The hawkers of second-hand articles, live animals, mineral productions, and natural curiosities, form, as we have seen, large important classes of the street-sellers. According to the facts already given, there appear to be at present in the streets, 90 sellers of metal wares, including the sellers of second-hand trays and Italian-irons; 30 sellers of old linen, as wrappers and towelling; 80 vendors of second-hand (burnt) linen and calico; 30 sellers of curtains; 30 sellers of carpeting, &c.; 30 sellers of bed-ticking, &c.; 6 sellers of old crockery and glass; 25 sellers of old musical instruments; 6 vendors of second-hand weapons; 6 sellers of old curiosities; 6 vendors of telescopes and pocket glasses; 30 to 40 sellers of other miscellaneous second-hand articles; 100 sellers of men’s second-hand clothes; 30 sellers of old boots and shoes; 15 vendors of old hats; 50 sellers of women’s second-hand apparel; 30 vendors of second-hand bonnets, and 10 sellers of old furs; 116 sellers of second-hand articles at Smithfield-market;—making altogether 725 street-sellers of second-hand commodities.
But some of the above trades are of a temporary character only, as in the case of the vendors of old linen towelling or wrappers, carpets, bed-ticking, &c.—the same persons who sell the one often selling the others; the towels and wrappers, moreover, are offered for sale only on the Monday and Saturday nights. Assuming, then, that upwards of 100 or one-sixth of the above number sell two different second-hand articles, or are not continually employed at that department of street-traffic, we find the total number of street-sellers belonging to this class to be about 500.
Concerning the number selling live animals in the streets, there are 50 men vending fancy and sporting dogs; 200 sellers and “duffers” of English birds; 10 sellers of parrots and other foreign birds; 3 sellers of birds’-nests, &c.; 20 vendors of squirrels; 6 sellers of leverets and wild rabbits; 35 vendors of gold and silver fish; 20 vendors of tortoises; and 14 sellers of snails, frogs, worms, &c.; or, allowing for the temporary and mixed character of many of these trades, we may say that there are 200 constantly engaged in this branch of street-commerce.
Then of the street-sellers of mineral productions and natural curiosities, there are 216 vendors of coals; 1500 sellers of coke; 14 sellers of tan-turf; 150 vendors of salt; 70 sellers of sand; 26 sellers of shells; or 1969 in all. From this number the sellers of shells must be deducted, as the shell-trade is not a special branch of street-traffic. We may, therefore, assert that the number of people engaged in this latter class of street-business amounts to about 1900.
Now, adding all these sums together, we have the following table as to the numbers of individuals comprised in the first division of the London street-folk, viz. the street-sellers:—
| 1. Costermongers (including men, women, and children engaged in the sale of fish, fruit, vegetables, game, poultry, flowers, &c.) | 30,000 |
| 2. Street-sellers of “green stuff,” including water-cresses, chickweed and gru’n’sel, turf, &c. | 2,000 |
| 3. Street-sellers of eatables and drinkables | 4,000 |
| 4. Street-sellers of stationery, literature, and fine arts | 1,000 |
| 5. Street-sellers of manufactured articles of metal, crockery, glass, textile, chemical, and miscellaneous substances | 4,000 |
| 6. Street-sellers of second-hand articles, including the sellers of old metal articles, old glass, old linen, old clothes, old shoes, &c. | 500 |
| 7. Street-sellers of live animals, as dogs, birds, gold and silver fish, squirrels, leverets, tortoises, snails, &c. | 200 |
| 8. Street-sellers of mineral productions and natural curiosities, as coals, coke, tan-turf, salt, sand, shells, &c. | 1,900 |
| Total Number of Street-Sellers | 43,640 |
These numbers, it should be remembered, are given rather as an approximation to the truth than as the absolute fact. It would therefore be safer to say, making all due allowance for the temporary and mixed character of many branches of street-commerce, that there are about 40,000 people engaged in selling articles in the streets of London. I am induced to believe that this is very near the real number of street-sellers, from the wholesale returns of the places where the street-sellers purchase their goods, and which I have always made a point of collecting from the best authorities connected with the various branches of street-traffic. The statistics of the fish and green markets, the swag-shops, the old clothes exchange, the bird-dealers, which I have caused to be collected for the first time in this country, all tend to corroborate this estimate.
The next fact to be evolved is the amount of capital invested in the street-sale of Second-hand Articles, of Live Animals, and of Mineral Productions. And, first, as to the money employed in the Second-hand Street-Trade.
The following tables will show the amount of capital invested in this branch of street-business.
| Street-Sellers of Live Animals. | |||
| Street-Sellers of Dogs. | |||
| Stock-money for 20 sellers (including kennels and keep), at 5l. 15s. each seller | 115 | 0 | 0 |
| Street-Sellers and Duffers of Birds (English). | |||
| 2400 small cages (reckoning 12 to each seller), at 6d. each; 1200 long cages (allowing 6 cages to each seller), at 2s. each; 1800 large cages (averaging 9 cages to each seller), at 2s. 6d. each. Stock-money for 200 sellers, at 20s. each | 605 | 0 | 0 |
| Street-Sellers of Parrots, &c. | |||
| 20 cages, at 10s. each; stock-money for 10 sellers, at 30s. each | 25 | 0 | 0 |
| Street-Sellers of Birds’-Nests. | |||
| 3 hamper baskets, at 6d. each | 1 | 6 | |
| Street-Sellers of Squirrels. | |||
| Stock-money for 20 vendors, at 10s. each | 10 | 0 | 0 |
| Street-Sellers of Leverets, Wild Rabbits, &c. | |||
| 6 baskets, at 2s. each; stock-money for 6 vendors, at 5s. each | 2 | 2 | 0 |
| Street-Sellers of Gold and Silver Fish. | |||
| 35 glass globes, at 2s. each; 35 small nets, at 6d. each; stock-money for 35 vendors, at 15s. each | 30 | 12 | 6 |
| Street-Sellers of Tortoises. | |||
| Stock-money for 20 vendors, at 10s. each | 25 | 0 | 0 |
| Street-Sellers of Snails, Frogs, Worms, Snakes, Hedgehogs, &c. | |||
| 14 baskets, at 1s. each | 14 | 0 | |
| Total amount of Capital belonging to Street-Sellers of Live Animals | 798 | 10 | 0 |
| River-Sellers of Purl. | |||
| 35 boats, at 4l. 10s. each; 35 sets of measures, at 5s. the set; 35 warming pots, at 1s. 6d. each; 35 fire-stoves, at 5s. each; 35 gallon cans, at 2s. 6d. each; 70 “pins” of beer, at 4s. per “pin;” 35 quarts of gin, at 2s. 6d. the quart; 35 licences, at 3s. 6d.; stock-money for spice, &c., at 1s. each | 208 | 5 | 0 |
Hence it would appear that the gross amount of property belonging to the street-sellers may be reckoned as follows:—
| Value of stock-in-trade belonging to costermongers | 25,000 | 0 | 0 |
| Ditto street-sellers of green-stuff | 149 | 0 | 0 |
| Ditto street-sellers of eatables and drinkables | 9,000 | 0 | 0 |
| Ditto street-sellers of stationery, literature, and the fine arts | 400 | 0 | 0 |
| Ditto street-sellers of manufactured articles | 2,800 | 0 | 0 |
| Ditto street-sellers of second-hand articles | 621 | 14 | 0 |
| Ditto street-sellers of live animals | 798 | 10 | 0 |
| Ditto street-sellers of mineral productions, &c. | 28,043 | 2 | 0 |
| Ditto river-sellers of purl | 208 | 5 | 0 |
| Total Amount of Capital belonging to the London Street-Sellers | 67,023 | 11 | 0 |
The gross value of the stock in trade of the London street-sellers may then be estimated at about 60,000l.
We have now to estimate the receipts of each of the above-mentioned classes.
| River-Sellers of Purl. | |||
| There are at present 35 men following the trade of purl-selling on the river Thames to colliers. The weekly profits of this class amount to 117l. 5s.per week, and yearly to 6097l., while their annual takings is | 8,190 | 0 | 0 |
Now, adding together the above and the other foregone results, we arrive at the following estimate as to the amount of money annually expended on the several articles purchased in the streets of the metropolis.
| “Wet” fish | £1,177,200 | £ |
| Dry fish | 127,000 | |
| Shell fish | 156,600 | |
| Fish of all kinds | £1,460,800 | |
| Vegetables | £292,400 | |
| Green fruit | 332,200 | |
| Dry fruit | 1,000 | |
| Fruit and Vegetables | 625,600 | |
| Game, poultry, rabbits, &c. | 80,000 | |
| Flowers, roots, &c. | 14,800 | |
| Water-cresses | 13,900 | |
| Chickweed, gru’nsel, and turf for birds | 14,570 | |
| Eatables and drinkables | 203,100 | |
| Stationery, literature, and fine arts | 33,400 | |
| Manufactured articles | 188,200 | |
| Second-hand articles | 29,900 | |
| Live animals (including dogs, birds, and gold fish) | 29,300 | |
| Mineral productions (as coals, coke, salt, sand, &c.) | 1,022,700 | |
| Total Sum expended upon the various Articles vended by the Street-Sellers | £3,716,270 | |
Hence it appears that the street-sellers, of all ages, in the metropolis are about forty thousand in number—their stock-in-trade is worth about sixty thousand pounds—and their gross annual takings or receipts amount to no less than three millions and a half sterling.