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Bamford & Norden October 2019

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cheques. He was accused of fraudulently<br />

obtaining subscriptions and adjusting figures<br />

on several cheques. This scenario was<br />

widely publicised and must have brought<br />

great shame to the family. The Common<br />

Sergeant in passing sentence, said that while<br />

he had no doubt that Mackenzie was the<br />

ringleader of a very extensive scheme<br />

of forgery, the prisoner’s connection with<br />

him must have made him aware that the<br />

man was a criminal of an almost desperate<br />

character. He was found guilty and<br />

sentenced to 4 year penal servitude at<br />

Parkhurst prison on the Isle of White.<br />

Arthur, had done his best to support Percy<br />

through his problems but was unable to<br />

maintain the required funding and needless<br />

to say the financial impact hit the<br />

Greenbooth mill heavily.<br />

Both Arthur and his wife Florence had been<br />

very active supporters of St Paul’s and<br />

Bagslate Wesleyan Chapel. Most of the<br />

social life of the day was centred around<br />

church and family and the Hutchinson’s<br />

fully embraced this way of life. Despite<br />

having enjoyed enormous wealth and<br />

privilege, Arthur does not appear to be in<br />

the least ostentatious. In 1911, despite<br />

having left Greenbooth and now living in<br />

Maida Vale, Arthur sends a letter and a<br />

donation to St Pauls for a fund raising that<br />

was taking place at the time. He makes the<br />

remark ‘My impaired means prohibit my<br />

doing what I would like but I have pleasure<br />

in enclosing you a small donation, and if the<br />

negotiations I now have on for disposing<br />

of Greenbooth and thus freeing myself of<br />

a most serious liability bear fruit I will be<br />

pleased to materially increase it.’<br />

Club function he makes a very telling<br />

remark. Talking of the club and its players<br />

he says, ‘I am somewhat rather old<br />

fashioned and sometimes thought there<br />

were too many ‘matches’ and too few games’<br />

he goes on to say that his preference was<br />

for friendly games and stressed that they<br />

had been fortunate in having so many local<br />

players who had stood by the club instead of<br />

pursuing their fortunes elsewhere’.<br />

Somewhat of an analogy of how the<br />

brothers had led their lives, Arthur<br />

remaining steadfast whilst Percy needed<br />

to seek his fortune elsewhere. Percy’s<br />

wayward lifestyle was to have massive<br />

implications for Arthur and indeed for<br />

Greenbooth itself.<br />

We can only surmise that Percy receiving<br />

a guilty verdict took its toll on Arthur and<br />

contributed heavily to his own financial<br />

downfall. Arthur died only a year after<br />

Percy’s verdict at the age of 52. A listing in<br />

the Annals of Rochdale in 1912 under<br />

‘Published Wills’ records his estate of<br />

£38,160 gross and £4,511 net, a very clear<br />

indication of the level of debt and weight of<br />

the burden he had carried. Percy went on<br />

to live in Dorset, married his second wife<br />

Ellen Jane Read in 1925 and died in 1928<br />

at the age of 75.<br />

To be Continued…<br />

Val Corns<br />

valcorns@hotmail.co.uk<br />

Photographs courtesy of Touchstones<br />

His remarks demonstrate the sheer weight<br />

of the financial burden he carries and yet<br />

despite all this he still feels duty bound to<br />

make his contribution to the fund for St<br />

Pauls. Whilst presiding at a <strong>Norden</strong> Cricket<br />

76<br />

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