Mary Hamilton (bigamist)
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Charles Hamilton (known when a child as Mary Hamilton) was an English 18th-century
female husband A female husband is a person born as a woman, living as a man, who marries a woman. The term was known historically from the 17th Century and was popularised by Henry Fielding who titled his 1746 fictionalised account of the trial of Mary Hamil ...
. In 1746, Hamilton – while living as a man – married Mary Price. After Price reported she was suspicious of Hamilton's manhood to local authorities, Hamilton was prosecuted for
vagrancy Vagrancy is the condition of homelessness without regular employment or income. Vagrants (also known as bums, vagabonds, rogues, tramps or drifters) usually live in poverty and support themselves by begging, scavenging, petty theft, temporar ...
, and sentenced in 1746 to a public whipping in four towns and to six months imprisonment with hard labour. While the surviving records of the case indicate that Hamilton was actually prosecuted for
vagrancy Vagrancy is the condition of homelessness without regular employment or income. Vagrants (also known as bums, vagabonds, rogues, tramps or drifters) usually live in poverty and support themselves by begging, scavenging, petty theft, temporar ...
, the fact that she had penetrative sex and sexual intimacy with Mary Price prompted public opinion to ask for a severe punishment of what was considered as deceitful sexuality. Newspaper reports at the time claimed that there had been 14 marriages in all. A 1746 account in the ''
Newgate calendar ''The Newgate Calendar'', subtitled ''The Malefactors' Bloody Register'', was a popular work of improving literature in the 18th and 19th centuries. Originally a monthly bulletin of executions, produced by the Keeper of Newgate Prison in Lo ...
'' gives other details.Newgate Calenda
A Woman who was imprisoned and whipped for marrying Fourteen Women
1746
In the same year,
Henry Fielding Henry Fielding (22 April 1707 – 8 October 1754) was an English novelist, irony writer, and dramatist known for earthy humour and satire. His comic novel ''Tom Jones'' is still widely appreciated. He and Samuel Richardson are seen as founders ...
published a fictionalised accountLouis Crompton, ''Homosexuality and Civilization'', Belknap Press, Cambridge, MA., 2003, p.476. of the case under the title ''The Female Husband''. The term Female Husband became common in the US and British press to document behaviour which would later be stigmatised by sexologists. Hamilton was not the first documented female husband, but it was the first use of the term to describe a woman who had married another woman whilst purporting to be male.


Biography

Hamilton was born in Somerset and grew up in Scotland, child of William and Mary Hamilton. At the age of 14, Hamilton began wearing male clothes borrowed from her brother. Hamilton studied with two doctors during her apprenticeship. One of them was Dr. Edward Green, who presented as an "operator and occulist" but was known as a mountebank. Hamilton helped Green to produce the medical compounds, collect the needed supplies and sell the cures for various illnesses ranging from cancer, leprosy, fistulas and scurvy. At this time, quack itinerant doctors were sometimes well considered, and Dr Green even offered his services to Poor Law to cure various illnesses and disorders, including fistula, being paid two guineas. After serving Dr Edward Green two to three years, Hamilton was employed by Dr Finley Green for the last year of apprenticeship. Hamilton then worked independently as a quack doctor, travelling and selling medicine and medical advice in southwest England, dressed in "man's apparel": ruffles, breeches, and a periwig. At the time, King George II was facing rebellion and war from the
Jacobites Jacobite means follower of Jacob or James. Jacobite may refer to: Religion * Jacobites, followers of Saint Jacob Baradaeus (died 578). Churches in the Jacobite tradition and sometimes called Jacobite include: ** Syriac Orthodox Church, sometime ...
of the
Scottish Highlands The Highlands ( sco, the Hielands; gd, a’ Ghàidhealtachd , 'the place of the Gaels') is a historical region of Scotland. Culturally, the Highlands and the Lowlands diverged from the Late Middle Ages into the modern period, when Lowland Sco ...
. He passed the
dress act 1746 The Dress Act 1746 was part of the Act of Proscription which came into force on 1 August 1746 and made wearing "the Highland Dress" — including the kilt — illegal in Scotland as well as reiterating the Disarming Act. The Jacobite Risings bet ...
forbidding Scottish men to wear their traditional
highland dress Highland dress is the traditional, regional dress of the Highlands and Isles of Scotland. It is often characterised by tartan (''plaid'' in North America). Specific designs of shirt, jacket, bodice and headwear may also be worn along with cla ...
and arms. Hamilton's clothes were viewed as typically British in contrast to Scottish traditions, which could also be seen as a cultural conscious choice. Travelling meant that Hamilton could easily change location in case of suspicion, and the work provided a decent living. At one point, Hamilton rented a room to a widow named Mary Creed. Hamilton became involved with her niece Mary Price. On 16 July 1746 Charles Hamilton married Mary Price in
Wells Wells most commonly refers to: * Wells, Somerset, a cathedral city in Somerset, England * Well, an excavation or structure created in the ground * Wells (name) Wells may also refer to: Places Canada *Wells, British Columbia England * Wells ...
,
England England is a country that is part of the United Kingdom. It shares land borders with Wales to its west and Scotland to its north. The Irish Sea lies northwest and the Celtic Sea to the southwest. It is separated from continental Europe b ...
. The couple travelled together for two months, before Mary Price decided she had been cheated upon into believing Hamilton was a man, and she reported her husband to the authorities in
Glastonbury Glastonbury (, ) is a town and civil parish in Somerset, England, situated at a dry point on the low-lying Somerset Levels, south of Bristol. The town, which is in the Mendip district, had a population of 8,932 in the 2011 census. Glastonbur ...
. Hamilton was arrested and tried for fraud. Before that, the couple had numerous sexual intercourses involving penetration, and historians have questioned how that could be possible. Explanations range from stating that Price was a virgin ignorant of sexual matters, and that Hamilton may have used
dildo A dildo is a sex toy, often explicitly phallic in appearance, intended for sexual penetration or other sexual activity during masturbation or with sex partners. Dildos can be made from a number of materials and shaped like an erect human p ...
s or their hands during the intercourse to penetrate her, the practice leaving Price satisfied for months before she began questioning her husband's manhood.


The court case

In 1746, Hamilton was brought before the summer
Quarter Sessions The courts of quarter sessions or quarter sessions were local courts traditionally held at four set times each year in the Kingdom of England from 1388 (extending also to Wales following the Laws in Wales Act 1535). They were also established in ...
in Taunton, Somerset. According to the local newspaper report, "There was a great Debate for some Time in Court about the Nature of her Crime, and what to call it, but at last it was agreed that she should be charged with fraud." At the time of the trial, there was no clear legal procedure to prosecute such cases. The records show that it was not so much the fact that Hamilton dressed and worked as a man that was a problem, but rather the fact of having deceitfully contrived penetrative sex. Hamilton was charged under the vagrancy act of 1744. This act was meant to prosecute lack of employment or deceitful attitudes, mostly related to deceitful ways of acquiring money. However, the charges retained against people prosecuted for vagrancy were vague and diverse, they were seen as a way to maintain order by restricting mobility and consolidating gender and sexual norms that were not precisely named. In fact Hamilton was detained with men charged with crimes of
bastardy Legitimacy, in traditional Western common law, is the status of a child born to parents who are legally married to each other, and of a child conceived before the parents obtain a legal divorce. Conversely, ''illegitimacy'', also known as ''b ...
or concerning settlement under the custody of William Hodges. The authorities were concerned about ruling over the mobility and sexual lives of strangers to the community, concerned about them taking their responsibilities with the women and children that these men had. Hamilton's case was the only one not involving paternity, money or bastardy. During the trial, members of Hamilton's community wrote a letter to the clerk asking for severe punishment. They wanted public humiliation and to ensure that Hamilton would never again be able to live as a man.


Depositions


Charles Hamilton's deposition

According to Hamilton's own deposition, she was born in Somerset, the daughter of Mary and William Hamilton. Her family later moved to Scotland. When she was fourteen, she used her brother's clothes to pose as a boy, travelled to Northumberland and entered the service of a Dr. Edward Green (described in the deposition as a "mountebank") and later of a Dr. Finey Green. She studied to become a "quack doctor" as an apprentice of the two unlicensed practitioners. In 1746, she moved to Wells, and set up a medical practice of her own under the name Charles Hamilton. She met Mary Price, a relative of her landlady, whom she married in July 1746. The marriage lasted for two months before Hamilton's so called «true sex» was discovered, and Hamilton was arrested.Sheridan Baker, "Henry Fielding's the Female Husband: Fact and Fiction", ''PMLA'', Vol. 74, No. 3 (Jun., 1959), pp. 213-224


Mary Price's deposition

A deposition from Mary Price says that after the marriage she and Hamilton travelled selling medicines. During the marriage Hamilton "entered her body several times, which made this examinant believe, at first, that the said Hamilton was a real man, but soon had reason to judge that the said Hamilton was not a man, but a woman." When they were in Glastonbury, Price confronted her. Hamilton admitted the truth to Price, at which point she reported the matter and Hamilton was arrested.


Conviction

The justices delivered their verdict that "The he or she prisoner at the bar is an uncommon, notorious cheat, and we, the Court, do sentence her, or him, whichever he or she may be, to be imprisoned six months, and during that time to be whipped in the towns of Taunton, Glastonbury, Wells, and Shepton Mallet ..." The report in the Newgate Calendar concludes "And Mary, the monopoliser of her own sex, was imprisoned and whipped accordingly, in the severity of the winter of the year 1746." According to Jen Manion, the court case is representative of the pressure exercised by community to trigger a legal response by the courts to punish sexual intimacy outside of marriage and to stabilize sexual differences in a context where there were no clear legal offences defined by existing laws for cases of female husbands. Hamilton became the first known case of woman imposter cheating a woman in a fraudulent marriage.


Newspaper reports

In addition to Hamilton's and Price's own depositions, there are several reports of the case in the local newspaper, the ''Bath Journal''. The first of these says that after news of the arrest got out many people visited the prison to get a look at Hamilton, who was very "bold and impudent". It added that "it is publickly talk'd that she has deceived several of the Fair Sex by marrying them." The author promises to "make a further Enquiry" into these allegations for a later report. A subsequent report states that Hamilton was born in Yeovil. Another report says that at the trial the prosecuting attorney, Mr. Gold, had alleged in his opening statement that Hamilton had been married fourteen times. The final report was repeated in the ''Daily Advertiser'' on 12 November, where it was probably seen by
Henry Fielding Henry Fielding (22 April 1707 – 8 October 1754) was an English novelist, irony writer, and dramatist known for earthy humour and satire. His comic novel ''Tom Jones'' is still widely appreciated. He and Samuel Richardson are seen as founders ...
. A few months later the affair was picked up by the US press.''The Boston Weekly Post'' published the story in February 1747 stating the court's difficulty in naming and defining the crime:
Mary Hamilton was try'd for pretending herself a man, and marrying 14 wives, the last of which, Mary Price, deposed in court that she was married to the prisoner and bedded and lived as man and wife for a quarter of a year, during which time she thought the prisoner a man, owing to the prisoner's vile and deceitful practices. After a debate of the nature of the crime and what to call it, it was agreed that she was an uncommon notorious cheat, and sentenced to be publicly whipt
Hamilton's story became a sensation with the stated fact of having 14 wives, which made the story very visible. Readers were left to imagine what the "vile and deceitful practices" could be, as they were not defined precisely.


Fielding's version: ''The Female Husband''

In 1746, Fielding anonymously published a sensational pamphlet, ''The Female Husband'', that gives a different account of Hamilton's life. Fielding was himself the son of a judge and had trained and worked in law, contributing to the establishment of the London police force. The author claims that he had his information "from the mouth" of Hamilton herself. However, it is likely that he never met the woman he satirized in his work. He says that she was born in 1721 on the Isle of Man, the daughter of a former army sergeant who had married a woman of property on the island. She had been brought up in the strictest principles of virtue and religion, but was seduced into "vile amours" by her friend Anne Johnson, an enthusiastic Methodist, and "transactions not fit to be mention'd passed between them". When Anne leaves her for a man, Hamilton seeks another female lover. She dresses as a man and pretends to be a Methodist preacher. She meets Mrs. Rushford, a wealthy 68-year-old widow who takes her to be a lad of about 18. Tempted by the money she will get as a "husband", Hamilton marries Mrs. Rushford. According to Fielding, she was able to deceive her bride by means "which decency forbids me even to mention". However, the bride eventually discovers Hamilton's sex, and Hamilton is forced to flee. Hamilton uses various other aliases to marry other women, but is repeatedly forced to flee when the ruse is discovered. In at least three instances she lived for some time unnoticed by her married spouse. Finally, posing as a doctor, she marries Mary Price, a beautiful 18-year-old girl. The marriage is apparently happy until, while Hamilton is visiting Glastonbury, she is recognised by someone from a previous "marriage". Mary cannot believe it, but her mother ensures that Hamilton is arrested and prosecuted. She is sentenced to imprisonment and to four public whippings in the market towns of Somerset. Fielding claims that "on the very evening she had suffered the first whipping, she offered the gaoler money, to procure her a young girl to satisfy her most monstrous and unnatural desires." Fielding's text was re-published with alterations in 1813, again anonymously, as ''The surprising adventures of a female husband! Containing the whimsical amours, curious incidents, and diabolical tricks of Miss M. Hamilton, alias Mr. G. Hamilton, alias Minister Bentley, Mr. O'Keefe, alias Mrs. Knight, the Midwife, &c ...''''The surprising adventures of a female husband! : containing the whimsical amours, curious incidents, and diabolical tricks, of Miss M. Hamilton, alias Mr. G. Hamilton, alias Minister Bentley, Mr. O'Keefe, alias Mrs. Knight, the midwife, &c. who married three wives, and lived with each some time undiscovered: for which acts she was tried at the summer sessions, in the county of Somerset, in the year 1752, found guilty, and whipped four several times, in four market towns, and afterwards imprisoned six months ...'', Henry Fielding, 1813. p.1 This lesser-known version has many alterations including a more sensationalized title and changes to the historical and cultural context. The pamphlet was inexpensive and more than likely purchased by both men and women of different social statuses. Fielding exaggerated and fictionalized parts of the story in order to keep the audience interested and to entice people to read who might not be interested in erotic fiction. Something interesting about Fielding's version of ''The Female Husband'' was his use of pronouns. When Hamilton is passing as a male, Fielding uses 'he/him', a tactic which might seem to cast the author as complicit in the deception. In Fielding's version the reader can be confused by the use of gender: "She had not been long in this city, before she became acquainted with one Mary Price, a girl of about eighteen years of age, and of extraordinary beauty. With this girl, hath this wicked woman since her confinement declared, she was really as much in love, as it was possible for a man ever to be with one of her own sex." Fielding's use grammar here confuses the gender issue; both 'man' and 'her' refer back to Hamilton, or the 'wicked woman' speaking to Fielding from her jail cell. However, in the pamphlet published in the 19th century, the author makes a point of correcting this ambiguity, often adding italics to emphasize the pronoun choice. Not only does the nineteenth-century pamphlet consistently refer to Hamilton with a female pronoun, the author draws attention to the choice by using italics which are only used when a masculine pronoun would be indicated by Hamilton's masculine persona. While in earlier text Fielding does play with the idea that women might find Hamilton attractive because of her femininity, whenever her 'sex' is discovered in his pamphlet, the relationship abruptly ends and unlike the 19th century author, Fielding more subtly exploits the possibilities of suggestion, and manages at the same time to maintain a tone of moral reprimand. It has been argued that Fielding merged the conventions of the criminal biographies that were so popular in his time, with those of the comic marriage plot (a staple of drama that was slowly gaining ground in fiction as well).


Authenticity of the accounts

Historian Louis Crompton describes Fielding's account as probably "one part fact to ten parts fiction". Sheridan Baker says of the 23 page booklet, "I think it fairly safe to put down the first twenty pages of ''The Female Husband'' to pure fiction by Fielding. And in the last three pages, as the record indicates, fiction is not altogether lacking." He dismisses Fielding's claim to have interviewed Hamilton herself, saying that "it seems certain" no such interview took place, and that he was not present at the trial. He notes that many elements of the 'life' of Hamilton as described by Fielding seem to parallel the plots of his novels, and that even the details of the court case, which can be checked against the record, contain elements that are demonstrably false, and probably follow from a misinterpretation of phrases in the newspaper reports. It is possible that Fielding got some details from the prosecuting council Henry Gould (misspelled as 'Mr. Gold' in the newspapers), who was his cousin, but Baker thinks this unlikely, especially as Fielding himself copies the newspapers in misspelling the name 'Gold'. Since details of Hamilton's life as reported by Fielding contradict her sworn deposition, the evidence suggests that Fielding simply elaborated on the newspaper reports, perhaps supplemented by rumours that were circulating about the case. According to Louis Crompton, Hamilton was only prosecuted for fraudulently marrying Price: there is no record of any other prosecution. Whether any previous marriages ever occurred, or if they were merely a product of local gossip and rumour remains unknown.


Broadcast media

Fielding's version of the story was adapted into a
BBC Radio 4 BBC Radio 4 is a British national radio station owned and operated by the BBC that replaced the BBC Home Service in 1967. It broadcasts a wide variety of spoken-word programmes, including news, drama, comedy, science and history from the BBC' ...
play of the same name, starring comedian
Sandi Toksvig Sandra Birgitte Toksvig (; ; born 3 May 1958) is a Danish-British writer, comedian and broadcaster on British radio, stage and television. She is also a political activist, having co-founded the Women's Equality Party in 2015. She has written ...
. The play was written by Sheila Hannon and was first broadcast in June 2006."The Female Husband" Radio Listings
/ref> The 1813 publication by Henry Fielding was the subject of an appraisal in a 2010 episode of
PBS The Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) is an American public broadcasting, public broadcaster and Non-commercial activity, non-commercial, Terrestrial television, free-to-air television network based in Arlington, Virginia. PBS is a publicly fu ...
' ''
Antiques Roadshow ''Antiques Roadshow'' is a British television programme broadcast by the BBC in which antiques appraisers travel to various regions of the United Kingdom (and occasionally in other countries) to appraise antiques brought in by local people (g ...
'' entitled "Naughty or Nice." The publication includes a colour etching attributed, possibly falsely, to
George Cruikshank George Cruikshank (27 September 1792 – 1 February 1878) was a British caricaturist and book illustrator, praised as the "modern Hogarth" during his life. His book illustrations for his friend Charles Dickens, and many other authors, reache ...
which depicts Hamilton being publicly whipped for her crimes.


See also

*
Female husband A female husband is a person born as a woman, living as a man, who marries a woman. The term was known historically from the 17th Century and was popularised by Henry Fielding who titled his 1746 fictionalised account of the trial of Mary Hamil ...
- other cases of female husbands


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Hamilton, Charles 18th-century British people Female-to-male cross-dressers LGBT people from England 18th-century LGBT people People from Somerset British people convicted of fraud 1720s births Year of birth uncertain Year of death missing