsend and Minster to Monkton and
copied the following Inscriptions in the Church .... From Monkton
proceeded to St. Nicholas and put up at the Bell where the host
furnishing us with plates and knives and forks and a clean Table
Cloth, and supplying us with Bread and excellent Ale, we enjoyed
the cold mutton with which we were already provided, and our
appetites exceeding our provision a few slices of excellently
flavoured Ham boiled, although cut rather clumsily, enabled us to
complete a hearty dinner. That done went to the Church where the
Monuments were so numerous that I was obliged to content myself
with tracings of the Brasses that were at all curious and such other
memorials as a very hasty visit would pennit. . . . Continuing our
intended Tour we proceeded to Birchington where at the Powell
Arms we were regaled with Tea, doubly grateful to us on account of
· the warmth of the weather.
Paid:
Carriage for the Day
Driver
Entrance into Monkton Church and for getting
the key
Drawing Paper ½ quire
Leather for the Tracings
7 Currant Buns
Gave an old Shepherd
For accommodation at St. Nicholas
For attendance do.
Entrance into St. Nicholas Church
Tea at Birchington
Man do.
Attendance
For getting into Birchington Church
Cleaning Shoes
Milk
Beer
Friday, August 7.
£ s. d.
14 0
2 6
1
5
4
1
2
9
2
6
2
0
6
6
0
8½
3½
6
1
4
l½
1 12 3½
After breakfast accompanied Charlotte to the Beach where she
bathed. Dined at ½ past 1, after which hired a boat by which we,
202
A 11-IREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGATE
i.e.: Mrs. Benham, myself and our little one, Mrs. Hunt and 2 of
her daughters, viz: Ann and Anise, and our Nursery Maid Betsy
Thornton were conveyed to Shellness near Sandwich. Drank tea at
the Red Lyon on the Sandwich Road near the Saltpans, now left to
decay there happily being no longer an opportunity of defrauding
the revenue of the duty. 26 On our return landed to pick up shells of
which we collected a great number but none curious. 27 Got to
Ramsgate Harbour at 8 o'clock all pleased with a charming
excursion ... This Day I wrote to the Works at Salisbury Square to
say we would return on Monday.
Paid:
2 Pairs of Soles
Cleaning Shoes
Milk
1 Pint of Porter
5 English Eggs
1 lb. of Brown Sugar for Pie
1 lb. Lard do.
Potatoes
1 lb. Red Currants
Baking
2 lb. Loaf
½ lb. London fresh Butter.
Boathire and 6d. extra
Tea with 6d. for attendance
Beer for the Man
½ lb. Gingerbread Cakes
£ s.
1
5
5
d.
6
1
5
3
6
7
10
2
3
1
5¾
9
6
6
6
6
17 10¾
20 According to The New Margate, Ramsgate and Broadstairs Guide, 6th Ed.,
(Margate, 1816), 126-7, salt works had been established at Stonar, being 'excellently
constructed', where 'the sea water is drawn during the summer months into open
broad shallow pans of great extent, where having continued till its more watery
particles are exhaled by the sun, it is conveyed into large boilers, and after being
further evaporated, is crystallized in the usual manner'. Fifteen years later Bonner,
op. cit., 179, confirmed that these works had ceased to operate some three years
previously, 'when the duty on this useful article of general consumption was
abolished', whereupon 'the works were taken down, and the crystallization of salt
(was) discontinued [because] the profits would no longer yield a remuneration for the
capital employed in its production'.
27 Bonner, op. cit., 86, observed how 'with the visitants and their children the
search after shells is a fashionable and daily amusement', and though there may be
'no splendid specimens on conchology . . . shells may be found of such exquisite
smallness, that many hundred may be stored in a very small bottle'.
203
JOHN WHYMAN
Saturday, August 8.
Rose at ¼ to 6 and walked till ¼ to 8. At ½ past 11 accompanied
Mrs. B- to the Beach where she bathed. Wrote to Charlotte's
eldest sister Miss Phillis Dueroz to say we should return on Monday
if all well.
Paid:
½ peck of very fine peas
1 ½ lbs. of Red Currants
1 lb. Cherries
Lettuce
Sirloin of Beef 4 lbs. at 9d.
White Currants for Eating
Paid for Bathing of Mrs. B. who gave the Guide
Mrs. Epps. ls. 28
1 Pint Porter
Milk
Washing: 1 shirt
2 Chemise
6 Neckerchiefs
2 pair Hose
1 Child's Apron
1 do. Nightgown
29 Drapers £ 8d.
1 Child's Frock
1 do. Cap
Sunday, August 9.
per doz.
£ s. d.
6
3
3
1½
3 0
2
2 0
3
5
3
4
6
2
2
1
1 7
2
1½
10 4
Rose at ¾ past 5 and walked to St. Lawrence .... At ½ past 10
went to Ebenezer Chapel and heard the Rev. Mr. Young from
Margate .... In the evening heard Mr. Goldsmith at Zion Chapel29
after which called on Mr. Hunt and bade him and his family farewell.
28 See above, n. 20, for Ramsgate's bathing arrangements and terms as they existed
in 1833.
29 These chapels are listed and shown on a Map of the Town and Royal Harbour of
Ramsgate by R. Collard and G. Hurst (1822), British Museum, 3110. (5). lt also
shows other amenities, which are mentioned in the diary and accompanying footnotes,
including the chapel of ease, Burgess's library and bank, the market, and the
bathing rooms.
204
A THREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGATE
Paid: £ s. d.
Cleaning Shoes 1
Milk 2 Days 10
Beer 6
Baking I
Candle 1
Eggs 4
2 oz. Coffee 6
For the Week's Lodging 1 11 6
A Broken Tumbler Glass 1 2
Church Collections 13 0
Attendance during the 3 Weeks Miss. C. 7s. 2d.,
Girl ls. 6d. 8 8
2 16 9
Monday, August 10.
Rose at 5 and prepared for our return home by the City of London
Steam Boat, commanded by Mr. Martin,30 whom we joined at 5
minutes before 8. Started at 8 and after a journey, which was
exceedingly wet till 12 o'clock, we arrived without accident at the
Tower at ¼ past 5 whence, taking a Coach, we reached home at ½
past 6, thankful for the kind protection of providence during our
whole excursion.
30 Capt. K.B. Martin, as author of Oral Traditions of the Cinque Ports and Their
Localities {1832) commanded The City of London Steam Packet in July 1832, 30-1.
As an employee of the General Steam Navigation Company he was a steam navigation
enthusiast who previously had commanded a sailing packet for six years earlier
in his career which also had plied between London and the Isle of Thanet, ibid., 28.
Having experience both of the old boys and steamboats, he felt well qualified to
comment on the superiority of steam navigation as he saw it in 1832. Since 1820 he
had never been obliged 'to anchor upon the passage, or put back in port in
consequence of any fault, accident, or defect in the steam machinery'. During twelve
years 'in the command of different steam vessels' he had had under his care 128,047
passengers, not one of whom had 'received the slightest personal injury'; moreover,
'if a sailing packet, to and from London and Ramsgate, fhadj conveyed 800
passengers in a month, it was thought an extraordinary affair; yet, during the last
four weeks (June{July 1832), our returns in the City of London steam packet give
5,356 persons', ibid., 29-30. The City of London Ramsgate steamer subsequently
finds mention in Charles Dickens, Sketches by 8oz (1836) in his story of 'The Tuggses
at Ramsgate'.
205
JOHN WHYMAN
Expenses of Journey Home:
Porter for Carrying Luggage to Steam Vessel31
Passage in the Steam Vessel 2 at 12s. and 1 at 10s.
Gave the Ship's Crew
£ s.
1
Bottle of Porter
Wherry to the Custom House
Porter for carrying Lugage to the Coach No. 476
Boy for getting a Coach
Jack at Waterside
Coach hired by mistake
Coach really hired
14
1
1
1
1
1
4
d.
0
0
6
6
0
6
1
2
0
6
2 5 9
The whole tone of the above diary and the meticulous attention to
detail portray a fully mature character in the person of the author,
who consistently rose early from his bed in order to pursue his
hobby of copying church inscriptions, especially at the old parochial
church of St. Lawrence,32 no doubt to the understandable annoyance
of the sexton who on the morning of Wednesday, 22nd July
was 'turned out' so that Mr. Benham might enter the church at 5.45
a.m. He was clearly fascinated by much else around him including
steamboats, the sluice gates in the harbour, the local gas works and
the town market. He was morally ashamed when bad weather
defeated his church attendance on 26th July, particularly since his
servant went off on her own accord to St. George's Church 'thus
exhibiting a faithfulness which ought to shame and stimulate me'.
Poor summer weather as an impediment to active holidaymaking is
fully confirmed in this diary on more than one occasion. 33
While there is much in this diary to interest the social historian, it
is the financial details contained therein which deserve careful
analysis and assessment. The following table shows the overall cost
of this three week holiday to Ramsgate including the journeys there
and back.
3
' Rams gate possessed officially appointed porters for conveying passengers'
luggage to and from the steam vessels in the harbour; passengers in 1833 were
advised at the London end to have their luggage 'safely deposited in its proper place',
as 'the Proprietors of the Steam Vessels are not answerable for the loss of any of the
luggage, as they make no charge for its conveyance; so it behoves the Passenger to
look after his own property', which at Ramsgate involved seeing 'your luggage safely
in possession of one of the appointed ticket porters', Picture of Ramsgate, op. cit., 4,
8.
'2 See above, n. 5 and n. 11.
'' See entries in the diary dated 3rd August and 4th August.
206
A THREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGATE
The Holiday Expenditure incurred during Three Weeks spent in
Ramsgate, July and August, 1829.
Item
Journey there
Journey back
Lodging 3 weeks
Broken tumbler
Attendance during 3 weeks
Food and drink
Lighting
Washing
Medical items
Stationery
Guides and views
Mail
Bathing, beach, boating, pier
Outings
Shoe cleaning
Charitable donations to individuals
To the Royal Sea Bathing Infirmary's box
Church collections
To the sexton of St. Lawrence's Church34
TOTAL
£ s. d.
2 9 3
2 5 9
4 14 6
1 2
8 8
Cost
£ s. d.
4 15 0
5 4 4
4 16 O¾
2 4½
8 2
3 9½
3 6
3 8½
1 4
13 3
3 4 2½
2 3
1 7
10 0
13 0
7 6
21 10 O¾d
The diary in the manner in which it was compiled relates expenditure
incurred to how the time was spent on this holiday, so that on
the downward journey, for instance, money was paid for a coach to
Tower Stairs; to a porter for handling the luggage from the coach to
a wherry, which was the means of reaching the steamboat prior to
the subsequent establishment of passenger wharves;35 to a waterman
for conveying the party and luggage to the Magnet steamboat;30 The
Times newspaper was obtained to read on the journey; the steam-
,. At least be derived some financial benefit from being summoned early in the
morning by Mr. Benham as o n 22nd July or 30th July, even though on 31st July Mr.
Benham 'failed to make the Sexton hear me knock at his door and, as the Rain came
on very heavily, I thought it better to return'.
3
' Passenger wharves may well have been under construction in the summer of 1829
since Bonner, op. cit., 3-4, could report by 1831 that in order 'to facilitate the
embarking and landing of passengers, two commodious wharfs have recently been
fonned: one close to London Bridge, and the other at St. Katherine's Docks, near the
Tower', whereby 'the public are now enabled to go on board and land with perfect
saf3e6 ty, without the aid of boats'. The Magnet is mentioned specifically in ibid., 6.
207
JOHN WHYMAN
boat fares were paid and money was put into the sailors' box. The
party disembarked at Margate and paid porterage on luggage taken
to the Ramsgate coach, which for three shillings conveyed them to
the Crown Hotel in that town, whereupon further porterage was
paid to the lodgings, which consisted of a sitting room and two
bedrooms at Mr. Cullen's in Hertford Place, situated away from the
seafront. On the return journey the City of London steamboat37 was
taken direct from Ramsgate, but firstly a porter was paid one
shilling for conveying Mr. Benham's luggage to. the steam vessel;38
money was again paid out in fares and towards the ship's crew39 and
a bottle of porter was purchased for one shilling. At Tower Stairs
further expenditure was incurred on a wherry to the Customs
House, to a porter for carrying the luggage to a coach and on coach
f ares and incidentals. The infant was conveyed both ways on the
steam vessel free of charge and the servant ten shillings either way
'attending the family'. 40 The total cost of travelling to Ramsgate and
back amounting to £4 15s. accounted for 22 per cent of the total
holiday expenditure.
The total cost of accommodation comprised two major items,
lodging and food and drink. Rent for a sitting room and two
bedrooms was paid at the weekly rate of £1 lls. 6d. at weekly
intervals on 27th July, 3rd August and 9th August. Three weeks
basic lodging plus attendance during the stay and making good the
cost of a broken tumbler glass absorbed £5 4. 4d. or almost a
quarter (24 per cent) of the total holiday expenditure. 7s. 2d. out of
the 8s. 8d. attendance money was paid for three weeks service to a
l7 See above, n. 30.
l• See above, n. 31.
l• By 1831 the London(rhanet steamboats had acquired a reputation for comfort
and luxury, which Bonner, op. ciJ., 6-7, described as follows:
'Those persons who have not been accustomed to steam-vessels, will, doubtless,
be astonished at the accommodations which they will find on board; the cabins
being fitted up in the most elegant manner, and with every possible attention to
comfort. The company are also provided with draughts, chessboards, etc., and an
excellent band of music ... It would be an act of injustice towards the stewards
were we not to notice their great activity and civility, and the excellence of the
refreshments provided. The dinner, which consists of joints, boiled and roasted,
of the very best quality; all vegetables that are in season; and pastry, wines,
dessert, etc., - is served up in a style both pleasing and surprising, when the
limited size of the kitchen is considered . . . In speaking of these accommodations,
we must not omit to notice that there is always a female attendant on
board to wait upon the ladies; . .. there is also a very neat cabin fitted up for their
particular reception.'
•° Certainly The Times during the \1820sl quoted lower fares for 'servants attending
families', one such advertisement on 28th June, 1826, inserted by the General Steam
Navigation Company on behalf of The Royal Sovereign, stating a tos. single fare for
servants.
208
A THREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGATE
Miss C., who possibly was Miss Cullen, the daughter of Mr. Cullen
who owned or occupied the house in Hertford Place where the
Benhams stayed.
Food and drink, as the second major item of accommodation
expenditure cost, £4 16s. O¾d., or just over 22 percent of the total
holiday outlay. Such is the detail of this diary that even the smallest
items of expense under this category were recorded. Breakfast and
an early afternoon dinner taken at around two o'clock were the two
major meals of the day. Breakfast at nine on the first day consisted
of 'the yolks of 2 Eggs mixed in a Pint of milk and Tea'; on the
other days breakfast was taken between 7 .30 and 8.30 on 'Tea, Eggs
and Rolls'. Dinner was a much more varied meal, consisting on the
first day of 'roasted Lamb, Peas and Currant and Raspberry Pie',
the ingredients for which cost about 5s. On the following day the
Benhams dined on 'Soles fried and Cold Lamb and potatoes and
currant and raspberry Pie', the cost of which was reduced by using
the cold left-overs of the day before, which suggests a careful
attention to the details of daily household management. The entries
for 21st and 22nd July reveal how the Benhams took advantage of
the soft fruit season and of the custom of having pies baked locally
for a penny apiece. Overall the daily accounts of expenditure are
interesting for their dietary information and for the prices paid for
bread, milk, eggs, meat, fruit, vegetables, etc.-, at that time. The
entries are such as to make it possible to calculate approximately the
cost of individual meals and more specifically the distribution of
total expenditure over the three weeks between different food items
as shown in the following table.
Expenditure on Food during three Weeks spent in Ramsgate, July
and August 1829.
Items
Meat
Bread and Flour
Butter and Eggs
Fruit
Milk
Fish
Beer and Porter
Vegetables
1 Bottle of Sherry Wine
£ s. d.
1 6 5½
12 11¾
9 3
8 10½
8 l½
7 5
6 3
3 11½
2 6
£4 5 9¾
On other items, viz: Salt, Sugar, Coffee, Lard, etc. 10 3
TOT AL £4 16 O¾
209
JOHN WHYMAN
It is often claimed that the point of a holiday is lost unless it offers
comforts and opportunities superior to those experienced normally
in everyday life. Diet and excursions are two indicators of this fact,
which seems to have been no less true of the nineteenth century
than of more recent times. The Benhams enjoyed obviously a varied
diet during their holiday, a diet revealing a high animal protein
content, with the consequence that meat formed the highest item of
food expenditure, accounting for 27 per cent of the total food bill.
Total expenditure on bread and flour did not greatly exceed that on
butter and eggs, or fruit, or milk. Not only were several visits made
to the market41 but the diary entries comment on the quality of
some of the goods purchased, such as 10d. spent on a pound of
white sugar which was 'very indifferent' ,42 as against 4½d. for a '2
lbs. Brown Loaf from the Calais Cottage - very good' ,43 or 6d. for
a half peck 'of very fine peas'. 44
The total cost of accommodation in Ramsgate embracing lodgings,
food and drink, lighting at 2s. 4½d. and washing at 8s. 2d. •s
amounted to £10 10 ll¼d. or just over 48 per cent of the total
outlay. Without the 8s. 2d. for washing, £10 2 9¼d. was allocated to
board and lodging, which is a reasonable total to set against the
boarding house terms at that time. Weekly boarding house terms in
Ramsgate in 1833 varied from two to three guineas per person,46
while for Margate 'the charges for board and lodging, where both
are good, are about two guineas per week - wine, spirits, or ale
exclusive. '47 Two adults in a boarding house at two guineas a week
for three weeks would have cost twelve guineas, without even allowing
for the infant or the domestic servant in this case. Calculations
along these lines suggest that a family could save on expenditure by
taking furnished lodgings and providing their own food compared to
the cost of hotel or boarding-house accommodation.
Excursions or outings absorbed·£3 4s. 2½d. or 15 per cent of the
total holiday expenditure. Nineteenth-century holidaymakers were
often more energetic and adventurous than some of their counter-
., On 21st July, 22nd July, 24th July, 25th July, and 1st August. No doubt
unrecorded visits by the servant to the market occurred on other days.
" On 23rd July.
43 On 3rd August.
44 On 8th August.
45 Washing bills were settled on 25th July (ll½d.), 29th July (2s. 4d.), 4th August
( ls. 6d.) and 8th August (3s. 4½d. ).
•• Picture of Ramsgate, op. cit., 17, with two guineas being quoted for Broadstairs,
ibid., 50.
41 'Amusements at Margate', Chamber's Edinburgh Journal, (Edinburgh, 1833),
156, while terms from 30s. to £2. 12. 6d. per week were quoted for Margate in a
Picture of Ramsgate, op. cit., 61.
210
A THREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGATE
parts today. Sea-bathing and sitting on the beach occupied relatively
little time compared to exploring the neighbourhood, meaning both
Ramsgate and the Thanet hinterland. The diary shows that several
varied outings were taken, and they, too, can be costed from the
details of expenditure. The carriage· excursion to Birchington on
25th July costs 9s. 2d. and involved expenditure on
s. d.
1 Pint Bottle of Sherry Wine 2 6
Biscuits at Birchington 2
1 Pint of Ale for the Man 4
Paid the Ostler 2
The Sexton for viewing the Church 1 0
The Carriage 5 0
The first four items were incurred at the Powell Arms in Birchington
amounting in total to 3s. 2d. The visit to the Shallows Tea Gardens•8
on 28th July when the Benhams were joined by Mrs. Hunt and her
eight children involved expenditure on sugar, tea, bread, butter and
water, the use of a table and service 'tho' not demanded' at a total
cost of 10s. 3d. The afternoon visit to Margate on 5th August
proved to be much more costly as the following details show:
A 4-Wheeled Single Horse Carr
Man Driver
Turnpike
Put into the Infirmary Box49
Paid for Walking on the Pier at
Margate ld. each50
A View of [the] Clifton Baths51
View of do.
TOTAL
s. d.
9 0
1 0
4½
10 0
3
1 6
2½
£1 2 4
An even larger expenditure was incurred on a day tour around
Thanet taking in Monkton, St. Nicholas and Birchington, with visits
to the Bell at St. Nicholas and the Powell Arms at Birchington,
which took place on 6th August.
•• See above, n. 16.
•• See above, n. 22 and n. 24.
50 See above, n. 25.
" See above, n. 23.
211
JOHN WHYMAN
Carriage for the Day
Driver
Entrance into Monkton Church and
for getting the Key
7 Currant Buns
For accommodation at St. Nicholas
For attendance do.
Entrance into St. Nicholas Church
Tea at Birchington
Man do.
Attendance
For getting into Birchington Church
TOTAL
s. d.
14 0
2 6
1 2
6
5 0
6
6
4 0
8½
3½
1 6
£1 10 8
The final outing of the holiday assumed quite a different form on
7th August when Mr. and Mrs. Benham, their infant and servant,
together with Mrs. Hunt and two of her daughters, indulged in an
aquatic excursion by hiring a boat which conveyed them to
S hellness, near Sandwich, and included taking tea at the Red Lion
on the Thanet-Sandwich road. On this occasion a total of 12s. was
involved with the hire of the boat from Ramsgate harbour and tea
and service each costing Ss. 6d.
All these excursions when put together illustrate very well the
diversified nature of holiday expenditure, some of it benefiting
places outside the resort in which particular visitors might be
staying. This is an important point because this diary confirms
historically the following general observation on the economics of
holidaymaking which was stated thus in 1958: 'the tourist industry
can only be seen through the eyes and the actions of the visitor', and
'it is only by obtaining a distribution of expenditure that the
importance of the tourist movement to individual trades and
business as can be clearly shown'. 52 There has always been variety in
holiday expenditure as well as many beneficiaries from it and the
Benhams were no exception in 1829, particularly since their
expenditure on outings did not exhaust their total outlay on
entertainment or amusement. The 3s. 8½d. spent on guidebooks
and views and part of the 3s. 6d. spent on stationery was money
spent with outings in mind. Yet another fairly sizeable item of
expenditure under the broad heading of entertainment was the 13s.
3d. spent on bathing, the beach, boating and the pier. On two
si L.J. Lickorish & A.G. Kershaw, The Travel Trade, (1958), 57.
212
A THREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGATE
occasions chairs were hired for sitting on the beach, 53 while being
rowed out of the harbour for an hour on 30th July cost 2s., not
forgetting the twopence spent on fruit on the beach for Mrs. Hunt's
children on 3rd August. Adding together the money spent on
outings, bathing, the beach, boating, piers, guides and views a total
sum is reached of £4 ls. 2d., equal to almost 19 per cent of the
Benhams' total holiday expenditure.
Miscellaneous expenditure on medical items (3s. 9½d. ),
stationery (3s. 6d.), mail (ls. 4d.), shoe cleaning (2s. 3d.), charitable
donations to individuals (ls. 7d. ), a 10s. donation to the
Margate Royal Sea Bathing Infirmary, church collections ( 13s.) and
7s. 6d. to the sexton of St. Lawrence Church abosrbed £2 2.s. 11 ½d. The diary fully relates how and why some of these smaller outlays
came about. The stationery purchases included red ink, an Indian
rubber, a black lead pencil, black ink, a memorandum book,
drawing paper and 'Leather for the Tracings'. 54 Among the medical
items purchased was a box of 'Anderson's Scot's Pills' for ls. l½d. on 28th July. The ls. 4d. for mail was paid on two letters from
London which were delivered on 29th July and 4th August. Among
the charitable donations to individuals was 3d. to 'an aged woman'
on 4th August, followed two days later by 2d. to 'an old Shepherd',
as against only a penny on 30th July to 'a poor man with one arm
only - but suspicious'. Generosity prevailed in the shilling given on
23rd July to 'a Poor Man who had lately lost his leg by accident'.
Finally, shoe-cleaning was a lowly occupation which by no means
was bypassed in the expenses of a holiday. Sums varying from 4d. to
a penny were spent on having boots and shoes cleaned on fifteen of
the twenty days actually spent residing in Ramsgate. 55 This was no
isolated phenomenon for during July, 1795, The General Evening
Post had noticed how the humble profession of shoe-cleaning had
benefited from the expenditure incurred in holidaymaking, for
'there is, we are told, a man at Margate exercising the profession of
a shoe-black who contrives every season to lay up somewhat more
than £100!!!'56 This interesting revelation obviously caught the
paper's fancy, for a few days later it remarked that 'this may literally
be said to be picking money out of the dirt'. 46
Having now analysed the expenditure details of this three week
s3 On 22nd July and on 1st August.
S4 On 22nd July, 25th July, 4th August, and 6th August.
55 On 22nd July, 24th July, 25th July, 27th July, 28th July, 29th July, 30th July, 31st
July, 1st August, 3rd August, 4th August, 5th August, 6th August, 7th August, and
9th August.
so The General Evening Post, 9th - 11th July, 1795.
s7 Ibid., 14th - 16th July, 1795.
213
JOHN WHYMAN
holiday to Ramsgate during July and August, 1829, the following
table shows how the overall expenditure was allocated in percentage
terms.
Percentage Breakdown of the Holiday Expenditure incurred during
three Weeks in Ramsgate, July and August, 1829.
%
The Journey there and back 22
Accommodation, viz: 48
Lodgings (24 per cent)
Food and drink (22 per cent)
Lighting
Washing
Entertainment, viz: 19
Outings ( 15 per cent)
Bathing, boating, etc.
Guides and views
Miscellaneous - medical items, 11
stationery, shoe-cleaning,
charitable and church donations
100
It is interesting to compare how the findings in the above table
closely match those of the mid-twentieth century.
A Modern Analysis of Total Holiday Expenditure. 58
British Holidaymakers Overseas Visitors
in U.K. % in U.K. %
Accommodation, meals
and drinks 52 45
Inland transport 21 20
Entertainment and
miscellaneous 15 20
Shopping 12 15
100 100
The detailed and unique diary which has been the subject of this
article is an important document of nineteenth-century English
social history. It shows how a holiday for three people, taking that is
s, 1.U.0.T.O., International Travel Statistics, (1951), quoted also by Lickorish &
Kershaw, op. cit., 57.
214
A THREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGATE
the servant and the infant in this case as one person, for three weeks
in Ramsgate in 1829 cost £21. 10. O¾d., which averages out at £7. 3.
4¼d. per person; £7. 3. 4¼d. per week; and £2. 7. 9½d. per person
per week.
215
JOHN WHYMAN
ST. LAWRENCE
is a pleasant village, half a mile from Ramsgate. It stands on a tolerably high hill, and
therefore commands a delightful view of the bay in front, and of the picturesque
country and scenery around it. The parish derives its name from the saint to whom
THE CHURCH
PLATE I
is dedicated; this is a very ancient building, particularly the tower, which is of Saxon
architecture of the earlier ages. It was formerly one of the chapels belonging to
Minster, but in 1275 it was made parochial, by Robert, Archbishop of Canterbury,
upon certain conditions, one of which was, that the burial fees should be paid to the
mother church, at Minster. The chancel contains many ancient monuments of the
Spracklings and Thatchers.
Source: G. W. Bonner, The Picturesque Pocket Companion to Margate, Ramsgate,
Broadstairs, and the Parts adjacent, (1831), 169-71.
216
PLATE II
r1.:_:·-
-4.
-'- ·.
¥}:,
;:
ST. GEORGE'S CHURCH
is one of those buildings which have arisen out of the liberal grant made by parlia
ment, and placed at the disposal of the commissioners. It is a handsome Gothi<
structure, computed to have been erected at an expense of more than £24,000, whid
was partly produced by the church commissioners, and partly by subscriptions and
parochial rates. This church was designed by Mr. Helmsley, who however. it is to be
regretted, did not live to witness its completion, and to enjoy the fame which he
would certainly have derived from its elegance and beauty. The tower forms a very
prominent feature, and is very generally admired for its boldness of design and
chasteness of execution.
Source: Bonner, op. cit., 157.
217
JOHN WHYMAN
PLATE III
SHALLOWS
PLATE IV
is in the parish of, and very near to, St. Peter's. Here we find the first Baptist chapel
erected in the island; it is now only used as a baptistry by the Rev. W.T. Cramp, the
worthy, highly respected, and truly Christian minister of the congregation of Baptist
dissenters, who now assemble in a new chapel at St. Peter's, which was purchased for
them by their very liberal and wealthy pastor.
Here are also tea gardens, which, though of a much humbler character than
Ranelagh, possess many, and perhaps equal, attractions for the lovers of quiet scenes
and country joys.
Source: Bonner, op. cit., 196--7.
218
A TI-IREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGATE
PLATE V
... ii. -
Source: A Treasury of Kent Prints: A Series of Views from original Drawings contained
in W.H. Ireland, A new and complete History of the County of Kent
(1828-1831), (Sheerness, 1972), Plate 23.
219
JOHN WHYMAN
PLATE VI
JACOB'S LADDER
is the medium of communication between the pier and Nelson's Crescent, but its very
great convenience can only be properly appreciated by those who are well acquainted
with the localities of Ramsgate. It is an elegant and substantial stone structure, and
is, in truth, well worth examination: it consists of ninety-two steps, the fatigue of
ascending which, and reaching the top of the cliff, which is here more than fifty feet
high, is greatly diminished by an occasional landing-place. This structure was begun
in March, 1826, and finished in September following, at an expense of several
thousand pounds; and while it reflects the greatest credit upon the liberality and
public spirit of the Pier and Harbour Trustees, is equally creditable to the clever
architect by whom it was designed. The old ladder was an ingenious wooden one, of
curious construction, but being unsafe and decayed, it was very properly removed. It
was built to shorten the journey of the workmen employed on the Western Head.
Among the traditions of this place, we find that a daring smuggler, while pursued by
Excise riding officers, and seeing no other way to escape capture, boldly galloped up
these stairs, - most certainly a very hazardous, but by no means impossible,
performance.
Source: Bonner, op. cit., 155-6.
220
A THREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGATE
Source: A Treasury of Kent Prints, op. cit., Plate 14.
221
PLATE VII
JOHN WHYMAN
PLATE VIII
THE
ROYAL SEA BATHING INFIRMARY
- =-
-·
-.· ; ·-.
situate at Westbrook, was opened in 1796, under the patronage of the King, and was
then called simply the Sea Bathing Infirmary; but in 1821, his late Majesty
commanded it to be called by the present name, accompanying his desire with a
donation worthy of George the Fourth. This building has been from time to time
enlarged, and is at present capable of affording accommodation to more than 200
scrophulous patients who are admitted for the summer months; but it is to be hoped
that ere long, the benefits of this very valuable institution will be continued for a
longer period, and then the curative effects of sea air and bathing will be more
durable and certain.
The mode of obtaining admission may be known by application to Mr. J. Rainbow,
35 Cannon Street, London; or to Mr. W.A. Hunt, Library, Ramsgate.
There are few public charitable establishments so extensively useful, or which
afford so great blessings to the indigent sick; and when we consider the dreadful
malady which sea air, and sea-bathing, are alone calculated to relieve, we shall easily
understand why the wealthy, - having themselves perhaps, experienced their
restorative power, - should have kindly hastened to extend their sanative influence
to the suffering and necessitous poor.
Source: Bonner, op. cit., 103-4.
222
A 1HREE-WEEK HOLIDAY IN RAMSGATE
PLATE IXa
· " LJ,;hth
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