Most of the Charterhouse residents who are recorded in our 19th century register, like those who died in earlier centuries, have no marked graves. Many were laid to rest in the Hull General Cemetery, their graves recorded but with no headstones. The Sculcoates workhouse had a contract with the cemetery to bury their dead in the pauper's section (left) but almshouses like the Charterhouse had no such contract so their graves are more scattered. Funerals and burials cost money so were carried out as cheaply as possible. In 1862 the Master's daughter, Emily Bromby, wrote a begging letter to a contact of Richard Haworth for the £2 it would cost to have this inmate "respectably" and "decently" buried. Even if an inmate left enough money for the funeral there would rarely be a headstone.
An exception was when there was an existing grave of a family member, and the deceased could be interred in the same grave and an addition carved on the headstone. That has helped to rescue at least one resident from obscurity. Jane Foster appears on our register with the bare details. She was admitted on 9 September 1876 aged 76 and died on 27 December 1878. We can be sure from that simply that she was either a widow or a single woman or she would not have been given a room in her own right. But the name is too common to enable us easily to find out more about her. Until, that is, Bill Longbone of the Friends of Hull General Cemetery turned up a gravestone.
It was hard to photograph but the details are clear. Jane was the widow of William Foster, who died in 1855. We have enough information to find out more about her. She was born Jane Richardson in Hull and married William Foster of Hull on 30 June 1823 in Rise, East Yorkshire. William was a brewer and by 1841 the couple were living on Vincent St, Hull. In 1851 William was employing two "hands" and they had a domestic servant. They also had two daughters. His small brewing operation was apparently moderately successful. On 5 March 1852 a court case was reported in the Hull Packet; William had been the victim of a robbery. The thief had stolen a gold watch, a gold chain and a hat.After William's death it seems that Jane did not try to carry on the business. In 1861 she was living on Shaw St, Drypool, with her daughter Harriet and Harriet's husband, and was described as an annuitant, i.e. a pensioner. By 1871 she was a lodger, along with another annuitant, in the home of a mariner. Five years later she got a room in the Charterhouse.
I have compiled a database of 1,179 Charterhouse residents - a small fraction of the total. All of them, like Jane Foster, were interesting individuals who deserve to be remembered as part of our social history.