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Ikey Solomon

Isaac "Ikey" Solomon (1787 – 1850)[1] was a British criminal who acted as a receiver of stolen property. His well-publicised crimes, escape from arrest, recapture and trial led to his transportation to the Australian penal colony of Van Diemen's Land (now known as Tasmania).

Ikey Solomon as printed from a drawing by the Lambeth Police

He is widely regarded as the model for the character Fagin in Charles Dickens' novel Oliver Twist.

Early life and marriage edit

Solomon was born into a Jewish[2] family in Houndsditch, in the East End of London. He was one of nine children.[1] His father, Henry Solomon, was a fence and introduced him to the criminal trade.[3] Henry Solomon also worked in various places in London and once remarked "I have worked for every factory in London."[4] Little is known about Solomon's mother except that she looked after her husband well into his old age.

Solomon married Ann (or Hannah) Julian on 7 January 1807 in the Great Synagogue, Duke's Place, London. Ann was the daughter of Moses Julian, coachmaster, of Aldgate.

Criminal life edit

Solomon first had a shop in Brighton but later opened what was ostensibly a jeweller's shop in Bell Lane, London, in the vicinity of Petticoat Lane.[5] (This business has also been described as a pawn shop.)

Solomon used the shop to carry on business as a receiver of stolen goods, known as a fence, becoming one of the most active Londoners in the "trade".

On 17 April 1810, Solomon and a man named Joel Joseph were caught stealing a pocket book (valued at 4 shillings) and £40 in bank notes from Thomas Dodd outside Westminster Hall (the site of Parliament) where a large crowd had gathered for a public meeting. Police chased the pair and caught them inside the Hall. Joseph attempted to get rid of the evidence by eating the bank notes while Solomon tried to ditch the notebook.

Both were arrested and tried at the Old Bailey during the June Sessions 1810 and found guilty of stealing, a felony.[6] Solomon, just 23 at the time, was sentenced to penal transportation, to spend the rest of his days in Australia. However, for reasons that are no longer clear, he remained in England, imprisoned in the prison hulk Zetland for four years, before being released in error or escaping.[1]

Solomon returned to London in about 1818 and set up as a fence and pawn broker. He continued until being arrested again on 25 April 1827, when police charged Solomon with theft and receiving. The goods involved were 6 watches, 312 yards of woollen cloth, 17 shawls, 12 pieces of Valentia cloth, lace, bobbinet, caps and other articles. Solomon was committed for trial and lodged in Newgate Prison.[1] Solomon gained substantial notoriety with this arrest. Pamphlet publishers created three highly exaggerated accounts of his criminal activity, which sold very well.

On a writ of habeas corpus, jailers took Solomon to the Court of King's Bench. The application failed, and the guards led him to a hackney coach for the return to Newgate. Unknown to his captors, the coach was driven by Solomon's father-in-law. The turnkeys approved a detour through Petticoat Lane. At a prearranged place, some of Solomon's friends overpowered the guards and released him.[1]

Abscondment and his wife's arrest edit

Solomon fled England, going first to Denmark and then to the United States,[1] arriving in New York in August 1827.[7]

Solomon's escape from custody was prominent news throughout England. Police quickly focused on his family.

Officers arrested Solomon's wife, Ann, and charged her with receiving stolen goods. She was found guilty and sentenced to penal transportation to Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania). The judge allowed Solomon's four youngest children (all under the age of ten) to accompany Ann on the transport ship. Their two oldest sons, John, 20, and Moses, 19, sailed to Sydney and then to Van Diemen's Land independently to be with their mother.

Solomon's father was also charged with theft, but the court allowed his sentence to be respited because of his age (Henry claimed "I am upwards of seventy years old". The Old Bailey records him as being 69).

Journey to be with his wife edit

Ann travelled in the ship Mermaid, arriving at Hobart Town penal colony in June 1828. Back in New York, Solomon learned from newspapers that his wife had been transported. He decided he would sail to Van Diemen's Land to be with her. Solomon first went to Rio de Janeiro, then sailed in the Coronet to Hobart. He travelled under the name of Slowman, probably a mispronunciation of Solomon rather than an assumed name.

Hobart, Van Diemen's Land's capital, was the enforced home of many of Solomon's old criminal colleagues and customers. These individuals quickly recognised Solomon when he arrived on 6 October 1828. Solomon's London escape had made him a notorious fugitive, but he had not broken any laws in the Colony. As a result, the Lieutenant-Governor Colonel George Arthur could not arrest Solomon without a warrant from London. On 17 October 1828 he wrote to the Colonial Office requesting one. This warrant took 12 months to reach Hobart. In the meantime, Solomon opened a tobacco shop/general store in Hobart's Elizabeth Street. He also began petitioning to have his wife assigned to his household.

Ann Solomon had initially been assigned as a servant to police officer Richard Newman, but quarrels broke out and she was sent to the Van Diemen's Land Female House of Correction. Solomon made a number of requests that Ann be assigned to him. Lieutenant-Governor Arthur finally agreed to the assignment after Solomon entered into a £1,000 bond to guarantee that his wife would not escape from the colony, and a number of local publicans and merchants, including John Pascoe Fawkner, entered into sureties of £100 or £200 each.

Arrest and return to England edit

The warrants for Solomon's arrest finally arrived in November 1829 aboard the Lady of the Lake. Hobart authorities immediately arrested him.

Solomon's counsel, however, had him brought before the court on a writ of habeas corpus. The judge approved Solomon's release because of a technical fault in the London warrants, but fixed bail at £2,000, with four sureties of £500.

Solomon's friends found it difficult to raise so much money. Lieutenant-Governor Arthur finally issued a warrant in his own name against Solomon. Police arrested Solomon and placed him on board the ship Prince Regent to be sent back to England.

Sydney and Hobart newspapers denounced the governor's refusal to abide by the principles of habeas corpus. Thomas Capon, the chief constable, had to accompany Solomon on the voyage because the ship's master refused to guarantee Solomon's safe arrival.

Trial and return to the penal colony edit

Solomon's trial at the Old Bailey in June 1830 caused a sensation and was extensively reported in the newspapers and the pamphlets of the day. As there are strong similarities between his trial and Fagin's trial in Oliver Twist (Ch 52), it is highly likely that Dickens used it as the basis for Fagin's trial.

Solomon was tried at the Old Bailey on eight charges of receiving stolen goods, found guilty on two, and sentenced to transportation for fourteen years.[1][8][9][10][11] The judge referred to Solomon as being "evil-disposed", another indication of the large notoriety he had garnered.

Solomon was sent back to Hobart in the William Glen Anderson, arriving in November 1831. He was sent to Richmond gaol, where in 1832 he became a "javelin man", or convict constable. In 1834, he was transferred to Port Arthur Convict Settlement. In 1835, authorities granted Solomon a ticket of leave on condition that he lived at least 20 miles (32 km) from Hobart.[1]

Family break-up edit

When Solomon was released from prison, he took up residence at New Norfolk and tried to reunite with his family, but the two elder sons seem to have left Van Diemen's Land by then.

Solomon had become estranged from his wife and children, and there were violent quarrels. Most of the children took their mother's side. Some sources say that Solomon turned the children out of his house,[1] and others say that the children turned out their father.

Ann Solomon was returned to the Female House of Correction as a result of some of these altercations. Her daughter Ann had to write numerous petitions before her mother was released in September 1835.

Solomon and Ann lived apart for the remainder of their lives. The elder Ann Solomon was granted a ticket-of-leave in November 1835, and a conditional pardon in May 1840.

Solomon remained in New Norfolk until 1838. He was living at New Town in 1840 when he was granted a conditional pardon. He received his certificate of freedom in 1844.[1]

Death edit

Solomon died on 3 September 1850 and was buried the next day in the Jewish cemetery in Harrington Street, Hobart. His estate was worth no more than £70.

What remained of the little Jewish cemetery, possibly the oldest Jewish cemetery in Australia, was bulldozed in 2002. It had been officially closed in 1872, and following the seizure of the property by the state in 1945, what memorials remained were removed as an apartment complex was built on the site over the next decade.[12]

Literary treatment edit

Solomon remains known as the person upon whom Charles Dickens may have based the character of Fagin in the novel Oliver Twist.[citation needed]

Solomon's life has been the subject of several works, including:

  • The First Fagin by Judith Sackville-O'Donnell, ISBN 0-9585576-2-4
  • Prince of Fences: The Life and Crimes of Ikey Solomons by J.J. Tobias, ISBN 0-85303-174-6
  • The Potato Factory by Bryce Courtenay, ISBN 0-14-027365-4, a historical novel that was made into a four-part miniseries[13] that aired in Australia
  • Thanks a lot, Guv! – The Stories of Eight Convicts, from Trial in England to Detention and Freedom in Van Diemen's Land by T. Garth Hyland, ISBN 0-9751610-0-8, also a historical novel.

Solomon was Jewish. His literary and historical treatment have been the focus of many debates. Some argue that many portrayals of Ikey Solomon have been anti-Semitic. Bryce Courtenay's Ikey character in The Potato Factory has recently been the subject of such debate.[3][7] The Fagin character, with its connection to Ikey, has caused similar debate.

Documentaries edit

  • The first Fagin by Helen Gaynor and Alan Rosenthal, Canberra – A.C.T., Ronin Films, 2012

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Sharman, R. C. (1967). "Isaac (Ikey) Solomon (1787–1850)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. 2. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISSN 1833-7538.
  2. ^ "Family Tree Maker's Genealogy Site: Home Page". Archived from the original on 7 December 2013. Retrieved 7 December 2013.
  3. ^ a b The First Fagin
  4. ^ Proceedings of the Old Bailey – HENRY SOLOMON, Theft > grand larceny, 12 July 1827.
  5. ^ Proceedings of the Old Bailey – HENRY BROWN, HENRY BROOKS, MOSES LYON, alias ISAAC NATHAN, THOMAS STOKES, alias WILLIAMS, MARY ANN EATES, theft : burglary, miscellaneous : perverting justice, theft : receiving stolen goods, 9 January 1822.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ Proceedings of the Old Bailey – JOEL JOSEPH, ISAAC SOLOMON, theft : pick pocketing, 6 June 1810.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ a b Ikey stirs up storm 200 years on
  8. ^ Proceedings of the Old Bailey – ISAAC SOLOMON, Theft > receiving, 8 July 1830.
  9. ^ Proceedings of the Old Bailey – ISAAC SOLOMON, Theft > simple larceny, 8 July 1830.
  10. ^ Proceedings of the Old Bailey – ISAAC SOLOMON, Theft > simple larceny, 8 July 1830.
  11. ^ Proceedings of the Old Bailey – ISAAC SOLOMON, theft : receiving stolen goods, 9 December 1830.[permanent dead link]
  12. ^ Ikey Solomon, Another Australian Icon?
  13. ^ IMDb, The Potato Factory
  • Additional Old Bailey records:
    • Ann Solomons Court Conviction, 13 September 1827
    • Ann Solomons Court acquittal on a separate Charge, 13 September 1827
    • Ann Solomons Court acquittal on a further separate Charge, 13 September 1827
    • Ikey's Sentence to Transportation, 12 May 1831
    • All cases with Isaac Solomon as defendant or mentioned in passing, 1810–1823[permanent dead link]
    • All cases with Isaac Solomon as defendant or mentioned in passing, 1830–1832[permanent dead link]

External links edit

  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 August 2006. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
  • Records from the "Colonial Times" regarding Ikey's court appearances in Van Diemen's Land

ikey, solomon, author, wrote, first, novel, junior, william, makepeace, thackeray, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, . For the author who wrote his first novel as Ikey Solomons Esq Junior see William Makepeace Thackeray This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ikey Solomon news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Isaac Ikey Solomon 1787 1850 1 was a British criminal who acted as a receiver of stolen property His well publicised crimes escape from arrest recapture and trial led to his transportation to the Australian penal colony of Van Diemen s Land now known as Tasmania Ikey Solomon as printed from a drawing by the Lambeth PoliceHe is widely regarded as the model for the character Fagin in Charles Dickens novel Oliver Twist Contents 1 Early life and marriage 2 Criminal life 3 Abscondment and his wife s arrest 4 Journey to be with his wife 5 Arrest and return to England 6 Trial and return to the penal colony 7 Family break up 8 Death 9 Literary treatment 10 Documentaries 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksEarly life and marriage editSolomon was born into a Jewish 2 family in Houndsditch in the East End of London He was one of nine children 1 His father Henry Solomon was a fence and introduced him to the criminal trade 3 Henry Solomon also worked in various places in London and once remarked I have worked for every factory in London 4 Little is known about Solomon s mother except that she looked after her husband well into his old age Solomon married Ann or Hannah Julian on 7 January 1807 in the Great Synagogue Duke s Place London Ann was the daughter of Moses Julian coachmaster of Aldgate Criminal life editSolomon first had a shop in Brighton but later opened what was ostensibly a jeweller s shop in Bell Lane London in the vicinity of Petticoat Lane 5 This business has also been described as a pawn shop Solomon used the shop to carry on business as a receiver of stolen goods known as a fence becoming one of the most active Londoners in the trade On 17 April 1810 Solomon and a man named Joel Joseph were caught stealing a pocket book valued at 4 shillings and 40 in bank notes from Thomas Dodd outside Westminster Hall the site of Parliament where a large crowd had gathered for a public meeting Police chased the pair and caught them inside the Hall Joseph attempted to get rid of the evidence by eating the bank notes while Solomon tried to ditch the notebook Both were arrested and tried at the Old Bailey during the June Sessions 1810 and found guilty of stealing a felony 6 Solomon just 23 at the time was sentenced to penal transportation to spend the rest of his days in Australia However for reasons that are no longer clear he remained in England imprisoned in the prison hulk Zetland for four years before being released in error or escaping 1 Solomon returned to London in about 1818 and set up as a fence and pawn broker He continued until being arrested again on 25 April 1827 when police charged Solomon with theft and receiving The goods involved were 6 watches 31 2 yards of woollen cloth 17 shawls 12 pieces of Valentia cloth lace bobbinet caps and other articles Solomon was committed for trial and lodged in Newgate Prison 1 Solomon gained substantial notoriety with this arrest Pamphlet publishers created three highly exaggerated accounts of his criminal activity which sold very well On a writ of habeas corpus jailers took Solomon to the Court of King s Bench The application failed and the guards led him to a hackney coach for the return to Newgate Unknown to his captors the coach was driven by Solomon s father in law The turnkeys approved a detour through Petticoat Lane At a prearranged place some of Solomon s friends overpowered the guards and released him 1 Abscondment and his wife s arrest editSolomon fled England going first to Denmark and then to the United States 1 arriving in New York in August 1827 7 Solomon s escape from custody was prominent news throughout England Police quickly focused on his family Officers arrested Solomon s wife Ann and charged her with receiving stolen goods She was found guilty and sentenced to penal transportation to Van Diemen s Land Tasmania The judge allowed Solomon s four youngest children all under the age of ten to accompany Ann on the transport ship Their two oldest sons John 20 and Moses 19 sailed to Sydney and then to Van Diemen s Land independently to be with their mother Solomon s father was also charged with theft but the court allowed his sentence to be respited because of his age Henry claimed I am upwards of seventy years old The Old Bailey records him as being 69 Journey to be with his wife editAnn travelled in the ship Mermaid arriving at Hobart Town penal colony in June 1828 Back in New York Solomon learned from newspapers that his wife had been transported He decided he would sail to Van Diemen s Land to be with her Solomon first went to Rio de Janeiro then sailed in the Coronet to Hobart He travelled under the name of Slowman probably a mispronunciation of Solomon rather than an assumed name Hobart Van Diemen s Land s capital was the enforced home of many of Solomon s old criminal colleagues and customers These individuals quickly recognised Solomon when he arrived on 6 October 1828 Solomon s London escape had made him a notorious fugitive but he had not broken any laws in the Colony As a result the Lieutenant Governor Colonel George Arthur could not arrest Solomon without a warrant from London On 17 October 1828 he wrote to the Colonial Office requesting one This warrant took 12 months to reach Hobart In the meantime Solomon opened a tobacco shop general store in Hobart s Elizabeth Street He also began petitioning to have his wife assigned to his household Ann Solomon had initially been assigned as a servant to police officer Richard Newman but quarrels broke out and she was sent to the Van Diemen s Land Female House of Correction Solomon made a number of requests that Ann be assigned to him Lieutenant Governor Arthur finally agreed to the assignment after Solomon entered into a 1 000 bond to guarantee that his wife would not escape from the colony and a number of local publicans and merchants including John Pascoe Fawkner entered into sureties of 100 or 200 each Arrest and return to England editThe warrants for Solomon s arrest finally arrived in November 1829 aboard the Lady of the Lake Hobart authorities immediately arrested him Solomon s counsel however had him brought before the court on a writ of habeas corpus The judge approved Solomon s release because of a technical fault in the London warrants but fixed bail at 2 000 with four sureties of 500 Solomon s friends found it difficult to raise so much money Lieutenant Governor Arthur finally issued a warrant in his own name against Solomon Police arrested Solomon and placed him on board the ship Prince Regent to be sent back to England Sydney and Hobart newspapers denounced the governor s refusal to abide by the principles of habeas corpus Thomas Capon the chief constable had to accompany Solomon on the voyage because the ship s master refused to guarantee Solomon s safe arrival Trial and return to the penal colony editSolomon s trial at the Old Bailey in June 1830 caused a sensation and was extensively reported in the newspapers and the pamphlets of the day As there are strong similarities between his trial and Fagin s trial in Oliver Twist Ch 52 it is highly likely that Dickens used it as the basis for Fagin s trial Solomon was tried at the Old Bailey on eight charges of receiving stolen goods found guilty on two and sentenced to transportation for fourteen years 1 8 9 10 11 The judge referred to Solomon as being evil disposed another indication of the large notoriety he had garnered Solomon was sent back to Hobart in the William Glen Anderson arriving in November 1831 He was sent to Richmond gaol where in 1832 he became a javelin man or convict constable In 1834 he was transferred to Port Arthur Convict Settlement In 1835 authorities granted Solomon a ticket of leave on condition that he lived at least 20 miles 32 km from Hobart 1 Family break up editWhen Solomon was released from prison he took up residence at New Norfolk and tried to reunite with his family but the two elder sons seem to have left Van Diemen s Land by then Solomon had become estranged from his wife and children and there were violent quarrels Most of the children took their mother s side Some sources say that Solomon turned the children out of his house 1 and others say that the children turned out their father Ann Solomon was returned to the Female House of Correction as a result of some of these altercations Her daughter Ann had to write numerous petitions before her mother was released in September 1835 Solomon and Ann lived apart for the remainder of their lives The elder Ann Solomon was granted a ticket of leave in November 1835 and a conditional pardon in May 1840 Solomon remained in New Norfolk until 1838 He was living at New Town in 1840 when he was granted a conditional pardon He received his certificate of freedom in 1844 1 Death editSolomon died on 3 September 1850 and was buried the next day in the Jewish cemetery in Harrington Street Hobart His estate was worth no more than 70 What remained of the little Jewish cemetery possibly the oldest Jewish cemetery in Australia was bulldozed in 2002 It had been officially closed in 1872 and following the seizure of the property by the state in 1945 what memorials remained were removed as an apartment complex was built on the site over the next decade 12 Literary treatment editSolomon remains known as the person upon whom Charles Dickens may have based the character of Fagin in the novel Oliver Twist citation needed Solomon s life has been the subject of several works including The First Fagin by Judith Sackville O Donnell ISBN 0 9585576 2 4 Prince of Fences The Life and Crimes of Ikey Solomons by J J Tobias ISBN 0 85303 174 6 The Potato Factory by Bryce Courtenay ISBN 0 14 027365 4 a historical novel that was made into a four part miniseries 13 that aired in Australia Thanks a lot Guv The Stories of Eight Convicts from Trial in England to Detention and Freedom in Van Diemen s Land by T Garth Hyland ISBN 0 9751610 0 8 also a historical novel Solomon was Jewish His literary and historical treatment have been the focus of many debates Some argue that many portrayals of Ikey Solomon have been anti Semitic Bryce Courtenay s Ikey character in The Potato Factory has recently been the subject of such debate 3 7 The Fagin character with its connection to Ikey has caused similar debate Documentaries editThe first Fagin by Helen Gaynor and Alan Rosenthal Canberra A C T Ronin Films 2012See also editList of convicts transported to AustraliaReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j Sharman R C 1967 Isaac Ikey Solomon 1787 1850 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 2 National Centre of Biography Australian National University ISSN 1833 7538 Family Tree Maker s Genealogy Site Home Page Archived from the original on 7 December 2013 Retrieved 7 December 2013 a b The First Fagin Proceedings of the Old Bailey HENRY SOLOMON Theft gt grand larceny 12 July 1827 Proceedings of the Old Bailey HENRY BROWN HENRY BROOKS MOSES LYON alias ISAAC NATHAN THOMAS STOKES alias WILLIAMS MARY ANN EATES theft burglary miscellaneous perverting justice theft receiving stolen goods 9 January 1822 permanent dead link Proceedings of the Old Bailey JOEL JOSEPH ISAAC SOLOMON theft pick pocketing 6 June 1810 permanent dead link a b Ikey stirs up storm 200 years on Proceedings of the Old Bailey ISAAC SOLOMON Theft gt receiving 8 July 1830 Proceedings of the Old Bailey ISAAC SOLOMON Theft gt simple larceny 8 July 1830 Proceedings of the Old Bailey ISAAC SOLOMON Theft gt simple larceny 8 July 1830 Proceedings of the Old Bailey ISAAC SOLOMON theft receiving stolen goods 9 December 1830 permanent dead link Ikey Solomon Another Australian Icon IMDb The Potato Factory Additional Old Bailey records Separate Case detailing Ikey s Fencing 2 December 1824 Ikey s Father s Court appearance 12 July 1827 Ann Solomons Court Conviction 13 September 1827 Ann Solomons Court acquittal on a separate Charge 13 September 1827 Ann Solomons Court acquittal on a further separate Charge 13 September 1827 Ikey s Sentence to Transportation 12 May 1831 All cases with Isaac Solomon as defendant or mentioned in passing 1810 1823 permanent dead link All cases with Isaac Solomon as defendant or mentioned in passing 1830 1832 permanent dead link External links edit New Zealand Government record of the Jews Burial ground PDF Archived from the original PDF on 27 August 2006 Retrieved 18 August 2013 Records from the Colonial Times regarding Ikey s court appearances in Van Diemen s Land Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ikey Solomon amp oldid 1220816818, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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