The Fleet: Its Rivers, Prison, and Marriages by John Ashton

(5 User reviews)   2427
By Abil Kile Posted on Nov 15, 2025
In Category - Adventure
Ashton, John, 1834-1911 Ashton, John, 1834-1911
English
Ever wonder what it was like to get married in a London prison? That's the bizarre, true story at the heart of John Ashton's book. Forget fancy churches—for over a century, the Fleet Prison was London's secret, scandalous wedding factory. Ashton digs through old records, court cases, and wild newspaper ads to show us a world where love, money, and crime collided in the most unexpected place. It's a forgotten slice of social history that reads like the strangest gossip column you've ever found.
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further course is kept in our memory by Brook Street, Hanover Square. The name of this little river has exercised many minds, and has been the cause of spoiling much good paper. My own opinion, backed by many antiquaries, is that a _Fleet_ means a brook, or tributary to a larger river, which is so wide, and deep, at its junction with the greater stream as to be navigable for the small craft then in use, for some little distance. Thus, we have the names on the Thames of Purfleet, Northfleet, and Southfleet, and the same obtains in other places. Its derivation seems to be Saxon--at least, for our language. Thus, in Bosworth's "Dictionary of the Anglo-Saxon Language," we find, "Flede-Fledu: part. _Flooded_; _overflowed_: tumidus[2]: Tiber fledu wearð[3]--the Tiber was flooded (Ors. 4. 7)." Again, the same author gives: "Fleot (_Plat_ fleet, m. _a small river_; _Ger._ flethe. f. _a channel_). _A place where vessels float_, _a bay_, _gulf_, _an arm of the sea_, _the mouth of a river_, _a river_; hence the names of places, as _Northfleet_, _Southfleet_, _Kent_; and in London, _Fleet ditch_; _sinus_.[4] Soes Fleot, _a bay of the sea_.[5] _Bd._ 1. 34." Another great Anglo-Saxon scholar--Professor Skeat, in "An Etymological Dictionary of the English Language": "Fleet, a creek, bay. In the names _North-fleet_, _Fleet_ Street, &c. Fleet Street was so named from the Fleet Ditch; and _fleet_ was given to any shallow creek, or stream, or channel of water. See Halliwell. M.E. _fleet_ (Promptorium Parvulorum, &c., p. 166). A.S. _fleót_, a bay of the sea, as in Soes Fleot, bay of the sea. Ælfred's tr. of Beda, i. 34.[5] Afterwards applied to any channel or stream, especially if shallow. The original sense was 'a place where vessels float,' and the derivation is from the old verb _fleet_, to float, &c." The French, too, have a cognate term, especially in Norman towns, as Barfleur, Honfleur, Harfleur, &c., which were originally written Barbe_flot_, Hune_flot_, and Hare_flot_: and these were sometimes written Hareflou, Huneflou, and Barfleu, which latter comes very near to the Latin _flevus_, called by Ptolemy _fleus_, and by Mela _fletio_. Again, in Brittany many names end in _pleu_, or _plou_, which seems to be very much like the Greek [Greek: pleô]: _full_, _swollen_, which corresponds to our Anglo-Saxon Flede; Dutch Vliet. But it has another, and a very pretty name, "THE RIVER OF WELLS," from the number of small tributaries that helped to swell its stream, and from the wells which bordered its course; such as Sadler's Wells, Bagnigge Wells, White Conduit, Coldbath, Lamb's Conduit, Clerkenwell--all of which (although all were not known by those names in Stow's times) were in existence. Stow, in his "SURVEY OF LONDON" (ed. 1603, his last edition, and which consequently has his best corrections), says-- [Sidenote: "_Riuer of Wels._] [Sidenote: _Decay of the Riuer of the Wels._] [Sidenote: _Parliament Record._] [Sidenote: _Riuer of Wels bare ships._] [Sidenote: Patent Record. _Mils by Baynards Castel, made in the first of King John._] [Sidenote: _Turnemill Brooke._] That the riuer of Wels in the west parte of the Citty, was of olde so called of the Wels, it may be proued thus, William the Conqueror in his Charter to the Colledge of S. Marten le Grand in London, hath these wordes: I doe giue and graunt to the same Church all the land and the Moore, without the Posterne, which is called Cripplegate, on eyther part of the Postern, that is to say, from the North corner of the Wall, as the riuer of the Wels, there neare running, departeth the same More from...

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John Ashton's book isn't a novel, but the story it tells is wild enough to be fiction. He pulls back the curtain on a massive, century-long loophole in 18th-century London: secret weddings performed inside the Fleet Prison.

The Story

The book explains how the Fleet, a debtors' prison, became the go-to spot for quick, cheap, and often shady marriages. Clergy imprisoned for debt set up shop, marrying anyone who walked in, no questions asked. Minors, drunk couples, people running from their families—all could be wed in minutes. Ashton builds this picture using the actual advertisements these 'Fleet parsons' placed, court records from the chaos it caused, and firsthand accounts. It's the full, messy story of a system that thrived on avoiding the rules.

Why You Should Read It

This is history with the gloves off. Ashton doesn't just give you dates and laws; he shows you the human hustle behind them. You meet the entrepreneurial parsons, the desperate couples, and the furious parents. It completely changes how you see marriage and law in that era. It’s less about kings and battles and more about people gaming a broken system, with all the comedy, tragedy, and scandal that came with it.

Final Verdict

Perfect for anyone who loves weird history, true crime, or stories about society's messy edges. If you enjoy learning about the odd, everyday ways people lived in the past—the stuff they don't teach in school—you'll be hooked. It’s a short, fascinating dive into one of London's most bizarre forgotten trades.



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This publication is available for unrestricted use. Knowledge should be free and accessible.

Jennifer Martin
5 months ago

I have to admit, the flow of the text seems very fluid. I learned so much from this.

Dorothy Walker
3 months ago

Very interesting perspective.

Kevin Martin
5 months ago

Five stars!

Elijah Miller
8 months ago

Without a doubt, the author's voice is distinct and makes complex topics easy to digest. A true masterpiece.

Sarah Torres
11 months ago

Not bad at all.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (5 User reviews )

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