Desperate Villains – The Hawkhurst Gang in West Sussex

By Jenny Bettger, Archives Assistant (Research) Walking along Broyle Road in Chichester you will find a large stone with a faded inscription.  Known as ‘The Smugglers Stone’, it records the execution of six members of the notorious Hawkhurst Gang in 1749.  From their base in Kent, this gang controlled much of the smuggling trade along…

Poverty and Punishment – the Glue family

By Jenny Bettger, Research Assistant When researching genealogy, you often come across individuals or family groups that stand out.  This was the case for me with the Glue family, who I discovered when I was looking at families with longstanding links to the Rogate area.  The Glues, or Clues, as they were also known, were…

Murder, They Wrote…in the register of baptisms

Please note that this blog post contains some graphic descriptions of injury. By Victoria Evans, Searchroom Archivist Working in an archive allows you the opportunity to stumble upon unexpected pieces of history and how it was recorded. As we answer enquiries on all manner of subjects it is sometimes too easy to fall down a…

The (futile) war on smuggling: Accounts from the archives

By Alice Millard, Research Assistant. In the archive, there is a report from 1806 (Add Mss 2610) which its author endorsed as "a most stupid, bombast report drawn by me for Captn. Lepper touching Smuggling." It's author, Job Gipps, was the Commander of the "Hawk" Revenue Cutter moored at Littlehampton. Gipps spent his days patrolling…