A Night At Billingsgate Market
Up to 600 homeless sleep people on the floor at the Crisis at Christmas shelter in Whitechapel, 1978.
I am giving my last lecture about the astonishing East End photography of David Hoffman this Sunday 8th December at 2:45pm as the finale of the Bloomsbury Jamboree at the Art Workers’ Guild.
In the week after the City of London Corporation voted to close Smithfield and Billingsgate Markets for good, I publish my account of a night at the market in the company of legendary fishmonger Charlie Caisey.
Eighty-five year old fishmonger Charlie Caisey retired more than twenty years ago yet he could not keep away from the fish market for long, so I was delighted to give him an excuse for a nocturnal visit – showing me around and introducing me to his pals. Charlie maintained his relationship with the fish business through involvement with the school at Billingsgate, where he taught young people training as fishmongers and welcomed school parties visiting to learn about fish.
Universally respected for his personal integrity and generosity of spirit, Charlie turned out to be the ideal guide to the fish market. Thanks to him, I had the opportunity to shake the hand and take the portraits of many of Billingsgate’s most celebrated characters and, looking back with impunity upon his sixty years of experience in the business, Charlie told me his story candidly. He did not always enjoy the high regard that he enjoyed in latter days, Charlie forged his reputation in an arena fraught with moral challenges.
“In 1950, when I joined Macfisheries and started in a shop at Ilford, I was told, “You’ll never make a fishmonger,” and they moved me to another shop in Leytonstone. I was honest and in those days fishmongers always added coppers to the scale but I wouldn’t do that. Later, when I ran my shop, it was always sixteen ounces to the pound.
In Leytonstone, it was an open-fronted shop with sawdust on the floor. You had a blocksman who did the fishmongering, a frontsman who served the customers and a boy who ran around. At twenty-one, I was a boy fishmonger and then the frontsman decided to leave, so I moved up when he left. And I found I had an uncanny ability at arranging fish in shows! I made quite a little progress there, even though I was never taught – just three weeks at Macfisheries’ school.
I got my first management of a fish shop within three years, I was sent out to a poor LCC estate at Hainault. It was a fabulous shop but it was losing money, this was where I learnt to run a business and I worked up a bit of a storm there, working eighty hours a week and accounting the stock to a farthing. As a consequence, I was offered a first hand job in a shop behind Selfridges where all the customers were lords and ladies, but I refused because, if I was manager in my own shop, it would have been a step down. So then they sent me to run a shop in Bayswater. It was a lovely shop, when I arrived I had never seen many of the fish that were on display there, and I became wrapped up in it. We had a great cosmopolitan public including ladies of the oldest profession in the world.
Within a couple of years, Macfisheries moved me to Notting Hill Gate at the top of Holland Park Avenue – absolutely fabulous. I served most of the embassies and the early stars of television. The likes of Max Wall, Dickie Henderson and the scriptwriter of The Good Life were customers of mine. I built up quite a reputation and I was the first London manager to earn £1000 a year. From there I went to Knightsbridge running the largest fish shop in London, opposite Harrods. In 1965, I had thirty-five staff working under me and I worked fourteen hours a day.
My dream was to go into business on my own but I had no money. When I started my own shop, the sad part was how poor it was. It had holes in the floor, no proper drainage and no refrigeration. I’d never been to Billingsgate Market in my thirteen years at Macfisheries and when I went with my small orders, it was a different ball game. The dealers treated me like an idiot, the odd shilling was going on the prices and I was given short measures. Yet I never took it personally and I started to earn their respect because I always paid my bills every week. And, in twenty years, my turnover went from twelve thousand pounds to over half a million a year.
Most of my experience and knowledge has come from the customers. My experience of life came from the other side of the counter. They showed me that if you go out and look, there is a better life. When I think of Stratford while I was growing up, it was a stinky place because of the smell from the soap factories. My family were all railway people, my father was an uneducated labourer and what that man used to do for such a small amount of money and bad working conditions. We were poor because my marvellous parents were underpaid for their labours. I didn’t leave London during the war and I witnessed all the horrors. I missed lots of school because I was in the East End all through the bombing, so I’ve always been conscious of my poor education. Basically, I’m a shy man and I’m always amazed that I can stand up in front of people and speak, but I can do it because it comes from the heart.
Don’t ever do what I did. I went eighteen years without a holiday. It was a little crazy, I was forty before I had time to learn to drive.”
Dawn came up as Charlie told me his story and we walked out to the back of the fish market where the dealers throw fish to the seals from the wharf. Through his tenacity, Charlie proved his virtue as a human being and won respect as a fishmonger too. Yet although he may regret the inordinate struggle and hard work that kept him away from his family growing up, Charlie is still in thrall to his lifelong passion for this age-old endeavour of distributing and selling the strange harvest of the deep.
Clearing away after a night’s trading at Billingsgate, 7:40am.
Tom Burchell, forty-nine years in the fish business.
Alan Cook, lobster specialist for fifty-two years.
Simon Chilcott, twenty-four years at Bard Shellfish.
Mick Jenn, fifty-four years in eels – “Me dad was an empty boy and I started off in an eel factory.”
Terry Howard, sixty-three years in shellfish – “I played football in the 1960 Olympics.”
Anwar Kureeman, twelve years at Billingsgate – “I am a newcomer.”
Paul Webber, seventeen years at J.Bennett, Billingsgate’s largest salmon dealers.
Andres Slips came from Lithuania eleven years ago – “I couldn’t speak English when I arrived, now my mother would blush to hear my language.”
Geoff Steadman, fourth generation fish dealer, thirty-three years at Chamberlain & Thelwell.
Charlie in his first suit at fifteen –“From Willoughbys, I paid for it myself at half a crown a week.”
Charlie at the Macfisheries School of Fishmongery (He is third from right in back row).
Charlie in his fish shop in the seventies.
Charlie Caisey – the little fish that became a big fish.
You may recall I met Charlie Caisey at The Fish Harvest Festival
You may also like to take a look at
Boiling the Eels at Barney’s Seafood
I wonder how many of the porters etc at Billingsgate remember Henry Dawkins who owned the Billingsgate Overall Service – hiring and laundering most of the white overalls worn in the market when it was in Lower Thames Street. His shop was in a basement just off Fish Street Hill.
Henry was a family friend for many years.
We learn so much about the people and their length of time in the business…
“forty-nine years in the fish business”
“lobster specialist for fifty-two years”
“twenty-four years at Bard Shellfish”
“fifty-four years in eels ‘Me dad was an empty boy and I started off in an eel factory.'” an empty boy? I’m guessing the clue is right there in front of us…
“sixty-three years in shellfish ‘I played football in the 1960 Olympics.'” a gem of a snippet…
“twelve years at Billingsgate ‘I am a newcomer.'” newcomer? says it all…
“seventeen years at J.Bennett, Billingsgate’s largest salmon dealers”
“from Lithuania eleven years ago ‘I couldn’t speak English when I arrived, now my mother would blush to hear my language.’ language? very much that ‘working class coal face language’ that we’re cancelled for these days…
“fourth generation fish dealer, thirty-three years at Chamberlain & Thelwell”
“in his first suit at fifteen ‘From Willoughbys, I paid for it myself at half a crown a week.'” it’s how many of us went about it paying for most everything back then…
“Charlie in his fish shop in the seventies” the three rows of shelved products behind the counter we got served – practical, sensible and conveniently to hand…
The poignant question for me is “who’ll be there out back where the fish market is now throwing fish to the seals from the wharf once this place is torn down? it’s the small stuff that is overlooked and lost in the midst of this ‘change for the sake of greed’.
I loved this instalment, especially the photos – and the eel man! My mother used to cook eels, with parsley sauce, 70+ years ago; I never see them now.
But I worry about your proofreading; ‘yet he could keep’ should surely be ‘yet he couldn’t keep’?
I enjoy each instalment, but don’t always have time to read them; I regard them as a treat.
Charlie, my father-in-law, is still going strong at 94 years of age.
Lovely piece. I ate it all up.
Thank you, Charlie — for sharing your life story and your wisdom. What a gracious man, to observe that he learned everything from customers. The modesty of that statement was a shining example of his endurance and skill as a story teller. An impressive gent.
In the late 1970s, I had the great joy to be an urban pioneer in Lower Manhattan. Before the trendiness, the foo-foo-fanciness, the gasp-worthy prices, the exalted status. It was, simply, a neighborhood waiting to be reclaimed and brought back to life. Perhaps a hold-out from the old Washington Market days (not sure), there was a no-frills fish store in a two-story building on Duane Street. The accoutrements of the place could NOT have been more simple. White tile covered every surface, fluorescent lighting blazed, a glass-front display case went from wall-to-wall, and two gentlemen in long white aprons stood behind the counter. No helpful signage. Nothing to give a clue about the contents of the case — one would have to ask. But, written on a piece of cardboard, was a message:
“I don’t know. I don’t want to know. Don’t ask me.”
I often had the urge to ask about the sign. I never did. As far as I could tell, both gentlemen were helpful, cordial, and sociable. Perhaps an earlier colleague, a true curmudgeon, had left the sign? I’ll never know. So don’t ask me.