
05/05/2025
This mugshot, taken in the 1870s, shows a man worn down by hardship. His tattered jacket and tired eyes reflect a life of relentless struggle.
Samuel Tappenden was born in the 1820s, a time when poverty gripped much of England and starvation was a constant threat to working-class families. His father, Thomas, earned a living as a brickmaker, backbreaking labour that involved digging clay, moulding it by hand, and firing it in kilns. The pay for labourers was one of the lowest in society, but like his father, Samuel took up the same trade. In 1841, the Tappenden family lived in Keymer, a rural village in West Sussex. The dwelling was right near the local brickyard, surrounded by many other families employed in the same industry.
By 1850, Samuel had moved to London, where he married Louisa Crush at St Peter’s Church in Eaton Square, a notable Anglican church in the heart of the city. However, their union appears to have been troubled. Within a decade, the couple were living apart. He was boarding with the Hieron family in Farnborough and Louisa had moved in with her sister’s family in Hackney, where she found work in the laundry sector.
Tragically, Louisa died just two years later, in 1863, from pulmonary tuberculosis at the age of 38. Her death certificate listed no known details about her husband, even stating uncertainty about whether she was widowed or a spinster. Samuel was not present at her death. In 1871, Samuel reappeared in the records, living in Willesden on Canterbury Road, listed as “married” and sharing a home with a woman named Elizabeth. However, no certificate has been found to confirm that they were legally married.
His life continued to unravel and, in 1873, he was arrested for stealing a shirt — a petty crime that hinted at desperation. He was sentenced to 21 days of hard labour at Wandsworth Prison. Samuel continued to fall deeper into poverty and ended up at St George’s Workhouse in 1876, an institution for society’s most destitute. He died there in December of that year from bronchitis, aged 50.
Samuels' story would not have been all that unfamiliar for a working-class individual—petty theft for necessities, stints in the workhouse, and a life of social marginalisation.