Friends of the Dickens Forum, Details of Dickens's residence at 10 Norfolk Street keep being discovered and put in context. Michael John Allen <michaeljohnallen@btinternet>, a master at clarifying how and by whom its history transpired, has kindly brought us up to date on this interesting matter: (pjm) ---------- > Dear Patrick, > > Following the messages from Herb Moscovitz and Dan Calinescu perhaps I can > clarify the sequence in which information came to us about the Dickens > family and Norfolk Street? > > John Forster, in his "Life of Charles Dickens" (1872), was the first > biographer to point us to this short street on the eastern edge of > Marylebone, information he must have had from Charles Dickens himself or > from another member of the family. However, he failed to provide us with a > number or give any other information about the property. But in 1911 a new > edition of Forster's biography appeared, edited by Dickens scholar B.W. > Matz; the value of this book lies in the addition of 500 portraits, > facsimiles and other illustrations, collected, arranged and annotated by > Matz. One of these illustrations is a photograph of 10 Norfolk Street and > had the caption "where Dickens lived in 1814-16". So, it was in 1911 that > the actual building was first identified. 12 years later another > Dickensian, Walter Dexter, drew attention to the fact that the Dickenses had > lived at Norfolk Street on a second occasion, in 1831, adding that it was > probably at the same address as 1816. This information was not expanded > upon until 1951 when Leslie Staples discovered Dickens' application for a > reader's ticket at the British Museum (and therefore its library), which > pinpointed the address as number 10. Dickens' application was made on the > 8th February 1830, the day after his 18th birthday, when he first became > eligible. Staples was the first to point out that the address was changed > from 10 Norfolk Street to 22 Cleveland Street. This change was implemented > in 1867. Staples emphasized the lodgings of the Dickens family were above a > shop, which would have been surmised from Matz's 1911 photo; but he was the > first to tell us that the shop was occupied by John Dodd, a grocer, who had > been there in 1804 and was still there in 1830. Information about Dodd was > expanded by W.J. Carlton in 1952. In my own book, *Charles Dickens' > childhood* (1988) I tried to give more space and attention to this house. > My own efforts were substantially superseded in 2012 by Ruth Richardson in > "Dickens and the workhouse". Ruth's research uncovered much new information > but most importantly pointed out, for the first time, that when the Dickens > family were living at 10 Norfolk Street they were located just 100 yards > from the local workhouse. Her book, together with the campaign to save the > workhouse from demolition, drew attention to a home of Dickens that had not > been given the recognition it deserved. The placing of the commemorative > plaque, with help from Dan Calinescu, has raised this building to a > prominence it rightly deserves. > > > The point of all this is that the identification of the Dickens family's > home in Norfolk Street is not a recent thing, but its proximity to the > workhouse is. I might add the most recent research shows there is a > possibility John Dickens' brother William may have lived at 10 Norfolk > Street in 1817; and that firstly John Dickens and then the rest of his > family may have lived there for a third time, in the first half of 1822 - > the reasoning for this will appear in an article in the forthcoming December > issue of "Dickens Quarterly". > > With best wishes to all > > Michael Allen.