The Scotsman

Exhibition turns spotlight on ‘jewellery’ of tattooed convicts

- Alison Campsie Heritage Correspond­ent

in Jane Johnston’s prison records are notes about her tattoos. On her left arm were the initials MSC, which were probably tattooed by own hand. On her right arm was the name Robert Lane. A lover, perhaps, or a partner in crime.

Johnston, of Aberdeen, was jailed in December 1882 for three months hard labour as a “rogue and a vagabond” and disappeare­d to Glasgow on release, her story then unknown.

But her papers and photograph from Perth Prison are now central to a new exhibition that looks at the longexplor­ed links between tattoos – considered the ‘jewellery of the working class’ – and criminalit­y.

The show, Gunpowder, Tattoos and Transporta­tion:

Aberdeen’s Inked Convicts, is a key draw of Granite Noir, the city’s popular crime writing festival, which starts on February 20.

Dr Ashleigh Black, archives assistant at Aberdeen City and Aberdeensh­ire Archives, has compiled the exhibition using records from Perth Prison and a register of transporte­d convicts who found their way home.

She found numerous examples of the tattooed criminal class, with the marks likely to have been made from gunpowder, charcoal or ashes mixed with water, saliva or urine.

Dr Black said: “The most common tattoos were lettering, initials, numbers and dots, mainly because they were the simplest to tattoo and could be easily self-administer­ed. Other common motifs were female figures, anchors, cruinclude­d cifixes, hearts, ships and flowers.”

Dr Black said, while women typically were marked with names and initials, the tattoos of men tended to be more elaborate. Murdoch Grant, a seaman from Thurso, was sentenced to ten years penal servitude following a drunken quarrel on a schooner docked at Wick that ended in a fatal stabbing. Prison records show Grant had a fresh complexion, black hair and brown eyes – and a tattoo of a horse, traditiona­lly used to represent strength and freedom, inside his upper arm.

Meanwhile, John Stephen, who was transporte­d from Aberdeen in 1866, was marked with a crucifix and sailor on his left arm and a woman on his right. While links between tattooing and the social underclass were made by 19th-century criminolog­ists and phrenologi­sts, Dr Black said she believed the tattoos were irrelevant to criminalit­y.

She said: “People, even back then, chose to get tattoos for several reasons, some of which may resonate with people today, such as commemorat­ing a loved one or a friend or even something to remind them of home if they had to travel great distances.

"Tattoos were the jewellery of the working class – some of the convicts featured in the exhibition had tattoos of rings and bracelets, and as jewellery was an expensive commodity, getting a tattoo would have been a lot cheaper in comparison.”

Dr Black said a cultural shift in the perception of tattoos occurred at the end of the 19th century, with King Edward VII tattooed with a Jerusalem Cross and Princess Marie of Orleans marked with an anchor in support for her husband’s maritime career.

 ?? PICTURE: WELLCOME COLLECTION. ?? A 19th century tattoo shows a face. Tattoos were likely to use gunpowder, charcoal or ashes mixed with water, saliva or urine
PICTURE: WELLCOME COLLECTION. A 19th century tattoo shows a face. Tattoos were likely to use gunpowder, charcoal or ashes mixed with water, saliva or urine

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