Birmingham Daily Gazette: Wednesday 24th March 1909

Mrs. Hume Pinsent and Claims of Married Women: The Women’s Local Government Society held a public meeting in Caxton Hall, Westminster, yesterday, in support of Dr. Shipman’s Local Government Qualification Bill, whereby a residential qualification for a candidate for county and town councils will suffice as it now does for all other Local government bodies. … … Mrs. Allan Bright (Liverpool) moved a resolution urging the Government to adopt Dr. Shipman’s Bill and asking it to consider the serious loss to the public service caused by allowing the electoral disabilities of married women to preclude them from serving on town and county councils, and by the fact that lack of a vote excluded many highly qualified single women who were living with their parents or other relatives. Mrs. Hume Pinsent (Birmingham Education Committee) seconded, remarking that women had done valuable work in Birmingham on the School Board and as Guardians and the Lord Mayor and some of the aldermen and councillors had expressed regret that the recent legislation did not enable married women to secure seats on county and borough councils. There ought to be only one qualification for public-service, capacity to serve. The speaker declared that the conditions of insane women and children would be greatly ameliorated if there were one capable woman on every asylum committee of the country. (applause). She believed that the presence of women on councils would lead to the careful attention to details which was so necessary to secure good and economical management. (applause). Miss Mable Atkinson supported, and the resolution was carried. It was decided to send copies to Mr. Asquith and Mr. Burns.


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive


Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

The Queen: Saturday 20th March 1909

Local Government Qualification Act: A public meeting will be held at the Caxton Hall on Tuesda next, the 23rd inst. at 4,30 p.m. in support of Dr. Shipman’s bill. Mr. Walter S. B. McLaren will preside, and the speakers will be Mrs. Pinsent (Birmingham Education Committee), Mrs. Allan Bright (Liverpool), Miss Lucy Moreland (Croydon Education Committee), and Mrs. Ashton (Brighton). Mr. Will Crooks, M.P., hopes to be present to speak. Dr. Shipman’s bill applies to the case of county and borough councils a provision of the Local Government Act, 1894, whereby a residential qualification is made alternative with the electoral qualification for being eligible to sit on boards of guardian district and parish councils. It would enable many women to offer themselves as candidates for election to town and county council’s who are not ineligible, owing to marriage or to residence in their parents’ house.


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive


Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Birmingham Daily Gazette: Friday 19th March 1909

Work of Laundry Homes: Mrs. Hume Pinsent and Care of the Feeble-Minded: The annual meeting of the Birmingham Laundry and Industrial Homes was held yesterday afternoon at the Council House, Canon Denton Thompson presiding … … The Homes met the needs of the danger to which the girls of feeble minded were frequently exposed, and they rescued girls from all kinds of evil, moral and social. The Homes must also be of inestimable benefit and relief to poor parents struggling with large families (applause). Mrs. Hume Pinsent in seconding the motion said they were not within reasonable distance of receiving state assistance in dealing with congenital deficiencies. … 


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive


Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Worthing Gazette: Wednesday 17th March 1909

Caring for the Mentally Defective:  A Pathetic Movement: Special Local School Suggested: The work of caring for the mentally defective was brought prominently before the local public on Friday afternoon when a meeting was held at St. James’s Hall. There was a fair attendance, largely compound of ladies and all listened with much attention to the long but interesting address which was given by Mrs. Hume Pinsent of Birmingham, who was a member of the Royal Commission on the Care and Control of the Mentally Defective which sat last year and issued a voluminous report on the matter. … …  Mrs. Hume Pinsent to the audience, and that lady, in commencing her address, read a number of extracts from the report of the Royal Commission on the Mentally Defective. It stated that there were, in the country, 149,000 people who were mentally defective, which was one out of nearly every three hundred people. Out of this number 66,000 needed urgent provision, either in their own interest or in the interest of the community. What they wanted was unity of control and the continuity of the control. At the present time there was no authority for dealing with these people. They came into contact with many, but they were not under the control of any. The Royal Commission had advised special Schools for the mentally defective children, and it was said that at the present time there were 35,000 children in need of such education. There should be Special Schools and Special Teachers: If they adopted the proposal then they would find what it would lead to. Every child improved with care, and she had never known one to go wrong. Mrs. Pinsent then dealt at some length with the trouble that these defective people gave and detailed what a great amount of looking after they required. The adoption of the Royal Commission’s report would, she said, put an end to all the cases of neglect and cruelty: At their Homes at Earlswood the education lasted two years, and it was wonderful how they could be taught different things. They made mats and baskets and were quite proficient in their work. … (continues)


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive


Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Saffron Walden Weekly News: Friday 12th March 1909

Care of the Feeble-Minded: Royal Commissioner’s Address: New Act Suggested: Interesting Comments & Discussion: An exhaustive address on “The care control of feeble minded” was given by Mrs. Hume Pinsent at the Council Chamber Cambridge on Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Pinsent is one of the leading authorities on this subject, and besides being Chairman of Special Schools Sub-Committee of the Birmingham Education Committee, she was member of the Royal Commission on the Care and Control of the Feeble Minded and, was so able to deal with first-hand knowledge of the recommendations of the Commission. The mayor (Mr. W. P. Spalding) presided and amongst present were Sir T. Clifford Allbutt, Prof. Bateson, Prof. Inge, Prof. Howard Marsh, Dr. Wingate, Mr. Darwin, Mr. E. H. Parker, and Mr. Turner (superintendent of the Eastern Counties Asylum at Colchester). The Chairman said the subject on which Mrs. Pinsent was about to speak, was, by no means, a new one to many of them. Many people were interested in the welfare and treatment of feeble minded people and he hoped they did some little good in the district in helping some of the feeble minded in that admirable institution at Colchester. The question upon which Mrs. Pinsent was to speak was the Royal Commission which had been held on the subject, and it seemed to him a subject deserving the most careful consideration. The main recommendation of the Commission, he supposed, was that the care of the feeble minded should be undertaken by a committee of the County Council, subject to a board of Control. Undoubtedly it was a great responsibility that the feeble minded should be taken charge of, but how a new system was to be brought into operation without injuring the voluntary system which at present existed was to his mind a question of extreme difficulty. But they must not forget the chief thing to be considered was the lives of the feeble minded and if the voluntary institutions were not able to provide for all the feeble minded in any given district it stood to reason that they ought not to allow the evil to exist:  The Chairman announced letters of regret inability to attend from Bishop of Ely Canon Stanton and Mr. Butcher M.P.: Mrs.  Pinsent commenced by pointing out that number of mentally defective persons in England and Wales, apart from certified lunatics, was estimated 149,628 or .46 of the population. Of these 66,509 were estimated to be urgently in need of provision either in their own interest or for the public safety. Only such cases were included as were, in the opinion of the investigators improperly, unsuitably, or unkindly cared for, or who, by reason of particular habits and characteristics, were a source of danger to the community in which they lived. The total number of mentally defective persons including certified lunatics, might be estimated at 271,607 or .83 per cent.  of the population. The great majority of these 270,000 were not only a burden on the resources of this generation but were producing children who in turn would have to be supported and cared for at the expense of the next generation. The Commissioners in their report said: “There are numbers of mentally defective persons whose training is neglected over whom no sufficient control is exercised and whose wayward and irresponsible lives are productive crime and misery, injury and mischief to themselves and to others, and of much continuous expenditure wasteful to the community and to individual families. We find local ‘permissive’ systems of public education are available here and there for a limited section mentally defective children, and which, even if it be useful during the years of training, is supplemented by no subsequent supervision and control, and is in consequence often misdirected and unserviceable. We find large numbers of persons who are committed to prisons for repeated offences which, being the manifestations of a permanent defect of mind that there is no hope of repressing, much less of stopping, by short punitive sentences. We find lunatic asylums crowded with patients who do not require the careful hospital treatment that well-equipped asylums now afford, and who might be treated in other ways more economically and efficiently. We find, also, at large in the population mentally defective persons, adults, young persons, and children, who are some in one way and some in another, incapable of self control, and who are, therefore exposed to constant moral danger themselves, and brome the source of lasting injury to the community. That was the picture the Commissioners had drawn for them, and to remedy that state of affairs they suggested a new Act for the care and control of the mentally defective. A full explanation of the Act was impossible, and she would therefore only deal with its fundamental provisions. Her first point would be the unity of control. The Commissioners recommended that there should be one single authority to supervise and regulate all provisions made for the accommodation, maintenance, care, treatment, education, training, and control of the mentally defective and that this central authority should be called the Board of Control. In order to carry this out they suggested there should be a new Act, and this new Act should contain all the necessary provisions of the Lunacy and Idiots Act combined with any additional statutory powers necessary to extend the protection afforded by those Act to all degrees of mental defect, and also to bring a complete scheme for their care and control into operation. The principle was that which was  already adopted in the Lunacy and Idiots’ Act that those who by reason of mental defect could not take part in the struggle of life should be afforded State protection suited to their needs. That principle was proposed to extend to all grades of mental defect. Many mentally defective persons were dealt with as paupers or criminals but there was at present no means of dealing with them primarily as mentally defective. It was thus necessary to know who and where the mentally-defective were. She believed that in Cambridge there were no special schools, and they therefore did not know how many defectives they had or what kind of care and control they would need in the future. If they had adopted the Epileptic Act they would know these things, and they would also know how defective the Act was. It was further suggested, said Mrs. Pinsent, that the present Lunacy Commission, enlarged and strengthened, should constitute the Board of Control, that England and Wales should be divided into at least eight suitable districts, and that an Assistant District Commissioner should be appointed to each district. It was in local efforts to train and control the mentally defective that the need for one single authority was most urgently felt. It was shown by the evidence that the mentally defective were perpetually coming into contact with different local authorities and were permanently cared for by none. This condition of things clearly indicated the need for one authority exercising continuous control, and the Commission had therefore to consider which local authority would be the most suitable. The Commissioners, after much careful consideration, decided that the Education Authority and the Poor Law were not suitable, but that by following the precedent of the Lunacy Acts all the mentally defective could be dealt with under the same authority. The Commissioners recommended that the local authorities should be the council of each county and county borough, and that they should be required by statute to make suitable and sufficient provision for the mentally defective. It was further suggested that they should exercise the powers which it was proposed to confer on them through a statutory committee which should be called the committee for the care of the mentally defective and should take over the duties of the Visiting Committee, or what was sometimes called the Asylums Committee of the County Council. They further recommended that the statutory committees should co-opt additional members of special experience of whom one at least should a woman, and that a medical officer should be appointed by the County Council to assist the committee for the care of the mentally-defective, This brought her to her second point, the continuity of control for the Commission recommended that, subject certain safeguards, in cases not under suitable parental or other control, the committee might resolve that until the child reached the age of 21 all the powers and rights of the parent should be in the committee. When the age of 21 years was reached, it was recommended that the committee should report to the Board of Control as to their condition who would decide what further steps should be taken view the continuance of such persons care and control. Mrs. Pinsent further urged the segregation of the defective as the chief means to prevent birth of mentally- defectives. … DISCUSSION: … Some of those present then contributed their views. Professor Bateson expressed appreciation of Mrs. Pinsent’s most masterly address. A most difficult question had, he thought, been dealt with in a way likely to lead to real and profitable results in the future. … … (continues in a like manner) … … 


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive


Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Cambridge Independent Press: Friday 12th March 1909

Care of the Feeble Minded: Interesting Address at Cambridge by one of the Royal Commissioners: At a largely attended meeting, arranged by the Cambridge Committee for the care of the Feeble Minded, and held in the Council Chamber of the Guildhall, on Saturday evening, Mrs. Hume Pinsent, a member of the Royal Commission on the care and control of the Feeble Minded, gave an interesting address on this most important subject. The mayor (Mr. W. P. Spalding) presided and was supported by Sir T. Clifford Allbutt. Professor Bateson, Professor Inge. Dr. Wingate, Mr. E. H. Parker. Mr. Horace Darwin, and Mr. Turner (Supt. of the Eastern Counties Asylum at Colchester). Apologies for absence were announced to have been received from the Bishop of Ely. Mr. H. Butcher, M.P., and Canon Stanton. In introducing Mrs. Pinsent, the Mayor remarked that the subject which she was about to speak on was by no means a new one. Many of them for a long time had been interested in the welfare and treatment of the feeble minded, and they hoped that they had done some little good in the district in helping to get a large number of the feeble minded into the admirable institution at Colchester—(applause)—which treated them so happily and frequently beneficially. Mrs. Pinsent would speak to them about the Royal Commission appointed to go into the question, and it seemed to him was a question deserving of most careful consideration. THE MAIN RECOMMENDATION of the Royal Commission was that the care of the feebleminded should be undertaken by a committee of the County Council, subject to a Board of Control. It was a great national responsibility that the feeble minded should be taken care of but how a new system could be brought into operation without injuring the voluntary system which at present existed was, to his mind, a question of extreme difficulty. They had no doubt an inclination to regard with suspicion any proposals that would in any way interfere with the institutions, which had admittedly been doing good work hitherto, but whilst both sides of the question would have to be taken into account, they must not forget that the chief thing to be considered was the feeble minded themselves. (Hear, hear.) If the voluntary institutions were not able to provide for all the feeble minded in any given district it stood to reason that they ought not to be content to allow the evil to exist and the terrible misery the feeble minded frequently brought upon the homes in which they were located. (Applause.) MRS. PINSENT’S ADDRESS: Mrs. Pinsent pointed out that the report of the commission showed that the number of mentally defective persons in England and Wales, apart from the certified lunatics, was estimated at 149,000, which was very nearly one to every 200 of the population. Of these about 65,000 were at present urgently in need of provision, either in their own interests or in the interests of public safety. In these figures, they were told, only such cases were included as were the opinion of the investigators improperly, unsuitably, or unkindly cared for, or by reason of the characteristics were a source of danger to the community. If they added to these figures the number of certified lunatics, they found the total number of mentally defective persons over 271,000 or very nearly one in every 100 of the population. These figures did not convey the full GRAVITY OF THE SITUATION because these people could never pay back to the community the equivalent of the time, energy, and money spent upon them. Not only were they a burden on the resources of this generation but they were producing children who, in their turn, would have to be supported by the labour and at the expense of the next generation. The difficulty of supplying adequate, and at the same time humane provision for this vast number of people presented a grave problem. In their, report the commissioners said: — “There are numbers of mentally-defective persons whose training is neglected, over whom no sufficient control exercised, and whose wayward and irresponsible lives are productive of crime and misery, of much injury and mischief to them-selves and to others, and of much continuous expenditure WASTEFUL TO THE COMMUNITY, and to individual families. We find a local and ’permissive’ system of public education, which is available, here and there, for limited section of mentally-defective children and which, even if it be useful during the years of training, is supplemented by no subsequent supervision and control, and is in consequence often misdirected and unserviceable. We find large numbers of persons who are committed to prisons for repeated offences, which, being the manifestations of permanent defect of mind, there is hope of repressing, much less of stopping, by short punitive sentences. We find LUNATIC ASYLUMS CROWDED with patients who do not require the careful hospital treatment that well-equipped asylums now afford, and who might be treated in many other ways more economically, and as efficiently. We find also, at large in the population, many mentally defective persons, adults, young persons, and children, who are some in one way, some in another, incapable of self-control, and who are therefore, exposed to constant moral danger themselves, and become the source of lasting injury the community.” This was the picture the commissioners had drawn for them, and they suggested A NEW ACT OF PARLIAMENT for the care and control of the feeble minded. She had no time to give a full explanation of the Act but would deal with two of its fundamental ideas. The first point was that there should be unity of control, and secondly continuity of control. In regard to the first point the commissioners recommended that there should one central authority to be called the Board of Control to supervise and regulate the provisions made for the accommodation, the maintenance, care, treatment, education, training, and control of all the mentally defective, and also that there should be only one local authority to deal with the feeble minded. In order to carry this out, they suggested that there should be a new Act, which should contain all the necessary provisions of the Lunacy and Idiots’ Act combined with any additional statutory powers necessary to extend the protection afforded by this Act to all degrees of mental defect, and also to bring A COMPLETE SCHEME for their care and control into operation. The principle was that which was already adopted by the Lunacy and Idiots’ Act, that those who by reason of mental defect could not take part in the struggle of life, should be afforded State Protection, suited to their needs. This principle, it was proposed, to extend to all grades of mental defect. Many mentally persons were dealt with as paupers or criminals, but at present there were no means of dealing with them primarily as mentally defective. If the mentally defective were to be dealt with, it was necessary to know who and where they were, and it was suggested that this should be ascertained chiefly through the Education Authorities. This had already been done in places where special schools existed. She believed that in Cambridge there were no special schools, and they therefore did not know how many defectives they had, or what kind of care or control they would need in the future. It was further suggested that the present Lunacy Commission, enlarged and strengthened, should constitute THE BOARD CONTROL; that England and Wales should be divided into at least eight suitable districts, and that an Assistant District Commissioner should be appointed to each district; that Honorary Commissioners possessing special knowledge likely to be useful should be appointed; and that inasmuch as women were deeply concerned in the care and control of the mentally defective, one at least of the members of the Board of Control should a woman. It was concluded that in organising the care and control of the mentally defective, it would better to follow the precedent of the Lunacy Acts rather than the Poor Law, and the Commissioners recommended that THE LOCAL AUTHORITY should be the council of each county and county borough, and that they should be required by statute to make suitable and sufficient provision for the mentally defective. It was further suggested that they should exercise the powers it was proposed to confer on them through a statutory committee for the care of the mentally defective and should be called the committee for the care of the mentally defective, and should take over the duties of the Visiting Committee, or what was sometimes called the Asylums Committee, of the County Council. They further recommended that the statutory committees should co-opt additional members of special experience, of whom one at least should be a woman, and that a medical officer should be appointed by the County Council to assist the committee for the care of the mentally defective. In regard to her second point, the continuity of control, Mrs. Pinsent explained that the Commissioners recommended that subject to certain safeguards, in cases not under suitable parental or other control, the committee might resolve that until the child reached the age of 21, all the powers and rights of the parent should vest in the committee. This recommendation followed the precedent of the Poor Law Act of 1899, which allowed Guardians to proceed on similar lines with orphan children or with children whose parents were unfit to control them. This, if adopted, would remove ONE OF THE GREATEST DIFFICULTIES in dealing with cases where the parents refused to allow mentally defective children to be placed in institutions, or withdrew them from institutions before they were fit to be discharged. When such mentally defective persons reach the age of 21, it was recommended that the committee should report as to their condition to the Board of Control, who should decide what further steps should be taken in view of the continuance of such persons under care and control. In conclusion, Mrs. Pinsent pointed out that the birth rate amongst the mentally defective was high and urged the segregation of the mentally defective as the best way to prevent the birth of mentally defective children. (Applause.) In the discussion which followed, Professor Bateson said that Mrs. Pinsent had dealt with a difficult question in a way which was likely to lead to real and profitable results in the future. He spoke of the seriousness of the descent of crime and mental deficiency from one generation to another, and said he thought the reason the present state of things was allowed to continue was because they did not fully realise what was happening. Prof. Howard Marsh also complimented Mrs. Pinsent on the excellent way in which she had dealt with the subject. A great beginning had, he said, been made, and he wished the movement every success and a rapid transit into better things. Mr. Wilkinson, a ratepayer of Cambridge, wanted to know what they were going to do with the Commissioners’ report. Were they going to let the Government take it carelessly and cast it into the wastepaper basket? So far as this local aspect was concerned it rested with the ratepayers to see that they kept their local authorities doing their part, and also to see that the Government gave effect to the recommendations of the commissioners. Mr. J. Congreve (Clerk to the Cambridge of Board of Guardians), and Mr. Turner. Supt. of the Eastern Counties Asylum also took part in the discussion. Sir Clifford Allbutt, in proposing a vote of thanks to Mrs. Pinsent, said that the mentally defective were not, as a rule, progressive, but he believed that three or four per cent of them were progressive, and ultimately, by discipline, something could be made of them. Professor Inge seconded the vote of thanks, which was carried with acclamation.


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive


Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Cambridge Daily News: Monday 8th March 1909

Care of Feeble Minded: Royal Commissioner’s Address: New Act Suggested: Interesting Comments & Discussion/ An exhaustive address on “The Care and control of the Feeble Minded” was given by Mrs. Hume Pinsent in the Council Chamber of the Guildhall on Saturday afternoon … long discussion … Professor Howard Marsh also expressed his admiration of Mrs. Pinsent’s very masterly treatment of one of the most urgent public questions of the day …

[see letter in response: 11th March 1909]


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive


Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Worthing Gazette: Wednesday 3rd March 1909

A Deserving Cause: It is sometime since a meeting was held locally on behalf of the mentally defective, but it will be seen from our advertising columns that the cause is to be publicly advocated at St. James’s Hall on the afternoon of Friday the 12th inst. Miss Mellena Heale is taking a prominent part in the movement, and a long list of those who have promised their patronage is here made. Dr. J. Elsdale Molson is announced to preside, and the promoters are to be congratulated upon the fact that they have secured the presence of one so well qualified to deal with the subject under discussion as Mrs. Hume Pinsent who was a member of the Royal Commission of the Care and Control of the Mentally Defective:


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive


Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Birmingham Mail: Friday 26th February 1909

Birmingham Education Committee: … … In presenting the report of the Special Schools Sub-Committee, Mrs. Hume Pinsent said she thought it was desirable that day schools should be opened for the blind or partially blind. The matter was not engaging consideration …


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive


Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Gentlewoman: Saturday 2nd January 1909

Wedding: Mr. George Schuster to Miss Gwendolen Parker: The Rev. The Hon. Charles Byron (cousin of the bride) the Rev. C. R. Shaw Stewart, and the Rev. Guy Vernon Smith officiated at the wedding of Miss Gwendolen Parker, second daughter of Mr. Justice and Lady Parker, of Browsholme Lodge, Haslemere, and 3 Buckingham Gate S.W. to Mr. George E. Schuster, son of Mr. and Mrs. Schuster of 12 Harrington Gardens, S.W., which was solemnized at St. Peter’s Church, Eaton Square on December 12th at 2.30 p.m. The service was choral, and the church was charmingly decorated with Bowers. The bride was given away by her father, and wore a soft white satin dress, the skirt draped with an old lace veil (lent by the bride’s mother), and a full Court train of satin brocade. The bodice, also draped with old lace, was held in place by old paste ornaments and buttons, given by the bride’s aunt, (Mrs. Pinsent). The bride also wore a riviere of diamonds (given by the bride’s mother). There were five bridesmaids—Miss Vivien Parker (sister), Miss Evelyn Schuster (cousin of the bridegroom), and Miss Ruth Darwin (daughter of Mr. and the Hon. Mrs. Horace Darwin), and two children—Miss Heather Pinsent and Miss Mary Parker (cousin of bride); the page was Master Hubert Parker (youngest brother of bride). The three grown-up maids’ gowns were of soft cream satin with plain long skirts, and bodices draped over soft net under bodices, and large black picture hats lined with blue. They carried bouquets of pink carnations. The two little girls wore cream satin “Jane Austen” frocks in full bag skirts to the feet, high-waisted low-necked bodices, and blue sashes, and forget-me-not wreaths in their hair. They carried baskets of pale pink carnations. The bridegroom’s presents were gem safety brooches. The page wore a white satin Charles H. Court suit with blue sash and cloak slung from the shoulder, lined with blue satin. Mr. Alfred Schuster was the best man. The reception after the ceremony was held at 3, Buckingham Gate by Lady Parker, and very largely attended—all the principal members of the legal world, members of the Bar, and relatives and friends being present Mr. and Mrs. George Schuster left for the Riviera for their honeymoon. The bride went away in soft blue satin charmeuse, the bodice draped with old lace, with a large picture hat to match, and a Russian sable stole and muff.


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive


Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949
GRO0422 Devonport: Hester Agnes Pinsent: 1899 – 1966