If you read our recent post on Grip, the raven much beloved of Charles Dickens, you will remember that it was removed from the writer’s home on its demise in March 1841 in a covered basket, and was returned stuffed, in a rather fine glass-fronted “rustic” case. In other words, it had been taken to a taxidermist. Sadly, we have been unable to identify the taxidermist in question, but we do know of another stuffer with a curious Dickensian connection, and he is the subject of this post. His name was John Willis.

Among other pieces of information, we know that Willis had his shop at no. 42 Great St Andrew Street in Seven Dials, in the heart of the notorious St Giles rookery. We know, too, that his father, who was also a John, and who lived with his wife and six children in Soho, was once a coal dealer but later, in his mid-forties, became a naturalist. A naturalist in the nineteenth century might have been any number of things. But the term was certainly used as a euphemism for taxidermist, as suggested by an article published in 1863 in the Cornhill Magazine, which states that

some of us may have had the misfortune to see some special pet carried off by death, and to have sent it to a “naturalist,” to be stuffed.

Meanwhile the nineteen-year-old John was a clerk at a wharf, but he soon abandoned this occupation, and when next sighted, in the 1861 census, he is also a taxidermist, or, to give him the title he preferred, a bird and beast preserver.

MR WILLIS OF SEVEN DIALS

By now he was married—his wife was called Emily or Emma—and living in Seven Dials. The occupational community to which he belonged was surprisingly extensive, and at about that time stuffers were operating all over London. Some won considerable renown, notable examples being Abraham Dee Bartlett, who in 1851 was awarded a gold watch by Queen Victoria for services to her pet birds, and Charles Jamrach, who became famous when in 1857 he fought one of his own tigers, which had sloped away from his shop with a young boy in its jaws. Others were rather shadier, and in 1858 it was reported that a Thomas Compton, who accidentally shot himself when he broke into the grounds of Baron Rothschild’s residence in Gunnersbury Park in Ealing, and subsequently died, had been in the habit of carrying a gun “for the purpose of shooting small birds to supply his brother, who is a bird stuffer in London”.

If young John Willis enjoyed no such notoriety, the same certainly cannot be said for Seven Dials. The best description we have of the area, which was one of Victorian London’s worst slums, is in Sketches by Boz. Dickens recreates the scene with vivid details—the maze of fetid courts and alleys, the women drunk on gin and bitters, the half-naked children. He was writing in the 1830s, but it is hard to imagine that much had changed, let alone improved, by the time Willis set up shop, and Gustave Doré certainly found there in 1872 a tangle of filthy streets peopled by desperately poor Londoners.

Here, then, John and Emily Willis made their home in a street busy with tradesmen and tradeswomen of every description. On one side their neighbours were a boot-maker, a cap-maker and a saddler’s ironmonger, and on the other a grocer, a haberdasher, and, coincidentally, a bird dealer. No. 42 itself was a tenement divided into a number of dwellings, and in the 1861 census it was home to six families—one of these the Willises—totalling twenty residents ranging in occupation from a ginger beer manufacturer to a gentleman’s servant. The writer Percy Hetherington Fitzgerald once saw Willis’s shop, and remembered “its dirt and darkness, and the articulated skeletons seen dimly through the frowsy panes”. Even in Seven Dials, which abounded with sellers of birds and animals, there would have been few sights as macabre as this.

ENTER MR STONE

Then one snowy day in the winter of 1864 the door of Mr Willis’s shop opened, and in came a young man by the name of Marcus Stone. Fate, it would seem, was taking an interest in the stuffer of Seven Dials, for the opening of the door would set in train a series of events that would ensure him—an otherwise entirely overlooked Londoner—an improbable sort of immortality.

Stone explained that he was an artist and illustrator, that he needed a stuffed dog for a painting he was working on, and that Willis had been recommended by an acquaintance. Willis told his visitor to leave the matter with him, and a few days later he appeared at the artist’s studio with a dog of undisclosed provenance and very much alive. The dog wagged its tail in such a winning manner that Stone almost forgot the nature of his project, but it passed muster, and was sent off with Willis to be “set up”, that is to say killed, and then stuffed, and then arranged in imitation of nature.

Now it so happened that young Marcus Stone was a good friend of Charles Dickens, and that on the very same evening he went to the theatre with the great novelist. Dickens at that time was hard at work on Our Mutual Friend, and between acts he confided in Stone that he was casting around for something unexpected and unusual that he could make a distinctive feature of the novel. Stone immediately thought of Willis, whom he remembered as a “brisk, active, cheerful, little man”, and he gave Dickens an account of the dingy little shop in Seven Dials with its heaps of bones, its feathers, and its anatomical curiosities—its “bottled monsters”—in preserving jars.

The next day at two o’clock in the afternoon Stone took Dickens to Great St Andrew Street. Mr Willis was not there, but the visitors were received by his assistant, a lugubrious youth who was working on some bones. Delighted by the strangeness of the scene, Dickens observed all, noted all, and without writing anything down took away with him a mental sketch that became the shop belonging to Mr Venus, the sallow-faced taxidermist of Our Mutual Friend.

Not only was the real Willis made eternal as the fictional Venus—as if in one of his own repellent jars—but his shop was frozen in time by the deft hand of the talented Stone. The artist visited Seven Dials several times in order to get the details right, and his efforts were rewarded, for the picture that appeared in book 1 chapter 7 must be one of the finest of the many visual treasures in the early editions of Dickens. Stone gave it the title Mr Venus surrounded by the trophies of his art, and, although the portrait of the taxidermist himself owed more to the artist’s imagination than to his memory, the interior of the shop was faithful captured. And so there could be no better inventory of its contents than the one offered by Mr Venus to his visitor, who, you will remember, was the wooden-legged ballad-seller Silas Wegg:

My working bench. My young man’s bench. A Wice. Tools. Bones, warious. Skulls, warious. Preserved Indian baby. African ditto. Bottled preparations, warious. Everything within reach of your hand, in good preservation. The mouldy ones a-top. What’s in those hampers over them again, I don’t quite right remember. Say, human warious. Cats. Articulated English baby. Dogs. Ducks. Glass eyes, warious. Mummied bird. Dried cuticle, warious.

FAREWELL JOHN WILLIS

Willis continued to ply his grisly trade in Seven Dials for a number of years after his cameo appearance in Dickens’s novel. We spot him again in 1868, when a swindler by the name of Moss tricked him out of a pound, and, given that he went to court to recover the stolen money, we would probably infer that he was not a wealthy man. Some years later, in 1879, he is named in connection with a mysterious enterprise involving a person known only as “H.S.”, a mummy that had once been exhibited at the Egyptian Hall in Piccadilly, a display case and a cart. Clearly our humble naturalist was attempting to diversify.

Shortly after, though, ill-health caught up with him, and he died in the winter of 1880. He was fifty years old, and he had been suffering from an enlarged and diseased liver. At the time he was renting a property—“Lawn Cottage”—in Kilburn Lane, where by an extraordinary coincidence Dickens’s younger brother Alfred, a civil engineer, had once lived. His death was reported to the registrar by a young clerk, George Arthur Day, who lived in Devonport Road in Shepherd’s Bush. Why Day was there, what his connection with the dying taxidermist was, and for that matter just who he was, are questions we may never be able to answer.

On a final intriguing note, a “J. Willis” placed an advertisement in a south London newspaper in 1884, notifying the public that he had “a lot of bones to be sold cheap”. He was a stuffer, but he also called himself, somewhat euphemistically, a zoological artist. His premises were in Waterloo Road. However, he had formerly operated from no. 42 Great St Andrew Street. It would appear that somebody had been carrying on the business of the Willis—our Willis—who had died in Kilburn four years before.

No such uncertainty hangs over the career of Marcus Stone. He established a name for himself as an illustrator, working not only with Dickens but with Trollope and other writers as well. His range was impressive, from domestic drawing-room dramas to mountaineers in the Alps. In an odd echo of Silas Wegg, one of his illustrations to Trollope’s He Knew He Was Right shows the wooden-legged postman of Nuncombe Putney.

In 1877 Stone was elected an Associate of the Royal Academy, achieving Academician status ten years later. He was now living in Melbury Road in Holland Park, which was (and still is) a pretty salubrious part of town. He could not have been further from the dark and malodorous shop in Seven Dials where he once encountered the strange Mr Willis.

As for Great St Andrew Street, it is now the top half of Monmouth Street in Covent Garden. No. 42 has long since disappeared. So too have the bird dealers, the bird-cage makers, and the bird stuffers in their dirty, dark and frowsy-windowed shops.

© london-overlooked 2018

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