A British postman’s 100-year-old snuffbox found in London
and
returned to his family in Dursley, Gloucestershire
We all love a good treasure-hunting story; accounts of
buried pirate booty, lost gold mines, or Roman coins found in a farmer’s meadow
seem to capture the attention of nearly everyone. Most of us are not fortunate
enough to discover a buccaneer’s hoard behind a chimney stone. Still, it seems
that we all, in our way, do a bit of treasure hunting––keeping an eye out for a
Picasso at a jumble sale, searching for bargains at Debenhams, or just looking
for forgotten change in vending machines.
My wife and I are collectors and treasure hunters; when traveling, we look for inexpensive curios in antique shops, shop windows, or flea markets––objects that seem to convey history, hold a strong visual appeal, and, ideally, some level of mystery. The object might be a hand-made toy,
a piece of jewelry, an old postcard, or a faded photograph, but it must convey a
human touch or story that communicates across time. On a recent trip to London, we spent hours in the British Museum, the National Portrait Gallery, and the
Museum of London. However, what really excited us was the prospect of discovering small
treasures in the city's many flea markets.
On a damp, grey Sunday––the kind of day that makes tourists feel
that they are in the London of Sherlock Holmes or Charles Dickens––we ventured
out to the Old Spitalfields Market in the East End, an area of London outside
the old medieval walled city that has seen buying, selling, haggling and
trading of all sorts for hundreds of years. The historic market looked
promising––crowded aisles between stalls filled with bits and pieces of other
times and lives. The vague odors of age
and dust were significantly improved by the smells of Cornish pasties and shepherd's pies, and we eagerly took to the hunt. While
bargaining over some small metal hooks that might be used in our bathroom, I noticed a small, nickel-plated snuffbox with the words “A. Whittard, Postman, Dursley”
marked on the lid. The letters had been stamped into the metal, one at a time,
with hand tools. The repetition of the letter “X” turned on its side created a border around the words. My
wife and I immediately thought that this intriguing find had enough clues to enable us to trace it to its original owner, and that quest seemed to be a tempting challenge. The snuffbox would be our map. The owner would be the treasure.
The Snuffbox
I made a cash deal with the seller for the bathroom
hooks and the snuffbox, and my wife and I happily went back to our hotel room to rest for the next day’s adventures. A
week later, back home in Texas, I searched the Internet for Dursley and found it was a small market town in Gloucestershire. A search for A.
Whittard, Postman, Dursley quickly turned up a link to an online forum for
past residents of Dursley and a comment by Julie Smith from Ohio, USA, about
growing up in the town, along with a mention of her late brother, Alan Whittard,
who had been a Dursley postman.
Parsonage St., Dursley, circa 1910. The old
post office was on this street.
Postcard from the author’s collection
It appeared that we had a win on the first spin of the
wheel, but in further investigation, we recognized that Alan was too young to
be our snuffbox owner, and what’s more, no one remembered him ever using snuff.
Julie offered to contact a friend in Dursley, Jennifer Rennie, known as
“Paddy.” As it turned out, Paddy’s maternal grandfather was Arthur Whittard, a Dursley postman at
the turn of the 20th century. So, unknown to Julie, she and her
“friend” Paddy were distant cousins.
Paddy put us in contact with her first cousin, Sadie Evans,
another of Arthur’s granddaughters. With help from Sadie and her daughter, Jane
English, the story of the Dursley postman, Arthur Whittard, began to take form.
My wife and I offered to return the snuffbox to the Whittard family in exchange
for some details of Arthur’s story.
Arthur Whittard was born in Dursley in 1866. He began working as an errand boy at age 15 and later joined the King’s Royal Rifle Corps. After his military service, Arthur was certified as a postman in 1893, and a year later, he married Ada Morgan. The 1911 census reveals that the Whittard family lived on Slade Lane and had nine children: Frederick, 16; Arthur Victor, 14; May, 12; Maud, 11; Edith, 9; Valentina, 8; Alfred, 6; and Dorothy, 2.
One family story suggests that Arthur worked as a school headmaster in India. We could not confirm this, but it is noteworthy that in the late 1800s, the King's Royal Rifles were posted to India. Perhaps this family story relates to Arthur's time in India with the KRR before returning to Dursley and
beginning his work as a postman.
Dursley Postmen, c. 1900. Arthur Whittard
fifth from the left, back row, prominent mustache.
Back (L-R) Unknown, Unknown, Frank Martin (?),
Unknown, Arthur Whittard, Unknown, Unknown, Fred Hitchins
Front (L-R) Tom Fussell, Frank Hadley, Unknown,
Unknown, ? Hitchins, Jim Fussell
Seated, Harry Trotman, Telegraph Boy
Photo and information courtesy of David Evans and
Andrew Barton, Dursley
With the onset of
World War I, Arthur’s eldest son, Frederick, joined his father’s old regiment
as a rifleman with the King’s Royal Rifles in July 1914. In September of that year, Arthur, now age 48, re-enlisted in the military and served as a corporal-instructor with
the Army Service Corps in England. Arthur’s younger son, Victor, followed his brother into the King’s Royal
Rifles infantry regiment as a rifleman in January 1915.
Arthur’s
sons saw action in the trenches of the Western Front of France and Flanders in
1915. Victor met the fate of so many men
in the trenches and became ill with pneumonia. He died on Boxing Day, December
26, 1915. He was 19 years old. Victor is buried in Merville Communal
Cemetery in Northern France. His brother
Frederick was wounded in Ypres during the heavy fighting of the summer of 1915 and was discharged in May 1918 with the loss of a leg. Arthur continued to
serve in the ASC until he was discharged as ill in March 1918, and he died
only a few years later at age 59.
We will probably never know how Arthur’s snuffbox traveled from Dursley to Old Spitalfields Market in London 88 years after his
death, but the little snuffbox was returned to Dursley and to Arthur’s
granddaughter, Sadie Evans. With a bit of luck, some online research, and some
trans-Atlantic sleuthing, two tourists from Texas learned a bit about a British
postman and the history of a family in a small market town in Gloucestershire.
When people
bury treasure nowadays they do it in the Post-Office bank.”
― Arthur Conan Doyle, The Case-Book of
Sherlock Holmes