Jimmy Stammers

Jimmy Stammers (1850-1915)

Jimmy Stammers was born in 1850, in the small village of Weston, just south of Beccles. In the 1870s he seems to have moved to Elswick in Northumberland – his son William James was born there in 1874, but by 1878 they were back in Suffolk and for the rest of his life he lived within a five mile radius of his birthplace, finally settling in Westhall, where he died in 1915. He worked for the Great Eastern Railway, initially as a plate-layer, then a flag signal man.

Russell Wortley heard about him from a man he met in the Engineers’ Arms in Leiston in 1966, who said Jimmy Stammers made dulcimers 60-70 years ago (i.e. around the turn of the 20th century).

Around the same time, Wortley met and corresponded with Jimmy’s grandson Oswald Stammers, who was living in Saffron Walden in northeast Essex and was playing a dulcimer which his grandfather had made.  Oswald died in 2002 but it is believed the dulcimer is still with the family.

Wortley also met Oswald’s brother who played the one-string fiddle. He is named only as ‘Josie’ in Wortley’s  1970 interview but was most likely to have been Ronald Leslie, known as Ronnie. According to the two brothers, Jimmy had made four dulcimers, all the same size and style, for family members, as well as making them for other people.

Oswald named his father (William James), Uncle Harry and Aunt May as players. Unfortunately, neither Oswald nor his brother could remember their grandfather playing.


All material on this website is copyright. Anyone wishing to quote or use this original research should credit it to Katie Howson and cite this website as the source. Please see our Terms and Conditions page for more information, and do contact me if you wish to use any of the contents in any way. Thank you.