I really hope this isn't a giant rabbit hole
But I am enjoying looking at these people anyway.
Father’s Denial: Domestic Tangle at Grimsby. Grimsby News, 25 January 1929
An extraordinary domestic tangle was revealed at the Grimsby Borough Police Court on Friday when a 17 years old girl, Violet Mullinger was charged with stealing a lady’s bicycle. The girl pleaded guilty to the charge. The cycle was the property of Dorothy Hall, of 36 Cromwell Road, Grimsby, and it was stolen from Moody Lane.
Det-Inspector Birtles said that the cycle was stolen on January 8th. On January 13th
a man named Woolas brought the girl to the police station with the stolen bicycle and she admitted that she had stolen it.
The defendant had nothing to say except that she was sorry.
Supt. Tarttelin said that the girl was 17 years of age and a native of Grimsby; she was at the Edward street School until she was 14, then also worked in her grandmother’s house for two years. She returned home for a month and then entered domestic service. She was only in this situation a week, however, when she was taken away, it was believed by her mother. It was ascertained that the girl had stolen 4s from her employer.
In November last, continued the Superintendent, the woman with whom the girl’s father was living told her to leave the house on account of going out on the previous Sunday night when she was told not to. She slept in a wash-house at her Grandmother’s house for a week. At the end of this period she was discovered by her father and taken back home.
It appears that the girl left home again on the 8th inst, after a quarrel with her father’s housekeeper. She slept out again for two nights.
The girl’s own mother was living with another man, and it was he who brought the girl to the police station with the stolen bicycle. Her father was a plasterer and lived with this woman at 65, Edward Street. ‘Quite a mix-up” said Supt. Tarttelin in conclusion.
The girl’s father was called before the Stipendary. the latter asked him if he had been a party to turning the girl out of the house. Mullinger replied he had not.
The Stipendary:- This woman you are living with did then ___ That is not true; it is another of her lies.
Mullinger said he reported the girl as missing on the next day, and he was not aware that she was sleeping out in the wash-house at her grandmother’s.
“You seem to have shockingly neglected this girl in the past with this result” said the Stipendary to Mullinger. The latter said in reply to the Magistrate, that he could look after her if she were sent home for a week.
‘I don’t know how you have got your affairs in this mess, but the result is your daughter is here charged with theft’ added the Stipendary.
The case was adjourned for a week.