Bob Cratchit

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Robert "Bob" Cratchit is a fictional character, the abused, underpaid clerk of Ebenezer Scrooge in the Charles Dickens story A Christmas Carol.

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

In the story, Cratchit is seen at work, where he copies letters by hand in an underheated "dismal little cell", "a sort of tank", and in his small Camden Town home with his large family on the following Christmas Day and a future one, gatherings which Scrooge visits invisibly with the Ghost of Christmas Present and the Ghost of Christmas Future, respectively. Cratchit is repeatedly described as "little", and clothes himself in a tattered white comforter, not being able to afford a coat.

Though Cratchit is treated poorly by Scrooge, and, with a weekly salary of "but fifteen bob" (about £56/US$109 in 2005 money using the consumer price index), is not given wages enough to feed his family a proper Christmas dinner, Cratchit remains loyal to his boss, even in face of the protestations of his wife. It is partly through concern the plight for Cratchit's youngest son, the frail and crippled Tiny Tim, that Scrooge makes the transformation from miser to philanthropist, offering Cratchit a raise and "discussion of his affairs".

Six Cratchit children are mentioned in the original story, two of which are unnamed:

  • Martha, the eldest daughter, who works as an apprentice at a milliner's
  • Belinda, the second daughter
  • Peter, the heir, for whom his father is arranging employment at the weekly rate of 5.5 shillings
  • An unnamed younger son
  • An unnamed younger daughter
  • Tiny Tim

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