London Labour and the London Poor, Volume 1
Mayhew, Henry
1861
Of Onion Selling in the Streets.
THE sale of onions in the streets is immense. They are now sold at the markets at an average of a bushel. years ago they were , and they have been and up to the bushel. They are now twisted into "ropes" for street sale. The ropes are of straw, into which the roots are platted, and secured firmly enough, so that the ropes can be hung up; these have superseded the netted onions, formerly sold by the Jew boys. The plaiting, or twisting, is done rapidly by the women, and a straw-bonnet-maker described it to me as somewhat after the mode of her trade, only that the top, or projecting portion of the stem of the onion, was twisted within the straw, | |
94 | instead of its being plaited close and flat together. The trade in rope onions is almost entirely in the hands of the Irish women and girls. There are now, it is said, from to persons engaged in it. Onion selling can be started on a small amount of capital, from to , which is no doubt inducement for those poor persons to resort to it. The sixpenny ropes, bunches, or strings (I heard each word applied), contain from to dozen; the penny bunches, from to roots, according to size; and the intermediate and higher priced bunches in proportion. Before Christmas, a good many shilling lots are sold. Among the costermongers I heard this useful root — which the learned in such matters have pronounced to be, along with the mushroom, the foundation of every sauce, ancient or modern—called ing-guns, ingans, injens, injyens, inions, innons, almost everything but onions. |
An Irishwoman, apparently of , but in all probability younger—she did not know her age—gave me the following account. Her face, with its strongly-marked Irish features, was almost purpled from constant exposure to the weather. She was a teetotaller. She was communicative and garrulous, even beyond the average of her countrywomen. She was decently clad, had been in London years (she thought) having been brought from Ireland, Bristol, by her parents (both dead). She herself was a widow, her husband, "a bricklayer" she called him (probably a bricklayer's labourer), having died of the cholera in . I take up her statement from that period: | |
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The greatest sum of money expended by the poor upon any vegetable (after potatoes) is spent upon onions— being annually devoted to the purchase of that article. To those who know the habits of the poor, this will appear in no way singular—a piece of bread and an onion being to the English labourer what bread and an apple or a bunch of grapes is to the French peasant—often his dinner. | |