Edward Lovett
Edward Lovett (1852–1933) lived in Croydon and
during his life amassed a huge collection of objects mostly
relating to his passion for folklore, charms, amulets and
superstitions.
He worked for much of his life at the Bank of
Scotland in the City of London, rising to the rank of Chief
Cashier, but in his leisure time he took great pleasure in his
collecting trips to the working-class areas of London. He acquired
a wealth of material from sites such as herbalist shops, the
barrows of costermongers and the city’s dockyards, collecting from
people neglected by most historians.
While a regular lecturer and author of
numerous articles, Lovett was a rather marginal figure in folklore
circles and never attained the same degree of influence as many of
his peers. He was, however, well-known to many museum curators and
fellow collectors, and corresponded closely with both Henry
Wellcome and his curatorial staff. The fruits of this relationship
were the exhibition The Folklore of London, curated by
Lovett, and held in the Wellcome Historical Medical Museum in
1916.
He published a book, Magic in Modern
London, in 1925. Although he was himself dismissive of the
idea that amulets could work as effective magical objects, he did,
poignantly, make his younger son an amulet to wear against the
dangers of the front during World War I.