Press Gang

Britain may have ruled the waves with its huge navy of sailing ships but the only way it could man all those ships was by impressment or the ‘press gang’. From the late 17th century until the early 19th century men between the ages of 18-55 could be forced to serve in the navy. Today we’d probably call it kidnapping!

Charles Joseph Staniland, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

The navy preferred sea faring men so merchant seaman and fishermen were liable to be ‘pressed’ and this made coastal communities particularly vulnerable. Merchant seamen ashore (easily identifiable by their uniforms) would be asked to volunteer to join the navy, if they refused they could be seized or plied with drink and taken. Many seamen were ‘pressed’ whilst at sea. Their ships, usually homeward bound, would be stopped and the merchant seamen seized and placed on the navy ships.

Understandably the press gangs were very unpopular and fights often broke out when men were seized from their communities. Wives and children suffered from poverty and hardship when their husbands and fathers were seized. Having been seized it was difficult to return and deserters could face the death penalty.

The Neglected Tar – Unknown author, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

At Trafalgar half of the navy’s 120,000 men were pressed into service.

Richard Lanyon of Marazion

This post is about Richard Lanyon of Marazion and what happened when the Press Gang arrived in town.

Richard was born in 1770 the youngest son of William Lanyon and Florence Michell. In 1794 he married his cousin Jane Lanyon (the daughter of James Lanyon and Catherine Brownfield) at St Hilary in Cornwall. (See St Hilary branch of the Lanyon tree.)

Richard was the blacksmith at Marazion. The town opposite St Michael’s Mount.

Richard also served as a sergeant in the 2nd Regiment of Mount’s Bay Volunteers. Britain was at war with France and all over the country there were volunteer regiments prepared to defend the country in the event of an invasion.

Marazion : St Michael’s Mount Wall Painting by Lewis Clarke, CC BY-SA 2.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

On the 9 October 1804 the volunteers had been at a field day practising their fighting skills. The day went well and the officers bought the men a ‘few’ drinks to celebrate. That evening the press gang, led by Lieutenant Andrew Wills arrived in town in search of seamen who had deserted. Accompanied by the constable they went to a home expecting to find one of the deserters, instead they found Richard Lanyon with several others.

Richard was still wearing his uniform, sash and sword and several of the men with him still had on their volunteer uniforms. Lanyon in particular abused and insulted the lieutenant and his party and obstructed them in searching for the deserters. “Lanyon then ordered the drum to beat to arms and sent for ball cartridges.” A great riot ensued and the lieutenant and his people in their retreat to their boat were pelted with stones, fired at with ‘balls’ and some of them were assaulted.

A letter to Earl Spencer from J. Le Blanc explaining what had happened stated “Lanyon was somewhat intoxicated“!

Richard and his nephews James and Benjamin Rodda were arrested and tried before Mr Baron Graham at the summer assizes at Bodmin in 1805. They were convicted on an indictment charging them with “riotously and tumultuously assembling with many other persons armed at Marazion in Cornwall with intent to obstruct one Andrew Wills and others in the execution of a warrant to impress seamen…

The trial was the transferred to the Court of the King’s Bench in Westminster, London.

The Roddas were sentenced to one year in prison and Lanyon was sentenced to two years. After a year he appealed for an early release. Mr Gryles, a gentleman of considerable property in Marazion, gave a reference and stated that Lanyon was of previous good character and always a ‘man of fair and upright character’, he also had a wife and several children who had suffered ‘the severest deprivations by means of the long confinement’ but the appeal fell on deaf ears and Richard served two years.

Richard eventually returned home and was still living in Marazion in 1841. He’s listed on the census living with his youngest daughter Julia. His wife Jane had died in 1820. Richard died shortly after the 1841 census.

Press gangs finally came to an end with the fall of Napoleon in 1815.

James Lanyon’s Grandsons

James and Mary had two sons and five grandsons to carry on the family name.

Thomas Lanyon 1750-1823

Thomas was baptised at Breage in 1750, he was a tinner at St Michael’s Mount and married Sibella Dusting/Disting at St Hilary in 1778. They had four children:

  • Catharine 1778-1779 died in infancy
  • Catharine 1781- in 1822 a Catherine Lanyon married Richard James at Breage could be this Catharine?
  • Thomas 1783-1859
  • William 1791-1871

Thomas senior was buried at St Hilary in 1823. Sibella was buried there in 1830.

Cornish Tin Mne – Internet Archive Book Images, No restrictions, via Wikimedia Commons

James Lanyon 1758-bef. 1851

James was baptised at Breage in 1758, he too was a tinner and he married Ann Sirrell at Breage in 1789 (William Lenine was a witness). They had eight children:

  • Margaret 1790-1872 baptised at Germoe in 1790 and two possible marriages may be hers – William Pearce 1809 at Germoe and George Gregory 1838 at Uny Lelant – two children from the marriage to George
  • Ann 1791-1873 she married William Bosanko at Germoe in 1834 no children
  • Catherine 1793-1883 in 1818 she gave birth to an illegitimate daughter at Sithney (Catherine Lanyon of Rosladen, Breage). In 1822 she married Richard James a miner at Breage – three daughters. Catherine died at Germoe aged 90.
  • Florence 1796-1875 she married Joseph Thomas at Germoe in 1821 – six children
  • William 1799-1854 was a tin miner, he married Mary Curnow at Germoe in 1822 and they had four children: William 1824 no further trace, Maria 1827-aft. 1901 married John Thomas – six children and two daughters who died in infancy. He then married Ann Beckerleg in 1834 and they had one daughter.
  • Elizabeth 1805- had an illegitimate son William baptised at Germoe in 1826 no further trace of him. Elizabeth then married William Peters at Germoe in 1829
  • Mary 1807- no further trace
  • James 1810-1829 he died age 19 at Germoe

There is no one traceable to continue James’ line. He died before 1851, his widow is listed on the 1851 census as living with her widowed daughter Ann Bosanko and is described as a pauper aged 83.

1851 Census for Germoe

John Lanyon 1763-1835

John was baptised at Breage in 1763 and like his brothers he was a tinner. He married Florence Michell (a relative of his mother) in 1789 at Breage. Their only daughter Ann was baptised at Germoe in Sep 1790, her mother Florence was buried in Jan 1791 aged just 28. Ann married James Provis at St Hilary in 1815.

John married for a second time in Aug 1792 at Breage to Catherine Pope (Witnesses Richard Michell and Thomas Kitto). They had three children:

  • John 1793-1869
  • William 1795-1802 died young
  • Florence Michell 1797-1864 she married Michael Benny at Helston in 1818, they had six children and she died in London in 1864

John senior died at Germoe in 1835 age 77 which gives him a date of birth of 1758, he could have been baptised when he was age 5 or his family may have miscalculated his age when he died.

There were lots of mines in the Germoe/Breage/St Hilary area.

Mines

We don’t know which mines they worked in but this film will give you an idea of what it was like.

Richard Lanyon 1770-aft. 1841

Richard was baptised at Germoe in 1770, he was a blacksmith at Marazion. He married his cousin Jane Lanyon at St Hilary in 1794. They had eight children:

  • William 1794-1871
  • Richard 1796-1797 died in infancy
  • Jennifer Jane 1797-1877 married Charles Gundry, a farmer, three children
  • Richard 1799-1835 died age 35 at Marazion, unmarried
  • Catherine 1802- aft. 1881 married John Roberts, a miner, she was still alive in 1881 and according to the census her two daughters Eliza (tailoress) and Jane (dressmaker) were living with her and her grandson William, illegitimate son of one of the daughters.
  • John 1804-1806 died in infancy
  • Mary John 1806-she married Thomas Harris Roberts at St Hilary in 1841 no further trace
  • Julia 1809-1843 living with her father on the 1841 census and dead by 1843

Richard senior was still alive in 1841 and living with youngest daughter Julia but after that no trace of his death. He’s often confused with the Richard Lanyon who died at Lostwithiel in 1848.

Victorian Blacksmith – Summer A. Smith, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

James Lanyon 1759-1848

James was the son of James and Catherine Brownfield. He was baptised at Breage in 1759 and married Grace Harry at Germoe in 1790. They had five children:

  • James 1790- he was a labourer and married Christian Arthur at Breage in 1812, one daughter Mary Anne baptised at Camborne in 1812. There is a Christian Lanyone on the 1841 census living at Helston but no sign of her husband. No further trace.
  • John 1794-bef. 1796 died in infancy
  • John 1796-bef. 1808 died in infancy
  • Jennifred 1799- no further trace
  • John 1808-1855

James’ wife Grace Harry died in 1815. In 1819 he married again in Mawgan in Meneage to Ann Rogers. They had one son:

  • Thomas 1819-1855

James died at Mullion in 1848 and Ann Rogers died in 1863 at Mullion.

Out of the five grandsons of James Lanyon and Mary Pearce there were only five great grandsons with children to follow.