The practice of wearing clothes decorated with
mother-of-pearl buttons is first associated with Henry Croft (1861-1930), an
orphan street sweeper who collected money for charity. At the time, London
costermongers (street traders) were in the habit of wearing trousers decorated
at the seams with pearl buttons that had been found by market traders. In the
late 1870s, Croft adapted this to create a pearly suit to draw attention to
himself and aid his fund-raising activities. In 1911 an organised pearly
society was formed in Finchley, north London.
Croft's funeral in January 1930 was attended by 400
followers and received national media coverage. In 1934 a memorial, referring
to him as "The original Pearly King", was unveiled in St Pancras
Cemetery, and in a speech to mark the occasion he was said to have raised
£5,000 for those suffering in London's hospitals.
Pearly organisations
The pearlies are now divided into several active groups.
Croft's founding organisation is called the Original London Pearly Kings and
Queens Association. It was reformed in 1975 and holds the majority of the
original pearly titles which are City of London, Westminster, Victoria,
Hackney, Tower Hamlets, Shoreditch, Islington, Dalston and Hoxton. Other groups
have also been established over the years. The oldest is the Pearly Guild,
which began in 1902. Modern additions include the London Pearly Kings and
Queens Society, which started in 2001 and the Pearly Kings and Queens Guild. Despite
the rivalries, each group is associated with a church in central London and is
committed to raising money for London-based charities. A parade of real-life
Pearly Kings and Queens was featured at the 2012 Summer Olympics Opening
Ceremony.
Croft was born at the St Pancras Workhouse in Somers Town,
London, and baptized there on 5 June 1861. He was raised in an orphanage after
his father, a musician, died in around 1871. He worked as a municipal road
sweeper from around 1876, employed by St Pancras vestry and later St Pancras
Metropolitan Borough Council until the 1920s.
Suits of Fame
Croft started to wear his pearly suit to raise money for
charity in the late 1870s. The origin of the pearly tradition is obscure. Croft
began to decorate his clothes with mother-of-pearl buttons, which were
mass-produced at factories in the East End of London. The inspiration for this
form of decoration is a matter of debate. It may have been inspired by the
clothes of costermongers (street vendors of fruit and vegetables) in Somers
Town: some sources mention a common practice of adding decorative metal buttons
to their plain clothes, others indicate that it was unknown. Croft himself was
never a costermonger. Alternatively, the costume may also have been inspired by
coster singers - such as Hyram Travers who performed as the "Pearly
King"’ - or the stage clothes of other music hall entertainers.
By 1880, Croft was wearing a "smother" suit
completely covered with thousands of white buttons. He later created more
sparsely decorated "skeleton" suits. He is thought to have made at
least seven suits to wear himself, two of which he left in his will. He also
made pearly clothes - suits, hats, belts, and ties - for others. The suit would
have drawn attention to Croft when he participated in charitable pageants and
carnivals to raise money for local hospitals, an important source of funding
before the National Health Service. Croft wore his pearly suit to raise funds
for the London Temperance Hospital in the 1880, but the first surviving
reference to him in a printed source is a photograph and accompanying letter in
The Strand Magazine in February 1902, which describes "Mr F. Croft"
as the "Pearlie King of Somers Town".
The Royalty of Pearl
Croft was presented to Edward VII and Queen Alexandra at the
Horse of the Year Show at Olympia in 1907, and led a display by costermongers
and their donkeys at the show in 1912. By 1911, all 28 of the metropolitan
boroughs of London had its own pearly king, pearly queen, and pearly family,
often members of the local costermonger community. The Original Pearly Kings'
and Queens' Association was established that year. South of the River Thames,
the pearly families were associated into a Pearly Kings' and Queens' Guild. In
July 1926, he claimed publicly that he was the "original Pearly-King in
London".
Croft raised money for a variety of hospitals and other
charities, including St Dunstan's, the Hospital Saturday Fund, and the Sons of
Phoenix temperance society. He received a medal from the Lord Mayor of London
for raising £72 following the 1928 Thames flood. He is thought to have received
around 2,000 medals and ribbons to recognise his fund-raising efforts, which
were estimated to have totalled around £4,000 to £5,000.
A Royal Funeral
Croft died from lung cancer in St Pancras workhouse, where
he had been born more than 68 years earlier. He was buried at St Pancras
Cemetery in East Finchley. His funeral cortège stretched for approximately half
a mile, with a procession that included a horse-drawn hearse, musicians, 400
pearly kings and queens, and representatives from the charities that he had
supported. The event was filmed by Pathé News. (Ian Dury requested that the
same hearse was to be used at his funeral in April 2000.)
Croft's Family and Memory
Croft had married Lily Newton on 21 February 1892, at
Bedford New Town Chapel in St Pancras. He was survived by his wife and by
eleven of their twelve children, his eldest son having been killed in action in
the First World War.
A life-sized marble statue of Croft, standing 5 feet (1.5 m)
high, wearing a "smother" pearly tail-coat with top hat and cane, was
commissioned in 1931 and erected at his burial site in 1934. After being
vandalised several times, the statue was restored and removed to the crypt of
St Martin-in-the-Fields in 2002, where the Original Pearly Kings and Queens
Society has held its harvest festival since 1956. Perpetuating the family
tradition, Croft's great-granddaughter later became pearly queen of Somers
Town.
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