Anna,
Where did you obtain your information? Was it from a book, or have you actually looked up
The Times, as I can't find the story there for that date? In a query about JSTOR in the private forum, you refer to an article in a US journal. That article only gives a tiny bit of information, and the author says it is from
The Times, but he has taken his information from David Walder
Nelson: a Biography New York: Dial Press 1978 p.xii. We have a Hamish Hamilton version of that book, and Walder gives his source as
The Times (giving the same information as you have given here).
A while ago, when Roy and I were researching
The War for All the Oceans, we came across this same story on page 111 of Laurence Brockliss, John Cardwell and Michael Moss's book
Nelson's Surgeon (Oxford University Press, 2005), an excellent publication on the surgeon William Beatty. They give the reference as the
Exeter Times for that date, but although we live in Exeter, we were unable to find the story. We never chased it up with the authors, but the Ayshford Trafalgar Roll has no mention of a marine with the surname of Pitt or Pitts on board the
Victory. There was an ordinary seaman called George Pitt from Bristol in the
Victory, and he may later have joined the marines, or she may have remarried - that happened to Ann Hopping, who was at the Battle of the Nile. She remarried and was later known as Nancy Perriam, so that for a long time it was believed there were two women (see
War for All the Oceans pp.32-3)
There is evidence for women being on board the
Victory at Trafalgar, such as Mary Sperring who claimed to have washed the blood from Nelson's shirt. It hasn't been possible to confirm the presence of these women, but we're sure some were there, as well as on board some of the other ships. You mention Daniel Maclise, the artist, in an earlier thread, and he shows two women in his famous painting. He did a lot of eyewitness research, and it would be fascinating to track down all his research. In a book by Nancy Weston, in 2001, called
Daniel Maclise: Irish Artist in Victorian London, she says that he interviewed many people who had been on board the
Victory during the battle, and she gives (in footnote 10 on page 245) a quote from a letter that Maclise wrote to one of his informants, in which he says of the women: 'I am very glad to receive this intelligence from you, for great naval authorities had forbidden me to introduce a woman in my design of "The deck of the Victory when Nelson fell". I shall certainly now introduce that element of interest and variety.' This letter is apparently in the Whitley Papers chapter 8, British Museum [not Library], department of prints and drawings. It was impossible to obtain more information from the museum, or to make a firm appointment to see this archive when we were doing our research - it was first come, first served to get a seat, we were told, and so you needed to live in London and be able to queue up at the museum door that morning in order to do the research. Nancy Weston also says that Maclise recorded that the presence of women was beyond doubt, but he also said that it was positively denied by the higher-ranking officers.
Many people of course claimed they were at Trafalgar, especially in the Victory, as they could get a lot of sympathy in their old age. In
Jack Tar, p.390, we talk about Joseph Swindlehurst who at the age of 89 was in the workhouse at Chorley in Lancashire. He made such a claim, but there is no evidence that he was there, unless he used an alias (which some of them did, of course).
Lesley
http://www.adkinshistory.com