Ben Boucher

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Born1769 (1769)
Died1851 (aged 8182)
OccupationPoet
Notable works"Lines On Dudley Market"
Ben Boucher
Born1769 (1769)
Died1851 (aged 8182)
OccupationPoet
Notable works"Lines On Dudley Market"

Ben Boucher (1769-1851) was an English poet who described life in Dudley in the Black Country during the 19th century.

Ben Boucher was born in 1769 at Horseley Heath, Tipton and was a collier by trade.[1]

According to one source: he "inherited by nature a lot of native humour and vivacity, he was essentially a "collier," fond of his beer, and jolly company to boot. He managed by considerable industry to acquire the knowledge of reading and writing, which enabled him to put in rhyme his "doggerel ideas " of things in general.[2]

He wrote a poem in 1827 describing in detail Dudley Market.[3]

A poem dated November 1837, entitled "On the Melancholy Occurrences which took place at Brierleyhill and Cradley Forge, November 1, I837" had under the title: "By Ben Boucher (a Working Collier)".[4]

A number of his poems are included in the book The Curiosities of Dudley and the Black Country by C.F.G. Clarke published in 1881. According to Clarke, he was commemorated with the rhyme:

Oh! rare Ben Boucher, Boucher Ben; The best of Poets, but worst of men.

Clarke also adds:[1] "the greater part of his singular and irregular life was spent in Dudley, at certain favourite public house haunts, where his talents were appreciated, and his songs admired and read by the curious". According to Clarke, Boucher was "a great Tory" and was supported by political association and sympathy in his latter days. Boucher fell on hard times towards the end of his life, becoming homeless and very poor. He reputedly died in the workhouse in 1851[5] although his grand-daughter wrote to a newspaper in 1902, claiming to have witnessed his death at a house in The Dock, Dudley.[6]

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Commemoration

References

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