Month: March 2018

Lindsey (S-Y)

1/ Skidbrooke Church near Saltfleet, (Ghosts?/Satanic Rituals)

Skidbrooke Church, satanic rituals

Me and some mates were driving around here late one night in the late Eighties or early nineties,(I remember we were in an Austin Maestro, so you do the maths) when we spotted lights at the Church, but left it alone and thought we’d check it out later. This was when St Botolph’s had a front door. Went back later and found a Pentagram in wax on the floor, plus an old blanket. Ran like Usain Bolt!  The church at Skidbrooke when mentioned to people, they say paranormal activity or ghosts or the Satan worshipper’s who chose hallowed and consecrated ground to worship Beelzebub, very clever! Ghost hunting groups from Lincolnshire and Norfolk got some weird sightings and photo’s and heard strange noises. Let’s get one thing straight, it’s a church on marshland and is miles from anywhere and infested with bats and other nocturnal creatures. I’ve been a few times, but never heard or seen anything unusual. But you get this feeling, whether that’s the past history of the place, graffiti, pentagrams. You’re bound to feel uneasy and it’s a shame as it is a lovely building with a long history. In 2004 there was a report of animal sacrifices, and got the nickname of the “Demon Church”.

2/ Well Vale Drowning, July 1888 (Well Vale has two large ponds/Still there !)

Well Vale, drowning

James Lawson, son of John Lawson, the head gardener at the Hall, was drowned in the lake or lower pond, at the back of the Hall. He was only nineteen and had served as an apprentice to a butcher in Alford, then left eighteen months ago and joined the navy, and was on board a training ship where he learned to swim. He was let go due to having a cataract in one eye, which destroyed the sight and the eye was removed. The brother, 14-year-old Edward, said he was by the lake with James when he said he’d like to go for a dip so they got undressed and dived into the lake where the water was shallow, and you could stand up in it. He then got into the boat and rowed to the centre of the lake then dived in from there. He called out “Oh” and threw his arms up, then he vanished. The body was found after an hour or so by police who dragged the pond. The body was in twelve feet of water, and he was naked. The length of time he had been under the water there was no need to try and restore animation. The verdict was one of “Accidental drowning” and probably was caused by the teenager getting cramp or something similar.

3/ Yarburgh Church (Vicars Suicide), September 1851

Yarburgh, church, vicars suicide,

The little village of Yarburgh (not Yarborough) near Louth, got one hell of a surprise one morning when they found out that their vicar, the Reverend J.C.Umpleby had killed himself. He left the Rectory with a double-barrelled gun. When a domestic servant saw that a gun was missing from the cabinet, a search was made by friends and workers alike. A groom discovered him in a shrubbery next to the garden with a gaping head wound and totally lifeless. Reverend Umpleby had been despondent recently but he was never considered suicidal, being a man of the cloth.

4/ Yarburgh Poisoning, January 1867

Eliza Graves, daughter of James Graves, aged only three months died on December 31st, 1866, by accidentally being given laudanum by its mother. The father had purchased at Mr Norris’s shop, a small bottle of what he believed to be cough mixture, which he had previously taken. By mistake, Mr Norris gave him laudanum, which he thought he asked for, but the evidence was not clear on this point. The mother gave her daughter a teaspoonful of the laudanum with the father taking the remainder, from which he was very ill. The infant died next day. The jury thought it was given the poison by mistake but also commented on the carelessness of both Mr Norris, and the parents, in this tragedy.

5/ Yarburgh Drowning, September 1880

Yarburgh, drowning

Cadeby Hall ( The Nelsons)

Cadeby Hall

6/ Cadeby/Limber, February 1878

The gentleman known as George Nelson, a farmer and landowner in this district, expired one Friday night at his residence in Limber, having only been taken ill on the previous Tuesday. The cause of death is said to be epilepsy. He succeeded his father a few years ago in the occupation of a large farm on the Brocklesby estate and was the owner and lord of the manor at the hamlet of Cadeby, occupied by his brother-in-law, Mr J.W.Kirkham. He was a captain in the Royal North Lincoln Militia, and a member of the Lincolnshire Light Horse. Deceased was a widower, and had two children.

7/ Cadeby Hall Death, January 1885

I read a book when I was a teenager,”The Haunted Realm”, by Simon Marsden, who always took those foreboding black and white photograph’s of creepy old houses and castles, throughout Britain. In it was Cadeby Hall, it mentioned that it was built on the site of an ancient monastery, underground passages and that it was haunted. A young lad disappeared and servants and family searched everywhere but never found the boy. Some years later a skeleton was found in a tree hollow. The mother then put a curse on Cadeby. There was also the story of how a ghostly coach and horses would come up the driveway, whenever there was about to be a death in the family. This should have occurred in January of 1885, because young George Nelson aged about sixteen was driving back to Cadeby Hall from a trip rabbiting, when a storm began to brew and his horse had been scared by either thunder or lightning. It reared up and veered into a ditch about three hundred yards from the lodge gates. He was killed on the spot and when he never returned home there was a search where he was found in the ditch, with the upturned cart. He died from suffocation being unable to get free from the debris. A grave is by the side of the road on Barton Street, near to where the accident occurred. It simply reads:-

This stone marks the spot, where George Nelson, of Cadeby Hall, was killed January 16th,1885. Aged 16 years. In the midst of life, we are in death.”

Later on, it told of how he was interred at the family brick grave at Limber. The “Dead March” was played as his coffin entered the church and handsome wreaths and crosses from his schoolfellows at Bedford Grammar School. The gravestone at the side of the road was of Yorkshire sandstone, has been worked in the yard of Mrs Woodward.

8/ Cadeby Hall, November 1869 (Concealment of Birth)

The body of a newly-born male child, which was discovered on the 12th November in a vault of a privy connected to Cadeby Hall. The housekeeper, Hannah Hill, deposed: I suspected a servant girl named Mary Laking aged sixteen, of having given birth to a child. I accused her and she denied the fact.the witness found the child and sent for P.C. Booth, who took the body and apprehended the girl for concealing the birth thereof. Mr George, a surgeon of North Thoresby, held a post-mortem and gave evidence that the child had never breathed. A verdict of “Found Dead”.

December 1869

Mary Laking aged sixteen, a domestic servant, pleaded guilty to the charge of endeavouring to conceal the birth of her child, at Cadeby on 11th November 1869. – Six months imprisonment with hard labour.

9/ Wyham-cum-Cadeby Drowned Child, March 1861

A child of six years was accidentally drowned at Wyham. Three or four boys and girls on their way to school, some of them left two of the younger ones behind near a pond when the elder of the two overbalanced itself and fell down the bank. The companion aged five years ran to the school and told of the accident, but twenty minutes had elapsed before he was brought out of the water, and all means to revive the child proved ineffectual. The Reverend F.W.Mann, of Wyham Rectory, and Mrs Mann, exerted themselves most strenuously in endeavouring to recover the child. Verdict:- “Found drowned”

————–There is a “Pond House” on Barton Road, between Wyham and Utterby Primary School.—————–

 

 

Wyham, death, machinery

10/ Wyham Death, September 1877 (Clayton got caught up in something similar to above)

Wyham, death

11/ Tetney, December 1898 (Oldest Bellringer Dies)

The oldest bellringer in England, ninety-seven-year-old Matthew Laking has died at Tetney. He started campanology when he was just a 15-year-old boy and continued for the next eighty-two years. He rang bells at the death of George the Third, the ascension of George the Fourth, William the Fourth, and Queen Victoria.

12/ Tetney, August 1860 (Laudanum Addiction)

Ann Colbeck was found dead in bed at her home in Tetney. Susannah Croft aged fourteen, took her some tea and sent Croft’s sister to go and fetch some laudanum which she drank off at once, then filled a teacup half filled it with rum then downed it in one. Eliza Croft, the mother of the witness, said she and Mary Plumtree went to see her and when they arrived the house was pitch black. They got a light and went upstairs and saw her lying on the bed with her head in the bottom drawer, face down. There was a broken glass nearby, and the witness had often seen her in a state of intoxication. Another witness stated that he had seen her take six ounces of laudanum a day and she was addicted to it. A verdict of Natural Death brought on by excessive drinking.

13/ Waithe Church, (Grimsby/Louth) January 1862 (Newly built village)

Waithe Churchwaithe

14/ Utterby Fatal Accident, September 1919

Mr Henry Hunt of the minesweeper H.M.S. Oakley was killed in a car crash at Utterby, midway between Louth and Grimsby. The car, which had four male passengers and the driver, ran into level-crossing gates. The others escaped uninjured.

15/ Utterby, September 1882 (Illegitimate Child)

An inquest was held at Utterby, concerning the body of the illegitimate child of Ellen Wood. The mother had been living in a situation at Hull but had lately come to Utterby to her parents in consequence of her condition. She was called to give evidence on the death of the child and stated that whilst in her chamber she was suddenly taken ill with a fainting fit. When she recovered consciousness, found she had been delivered of a child, which was lying dead beside her. The post-mortem failed to enable the medical man to say positively that the child had lived and the proceedings terminated. The mother had had two children previously.

16/ Usselby near Market Rasen, December 1861 (Concealing Birth)

Ann Dixon aged twenty-one, was charged with unlawfully endeavouring to conceal the birth of her female child at Usselby on September 8th,1861. The prisoner pleaded guilty and his Lordship in passing sentence observed, that if he had any idea that she had been concerned in taking away the child’s life, he should have passed a more severe sentence than he now intended doing. He then sentenced her to three months imprisonment with hard labour.

17/ Usselby, February 1887 (Concealment of Birth)

In a case scarily similar to above, again in Usselby, a hidden gem of a place (to me anyway), just outside of Market Rasen. This was Annie Kirman, a twenty-three-year-old domestic servant on a charge of murder of a female child, of which she had recently been delivered at Usselby. They, however, returned a true bill for concealment of birth, to which indictment prisoner pleaded guilty and she was sentenced to three months imprisonment, with hard labour.

18/ Usselby Train Crash, January 1881

Usselby Train crash

 

 

19/ Skendleby Church Death, July 1887

Skendleby, church, death

A singular fatality occurred at the church in Skendleby near Spilsby.The evening service at the church commences at 6-30 p.and just as the bellringers were getting ready to ring the church clock, to strike six, the cord suspending the striking weight snapped and the weight fell forty feet, hitting a campanologist named Frederick Hutchinson on the head, killing him outright. The weight weighed just under a ton.

20/ Skendleby, May 1897 (Two-headed Baby)

A woman in Skendleby gave birth to a child with two heads and two backbones, with a rudimentary arm projecting between the heads. The child which was born dead was in other respects perfectly normal.

21/ Skendleby Vicarage, July 1869 (Attempted Murder/Suicide)

Skendleby, murder, suicide

 

The verdict a week later went:- Charles Bradley aged thirty-eight, gardener, as charged with feloniously attempting to discharge a gun loaded with powder and shot, at Ellen Parker with intent to kill her at Skendleby on the 15th July. Prisoner pleaded guilty to the charge of intending to do grievous bodily harm. This plea was accepted and no evidence was offered on the count for intending to murder and he was sentenced to five years penal servitude.

22/ Saltfleetby Suicide, February 1866

Mrs Richardson, the widow of the late Thomas Richardson of Saltfleetby, committed suicide by taking three-pennyworth of Battle’s Vermin Killer. The deceased had been in a desponding state for some time and had evidently contemplated committing the rash act, having sent to the shop for the poison on a Wednesday. Verdict:- “Deceased destroyed herself, whilst labouring under temporary insanity”.

23/ Saltfleetby Fatal Accident, February 1881

A painful incident occurred in the parish of Saltfleetby when a little girl of six years of age, daughter of Mr Riggall of Trusthorpe was spending some weeks with her aunt and uncle at their residence, Red Leas. On Monday the Riggall’s were taking the girl home in a vehicle and while passing over a narrow wooden bridle-bridge which spans a drain, the wheel slipped off. Mr Riggall was leading the horse at the time but couldn’t prevent an upset, and the woman and girl were thrown into the water. Miss Riggall was rescued but her niece was under the trap some ten minutes before she could be extracted when life was then extinct.

24/ Saltfleetby St Clements, June 1876 (Slept with the corpse!)

Saltflleetby, slept with corpse

25/ Saltfleetby St Peter’s, September 1879 (Child Drowned)

William Fox aged twenty months, drowned in a horse pond in his father’s yard. The father, Marshall Fox, a farmer, said he was in the house a few minutes before this happened. The mother was skimming some milk and missed the child, so went to look for him and saw his body in the water. They tried to restore animation at a neighbour’s house but this failed to bring a result. It was here that a statement from the mother was due to be heard but she was ill in bed, due to the dreadful occurrence. After the incident, she had tried to place him in a hot bath and kept rubbing him and moving him about for about an hour but to no avail. There was a gate between the house and the pond but the string wasn’t on it. It is presumed the child’s bonnet blew off and he tried to get it from the water, then fell in, as the bonnet was in the pond as well.

26/ Saltfleetby Death,(Prussian Queen Inn) December 1897

Saltfleetby, death, Prussian Queen

 

27/ Saltfleet Drowning, December 1874

John Houlden was an elderly man who was employed with his horses and cart to unload a ship that ran aground near Saltfleet, that was laden with timber. They were clearing it so that they could get her afloat again. A storm came in on the night time and he lost his way and was drowned. His corpse was discovered the following day along with the cart, but the horses were missing. “Accidentally Drowned”.

28/ Saltfleet, December 1884 (Fatal Accident)

Two vessels ran aground off Saltfleet and some men were employed to heave it out, the Ocean Bell being the name of the vessel when Charles Humberstone was knocked down by a tow rope which broke away. Whether he was killed by the rope hitting him or the fall down after it struck him, is uncertain. The Humberstone family who has resided at North Somercotes for several years have been lamentably unfortunate; two others were drowned; one, who was a painter, fell whilst at work and was killed; and another burned to death. He was thirty-three and leaves a widow and two children.

29/ Saltfleet Haven, February 1882 (Five Lives Lost)

Saltfleet Haven, lives lost

The thirty-nine-ton sloop “Try”, captained by John Adams of Saltfleet, along with his wife and three kids on board were going from Manby Main near Rotherham to Saltfleet, with a cargo of coal. The vessel began to leak and the vessel was anchored, and then the anchoring broke, they began to drift. It was seen to be in trouble by the coastguard station, above. The mother and a mate and the three children died…Robert Adams, Robert Adams the younger, Herma Adams and Louise Adams died on the Sunday morning on board the “Try”, on the shore of the German Ocean (North Sea) in the parish of Saltfleetby St Clements from exposure to wet and cold and that Harriet Adams died at the house of J.Stubbs, Saltfleetby St Clements from exposure on the same vessel.

30/ South Somercotes, February 1870 (Child Burned to Death)

Charles Edward, son of Mr Samuel Spendlove, an agricultural labourer who was aged five years, and was burnt to death on the 1st of February. It appears the mother was out charing and the little fellow was left at home with a sister not much older than himself, when his pinafore caught fire and he ran out of doors with all the clothes burnt off his back. Accidental burning.

31/ South Somercotes, November 1888

Robert Hundleby, a farmer, was with Robert Houlden at Louth Market and had enjoyed a few jars together. Absolutely drunk as skunks they drove home together and when about five miles from home, Hundleby got out and Houlden drove off. Hundleby’s body was discovered in a ditch by the roadside and had been there since the previous evening. Houlden said he could remember very little of what occurred that night, because of the drink. The Coroner told him off for his behaviour and cruelty. Deceased suffocated by drowning.

32/ Thorganby near Caistor, November 1904 (Bicycle Fatality)

Robert Burnett, a blacksmith from Thorganby, was going down Rothwell Hill on a bicycle late one night and he crashed into a gentleman named Berridge. Both men lay on a heap on the ground with  Berridge appearing to be severely hurt. Burnett got up and walked with his broken bike, arrived home, then collapsed in a heap. He died the next morning from internal injuries and shock. Berridge is also in a precarious condition.

33/ Theddlethorpe (Body Washed Ashore) May 1876

Theddlethorpe, body washed ashore

34/ Theddlethorpe, August 1866

Little William Richardson, son of the local butcher, George Richardson, was playing near the side of a large ditch that runs right in front of the house. He slipped in and drowned in the relatively shallow waters.

35/ Theddlethorpe, (Four Coastguards Missing) February 1903

The deaths of four local coastguards were reported from Theddlethorpe. At dinner time one day, they went for a monthly practice run in the boat and the result was that none of them came back. The boat was found upside down with none of the crew in sight. Three of the men were from Theddlethorpe and the other was from Saltfleet. One leaves a large family and two of them had just recently got married to their sweethearts.

36/ Theddlethorpe Murder, November 1817

October 7th, 1817. This night Thomas Hall aged 70, and Mary Grant his housekeeper of about the same age, who had many years resided by themselves in a very lonely cottage in Theddlethorpe, were most inhumanly murdered by some diabolical monster or monsters in human shape who entered by a breech made in the back wall of the house, for the bloody purpose. The bodies, particularly that of Hall, were dreadfully mangled, owing, as there is reason to believe, to the vigorous defence he made. Money and notes were found scattered about, whence it is supposed the murderers were disturbed before they had time to secure their plunder.

37/    Theddlethorpe Murder, February 1888

Theddlethorpe, murder

 

38/ Theddlethorpe, November 1883 (Concealment of Birth)

Theddlethorpe, concealment of birth

Later on:- Lucy Towle aged twenty-one, told Mrs Walker that she was ill and had diarrhoea for a couple of weeks but when she had occasion to go to the closet, she discovered the decomposed infant. She was churning in the kitchen when Mrs Walker came through looking very pale. Priscilla Hyde, Mrs Walker’s nurse, was asked by Towle to take over while she went to the closet. Towle was away a lot longer than was necessary and she sent a child to get her. She seemed agitated. Mrs Walker then informed her husband and all was revealed. The post-mortem revealed the child was born alive. The baby girl had been dead for a number of weeks.

39/ South Thoresby Rectory Suicide, September 1864

The Reverend Matthew Jeffreys, the rector of South Thoresby near Alford, killed himself by slitting his throat. He had been depressed for quite a while and his best friend had also died recently which was the straw that broke the camel’s back.

40/ South Thoresby Child Death, July 1877

Sarah Ellen Tales aged fourteen months, died as the result of a very singular accident. The mother who was very much affected, was the principal witness, when she left the child in an out-house playing with a swing, but not on it, whilst she went to fetch a bucket of water. She returned in five minutes and to her horror found the child with its neck resting on the rope and apparently quite dead. She took it up in her arms and rushed out screaming for help. Her husband and another labourer came straight away and after a short time the child began to breathe with difficulty but remained in an unconscious state. A doctor was sent for and it was seen for a day or two after, but the child continued very much convulsed and it died on Monday morning, at ten a.m. The pressure of the cord on the neck produced congestion of the brain, and this caused death.

41/ The Bull Inn Suicide, South Kelsey, June 1862

On June 3rd, Edward Rowson of Laceby, on his journey with an entire horse belonging to Mr Inch of Brigsley, put up at the public-house at South Kelsey where he slept and on the following morning hanged himself in a stable at the back of the house. He was found only partially suspended from the neck with a plough-line, and quite dead. Nothing particular was noticed in his manner the previous night but he was an inmate of the workhouse last Winter, and the poverty caused by an unsuccessful Spring is said to have produced depression that ended in a fatal determination. The verdict was one of “Temporary Insanity”.  He was about sixty years of age and left a widow and family.

42/ Withern/Gayton November 1881 (Accidental Shooting)

Withern, shooting

43/ Withern Suicide, October 1877

Mrs Susannah Brooksom, a widow, committed suicide by cutting her throat with a razor. She was staying at the house of Mrs John Allett, her sister. Mrs Brooksom lost her husband a few months ago and was enticed to sell up and to go and live with them in Yorkshire. The plan was not successful and she came back to Withern, but friends noticed that she was down in the dumps all the time. A niece was staying with her when Mrs Brooksom told her to go and get a box but she had something under her apron and was acting suspiciously so she declined. The aunt pulled out the razor and slit her throat in front of her with the niece running screaming from the house. When neighbours arrived, the floor was soaked with blood and her head was nearly severed from the body. It was deemed “Temporary Insanity”. She was forty-nine years of age.

44/ Withern, July 1882 (Cart Accident)Withern, fatality

45/ Withern Mill Fatality, November 1881

A man with a great Dickensian name of George Tickler who was resident for fifty-five years, who was miller at Withern between Louth and Alford, met with a serious accident which proved fatal a few hours later. He was trying to start the wheel of the mill by treading on it, and when it started he didn’t get out of the way in time and was crushed between the wheel and the “beast-board”. Henry Needham, who was in the mill at the time of the tragedy, said it was necessary to have the water-wheel turned to get the belt on inside the mill. The wheel was being trodden on the inside by Needham the proper way, and incorrectly by Tickler. He told Mrs Tickler what had happened and together with the maid and a boy, they lifted him out. The doctor found him in bed with several ribs broken and deceased was aware he was dying. He expired a few hours later. “Accidental death”.

46/ Longlands Farm Suicide, Withern, January 1879 (Still there! Down Stain Lane)

Suicide, Withern

47/ Swallow near Caistor, November 1976 (Vehicle Crash)

Three young persons from Grimsby were killed when their pick-up was involved in a head-on collision with an articulated lorry near the village of Swallow. Francis Paul Vergette aged twenty-one, along with passengers Amanda Jane Usher aged seventeen and Peter Robert D’Arcy, were on their way towards Caistor when the accident happened on a bend on the A46. The driver of the lorry escaped with minor injuries. Unlike the Victorian times, there will be hundreds of these types of an accident on Lincolnshire roads.

48/ South Elkington, February 1866 (Fatal Accident)

A fatal accident occurred just outside Elkington village when three waggons from Ludford were on their way to get laden with bones. The horses in a line of three waggons suddenly reared up and galloped past them at full speed, and this scared the horses in the second spot, and Stringer the head waggoner tried to maintain control of them and while turning to ascertain the cause of all the commotion, he saw the dead body of John Rands, a 25-year-old stout man, lying on the road, terribly crushed. Rands horses had become disengaged and ran off, with the shaft horse overpowering and him being by his own waggon. The horse ran into a ditch and broke its neck when it fell over. All the waggoners were sober and it was ruled as an “Accidental death”.

49/ Cotes Grange is in between South Elkington and Kelstern, (Dead Child Found) November 1877

Cotes Grange, child found dead

50/ Can anybody help me here! I have this postcard with an Ulceby postmark on the back, and dated 1907, but cannot identify what or where the building was located, it says on the back, that this is the place I work at- can you get my trousers done, and send them to me! Addressed to Finkle Lane, Barton.

51/ Ulceby/Thornton Curtis, March 1876 (Attempted Wife Murder)

Martin Pinchbeck aged forty-one, a chimney sweep, was indicted for attempting to kill Catherine Pinchbeck by throwing her out of a moving train carriage between the stations of Ulceby Junction and Thornton Abbey. The couple had been to a relative’s funeral at Hull Cemetery and an argument ensued between them while on the train, and he told that the next funeral he be at, would be her’s. It reached a peak at Thornton Abbey Station when Pinchbeck was seen standing over his wife with blood on her head, and then lobbed her out of the carriage. He pretended to have lost his wife at Ulceby Station by calling her name. His wife was found on the side of the train tracks with a bad gash on her head and in a semi-conscious state. This lasted for weeks, and she is now mentally incompetent. Pinchbeck was given a year imprisonment with hard labour.

52/ Thornton Abbey Station Death, December 1873

An elderly gentleman was run over and killed at the station at Thornton Abbey. A passing Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Company train was responsible for his death. (Name?)

54/ Ulceby Junction Station Fatality, April 1880

At Ulceby Railway Station on the M.S.and L Railway, as an engine and tender were proceeding from a siding up the line, to be joined by a train on its way to Grimsby, W.B.Strickland, the station master, while crossing the line, was knocked down and killed. His body was terribly mangled with both legs and right arm almost severed off. Strickland had been station master for fifteen years.

55/ South Reston, (Body Found) November 1881

South Reston, body found

56/ South Reston Double Murder, July 1890

South Reston, double murder

nothing whatsoever to do.

57/ Worlaby (Elsham) April 1914 (Gun Accident)

Tom Duffill aged fourteen years, was discovered in a field at Worlaby with serious gunshot wounds. His father came across his body and Tom murmured “shall I go to Heaven Dad?”. Tom had been using a gun to scare crows for a local farmer and when he leaned on the muzzle, the gun accidentally fired its contents.

58/ Worlaby, November 1976 (Boy Crushed to Death)

A 15-year-old boy was crushed to death when he fell off the ladder of a potato harvester and was crushed by the huge tyres. Saul Ben Randall of Garden Cottages, Elsham Hall, had the accident at North Wold Farm in Worlaby. Children used to ride the harvester, four at a time and one would follow it picking up loose spuds and Saul was this child and tried to climb on to get a lit back uphill. This was a tragic accident and he was found with a huge tyre mark on his chest and on the side of his face. The coroner said he died from shock and haemorrhage.

59/ Welton-le-Wold Suicide, June 1878

John Hurst, a retired farmer of Welton-le-Wold, has committed suicide by cutting his throat with a razor. He was said to have been depressed for the past year or so due to a loss in a farm which he rented.He was fifty-seven years of age and had been constable in the village for quite some years. A child named Stainton saw him laid down at the rear of the house near the closet and immediately told Harriet Webb the neighbour, who found him bleeding from the awful gash across his throat. He had suffered a stroke last October and was paralysed and was low-spirited because of this. That along with the financial losses must have preyed on his mind very much. Death was from the self-inflicted wound to the throat and he was said to be of unsound mind.

60/ Welton-le-Wold, September 1878 (Child Death)

Betsy Oliver, a young woman from North Thoresby, came to live at Welton-le-Wold to attend the wife of a man named Marshall who was very ill and has since died leaving five children. She had been there a few days when she gave birth to an illegitimate female child who was baptised on Sunday last in Welton church, it then being a month old. On Monday, the child was found dead in bed and a neighbour was sent for. The body of little Annie Oliver was viewed and she admitted she gave the child ten drops of “Godfrey’s Cordial” as it seemed unwell. It was thought to have died of a convulsive fit. “Accidental Death”.

61/ Willoughby Station Fatality, (Alford) June 1889 (Did she make it?)

Willoughby Station, fatality

62/ Willoughby near Alford, July 1874 (Attempted Poisoning)

A domestic servant named Mary Ann Gunby was committed for trial at Lincoln Assizes for attempting to poison her mistress, Mrs Farrow, wife of Mr T.Farrow, a farmer of Willoughby. The prisoner was hired at May-day but not liking the place she wanted to leave but her employer would not let her; the prisoner, therefore, purchased a packet of Battle’s Vermin Killer and mixed part of it in her mistress’s tea. She acknowledged the offence prior to committal.

August 1874 (Sentence)

At the Lincolnshire Assizes, Mary Ann Gunby, domestic servant, aged twelve years, was found guilty of feloniously administering poison to her mistress, Mrs Frances Farrow, at Willoughby, on July 11th,1874, and sentenced to fourteen days imprisonment and afterwards to be confined in a Reformatory for five years.

63/ Willoughby Station Fatality, November 1881

William Bamber and John Baines were walking down the line from Alford to Willoughby, when near a hut between Willoughby Station and the gatehouse nearer Alford, they found the dead body of a man. It was reported and it appeared that the man was struck by the mail train and dragged about fifteen yards with the wheels severing an arm, tearing his trousers and pulling his coat up to his neck as it mangled him. He also had a fractured skull and laceration of the breast with bone fragments along the railway line. The body was later identified as Charles Goodhand from Sloothby aged 58 years. Apparently, the son told of how deaf he was and he was not always a sober man. The verdict was “Accidentally killed by an engine on the railway, whilst trespassing thereon”.

64/ Saucethorpe (Spilsby) September 1859 (One in a million)

At Saucethorpe, a little boy in crossing the farmyard with a thatch peg in his hand, stumbled over some article being in his way and fell upon the pointed end of the peg which penetrated his chest causing his death within twenty-four hours.

65/ Scamblesby Suicide, March 1879

Scamblesby,suicide

66/ South Ferriby Decapitation, (Barton) December 1866

One Monday evening an accident occurred, involving William Woods who was the manager at the Lincoln and Lindsey Bank, Brigg and also owned a bone mill at Ferriby Sluice near Barton. He went to Barton Market and having had a slight accident to his gig he had a couple of jars in the Wheat Sheaf until it was repaired. He left a couple of hours later and drove off to Ferriby, four miles away. When he got to the mill he told the foreman to crank up the engine as he wanted to see it working for himself. He did, and he got too close to the mechanics of the engine and it snagged his coat and dragged him through the cogs and flywheels, decapitating the fellow in the process. He was forty-four years old and leaves a widow and five children.

67/ Saxby All Saints, (Barton) March 1872 (Mass Poisoning)

Over a dozen people were poisoned accidentally by some refreshments provided at a funeral of Mrs Hutchinson at Saxby near Barton. They had some rice pudding and when they then walked along in the funeral procession, they began staggering about and getting dizzy. Then they vomited and were taken home to bed. The surgeons called in and they spotted that it bore all the hallmarks of arsenic poisoning. Eventually, most of them were alright. The late Mrs Hutchinson kept the arsenic in a tin and this was mistaken for ground rice and that was put in the pudding that day.

68/ Winteringham, December 1874 (Inhuman Act)

Ann Swanwick aged nine died of exposure to the wind and waves on the River Humber. Captain Swanwick’s ketch and five other vessels were being towed by a tug from Hull. The captain’s name was Philip Ullthorpe and he took them to the Lincolnshire side of the river. Early next morning the ropes were cast off and the ships left by the tug, which made its way back to Hull. The vessels collided and two sank. Swanwick, along with his wife and child, were left to fend for themselves but they were rescued by ropes, but the little girl died in the arms of a seaman shortly after. Swanwick is on death’s door and his wife is in a critical state. Ullthorpe was asked to keep to the Yorkshire side but ignored that, and he was hailed as an unfit captain of any vessel. It was thought that Ullthorpe deliberately cast off the ropes and left them to their own devices. He was charged with “Manslaughter”.(What sentence did he get?)

69/ Sloothby Death, May 1888Sloothby, death

 

70/ Trusthorpe, March 1904 (Body On Beach)

At Trusthorpe near Mablethorpe, the corpse of Miss Loft was discovered floating in the sea. It was found by Miss Francis of Newstead Lodge, Mablethorpe, whilst out for a stroll along the beach. Coastguards were called in and tried to resuscitate her but she was too far gone. The deceased left Mablethorpe on the Wednesday in order to get married.

71/ Snelland, (Inhuman Treatment) (Market Rasen/Lincoln) February 1860

A farmer named Peel, committed an assault upon a member of his farm labourers, who had since died from the attack. Deceased was a young lad, not very intelligent, who was ill-used by Peel and treated with the utmost brutality. He hung him in a stable till he was nearly dead on one occasion and another time struck him with a fork-shaft. A verdict of “Wilful Murder” against Peel. (What happened to him?)

72/ Scrivelsby Rectory Suicide, August 1901

The Reverend C.E.Chapman was found shot through the head from a self-inflicted wound, in an outhouse at Scrivelsby Rectory near Horncastle. He was an athletic man and taught at Llandovery Boys School and played cricket for them as well and earned an England cap for Rugby, where he played as a three quarter.

73/ Stenigot Fatality, October 1868

Stenigot, fatal accident

74/ Westlaby, near Wickenby Aerodrome, May 1844 (Infant Remains)

A bundle containing a dead infant was discovered at Westlaby near Lincoln, but it was kicked among some ivy. The villagers were concerned and searched for the remains, but it was all in vain as the child seemed to have just vanished. While all this going on the housekeeper to Mr Tongue the rookery owner, Anne Robinson, killed herself by taking laudanum. The mother was accused of “Wilful Murder” against the child and was then revealed to have committed suicide at the inquest.

75/ Winterton near Scunthorpe, February 1849 ( Made to Milk Cow Naked)

An awful outrage was committed at Winterton by John Sunman aged twenty-eight and Alick Johnson aged twenty-six, who stalked the girl over a field, then made her perform her work of milking the cows while stark naked. Sarah Ann Neal, who is a domestic servant at Winterton told of how they stole her skirt, petticoat and gown, and made her perform her work then gave her an old grey coat to go home in. Prisoners were sentenced to seven years transportation to Australia.

76/ Toynton St Peter (Spilsby) December 1867 (Attempted Murder/Suicide)

Samuel Robinson, an ex-solicitor in London but who lived in Gravesend, went down to see his brother in Toynton St Peter near Spilsby, to change his will in favour of his children instead of leaving everything to his own wife. He was told in no uncertain terms to “Bog Off”,  and he then became enraged. He stayed for tea and afterwards Mrs Robinson was outside doing the dishes, he jumped out with a shotgun and fired at her twice, missing both times. He then scarpered and then three shots were clearly heard. His brother found him and asked why he had done this foolish act, his brother simply inquired if his wife was dead. When told she was alive, he said “That is a bad job. I have three bullets in my body”. He then died within the hour.

77/ Wrawby Junction Report, January 1899

Wrawby Junction Accident

direction of safety.

78/ Stainton-by-Langworth, November 1976 (Train Fatality)

A woman from Holton-le-Clay near Grimsby was killed when she fell from the King’s Cross to Cleethorpes train at Stainton-by-Langworth, between Market Rasen and Lincoln. Kay Sullivan from 31, Holt Mount, fell when a door was thought to have accidentally unlatched itself, with Miss Sullivan thrown out.

79/ Welton Church Lightning Stike, near Lincoln September 1847

One person lost his life and five women and three men were seriously hurt, when the church at Welton near Lincoln was struck by a bolt of lightning. While the congregation were singing a hymn, the Reverend Williamson had just ascended the pulpit and the lightning entered the belfry, then there was a sudden explosion. The congregation began to shout and scream and there was mass panic as they all headed for the exit. The people inside who were injured were laid on the floor, clothing alight and the women with blackened faces. The dead man, Mr Brownlow,  a wheelwright, aged sixty-eight was found at the bottom of the pew, under a chandelier, quite dead. His buttons melted, his trouser leg was ripped open and his coat was in shreds. The lightning struck the south-eastern pinnacle first then went down the battlement. Then it went through the tower and partially melted a portion of the clock face. Where Brownlow stood, the current passed through his body to the ground.

80/ Thurlby Suicide, April 1892

Eliza Wilkinson aged sixty-five, who lived with her husband in a cottage in Thurlby near Alford was found dead under remarkable circumstances. Her husband had been away visiting a friend and Eliza decided to stay with her son at Bilsby, not far from home. Her son’s wife went to meet her at Thurlby and on entering the premises she found Eliza on the floor, covered in blood, with a large self-inflicted razor wound on her throat.

81/ Thimbleby, November 1888 (Same Day Deaths)

Thimbleby, same day deaths

82/ Westwoodside near Epworth/Haxey July 1861 (Mother Drowns Three Children)

Ann Wilson woke her three children, Lucy, William and Elizabeth and drowned them by putting them in the cistern, under the kitchen floor and covered it over with a stone. The water was only a couple of feet deep so she held them under with a mop, then put the stone back. The ages of the children were seven, four and a half and two and a half. When she finished her dreadful deed she went to Wheatley, to her father’s house, where the husband was staying. Police arrested her at Wheatley and charged her with wilful murder and with no fuss, she kissed her father and calmly said that she was guilty of the crime. The verdict was that she was guilty of the murders but was of unsound mind at the time.

83/ Southrey near Bardney, June 1812 (Three Killed in Lightning Strikes)

Three youngsters by the names of John East, Richard Pask aged twelve and eleven-year-old Levi Day were tending geese, with another lad, Charles Blakey in the little village of Southrey, between Horncastle and Lincoln. A storm was brewing and when it hovered above them they took shelter in a rudimentary hut. The next thing Blakey remembered was shouting at the boys to get out, but they never responded so he ran home to get assistance. Help arrived but it was found that the place was struck by a bolt of lightning and the other three were dead. Their necks, shoulders, faces and chests were all charred and inner clothing was burned off their backs, but the outer garments were unscathed. (Where are they buried?)

84/ Tetford Suicide, February 1880

Tetford, suicide

85/ Sutton-on-Sea Poisonings, June 1890

A married woman named Mackinder from Sutton-on-Sea died from arsenic poisoning. She had made a pudding for the family and put arsenic in it, in a deliberate bid to wipe out the whole family. One of the children commented on the food tasting funny and the mother knowing full well what was in it, told her to sprinkle some sugar on it. The eldest son whose head was screwed on, told the other kids to leave it alone. A doctor was called in but the mother died in the evening and the son is in a dangerous condition. Apparently, it all stemmed from the mother spending her husband’s sick allowance and didn’t want to be around when he discovered what she had done.

86/ Sutton-on-Sea August 1883 (Gun Accident)

At Sutton near Mablethorpe, a chap named William Jackson who was a foreman for Mr Brooks, a farmer, was out shooting rooks. He got hold of a sparrow gun and put in twice the amount of powder and then fired it, causing the barrel to explode and some of the metal lodging in his skull. The explosion also caused a portion of his face to be blown off, causing instant death.

87/ Strubby, July 1882 (Drowning by Epilepsy)

George Holmes died at Strubby, with the cause of death was returned as “Death by drowning whilst in a fit”, which in my book means, he had an epileptic seizure in some water! He was mowing out the Skybeck drain with John Simpson working nearby. Simpson saw him working and when he passed him twenty minutes later, he discovered the body, face down in the water, which was only three feet deep. He pulled him out and tried to resuscitate him but to no avail. His doctor said he suffered from epilepsy. He also leaves a widow and several children.

88/ Strubby Suicide, September 1880

Strubby, suicide,

89/ Welton Wood, near Alford, April 1879 (Burned to Death)

Seventy-eight year old Edmund Frost had served as the woodman to Baroness Willoughby de Eresby at Welton Wood for fifty years or so, went missing one evening. His son and a neighbour searched the fields, then saw some burning embers of a fire which had covered approximately three acres. In the centre was a charred corpse with the clothes still smouldering. It is thought that he lit a pipe, threw the match down and ignited the brush and twigs around him which caught fire and burned him to death.The right arm was bent as though protecting his face and the contents of his pockets/; a watch, knife and pipe, with a tobacco-box were all blackened by the inferno. He also is thought to have choked on the smoke fumes, fallen over and then passed out and then been consumed by fire.

90/ Welton-le-Marsh, December 1873 (Child Murder)

Emma Wilkinson aged twenty-three, servant, was charged with the wilful murder of her infant at Welton-le-Marsh on 7th December 1873. The prisoner was a cook in the Rector’s family at Welton, and suspicions arose, so a doctor was called in to examine Emma and he consequently accused her of having given birth to a child. Emma confessed and the child’s body was found in a bundle with a handkerchief tied tightly around its neck. She was found guilty of concealment of birth and was sentenced to eight month’s imprisonment.

91/ Tathwell, May 1870 (Accidental Drowning)

A sad occurrence took place within a few hundred yards of Kenwick Thorne Bar in the parish of Tathwell. There are one or two labourer’s cottages in the vicinity of the lane (Poverty Lane), which leads from the London Road (A16) to Tathwell and a deep pond is adjacent thereto. All the children were playing around here, when a child fell in the pond, when the mother named Carter, along with another woman named Rhodes, hastened to rescue the child. Mrs Carter dived into the water but rather than help the child she seemed to become paralysed and when the child was rescued, she was dragged out and almost instantly expired. The coroner said the death was caused by the sudden shock of excitement and the coldness of the water, along with deceased being heavily pregnant. The husband is now left with three motherless children.

92/ Tathwell Drowning, August 1859 (Not same pond as above, is it?)

Tathwell, drowning

93/ South Willingham, July 1883

A dwelling house at South Willingham near Louth was struck by a bolt of lightning, killing the male inhabitant inside. In the same storm, nine sheep and a cow were also struck and killed.

94/ South Willingham Suicide, August 1888

In the village of South Willingham between Wragby and Louth, a young lad was working in the fields, scaring birds when his lifeless body was discovered hanging head downwards from a tree, with his throat slit from ear to ear. (Boys name?)

95/ South Willingham Landslip Death, July 1864

A labourer named William Smith aged thirty-one worked for a local farmer, Mr Chatterton. Deceased went out with two other men, carting marlstone, for agricultural purposes, from a pit on Mr Heneage’s estate. One side of the pit was undermined to, so as to economise labour and secure a large fall. The problem was this fell on them while they were working with two escaping, but Smith was buried up to his shoulders, and so fearfully crushed that he died within two hours of being extricated. He was married with one child and ironically his wife was on her way to the pit, with his breakfast when the landslip occurred.

96/ South Willingham Station Suicide, July 1881

South Willingham, Station, suicide

South Willingham and Hainton Station were south of the village, between there and Benniworth. The tunnel mentioned is about a mile east of that.

97/ Whitton, October 1876 (Shocking Cruelty)

James Dalton was a clerk at a solicitor’s in Hull and he killed himself by jumping overboard from a New Holland packet, while in the centre of the River Humber. What happened after his corpse was discovered leaves nothing to the imagination. When he was found floating in the Humber by the captain of a tug, the captain sent a man in a boat, to drag in the body then row to shore with it, all of which he did. He got to shore near Whitton on the banks of the Humber and tied it to a stake and abandoned it there. A witness, Mr Barley, saw the man do this, then row off back to his ship. He thought it best to inform the local police but they refused to get involved, thus the corpse was left out in the open until the inquest some days later. The coroner said the conduct of the local population and of the policeman, bordered on inhuman. When the pockets were searched, a third class ticket between Hull and Beverley and a scarf pin was found. It was only by the latter that the body was identified because the facial features had virtually been eroded away.

98/ Whitton Ness, (Humber) (Shipwreck Escape) May 1885

Whitton Ness, extraordinary escape

99/ Saxilby Child Murder, September 1859

Seventeen-year-old Sarah Ann Bellamy who worked for a farmer in Saxilby, Mr Capes, was charged with having wilfully murdered her male child. A doctor was called for one day and she complained of back pains and having sickness, for which she took some pennyroyal (a herb-pudding grass). The surgeon was suspicious and believed her to have had a child but she resisted attempts at an examination. The next week he saw her again and was sure she had been delivered of a child, so he informed the police. They quizzed her and searched the premises, where they found a dead baby boy in a box with a thick tape around the neck. The child, described as a fine, healthy one, was born alive and the mother strangled it with the cord or tape. (What happened to her?)

100/ Saxilby Station Fatality, November 1849

Three labourers were on their home from work, walking down the train tracks in the dark near to Saxilby Station when they spotted a luggage train coming towards them. They nimbly moved out the way only to be struck by another luggage coming in the opposite direction, which they had neither seen nor heard. One man was killed on the spot and was fearfully mangled, with his entrails spread all over. The second was badly injured and chances are that he may not make it. The third was extremely lucky and was thrown clear down an embankment.

101/ Stow Murder, (Lincoln/Gainsborough) November 1850

Christopher Page from Stow Park was poisoned and his wife was fatally poisoned. Mr Page was in a serious condition and the servant, seventeen-year-old Eliza Smalley was accused of administering the fatal dose. It seemed that arsenic and mercury was boiled, to be mixed with wheat. A portion was left in the pot and then locked away, with the key brought to her master. Mrs Page suffered from a burning tongue and severe stomach cramps. Mrs Page had coffee at breakfast and Smalley confessed to putting the mercury in her coffee. Her employers treat her well and she hadn’t been to church since she worked there and was illiterate, but she knew right from wrong. “Wilful Murder” against Eliza Smalley.

102/ Stow Station Fatality, October 1886

An inquest was held regarding the body of Tom Smith, who with two other waggoners went with a team to Stow Station. On the way, they stopped off for a few beers….then a few more…..and a whisky chaser. When they returned, one of the teams of horses galloped off and Tom was knocked over and killed.

103/ Scawby Poisoning, February 1888

Scawby , poisoning

104/ Scawby Hall Fatality, August 1881

Mr J.Wilson, agent to Captain Sutton of Scawby Hall, Brigg, was found lying on a stile on the estate, shot through the head. He was alive when found but died soon afterwards. He had gone out with his gun to look over a portion of the estate. The weapon was found discharged by his side and it is conjectured, in the absence of any direct evidence, that while Mr Wilson was crossing the stile, the trigger caught in something and the contents of the gun was lodged in his head.

105/ Scawby Brook (Brigg), May 1883 (Child Death)

(Scawby Brook, the park on the bend of Scawby Road?) Alfred Patterson aged ten years, the son of a widow and living at Scawby Brook, was with another lad named Smith and they were playing in Scawby Park one afternoon. Patterson climbed a tree to get to a rook’s nest and when near the top, the branch snapped and he came hurtling down to the ground, a distance of around forty feet. He had a fractured skull with the brains slightly protruding and his arm fractured as well. He died the next morning.

106/ Wood Enderby Skeleton, June 1887

While some men in the employ of Mr Coney, a farmer of Wood Enderby, were gripping in a field belonging to the latter, they came across a human skeleton. The bones were evidently those of a full-sized woman, being too fine for a man’s frame. Unfortunately, the men in digging had broken in the skull or the skeleton might have been preserved whole. (Where is the skeleton now/Who was it?)

107/ Somerby Crossing Suicide, near Brigg, March 1878

Somerby Crossing, suicide

108/ Woodhall Spa Suicide, August 1899

A young man named Whitlam, who was a violin-player in the Woodhall Spa Band, killed himself. He left a note saying that he intended committing suicide, then drowned himself in a local pond, all because of a love affair. (What pond?)

109/ Stixwould Grange near Woodhall Spa, April 1875 (Siblings Drown)

Firstly, I’m not sure if this the Stixwould near Woodhall Spa! There is a Grange Farm, down Green Lane. A pair of siblings named Almond, who were aged three and four, were feeding the ducks on a pond at Stixwold Grange in Lincolnshire when for some inexplicable reason they tumbled head first into the water. They were both drowned before they could be rescued.

110/ Thoresthorpe Suicide, near Alford, August 1879

A young woman killed herself by jumping into “Robinson’s Pit” at Thoresthorpe near Alford. An attractive eighteen-year-old named Sarah Ann Turner was spoken to by several persons on Tuesday evening, but a man named Barnes said she seemed really depressed and troubled. Mr Barnes was the last person to see her and she was heading in the direction of the pond. Two men named Davidson and Kidd saw her approach the water-side but couldn’t determine if it was a man or a woman as it was dark. They saw them head for the bather’s shed, then lost sight of them. They then observed the person, walk to the edge, then sprang in and disappear under the surface. They informed Mr Robinson who called on police to attend. They tried to recover the body but she was eventually found after being in the water for an hour. Her hat, jacket, linen cuffs and boots, were placed neatly on the bank. The young girl had been crossed in a love affair and in her pocket were a couple of pieces of paper, with this written on them:

“Like a lily fair and green, Soon cut down and no more seen, Beloved she was, in peace she died, Her life was craved, but God denied. – My love is fair, so fair to see, My love is blind, he loves me not, But when the time comes round he’ll miss, The rapture of my Heaven-born kiss. – Beating heart, why thus lament?  Woe is thine, then be content; Tho’ on earth no more we’ll rove, Softly sighing vows of love. – Softly your lips on mine were trembling, As I whispered low, Give me your love some token, Darling ‘ere I go.

Then was written in pencil  “it would be useless. You will please to consider our engagement at an end. Do you ask for an explanation? Then your own heart will tell you if you have been true to me. Do not attempt to see me, it would be useless.”

The young man she seemed distressed about was Edward Robinson and told a friend she loved him and would die for him. Nelly Blythe, another friend, said she took a razor upstairs recently but prayed for a while, then found some relief. Her body was interred at the Cemetery, followed by a large number of family and friends of the Congregational Church.

111/ Wragby Drownings, May 1884

Wragby, drownings

112/ Wragby Fatality, June 1862 (Drink Driving)

Wragby, fatality

113/ West Keal Suicide, near Spilsby, November 1877

Jane Shaw aged fifty-nine, wife of George Shaw, farmer, committed suicide. She had been in a desponding state of mind for some time past and Dr Thimbleby warned her family that she was a suicide risk. In consequence of this, she was closely watched by her husband and her sister, Mrs Maddison. On November 3rd, Mr Shaw went down his grounds having first hidden a bottle of laudanum which he had on the premises for cattle medicine. He locked the barn door and supposed that he had taken every precaution, but in course of an hour, Mrs Maddison called him home. Deceased had broken into the barn and taken a large quantity of the poison. The jury found that deceased was deranged in mind and the verdict to that effect was returned.

114/ West Keal Church Tower Collapse, October 1881 (Behind Coffee Cup Cafe)

West Keal, church tower, collapse

115/ West Keal Suicide, (Poplar Farm), October 1931

West Keal, suicide

116/ Withcall Drowning, September 1859

At Withcall, the wife of William Marfleet, carpenter, whilst drawing a bucket of water out of a deep pit in the field, near her residence, slipped off the plank on which she was standing and being unable to extricate herself or make her voice heard, was drowned. One of her little boys becoming alarmed, at length ran to the pit and finding his mother had fallen in, ran for help, but before any could be obtained life was extinct. Six young children, by this catastrophe, are left motherless.

117/ Withcall, (Threshing Machine Accident) November 1875

Elizabeth Padley aged twenty-six and married, met with a horrific accident at Withcall on October 26th. Her leg was drawn into a threshing machine on the farm of Thomas Sowerby. She was brought to Louth Hospital, where the leg was amputated above the knee, and she sank gradually from that point on, expiring on Saturday morning. A witness who was working with her on Goulceby Top said her left foot and leg had been caught by the drum and held on to her before she was released after twenty minutes or so. He also said there was surprisingly little blood. All she kept saying was that her knee hurt and that she couldn’t feel her foot. The verdict of “Accidental Death”.

118/ Withcall Tunnel Death, December 1875

Cornelius Janway aged twenty-eight and from Cambridgeshire, met with an accident while at work, causing the death thereof, on the Withcall Tunnel. (There is a video on Youtube) He was crushed between two of the trucks and suffered a fractured elbow and had his left thigh literally squashed to bits. The accident happened about 500 yards in the tunnel, from the entrance on the Stenigot side. The waggons were laden with bricks, and deceased was riding on the buffer behind the waggon with his hand on the lever. The waggons got faster, then the lever went down, then a link in the chain of the brake-block broke, rendering the lever useless and then the deceased screamed out. He was freed and brought to Louth Hospital. Blood was oozing from his elbow joint, and the left thigh had a huge gash in it. His right testicle was hanging out, while the left had been driven into the abdomen, under the skin and the bladder was ruptured as well. The injuries were so bad that hope of recovery was remote. The surgeon also said the skin was torn from the flesh, due to getting caught between the wheel and track and getting dragged for some distance.

(The Withcall and South Willingham tunnels were closed in 1960, but they are now home to some rare species of bat, including Brandt’s bat, Natterer’s bat, Daubenton’s bat, Whiskered and Brown long-eared bat.)

119/ Withcall Tunnel Accident, January 1876

Withcall Tunnel, accident, deaths

 

120/ Woodhall Spa Fatality, July 1887

Fatal accident, Woodhall Spa

121/ Sutton-on-Sea Suicide, April 1888

Sutton-on-Sea, suicide

122/ Saxilby Railway Death, March 1885

Gertrude Handley, a labourer of Saxilby near Lincoln, left her home on the 6th February at eight o’clock, to go into the village. The G.N.R. from Lincoln to Doncaster passes through Saxilby and Handley was in Crinsey Nook on the other side of the line, so she had to cross over. When she got to the crossing a goods train was passing towards Lincoln, and as soon as it passed she stepped through the gate and as another train was due, the gate-keeper called out to her. She spun around and was struck by the train, with the engine going over her foot. Gertrude was taken to Lincoln Hospital and they found her foot severely crushed, also with bad bruising on her body. She recovered but then relapsed, and gradually sank, dying the Saturday afterwards.

123/ Fossdyke Fatal Accident, near Saxilby September 1888

Fossdyke, fatal, accident

 

Posted by dbeasley70

Lindsey (M-R)

1/ North Kelsey Church Suicide, August 1886.

North Kelsey, church, suicide

2/ North Kelsey, March 1865 (Attacks Wife with Scythe)

Thomas Andrew aged forty-three, a labourer, was indicted for unlawfully and maliciously wounding with a scythe Elizabeth Andrew, his wife, with intent to do grievous bodily harm at North Kelsey on August 25th, 1864. Several witnesses were examined and the jury returned a verdict of guilty. He was sentenced to six months imprisonment with hard labour.

3/ North Kelsey Suicide, January 1914

John Seagrave, a farm labourer at North Kelsey, was discovered hanging from a wooden beam in his kitchen in his cottage. He was cut down, but life had already expired.

4/ North Cotes, (Grimsby/Louth) September 1887 (Body Washed Ashore)

north Cotes, body washed ashore

An inquest was held at the Fleece Inn, North Cotes, upon the body of a man unknown, but believed to be a person late in the naval service. Henry Jacklin deposed to finding deceased on the North Cotes sands at nine a.m. on Wednesday. Coastguard, Joseph White of Tetney Lock, identified the clothing of deceased as that of the navy. It was supposed deceased was lost off a man-of-war which was cruising off Grimsby about a month ago. A verdict of “Found Drowned” was returned.

5/ North Cotes Drowning, February 1867

Joseph Osborne aged fifty-six, was accidentally drowned in the large drain opening through a sluice into the sea. He was in a small boat breaking up the ice when his frail bark capsized. A man named Michael recovered the boat and reached Osborne, who too impatiently seized the boat, which was then overturned for the second time and now the two men were both struggling like hell. They managed to grab a rope which had been flung across the sluice, and which they supported themselves for half an hour. A passerby named Capes rescued Michael and then the two tried to rescue Osborne but he was carried under the sluice. Only a few minutes elapsed between him going under and when it was recovered on the other side, but life was extinct.

6/ North Cotes Suicide, September 1880

North Cotes, Suicide

7/ North Cotes/North Somercotes, (Sailors Body Found) January 1861

An inquest was held at the Fleece Inn on the body of a sailor unknown, found on the shore. Another inquest was held at the White Horse Inn, Marshchapel, on the body of Captain Thomas Wickenden, of the “Mary Caroline” of Rochester, which was wrecked on the coast at North Somercotes a few days ago. Captain Wickenden was born in a village near Rochester and has left a widow and two children there, having previously lost three other children to scarlet fever during the past year. The body was identified by Mr Silver, of Rochester, the builder of the vessel. He was thirty-two years old and had saved the lives of shipwrecked sailor’s in the North of England no less than three times, which he obtained for, unfortunately not recovered with the body.

8/ Riby Murder, September 1870 (William Hicks the murder victim, is buried here)

Riby, murder

The story goes, that William Marris, a husband and father of ten children, didn’t get on too well with 18-year-old William Hicks, as they worked on the same farm and there was a bit of friction owing to when Hicks took some oil-cake to feed his horses from Marris and it rankled. Marris would regularly moan about the young lad to his employer, and the other staff took the mickey out of Marris. Hicks went past Marris’s cottage one evening and he fired a gun at him from an above window hitting him in the face. The lad fell down dead.

9/ Riby Murder (Sentencing), March 1871

Riby ,murder, sentencing

The body of young William Hicks was interred at Riby churchyard and is to the right of the church door, and a couple of graves down…It says somewhere else that Marris was sentenced to transportation to Australia, but it states five years with hard labour.

10/ Riby Fatal Accident, September 1907

George Henry Lowe was busy working on a traction engine in the village of Riby near Grimsby, when he was run over and crushed by the huge machine. A verdict of “Accidental Death” was returned. (Is he buried there?)

11/ New Holland, January 1884 (Fatal Fight)

Fatal fight, New Holland

Two young men, John Longbottom aged twenty-six and nineteen-year-old Walter Harrison, both of whom worked for the M.S.& L Railway, got into a fight one night, with the elder one landing a couple of punches and the teenager smacking him once. This was at the Pelham Inn, New Holland, and the fight became a scuffle and Longbottom struck Harrison’s head on the floor. Police were called for and Longbottom was taken home, where he died a couple of days later. Harrison was later arrested by police on a charge of manslaughter.

12/ New Holland Railway, August 1865 (Fatal Accident)

 

13/ New Holland Murder? April 1868

At nine p.m., a watchman on the steamer “Magna Charta” spotted a woman in the water near the railway pontoon and drifting out to sea. He got the crew to head towards the spot she had been seen flapping around in the Humber, shouting for help, but before they got there, she drowned. When they returned they found a group of blokes drunk as anything and asked around about the woman. One piped up that it was his “Poll”, who he’d been with for the past year and three of the men were given into custody on a charge of having something to do with Poll’s death. A youth saw them throw the woman into the Humber and she was being man-handled previous to this. Her full name was Polly Bishop, a 24-year-old prostitute from Hull. They came over from Hull that day and had been drinking when things got physical between her and Thomas Stamp, the boyfriend. The others involved were:- John Coleman, a fisherman, and labourer George Stathens. (Was it murder?)

New Holland Pier. Was Poll pushed off here?

 

14/ New Holland, (Child Murder?) May 1869

New Holland, child murder

15/ Manby/Legbourne, November 1860 (Birth in Public)

Two servant girls left the house of a farmer at Manby on the morning of 23rd November, for Louth Fair ostensibly for a day’s recreation, when a short distance from that village they were overtaken by Mr Coote’s cart, with the driver asking them if they wanted a lift. They thanked him and climbed in and when the vehicle had reached Legbourne Bar, one of the girl’s wished to be put down. No sooner had she alighted on the road when she gave birth to a child. It was taken to a cottage close by and placed before the fire but gave no signs of life. The girl remained there for a few days, with an inquest was held on Monday when it was proved with a post-mortem examination that the infant had been stillborn. It is remarkable that up to the very moment of birth the girl’s pregnancy was never suspected.

16/ North Thoresby Railway Station, June 1876 (Death in Railway Carriage)

North Thoresby, railway, death

William Cook, a shoemaker from North Thoresby, died in a third-class carriage between North Thoresby and Louth. He was about sixty-four years old. He and his wife were heading to the Boston flower show and could see their daughter as well. Mr and Mrs Cook sat opposite each other and after a few minutes of leaving North Thoresby, the man sitting next to him asked if her husband suffered from fits, as he thought he was having one. When they pulled into Louth Station he was dead as a dodo. The wife said that they were a little late for the train so they hurried a little but he didn’t seem exhausted when they got there. She saw him fall back when they neared Fotherby or Utterby. The man who was next to him, William Capes, said he never spoke a word and seemed to have a fit, then five minutes later he was totally lifeless. Death from natural causes.

17/ North Thoresby Railway Station, July 1887 (Another Death in a Carriage)

North Thoresby, railway carriage, death

18/ North Thoresby March 1915 (Motor Accident)

Two soldiers were involved in a fatal motor accident near North Thoresby. Military motorcyclist, Bryan Fletcher of the East Yorkshire Regiment, was riding the motorcycle and Henry Robinson from Hull was in the sidecar when it overturned at high speed and they went into a dyke on the roadside. Robinson was dead on impact and Fletcher was whisked off to Grimsby Hospital with a fractured arm and several lacerations.

19/ North Thoresby, July 1868 (Concealing Birth)

An inquest was held in North Thoresby before the coroner, Thomas Sharpley, on the body of a newly-born child, the illegitimate daughter of Sarah Bradeley, who had been confined thereof in a petty adjoining her parents’ house. After hearing the evidence of witnesses the jury returned a verdict of “no evidence of live-birth”.

20/ North Thoresby, July 1881 (Heart Attack near Granby Inn)

Mary A.Hall aged fifty-three years died on the Grimsby and Louth Road about seven p.m. and died immediately. Tom Webster, a youth who worked for Mr Atkinson, an engineer at North Thoresby, was stood at the Granby Inn corner with several others when he saw her coming towards them from the direction of Ludborough. He knew her very well, she being the sister of Mr Atkinson, he walked forward about 100 yards to meet her, when she reached for her side and said she felt bad. She turned around to go home when he grabbed her arm enticing her not to, and she said,”Oh.I wish I’d never come”, then said”I’m dying”, then rolled over and went pale and frothed at the mouth. Somebody fetched a chair and a brandy and she uttered “Oh Tom!”, then expired. Her G.P., Dr George, described as a very fat woman and ruddy (red colour) and had difficulty in breathing. He said death was due to heart faintness.

21/ North Thoresby, (Burned to Death) January 1869

North Thoresby, burned to death

22/ North Thoresby, January 1886 (Concealment of Birth)

An inquest at the New Inn, upon view of the body of the new-born illegitimate female child of Alice Lingard, a domestic servant. The woman was a servant to Mr Thomas Bond of North Thoresby. When Mrs Bond came down one Sunday morning she found the girl poorly and in consequence of what she told her made a search, the result of which was the newly-born daughter. The infant was quite dead and the girl had no assistance in giving birth. A doctor was called for and she was attended by Dr George. Mrs Bond explained that Alice had been in her service for six months and when she found Alice in the kitchen and when asked “what was the matter?”, she confessed she had had a mishap in the closet. She sent her to bed then searched the closet and discovered the child’s body upon the soil. It was dead and cold. Dr George said he was summoned that day and saw the body of a female child in a bucket. It had been torn apart and asked for it to be placed on a board. It was six pounds and nineteen inches tall. The girl said it was born dead but the doctor said he doubted that was the case. The jury gave a verdict of “The body was found on the premises dead but there was not sufficient evidence to show that it was born alive”.    (Found Thomas Bond in 1882 White’s Directory- he was a farmer, woolstapler, postmaster and grocer (Bond and Sempers)

February 1886

Alice Lingard aged twenty, a domestic servant, was charged with concealment of birth. Superintendent Stennett said he saw the girl on February 2nd, cautioned her against making any statement which might incriminate herself then read over the warrant for her apprehension. She said nothing and was taken to Grimsby in charge of a female attendant. The prisoner was then committed for trial at the next Assizes. Substantial bail:-two sureties of £20 being accepted.

23/ North Thoresby Fatality, April 1877

A dreadful accident occurred at North Thoresby that resulted in the death of sixty-four-year-old Anthony Stovin, when he was knocked down by a horse and dog-cart. Mr Stovin was nearly deaf and also mentioned his poor eyesight. He had been run over about a year ago but escaped serious injury. He had a history of accidents and near misses, about fourteen in all. The son said that he had seen him at the wood sale at the Granby Inn, the same evening as his accident. When he heard his father had been run over about an hour later, he was not shocked but went to the scene of the accident and knew he was dead. The driver said he was driving out of the Granby Inn and was going along, when he went to pass three men about fifty yards away, he called out “Heigh up”,and he turned the horse to side of the road when the shaft of the conveyance knocked him on the head and he fell down. Dr George examined the body and found a wound about an inch a half long on the back of his head. He died from concussion of the brain. The verdict was “Accidentally Killed”.

24/ North Thoresby, August 1863 (Accidental Death)

25/ North Ormsby near Ludborough, January 1876 (Suffocated to Death)

Edward Martin aged 16, was found in bed by a fellow workmate in a state of insensibility, and who died within half an hour of being discovered.  John Briggs, a groom who worked for J.R.King of North Ormsby, said the two of them shared a room over the coach-house. They took some rakings from the fire put them in a scuttle and took them to their room. They were up for several more hours but could see the embers still glowing, but with no discernible smell coming from them. The next thing he remembered was someone giving him brandy to revive him. Edmund May, a blacksmith, went to call on the two of them but got no reply, so he got a ladder and entered the room. They were both unconscious with Briggs was making a gurgling noise in his throat. Briggs recovered but Martin died in less than half an hour.The verdict was “Accidental death caused by the carbonic acid gas emitted by the burning logs”.

26/ North Ormsby, (White Lady)

This tiny village near Ludborough has a statue of a lady in flowing robes, standing on the edge of a field overlooking the Lincolnshire Wolds. Supposed to be the site of where a young woman died in a riding accident, it was taken from Abbey Farm gardens and put in its present place a number of years ago. There is also an old airfield near Mill Farm that was used in World War One, only for a couple of years, as an emergency airfield used to deter the Zeppelins when they came over the East Coast.

27/ Nettleton, January 1904 (Drowning)

The son of the vicar of Nettleton near Caistor, Alfred B.Campbell, was brought up by a dredger in the River Teign in Devon. He was staying in Teignmouth and was seen on the Sunday evening after he left the service at the local church. The tide was at full flood and his watch had stopped at 7-20 p.m. Whether it was an accident or of a deliberate nature, police weren’t sure.

North Somercotes (Lively little place in Victorian times! Shipwrecks, Poisoning, Suicides, Bodies Washed up.)

North Somercotes, bodies washed up,

28/ North Somercotes, February 1909 (Accidental Shooting)

William Padderson was accidentally killed at North Somercotes while shooting stock doves. He went with two loaded weapons, a barrel went off and went directly into his head. A companion in another dugout, found him when he thought something was wrong, as the birds were flying around his place and no shots being fired.

29/ North Somercotes Suicide, October 1865

A labourer named Robert Limon killed himself one Monday evening due to his depressed state of mind at the time. He climbed into a tree and after fastening the rope to one of the highest branches, he placed it around his neck and threw himself from the tree. He was discovered early next morning by his father, who immediately cut him down. A verdict of “Temporary Insanity”.

30/ North Somercotes, (Fatal Accident), August 1883

A bricklayer by the name of Thoreley arrived back home one Saturday evening after being away for a couple of weeks and was told by his missus that birds had incessantly been pecking at his corn, so he went to borrow a gun from a neighbour. He left it in the passage, fully loaded and ready for action. His twenty-one-year-old son spotted the gun and picked it up unaware that it was loaded, and the shot went straight into his mother’s back, causing instant death.

31/ North Somercotes/Donna Nook June 1861 (Lifeboat Deaths)

A tragic accident occurred, by which two men and a young boy lost their lives. A newly built lifeboat had been built at Grimsby for the coastguard at Donna Nook Station, and five men and a boy went out on a trial run. The wind was blowing from the North-East and the waves were unseasonably high when they were on their way back. About half a mile from the shore a sudden gust upset the boat and it capsized, throwing all the crew into the North Sea. Two swam ashore and a third was rescued by his daughter, who seeing his strength fading, rushed into the water and dragged him to the beach. Harris aged forty-seven, Andrews aged thirty-four, and the youth, Collins, all lost their lives. The boat is too long and narrow for coastguard service and it has taken three lives of brave men, to find this out. (Are they buried locally?)

32/ North Somercotes Drowning, January 1877

North Somercotes, drowning

33/ North Somercotes, May 1879 (Hermit’s Suicide)

The local hermit of North Somercotes, Alan Lewis, who owned some acreage in the village, went out and hanged himself with a section of rope in an out-house. He was a sixty-year-old bachelor and kept himself to himself. His reclusive nature went as far as him eating a meal at a neighbour’s house then scuttling back to his own home and shutting himself away for the rest of the day. He had been in a desponding state recently and even looked a little poorly and pale. In a rare event, he went into Louth and went to a solicitor to have a will drawn up, then he went straight back to North Somercotes.

34/ North Somercotes, July 1880 (Body Washed Ashore)

On Saturday last, the body of a man was found after high tide, among the tufts of grass on the seashore near the ark. It was completely decomposed with the features having been eaten away. The body was taken by Sergeant Dale, and the clothes, boots and knife and fourpence in copper, were retained for identification if possible. The remains were too far gone for an inquest to be held and they were buried the next day. Nothing was known about the deceased and judging by the state of the corpse it had been in the water about three months, having been washed off some vessel.

35/ North Somercotes, September 1877 (Another Body Washed Up)

An inquest at the Bay Horse Inn on the body of a man which had been found on the sands on the previous day. Blythe Brooks, a labourer, stated that he was on the sands at 3-30 p.m. Monday afternoon with Charles Smith when they saw the body lying in a sand-hole with the legs and arms wide apart. He told the coastguard, and Smith went for his horse and cart and took the body to the Bay Horse Inn. The policeman searched him but found nothing in his pockets. John Lawson, the police sergeant of North Somercotes was present as the body was stripped. There were no marks on the body or on the clothing. He was about fifty years old, 5 foot 6 inches tall and fairly stout, with a grey goatee beard. He wore a brown cloth coat and vest, violet tie, cord trousers, grey socks, and cotton shirt. As yet remains a “John Doe”.

36/ North Somercotes Child Poisoning, August 1877

child poisoning, North Somercotes

37/ North Somercotes/South Wales, August 1879

The twenty-eight-year-old son of the vicar was drowned at Mumbles near Swansea. Allan Blomefield went for a dip at 11-30 a.m., with the weather being warm and with the sea calm, with his two cousins, George Blomefield and Wilfred St Maur Hill, when out swimming they were caught in an eddy pool. George and Wilfred got to shore and told the coastguard to look for Allan. George was unconscious for nearly an hour. Three coastguard vessels were launched to search for him but he was not discovered until three a.m next morning in a deep whirlpool near the place where other casualties have previously occurred.

38/ North Somercotes Murder? January 1860

James Stubbs, a shoemaker, committed a brutal and savage attack upon his wife on January 12th. There was some disagreement between them during the day which led to a more serious quarrel at nine that night when Stubbs ejected his wife from the house and beat and kicked her in a ferocious manner. Her cries for help brought neighbours out to help her and they discovered her lying on the ground, apparently lifeless. A doctor was called for and she was taken inside. Mrs Stubbs was alive but had severe blows to her temple, and with her legs bruised and discoloured from her husband’s kicks. The woman is also in the latter stages of pregnancy and slight hopes are entertained of her recovery. Stubbs was arrested and taken to Louth Police Station. He was remanded for a fortnight with his wife too weak to undergo an examination. This wife-beating expert caused the death of a woman named Walker, with whom he cohabited about five years ago. He ill-treated her and on one occasion threw her on the fire and her back was severely burnt, the vertebrae being quite bare. She lingered for six months but ultimately died from injuries Stubbs had inflicted on her.

39/ North Somercotes, (Death by Burning) February 1878

North Somercotes, death, burning

40/ North Owersby Suicide, July 1870

The untimely end by his own hand, of John Davy the highly respected agriculturist and ram breeder from Owersby near Market Rasen, occurred on Wednesday morning. He had been suffering from mental depression for the last two months and he took a gun into an out-house and discharged the contents into his head. His eldest son was married on Tuesday to Miss Marris of Orford near Binbrook, and this circumstance certainly intensifies the distress which has fallen on the united families. Mr Davy was a little over fifty years of age and well known all over the county. He cultivated 1600 acres of land and was an employer of much labour.

41/ Marshchapel Suicide, January 1869

Mary Neal aged 69 had been depressed for some time past, chiefly on religious subjects and that she had often told witnesses present that she wanted to destroy herself. On Monday morning, at 6-15 a.m., a person residing under the roof of the house in which deceased lived, heard her come down the stairs and walk out the door. At 6-45 a.m. she was found in a dyke in front of the house, which was only about three feet wide and ten inches deep. The jury gave a verdict of “Found drowned”, as it might well have been an accident and not a premeditated suicide.

42/ Marshchapel, July 1882 (Child Disappears)

A very sad occurrence happened at Marshchapel on the 21st July. A man named Thomas Johnson went down to the seashore to gather some cockles and took with him two of his children. In the afternoon one of the children, a little fellow aged about four years, strayed away from the cart and has not been seen or heard of since. He is supposed to have fallen down and was then washed away by the tide.

43/ Marshchapel Affray, October 1878 (English and Irish Scrapping)

Marshchapel, affray

or 50) to a place of safety, most of their wearing apparel being left behind; they spent the remainder of the night in a barn! Such a scene of excitement has never before occurred in Marshchapel and although no arrests were made that night, it is expected that the leaders of the riot will be brought to justice.

44/ Normanby-by-Spital Suicide, December 1856

A well-respected farmer in the district of Market Rasen, a Mr Joseph Hardgreave, aged forty-six and from Normanby, who occupied 700 acres of prime farmland under the Earl of Yarborough, killed himself in the following manner. He rang the bell and the servant came along and observed him sat at the breakfast table, with a shotgun between his legs. He ordered some milk for his tea and before he had returned he seems to have tied the ends of his handkerchiefs to the triggers, then placed the muzzle in his mouth and given the handkerchiefs a tug with his feet and blown his head to atoms. Fragments of flesh and bone covered the walls and interior. He had no money worries.He was worth a handsome £30,000, and he leaves a wife and children.

45/ Middle Rasen Elopement, December 1870

A little sensation was created in Middle Rasen, by the elopement of a labourer’s wife with a married man of the same class. The affair was managed by the faithless wife with great craftiness. On the morning of the flight, she led her husband to believe that she was off to visit friends in Louth and got him to assist with her luggage etc. to Market Rasen. Upon the arrival in the Market Place she consulted the clock and kissing him meekly, said “Goodbye Iky! and God bless you! You had better go back now or you will be too late for work”.  Iky went back; his wife joined her paramour and they went off by train. Neither have been seen since. The bereaved husband has broken up his home and gone into lodgings.

46/ Normanby-le-Wold, August 1862 (Inhuman Farmer)

** Found Joseph Lyall on Gravestonephotos.com. Buried in St Peter’s churchyard in Normanby-Le-Wold. He was buried in 1862, the same year as this story, aged 69. Born in 1793.**

47/ North Cockerington, November 1888 (Body in Ditch)

The corpse of Mr Robert Hundleby aged forty, a farmer of Louth Park and North Somercotes, was found in a ditch in North Cockerington one Friday afternoon. It was in the ditch adjoining the public road leading from North Cockerington not far from the turn, leading to Red Leas. He had been to Louth Market and popped into the pub at the corner, known as Aylett’s Corner at about seven p.m.the night before. There were no marks of violence upon the body and his money and papers were found on him. The evidence seems to point to an accidental drowning. He fell in on the 7th November and was discovered on the 9th of November and was probably suffocated or drowned.

48/ North Cockerington, August 1878 (Child Drowned)

A painful death by drowning occurred at North Cockerington. Carter White Staines, a child of eighteen months old, was around about tea-time, missed by the other children and on a search being made his dead body was found by the eldest boy in a pond at the back of the stockyard. It seems that Mr.Charles Staines who has a family of nine children and up to Saturday last there had been a fence around the pond but it was removed for the purpose of thatching a stack of hay. The child was missed for only about ten minutes, and during that time had gone to play near the pond and then fallen in and drowned. “Accidental drowning”.

49/ North Cockerington Concealment of Birth, July 1866

North Cockerington, concealment of birth

50/ Northorpe near Gainsborough, November 1880 (Railway Fatality)

The station is still there at Northorpe, now a private house I believe. This was a railway accident that resulted in the death of the driver and destruction of a large quantity of rolling stock. A down coal-train was standing within a few yards of Northorpe Station, engaged in shunting at the same time the down goods train was expected. The distance signal was against this train, which should have drawn up but due to heavy fog, this could not be seen until the driver had passed it. The driver slammed on the brakes, but he was on an incline down and pulling 36 waggons fully laden resulted in a collision. The engine of the approaching train telescoped the waggons of the standing train and mounted over the debris then fell over the bridge, sixteen feet below into a meadow. It took some hours to extricate the body of the driver, Nathan Priest. Two marvellous escapes were recorded though. The stoker named Gorton, when he saw they were going to crash he jumped at the telegraph wires and was fortunate to secure a hold, and hung there till the danger was past. A miner named Henry Hunsley, about to emigrate to America, missed the ordinary train and got permission to travel on the brake van of the stationary train. He had just sat down when he heard a whistle, looked out and saw the goods train approaching, he leapt out and ran down the embankment within a minute of the brake van smashing up into thousands of fragments. There was a five-hour stoppage while debris was cleared.

51/ New Bolingbroke Child Murder, March 1832

The wife of a labourer named Padley, who lived in the village of New Bolingbroke, became a mother and after a couple of days, while her husband was working in the fields, she threw the little bairn of the fire. Her husband returned later on and she came up with a far-fetched tale of how a beggar woman was spotted near the house and she feared that she had taken the child. The husband was suspicious of this feeble account of what happened and she admitted what she had done. The woman is on suicide watch and the infant was nothing more than a tiny pile of ashes.(post-natal depression?)

52/ Maltby-le-Marsh School Death, (Alford/Mablethorpe) June 1885

Samuel White aged thirteen years met with a terrible accident in the school playground. From the evidence of two or three play-mates of the deceased (who had left school and was working for his father who is a blacksmith at Strubby and Maltby) was going for dinner, when he stepped into the school ground. Here he was requested by some boys to give them a turn on the swinging pole. Whilst they were turning around, the pole snapped and fell upon the deceased. He was carried into the schoolroom insensible and in fact dead. The verdict of “Accidental Death”.

53/ Maidenwell, (Child Fatality) March 1876

Not a million miles away from Cadwell Park, the motor-racing circuit in the Lincolnshire Wolds. This is an all too familiar tale in the Victorian era, and four-year-old Harriet Carpenter was another sad victim. While her parents were gone temporarily she went downstairs and while trying to reach something on the mantelpiece, her nightdress caught fire. She was severely burned on the right arm and her chest, and soon after the poor lass died after suffering from agonizing pain.

54/ Maidenwell/Haugham Hill,  June 1868 (Fatal Accident)

55/ Ruckland, (Human Remains) April 1875

Lying in a lovely valley, Ruckland is one of my favourite places in Lincolnshire. The tiny church of St Olave’s is one of the smallest in the county and is immaculately kept. Back to 1875 some small human bones and a portion of a brown skirt were found in a water cistern on the premises of Mr John Heanley, a farmer at Ruckland. The bones appeared to have been in the cistern for years and are supposed to be those of a child. The water has never been used for drinking purposes but merely for washing down vehicles etc. Inquiries have been made by the police but nothing as yet has transpired to throw any light on the matter.

56/ Ranby Suicide, (near Horncastle) October 1897

Ranby, suicide

57/ Mumby near Alford, January 1893 (Vicar Vanishes)

The vicar of Mumby, the Reverend William Henry Jones, who is slightly rotund in stature and about forty years of age, sandy beard and moustache, blue eyes and about five feet six inches tall, had vanished off the face of the earth. He left Lincolnshire to see his solicitor in London, a Mr Pakeman of King William Street, and he booked into the Midland Hotel. He left his luggage and said he would come back later for it but he disappeared. There were two actions in which he was concerned that were to be tried at Lincoln, and now no trace can be found. (Where did he go?)

58/ Mumby Mill Fatality, August 1883

A sad accident which ended fatally occurred at Mumby Mill. The owner Thomas White aged twenty-seven, whose house is near the mill, walked round the side of the mill where the sails were at work and he was knocked over by a sail. He had just shouted for a man who worked at the mill to come down for breakfast. The boy thought they had struck something as there a jolt and rushed out and saw his master lying on the ground, bleeding from a large head wound. He was directly under the sails, which swung within three feet of the ground. He lingered a day or two but died without regaining consciousness. It was a verdict of accidental death but they thought the place was a danger to those working there and a fence should be erected. White had only recently purchased the mill and premises.

59/ Mumby, October 1861 (Dead Child Found)

The body of an unknown male child was discovered in Mumby by Inspector Wynne. The policeman said he had received information to go to the garden of Thomas Payne in the hamlet of Helsey in Mumby parish and examined the ditch round the garden. The tiny body was about a foot under the surface and wrapped in a handkerchief. The garden is about 200 yards from the nearest house and separated from the road by a grass field. Mary Ann Jarvis then spoke up and said she saw Betsey Grant with a newly-born baby on her bed. A thud was heard that day and when Mary Ann asked her if she was alright, she said she was fine and to make a cup of tea. The thud was the child dropping out. The child cried very weakly and appeared feeble. They tried to feed it and it had a spot of blood on it’s nose. Jarvis was told to nurse the child that evening but when she was going to take it, Grant said the child was dead. David Payne, the son of Thomas Payne, called on her and said he would bury the child properly. The post-mortem revealed no signs of violence, no broken bones or strangulation marks, so it was concluded that the little boy died naturally. Both David Payne and Betsey Grant were committed for trial for concealment of birth.

60/ Mumby Skeleton, October 1859

Mumby, skeleton

61/ Revesby/Mareham-le-Fen Murder, December 1862

Revesby Abbey nearby now does “ghost hunts”, might try one some time! This is about the body of Jemima Garner, an elderly woman who was exhumed and the contents of her stomach were tested for traces of arsenic poisoning. Yellow stains on the spine which was produced by the arsenic escaping through the stomach lining. Jemima was interred in December of 1861 and John Garner, her son and his missus, Elizabeth, were arrested. Witnesses told of how they ill-treated the old lady and when she was on her deathbed in terrible pain, John Garner didn’t give her anything to ease the pain, a tot of brandy or anything. He made it clear that she was being a hypochondriac and told her to hurry up and die. She asked for her son but he ignored her plea’s to see him one last time. There was alleged physical abuse as well, with Garner’s wife cursing at her and calling her all the names under the sun. Later on, in January of 1863, they were charged with her murder and Garner’s first wife, Hannah, was also to be exhumed and tested for arsenic poisoning.

62/ Mareham-le-Fen Poisonings, March 1863

Mareham-le-Fen, poisonings

63/ Mareham-on- Hill, (Horncastle) December 1905 (Gun Accident)

A farmer by the name of John Empringham, at Mareham-on-Hill near Horncastle, was discovered dead in a field. He had been shot in the head and it is believed that cause of death was a tragic accident, by him trying to squeeze through a gap in the hedge and the gun going off, discharging its contents into his temple.

64/ Mareham-le-Fen Suicide, January 1881

Mareham-le-Fen, suicide

65/ Markby Suicide, November 1902

Markby, suicide

66/ Redbourne near Brigg, December 1888

Redbourne, murderous, attack

67/ Moorby, (Horncastle) June 1877 (Child Fatality)

An inquest was held at Moorby, on the body of Emma Chapman aged three years. Deceased had been last seen alive playing in the road on the previous day. Her elder sister lost sight of her for a few moments and on looking for her, saw her lying in a ditch close to their own cottage door. There was not much water in the ditch but the poor child had fallen on her face and when taken up, was quite dead.

68/ Middle Rasen Railway Suicide, April 1888

Middle Rasen, railway, suicide

jury returned a verdict that the deceased committed suicide whilst in a state of temporary insanity.

Posted by dbeasley70

Lindsey (G-L)

1/ Hawerby Hall Murder, October 1976

Hawerby Hall, murder

I took this picture on a £20 camera in November 1986. The murder was of 36-year-old Anthony Pulling, by his 35-year-old wife, Valerie Pulling, in October of 1976. Anthony was the son of former Scunthorpe alderman, Bill Pulling. She was allowed to stay with her parents in Wakefield on a £500 bail. Apparently, she shot him when he was getting a bit abusive. What happened in the end?

2/ Ludborough Church, February 11th, 1882 (Child Buried in Churchyard)

Ludborough, dead , child

The body of a male infant was discovered in the churchyard, buried just a few inches deep. Robert Andrews the gardener and groom for the rector, Reverend Augustus Gedge, was trimming the hedge bordering on the churchyard when he spotted some fresh moulds on the grass. He examined it and found the body of the little boy beneath the soil. There were paw-prints from a dog near to the temporary grave. It seems that the body had been there for a fortnight and was that of a well-nourished boy with no marks of violence. The lungs were put into water, to determine if he had been born alive. If they floated, there was air in them, and the child had breathed. When the test was carried out, the lungs sank, so the child had not lived.

March 4th, 1882

The mystery of the child’s body in Ludborough Churchyard had a simple solution in the end. James Stanley, the sexton, denied having buried the child, and no one appeared to know anything about it. Inquiries were made by Superintendent Cadge and he found out that the sexton had been lying all along and that he had buried the body and got a death certificate from Dr George in North Thoresby. Why he concealed the burial is not known as the child was born of married people.

3/ Ludborough, March 1865  (Fatal Accident)

On Monday last an old man named White, a much-respected cottager residing in Ludborough met with his death in a shocking manner. He was engaged in assisting Mr Harrison of the Livesey Arms Inn, to load some oats in the sheaf and was riding on top of the load, when, owing to the horses stopping, he fell to the ground with the fall dislocating his neck and causing instantaneous death.

4/ Ludborough, October 1868 (Child Burns to Death)

An inquest was held in Ludborough touching the death of John William Borrell aged two years, son of a labourer in the employ of Mr Parker. It appeared that the boy had been left for only a few minutes by his mother, and on her return, she was met by the child running from the house enveloped in flames. After lingering in much agony, death took place on Tuesday.

5/ Ludborough Railway Station August 1875 (Dead Child in Box)

Ludborough, train Station, dead child,

Shelford in Cambridgeshire, about four miles south of Cambridge.

6/ Ludborough House Drowning, August 1882

Little Rose Ellen Ayscough aged nearly two and a half years, the daughter of Mr T.W.Ayscough, of Ludborough House (on the corner of Lincoln Gate and Livesey Road), was found drowned in the pond at the front of the house. She was taken out of the pond in her father’s yard at about 8 p.m. on Saturday evening and was found to be dead. She had been in the garden with her father and he left her alone to go into the village near the house. The milkmaid just finished work, and went to wash her hands in the pond and thought she saw a doll. On returning to the house she asked if Rose was in bed and when Mrs Ayscough said no, she said: “Well, I’m afraid she’s in the pond then”. Mrs Ayscough fished the child out.  “Accidentally Drowned” was the verdict.

7/ Ludborough, (Child Burnt to Death) November 1862

Ludborough, child, burning

8/ Kelstern, (Louth/Mkt Rasen) September 1859 (Fatal Drowning)

A man and boy in the service of Mr Sharpley of Kelstern were employed in loading water from a pit. While the man was backing the horse to the edge of a deep part of the pit, the animal reared and plunged, throwing them both in the water. The man scrambled out but the boy went to the bottom and was never seen to rise. Before he could get out,  life was extinct. The boy was only fourteen years of age.

9/ Kelstern, April 1871 (Fatal Horse Accident)

As you will see this is the first of three fatal accidents that occurred in this little village, of a population of around 200-230, within a seven-year range. This involved James Larder, aged seventy-four, who went to David Briggs’s farm to get some oats to sow his land with. A horse had been lent to him for the purpose and being accompanied by a young boy. Larder climbed up on the horse and sat partly on the sack, which was used for oats. The horse kicked as the went through a gate and threw him off, with his foot entangled in the gearing and the horse dragged him for a considerable distance. The boy went to get help and Mr Briggs’s shepherd was first on the scene and he stopped the horse. The old man was frightfully bruised and battered and was taken home a distance of about half a mile away.  A doctor was sent for and stimulants were given to revive him but he had breathed his last.

10/ Kelstern, April 1873 (Gun Fatality)

Jon Hall aged fourteen, died as a result of injuries received by the accidental discharge of a gun he had in his possession while tenting birds in a field at Kelstern on March 19th. Charles Borman was harrowing a field and Hall came up with a gun. He heard the gun go off and turned around, saw the deceased jumping about and he thought he was larking about. He shouted out that he’d blown his arm off and then he spotted his coat was on fire from the powder, which was immediately put out. He then walked home to Coates Grange to get attention. He leaned on the gun and it discharged accidentally. In February he cut his thumb end off in a turnip cutter. He was taken to Louth Hospital and was doing well for a week or two, then lock-jaw set in and he died soon after.

11/ Kelstern Fatal Accident, April 1866

Kelstern, fatal, accident

12/ Kelstern, December 1873

At Kelstern, an aged widow named Susan Taylor who had been infirm for some time retired to rest as usual. Her grand-daughter who slept with her, on waking the next morning at seven a.m., found her in a calm sleep and after dressing and making up a fire she went to call her granny but was alarmed to find her dead. Deceased was under the care of Dr Fawcett of Binbrook who was sent for, and said that death was from natural decay, she was eighty-four years old,

13/ Kelstern, August 1880 (Gored to Death by Bull)

Another freaky death in Kelstern, which must rate as one of the most dangerous places to live in Victorian Lincolnshire! Wright Hall, aged about sixty-five years, was gored to death by a bull in a field in Kelstern. He was alone with the animal and it didn’t seem too vicious. Hall struck it once or twice with a stick and it seemed to shy away when Hall came near. The bull attacked him, mangling and mutilating him in a shocking manner and breaking all of his ribs. Deceased was leading the bull, which was about four years old from his stable to a field. After the tragedy, the bull was shot. “Accidental Death”.

14/ Grainsby Motorcycle Death, September 1903

James Edward Robinson, a twenty-three-year-old valet in service in Aberia, was involved in a fatal cycling accident at Grainsby. The motorcycle skidded and Robinson was thrown off. The poor chap landed on his head and the doctor confirmed at the inquest, that his death was caused by the breaking of his neck.

15/ Grimoldby Suicide, November 1868

On Friday morning, Thomas Ellerby, a farmer at Grimoldby, committed suicide by cutting his throat. He was not dead when discovered and medical aid was sent from Louth but shortly after the arrival of J.Nelthorpe, surgeon, he expired. Deceased had been in a very desponding state of mind for some time.

16/ Kirmond-le-Mire Cripple, April 1895

Kirmond-le-Mire, cripple

 

17/ Great Limber Fatal Accident, (Grimsby/Brigg) June 1859

An inquest on the body of a thirty-four-year-old labourer, Edward Symonds was held at Limber. On May 26th he was sent with a water cart to a seed field, and had been cautioned against riding on the cart between certain gates but neglecting the caution he was thrown off. He landed on his head and received an injury which brought on concussion and effusion of the brain. He slipped into a coma for about a week, then passed away.

18/ Hallington (Louth), March 1873 (Crushed by Bull)

John Kirby aged sixty years, who had been working for William Chatterton of Hallington for about seven or eight years as a garthman, received such severe injuries from a bull, which terminated fatally. The beast was not a vicious one but it knocked down the old man then knelt upon him and crushed him. A fork had to be stuck in the bull’s neck to get him to move, and when extricated he was found to have massive internal injuries with several broken ribs. He received medical aid and lingered for two days, then expired.

19/ Grasby near Caistor, April 1906 (Policeman Under Arrest)

A bizarre tale of Henry Gabitass, a 25-year-old policeman, whose beat was in the village of Grasby. He had a massive argument with the inspector and walked out in a huff and legged it down to the South-West area and Wales. He was on the sick list and was called out for night duty, before he got over his troubles which involved a love story. He then he argued with his superior officer and then bolted from the station. He was next heard of at Magor in South Wales. A porter at the station was asked by Gabitass what time the Weymouth train left. When a man called Williams said “You want to keep your eyes open, there are strangers about” as only last week the station had been broken into. Gabitass ran across the train tracks, with porter in pursuit. He drew something across his throat and dropped down to the ground. He had tried to kill himself with a penknife. He was taken to the hospital and now a Lincolnshire officer is on his way to pick up the prisoner.

20/ Kingerby Suicide, April 1892

Kingerby, suicide

21/ Little Carlton Mill Drowning, near Louth,  September 1882

The mill is still there on the Main Road, over the river. The death was that of James Oldacres Shakespear, son of Mr Shakespear of Shilton near Coventry. The child, with an older brother, was visiting the area, and both were being looked after by Miss Fawkes at the mill. The two brothers along with another boy were playing “hide and seek”, and James was missed upon the return of the other two boys. A search was made and the boys said he was last seen near the stables and they had looked everywhere. A man named Dales who worked at the mill helped in the search and even though the mill dam showed no sign of a disturbance they turned off the water wheel. When the water had nearly run off at the dam they found his body near to the stream. A verdict of “Accidentally drowned” was returned with a recommendation that the mill dam should be fenced off.

22/ Little Carlton (Louth) January 1881 (George Mawer)

Little Carlton, death, child

23/ Goxhill Haven Drowning, October 1874

At Goxhill on the 21st October, found drowned in the Haven, Mr Thomas Green, a blacksmith of Louth who was aged twenty-three years.

24/ Goxhill/Humber, August 1860 (Body Found)

The dead body of a man in an advanced state of decomposition and afterwards identified to be that of Thomas Rawney aged sixty-five years, a butcher from Goxhill, was picked up in the Humber. He had been missing from his house since November 29th, 1859. It was conveyed to the dead-house and at the inquest, a verdict of “Found Drowned” was returned.

25/ Goxhill ( Body Found), February 1880

The body of the unfortunate youth Charles Walker (who was accidentally drowned in Hull last week) was washed ashore at Goxhill on Monday, at a distance of several miles from the spot where the steamer Parana was lying. The body was taken back to Louth and the funeral took place at the Cemetery. Deceased was only aged sixteen years of age.

26/ Goxhill Railway Death, August 1879

Goxhill, railway, accident

27/ Killingholme Suicide Coincidence, September 1865

A young woman named Ann Eliza Evatson committed suicide at Killingholme by cutting her throat. Deceased who up until Christmas lived at Barton, had an epileptic stroke at the time, which has latterly been repeated, so much so that the unfortunate woman has been able to earn her own living. The deceased was the illegitimate daughter of a surgeon, who on the occasion of her birth became highly excited and taking a large draught of tincture of opium, mounted his horse and rode from Ulceby to Brigg, and on arriving opposite to the Lincoln bank at Brigg, he fell dead from his horse. Just twenty-eight years from that day, and at the same hour, his natural daughter committed suicide. The same coroner who presided over her father’s inquest in 1837 also performed this one.

28/ Killingholme Haven, February 1900 (Body Washed Ashore)

On Sunday, the body of a man was found on the foreshore of the Humber near Killingholme Haven by Mr Isaac Wright. There was nothing on the body or clothes to lead to identification. An open verdict was returned.

29/ Killingholme Suicide, November 1903

Wright Cuthbert of Killingholme had told his housekeeper that he had been negotiating and sold his soul to the Devil for the next 1000 years. If I was her, I would have handed my notice in, but several days ago he hung a noose in the coach-house and told her that he was going to hang the Devil from it. He hanged himself from another noose on another section of the farm.

30/ Killingholme/Humber, (Boat Capsized) February 1899

Killingholme, boat, capsize, four dead,

31/ Kenwick Park Lightning Fatality, June 1871

Kenwick Park, lightning, death

32/ Legbourne, (Criminal Did Well) August 1840

A man named Sharp who was transported to Australia twenty years ago has returned to his home village, with a sack load of cash at his disposal. He had built up a business through diligence and hard graft and now has a fortune estimated at £20,000 and is now seeking a county manor in which to reside.

33/ Legbourne Suicide, January 1886

Edward Parker aged thirty, hanged himself in his master’s out-house. Mr Barton found his servant had not come in at his usual time so went to look for him and discovered him in the out-house, hanging from the ceiling by his neck and being quite dead. The suicide was a most determined one with Parker using a piece of rope with an elaborate number of knots in it. His feet were touching the ground and the body leaning forward. Mr Barton also said that Parker had come into the yard and asked for work in September 1885, and he took him on at five shillings a week. He was a good workman, he was always punctual and believed his mother was living in Binbrook. The jury decided that the deceased strangled himself but could not tell what frame of mind he was in at the time.

34/ Legbourne Suicide, June 1877

An elderly man named Robert Baldwin, who was a labourer, and lived at the corner cottage opposite the National School, committed suicide in a shocking manner. He worked at Reston but took the day off on Monday as he felt ill, but on Thursday morning he got a piece of rope, one end of which was fastened to the top staye of the ladder leading from the lower apartment to the bedroom;at the other end he made a noose which he put around his neck, then jumped off the steps of the ladder. His wife woke up at this time, but being deaf she thought it was a door shutting as her husband went to work. Then she saw his clothes and thought there was something wrong. She climbed down the ladder and saw deceased attached to it with his head to one side. Quickly she grabbed a knife and cut him down, but he was dead. His father hung himself at Cawthorpe many years ago, and a couple of years ago his brother took his own life in the same manner, at Louth.(Next to War Memorial?)

35/ Legbourne Drowning, November 1902

The sad death of John Maw, butcher and farmer of Legbourne aged seventy-six, was found drowned in a pond on Mr Stephenson’s farm by Adelaide Ward at about 6-45 a.m. He was last seen alive at the Queen’s Head Inn, Legbourne, on Monday evening, leaving at around 9 p.m.  Fifteen-year-old Adelaide spotted the body floating in the pond and ran to tell her cousin. The body was face downwards when they got a rake and fished him out, then they knew it was John Maw. It was thought that Maw had somehow accidentally fallen in and drowned. The coroner commented that the last time he was in Legbourne parish attending an inquest it was on the body of a man who was found drowned about two years ago.

36/ Linwood Suicide, April 1879

Linwood, suicide

deceased drowned himself whilst in a state of unsound mind. I also have here that he died on the 10th April 1879 at Linwood Grange, Blankney.

37/ Grainthorpe Drowning, (Austen Fen), October 1875

George Motley, a farmer, was discovered drowned in the Louth and Tetney Navigation Canal. He had been to the October Fair at Louth when he imbibed too much liquor….or got ratted as we now know it. He had transacted some business with Mr Bryan of the beerhouse at Austen Fen (Where inquest was held),  after which he accompanied him home from Motley’s own house. Mrs Motley became worried and sent a messenger to get him but he couldn’t be found anywhere. It was a dark night and they thought he’d fallen in the canal. On Saturday morning, Alfred Ticklepenny, with others, dragged the canal and found Motley about 600 yards north of the Austen Fen Bridge. His watch having stopped at 7-33, with all his money and bank-book in his pockets. There were no marks of violence. “Accidentally Drowned” was the verdict returned.

38/ Grainthorpe Suicide, February 1885

John Green, a retired carrier aged sixty-six, was found hanging from a baluster in his house on Saturday, quite dead. He was a widower and had a young man to live with him but he died a short time ago, and since then he has been alone. Since the death of James Odling whom he had brought up, and who attained the age of twenty-seven, deceased had been in a very depressed condition. He had also expressed fear that his money would not last. Jury’s verdict-“Suicide whilst temporarily insane”. He had been a carrier between Grainthorpe and Louth for thirty years, his cart standing in the “Pack Horse” yard in the time of Mrs French.

39/ Bricklayers Arms Suicide, Grainthorpe, March 1876

Grainthorpe, suicide, Bricklayers Arms

40/ Grainthorpe Suicide, August 1889

Grainthorpe, suicide

41/ Hainton Hall Fatality, (Market Rasen), June 1919

A horrendous fire nearly wiped out the whole of Hainton Hall near Market Rasen in 1919. It is the Lincolnshire seat of Lord Heneage, and the fire caused little damage to the more ancient portion of the premises but the modern wing, where the family resided, was just a charred shell. Firemen from all over the northern section of the county were called in to help douse the flames but one Grimsby fireman lost his life. The ceiling collapsed and poor Albert Bancroft was directly underneath the half a ton of rubble that fell on him. Lady Heneage was extremely distressed by the death.(Where is Albert buried?)

42/ Hainton Hall (Attempted Suicide), January 1869

On Friday the 25th December 1868, a man named Duckering, butler to W.R.Emeris Esq, of Louth, attempted suicide by cutting his throat at Hainton Hall where his master was visiting. The attempt was made in an upstairs room and when the unfortunate man was found, he was bleeding profusely. Various rumours were afloat as to the cause of such a rash act. Prompt assistance placed the man’s life out of danger and he is now slowly recovering.

43/ Gayton-le-Marsh Suicide,(Louth) July 1889

Gayton-le-Marsh, suicide

44/ Gayton-le-Marsh Murder, October 1851

This is the most feeble alibi of any murder I’ve heard of. At Gayton-le-Marsh near Louth, a witness heard a gunshot coming from the Baker’s property a few hundred yards away. It was only when the Mr Baker himself, stumbled up to his door and mumbled that his wife had been shot by an unseen assassin and that a murder had been committed, or so it seemed. A local surgeon dressed the wounds sustained by Mr Baker but found no shot in them. He told of being shot at as well, so this aroused suspicion. Baker had wanted to sell up and go to America but Mrs Baker was less keen and refused him any money to fulfil his dream of going across the pond. It seems that he shot his missus then inflicted a wound on himself to make it look as though he’d been attacked at the same time. Mrs Baker had been shot while she sat sewing in front of the fire, straight through the window. The witness only heard one shot, and lack of gun contents in his wound put pay to his weak alibi.(What happened to Mr Baker?)

45/ Ludford Magna Murder? February 1862

Ludford Magna, murder

46/ White Hart Inn Death, Ludford, September 1882

A labourer named John Townsend died at the White Hart Inn at Ludford, from injuries received on the previous morning through being run over by a portable engine. Townsend worked for Luther Adams, a farmer, and at 5 a.m. he was in charge of a team of horses and a portable engine. Whilst descending the hill near Ludford the horses were overpowered by the load and ran down at full tilt. Deceased kept up for a while but stumbled and fell, with the wheels passing over his body. He clung to life for around thirty hours but then died. “Accidentally killed”.

47/ Ludford Skeleton, June 1866

Ludford,skeleton

48/ Keddington, (Louth Canal) February 1875 (Body Discovered)

Charlotte Peel, the wife of John Peel an agricultural labourer, was found drowned in the Louth and Tetney Navigation Canal. She was well known in the town of Louth and known to be slightly eccentric and who was the cleaner at the Town Hall for a long time. She had recently shown symptoms of depression and was seen talking to herself on Keddington Road, then got to Alvingham and asked where the Market Place was. Her body was found by her husband in the canal in a nearly upright position near a holt in Keddington. The verdict was “Found drowned, having walked into the water accidentally”.

49/ Keddington Fatality, September 1859

Keddington, fatality

50/ Kirkstead Station Fatality, (Woodhall Spa) October 1851

An accident occurred on the Great Northern Railway at Kirkstead Station near Woodhall Spa one Friday morning. An employee of the company was killed at the station owing to gross negligence on behalf of the signalman who should have been paying attention at the time.(Name?)

51/ Langton, (Horncastle) March 1869

An inquest was held at Langton on the body of Mr Christopher Coates who died on the 27th of February from the effects of a fall from his horse. He had been at Horncastle the previous evening and was returning, attended by his groom, Edward Lorrly, when he fell from his horse and sustained concussion of the brain from the effects of which he died the following morning.

52/ Little Steeping Railway Crossing Death,(Spilsby) November 1897

A forty-eight-year-old farmer named Thomas Odling, met his death at the crossing at Little Steeping near Spilsby. He was on his way home in a cart, drawn by two horses, and while waiting on the line for the gate to be opened he heard the Boston/Grimsby express hurtling towards him. He jumped off and grabbed the horses to turn them around but was hit full on and at terrific velocity. His corpse was hurled forty yards away and was badly mangled in the impact, with a horse being disembowelled, and the other having it’s spine broken. The cart fragments which were sprayed everywhere hit Mr Johnson and broke his leg. Odling leaves a widow and one daughter.

53/ Haugham Landslip Fatality, January 1866

Haugham, landslide

 

54/ Kexby, (South-East of Gainsborough) June 1880

The mother of little Thomas Thompson Leeman aged nine months, left the house for a few moments to go and feed the ducks leaving him in the charge of a four-year-old girl. The father passed the window then shortly after, heard his wife screaming. He went back to the house and found Thomas in a bucket full of hot water. The girl said the boy was looking for his father while the girl held him and got restless when he passed the window. The fidgeting boy slipped out of her grasp straight into the hot water. A doctor was sent for and tended to the scalded infant but despite this help, he died the next morning.

55/ Keadby Suicide, (On River Trent, west of Scunthorpe) October 1894

Seventy-year-old John Winter was discovered hanging in a warehouse, but the reason for this man’s suicide is a singular one indeed. He was contracted to keep the drains clear but recent high tides had blocked them, and in the old man’s mind, he hadn’t done his job properly, so killed himself as a result.

56/ Keadby/Burton Stather Drownings, July 1876

Two lives were lost in a tragic accident on the River Trent somewhere between Keadby and Burton Stather. The sloop “Eagle” is being repaired at Burton Stather, and on Sunday, Captain Barnett Brooks, along with his six-year-old son, and a carpenter, headed up the river towards Keadby Bridge. They set sail and all was going well when they approached Keadby, a gusty wind blew the vessel over, with all three precipitated into the Trent. The carpenter being a good swimmer, managed to get ashore but the captain and his young son drowned.

57/ Gunness, (Scunthorpe) August 1905

Gunness, train, death

58/ Goulceby Drowning, May 1867

Goulceby’s most famous inhabitant was William Marwood the hangman, who was born here and went on to invent the “long-drop” method of execution. This one, however, doesn’t involve him. The mill-dam at Ranby near Goulceby was the scene of an awful accident, where Thomas Stothard the 54-year-old miller had left East’s public-house at Goulceby and was hardly able to stand up with the amount of liquor he’d consumed. He stopped at Sylvester’s cottage and asked him to make sure he got home alright, but he thought he was perfectly capable of getting home on his own. Next time he was seen they were lifting his body out the mill-dam at Ranby.

59/ Goulceby Exhumation, August 1860

Goulceby Exhumation

60/ Hackthorne Hall Shooting Fatality, (Lincoln), January 1862

Captain Tennant R.N., was killed in a fearful shooting accident at Hackthorne Hall. A party of Weston Cracroft Amcotts, the High Sheriff of Lincolnshire, and Captain Cracroft R.N., along with Captain Tennant, who was married to Cracroft’s daughter; the Reverend Robert Cracroft, and the Reverend E.G.Jarvis, plus some others, were at Hackthorne Hall on a pheasant shoot. During the fun and games, a pheasant flew up and Captain Cracroft shot it. Captain Tennant had dipped down to allow him to get a good aim and Cracroft totally missed the bird and blew away Tennant, taking off the top of his head. The body was removed to the Hall and the Reverend Cracroft went to Canwick Hall to break the bad news to Mrs Tennant who was staying with her sister, Mrs Sibthorp. “Accidental Death” was the verdict.

61/ Greetham Suicide, (Horncastle) May 1879

John Hobson, a young farmer aged twenty-five and from Greetham, shot himself whilst in an unsound state of mind. The coroner was attending the third suicide in this district within the past nine days. Hobson lived with his mother, brother and sister, with his mother being infirm and virtually bedridden. The brother went to bed one night and left Hobson and his sister sitting up. They followed soon after when a few moments later they heard Hobson go downstairs. She asked him where he was going and he replied that he thought he heard a disturbance and would check it out. When he returned to bed, a man knocked on the window and spoke to the younger brother, and the stranger went away. That night a gun report was heard at one a.m., and Hobson was found drenched in blood with a large hole in his chest. He never said a word and death must have been instant. The father died at Christmas time and he had been despondent ever since then.

62/ Harrington Fatal Accident, May 1876

Harrington, fatal accident

63/ Halton Holegate, September 1897 (Farm Haunting)

Human bones were found underneath a brick floor of a farmhouse near Halton Holegate. A spectral figure has been seen and odd knocking and tapping had been heard. The farm stands back from the road and is occupied by Mr and Mrs Wilson and a servant. Mrs Wilson spoke of the haunting, saying:

“We came here on Lady Day. The first night we heard strange noises about midnight, as though someone was knocking on the doors and walls. Once it seemed as though someone was moving all the things about in a hurry downstairs. Another time, the noise was like a heavy picture falling off the wall. In the morning I found everything as right as it should be. The servant left saying he dared not stop and we got another. About six weeks ago I saw “something”. Before getting into bed, my husband having retired before me, I thought I’d go downstairs and see if the cow was alright as it was about to calve. I did so, when at the foot of the stairs, just as I was about to go up again I saw an old man standing at the top looking at me. He was round-shouldered. How I got past I cannot say, I darted to the bedroom and slammed the door. Then I went to the dressing table to get some water but feeling somebody was behind me I turned around and again, there stood the old man. He quickly vanished, I have seen him several times since though not as distinctly.” She took the interviewer to the room where these occurrences happened and it was noted that the floor in one corner was very uneven, and a day or two ago Mrs Wilson took up the bricks and intended to relay them. There was a horrible smell when she did this and her husband found three bones, a gold ring and pieces of black silk. They were buried in quicklime. A doctor examined the bones and stated they were human and over a century old.

64/ Halton Holegate Suicide, April 1888

On Friday morning, the 6th of April, about 4-30, William Searby, aged sixty, of Halton Fenside, was missed by his wife, who, on searching for him, found him in the bedroom suspended by a cord around his neck, The cord being attached to a nail in the wall. Mrs Searby called for help and a neighbour came and cut him down, but life was extinct. Deceased had been in a despondent state for some time.

65/ Halton Holegate Gun Accident, September 1884

Holton, gun, accident

Sorry, this bottom piece is missing!

66/ Hogsthorpe Suicide, January 1888

Isabella Carden aged fifty-two, was attended by Dr Pockett for sunstroke in July and since that time had been in a depressed state of mind. The husband said he left the house for about fifteen minutes on Wednesday and when he came back, she was hanging by the neck with a chain which she had secured to the damper of a large oven, which was formerly used as a bake oven. He took her down but he was too late to save her. Deceased was buried on Sunday afternoon. (At Hogsthorpe?)

67/ Hogsthorpe Fatal Accident, July 1885

A distressing accident happened to the five-year-old son of Edward Dring on Saturday the 4th July. The father is a carrier between Hogsthorpe and Louth and he had brought home several hundredweights of goods for various tradesmen in the place, and having left his cart standing in the yard with the shafts resting on the usual prop sticks, the deceased, along with other kids, started swinging on the back of it. This caused it to topple over crushing the boy’s head in a frightful manner. All of Dr Boulton’s skill proved to be of no avail and he succumbed to the injuries he received. “Accidental Death”.

68/ Hogsthorpe Female Suicide, March 1892

Hogsthorpe, suicide

69/ Hogsthorpe Child Murder? April 1888

The body of a newly-born child was found in a pit in the brick-field at Hogsthorpe. The male baby was found in a pond of water one Monday morning and the circumstances into its demise, look suspicious. It was covered in paper and it had been in the water for quite a length of time, and a post-mortem examination would determine if the child had a separate existence. William Parrinder noticed a pike floating on the pond then went back to get it later on but was unable to reach it. He used the boat at the side and rowed out to get it and then noticed what he thought was a duck that had been shot. He uncovered the paper, and saw the child and immediately went to inform the police. It weighed six pounds and was twenty-one inches in height, with the cord not having been tied. The body had been in the pond for some months. The skull was not broken and the brain was like cream, The lungs would not float in water which points to strong evidence against a live birth. It had three bruises, two on the forehead and one at the back of its neck. An open verdict was returned.

70/ Hogsthorpe, (Body In a Ditch) December 1886

71/ Horkstow near Barton, September 1847 (Inhuman Treatment)

An Irishman named Kane had been helping with the harvest for Mr Spencer, a local farmer at Horkstow. Kane had a wife and six children to take care of, and four of them, as well as the mother, had a serious fever. The poor woman was pregnant on top of everything else, and she wanted Kane to ask Mr Spencer if they could stay in an outbuilding. Spencer in no uncertain terms told them they couldn’t, and was going to pay Spencer for services rendered, only until the whole lot of them got off his property. He pleaded for a cart but was flatly told that he had none. They managed to walk to South Ferriby and in her condition, it was a minor miracle. She gave birth in a public street and was given the barn she desperately craved but far too late. The child died through lack of a medical man being present and with all this, the mother was in a delirious state. The inquest ascertained that the family, especially the woman, had suffered inhuman treatment and those responsible should be ashamed of their conduct towards them.

72/ Horkstow Bridge Triple Death, March 1899

Two children named Emma Hildreth aged three and a half, and Frank Hildreth aged two and a half, were playing on the river bank and fell in. The mother went to save them and jumped into the Ancholme, she too was a poor swimmer and failed to grasp hold of them. All three were drowned together. The corpses were recovered from the river, but each one was lifeless.

73/ Kirton Lindsey Station Decapitation, February 1879

Kirton Lindsey, decapitation

74/ Snitterby Child Murder, near Kirton Lindsey, October 1881

At the Brigg Police Court, Mary Jenny aged thirty-eight, a widow from Snitterby near Kirton Lindsey, was charged with the murder of her infant child. The dead body of prisoner’s newly born child was found in a bucket, three quarter’s filled with water. The prisoner had stated to P.C. Saunders, that she was sorry she had done it. The prisoner was committed for trial at the Nottingham Assizes.

75/ Kirton Lindsey Double Murder, December 1836

William Marshall was the male half of the brother and sister team that lived together in Kirton Lindsey, with Deborah Elizabeth Hutchinson, the other half. They were frugal and kept themselves to themselves. This gets tongues wagging and the theory that they had money under the floor-boards. Two charwomen, Elizabeth Beech and Rosamund Sampson worked for the pair and usually did an 8-5 shift. They spotted a suspicious looking man hanging around when they left the evening before and asked if he could buy some vegetables from them, as the brother/sister did sell their garden produce. They described him as average height, smoking a pipe, and having an Irish accent. Beech went to work one day, did her chores, then left as usual at around five o’clock, and when she came the next day that’s when she saw the horrific murder scene. Mrs Hutchinson was under some bags with her head smashed in and an eye socket devoid an eye, her jaw broken, and a fractured skull. There was blood everywhere. Next, she saw the corpse of her brother, William Marshall, who sustained a broken nose, a wound that exposed the brain in his skull and was drenched in blood. The murderer had put the woman’s clothes over the window to prevent people seeing what was going on inside and then robbed them of all they had, including money and silverware. The two charwomen said the man who they had seen hanging about, looked like John Dimsey who lived there a number of months ago but left Kirton Lindsey. The jury thought it was a case of “murder by person or persons unknown”. (Was it Dimsey?)

76/ Kirton Lindsey Murder, December 1847

Two labourers found the body of a male on the way to Kirton chapel, coming from Blyborough. About a mile outside of the village, they found him with a dog lying next to it. He had his throat slit and had been punched and kicked. He was identified as Charles Copeman, a 26-year-old farmer from Blyborough and had been to the fair at Kirton, had a few jars then walked home. His bull terrier had cuts on it and his pockets had been rifled.

January 1848

A man named Travis, accused of Copeman’s murder was committed to Lincoln Castle. Weirdly, a friend of Copeman’s, Mr Whelpton, had a dream about the murder and saw him attacked in his dream. He warned him not to go out late at night. He said he would comply but ignored it and then was murdered. Edward Landseer, the artist, wanted to own the faithful hound that stood by his master. Did he?

77/ Grayingham Suicide, near Kirton Lindsey, August 1882

 

78/ Haxey, November 1861 (Child Shot by Brother)

Haxey, child, death

79/ Westwoodside, (Haxey Murders) July 1861

Haxey murders

80/ Ingleby Corpse, (Lincoln) January 1843

The dead body of Mr Parker was found in a field next to Ingleby church, with his pockets having been rifled and suspicions of murder, just after Boxing day in 1842. Mr Evison, a shepherd, was on the path in the field next to the church when he saw Mr Parker lying on his back, groaning. He asked his name but received no reply so he went for help. When several people followed him they identified the body as that of Mr Parker. He had been beaten up and robbed of his cash. Joseph Atkinson, a horsebreaker who resides in Lincoln, sat down with Parker the night before and said he left him to go to church and next time he heard his name mentioned it was concerning the dead body they’d found.(Did they get the killer?) In the 1882 White’s Directory, I found a John Parker living in Ingleby. Was it his son perhaps?

81/ Ingoldmells Drownings, (Skegness) August 1853

Two of the son’s of Mr Childs of Moorgate, London, who is the surgeon in chief to the City Police Force, were drowned on the coast at Ingoldmells north of Skegness. The two lads, aged nine and ten, were swimming in the sea (North Sea) and were told about the large holes where clay had been dug up and to watch out for them. The governess had taken the two girls for a paddle on the beach with the boys nearby. The governess took the girls back to the hotel, and the boys were going to follow or so she thought! They got to the hotel and an alarm was raised, that two lads were in trouble. Mrs Childs, dressed in her nightie, ran down to the water’s edge and strode into the water. Onlookers pulled her back. John had sunk without a trace but Julian was floating on the surface, both drowned. A verdict of “Accidental Death”.

82/ Ingoldmells Poisoning, July 1882

A man named Deans bought some rat-poison which he placed safely in a spice-box, which he then put in the clock case in the kitchen to keep out of the reach of the kids. They had a nurse, named Blake, who was making a pudding one day and found the powder which was arsenic and popped it in the cake assuming it was baking powder. Deans and the two kids ate some of the pudding but said it tasted funny. She said it must be the baking powder from the clock case Deans shot up, yelling out that that was poison and went to get assistance. A neighbour gave them mustard emetics (makes you vomit), and they all survived. Mrs Blake had nearly killed three people and this preyed on her mind for some time after, so much so, that she expired shortly afterwards.

83/ Huttoft Lightning Fatality, September 1880

Huttoft, lightning

84/ Huttoft, November 1883 (Childs Body Found)

Florence Mary Wilkinson the infant daughter of Henry Raithby Wilkinson went missing at 10-30 a.m. on November the 15th, just after Mrs Wilkinson had got her dressed. It was meant to be with the grandad in the garden but wasn’t. A frantic search around the area revealed the child to be in a ditch, in which it had fallen head first and had drowned.

85/ Near Huttoft, December 1877 (Body Washed Ashore)

The body of 14-year-old William Baylis, who was the fisher-boy on the smack “Onward”, which was owned by John Oliver Hawkes from Grimsby, and was recently wrecked off Theddlethorpe in the gale. The captain and crew were compelled to abandon their vessel and took to the small lifeboat but during their struggle to shore, the boy was washed away by a heavy sea and lost. The body went ashore on the Huttoft coast and was discovered by Henry Scown, a coastguard.

86/ Huttoft Death, September 1878

Frederick Parish, a wholesale grocer from Gainsborough whose dead body was found in the Huttoft drain by Susannah Hodgson. Deceased and his missus were visiting Huttoft and were staying with Mr Robinson, a farmer. Parish woke early one morning and complained of feeling ill and decided to go for a walk to clear his lungs. He went towards Anderby, and in going there would have crossed the drain that divided Huttoft and Anderby, over which there is a footbridge, well, a plank of wood, with a railing on one side! Along came Susannah and observed a body of a male floating in the ditch. He was pulled out of the water and found to be quite dead. His watch had stopped at 9-50 a.m. It is believed that the deceased fell into the drain while in a state of syncope (loss of consciousness, due to low blood pressure).

87/ Huttoft  Fatal Accident, September 1883

Huttoft, fatal accident

88/ Holton Beckering Suicide, December 1927

Holton Beckering, suicide

89/ Keelby Poisoning, August 25th, 1860

Keelby, poisoning

September 1st, 1860

Dr Alfred Taylor from Guy’s Hospital, London, is busy investigating the case of a young wife named Chambers, who suddenly died at Keelby a few days since. It bears all the hallmarks of strychnine poisoning.

September 8th, 1860

The adjourned inquest on the body of Matilda Chambers was held and the verdict returned was that “Deceased died of strychnine poisoning, but how it was administered, there is no evidence to show”.

90/ Hemingby Child Murder, May 1880

Hemingby, child murder

Looked in 1882 Whites Directory and found “John Redmore, farmer, The Grove.” That is down Horsemoor Lane in Hemingby and that is still there.

Posted by dbeasley70

Lindsey (A-F)

1/ Fulstow Suicide, August 1901

Francis Mason the 27-year-old son of a Grimsby solicitor, had been seeing a young lady in the town but now the two had parted company. He threatened to commit suicide a couple of months previously but it was laughed off as idle talk. He left a suicide note addressed to his father and, on the tombstone of a suicide in the churchyard, he wrote the following:- “God Forgive me this deed”. It was judged to be a suicide whilst of unsound mind.(What… a suicide in the churchyard?)

Fulstow, suicide, gun fatality

2/ Fulstow Gun Fatality, March 1887

William Sutton a labourer for Mr Richardson aged thirty-two, met with his death in a million-to-one accident when a gun fell over and fired its contents straight into his body. Sutton had gone out with a man named Marshall and returned at eight o’clock to Sutton’s house. When just outside the two were saying goodbye, when Sutton took the barrel of the gun out his pocket, which had been in two pieces when it fell to the ground and exploded. The contents went right in his side killing him instantly. It must have fallen on the nipple due to the stone-chip that was found on it. He left a widow and one child.

3/ Fulstow Child Death, October 1888

An inquest was held at the Cross Keys Inn touching the death of William Arthur Johnson, the illegitimate child of Hannah Johnson, a widow. The baby was ten weeks old when it expired with Hannah having four other children to provide for. She was in receipt of parish relief for herself and the kids at the time he was born. The Guardians stopped the outdoor relief and gave her order for the house, which she flatly refused. (Equivalent would be today, that they stopped her housing benefit saying she’d have to move to a workhouse). The autopsy revealed that the little fellow had died from lack of proper nourishment but no blame was attached to the mother. The Guardians were to blame for their actions said the jury afterwards.

4/ Fulstow Suicide, November 1888

Fulstow, Suicide

5/ Donna Nook, April 1876 (Body Washed Ashore)

More famous these days for a grey seal colony that is here most of the winter/ spring and also well-known for its Royal Air Force bombing range. Not while the seals are there!  In the Victorian era, it was a hot-spot for shipwrecks and washed up bodies, or flotsam and jetsam. This body was of a Welshman, Hugh Roberts aged twenty-six, the steward of a Liverpool ship of 12,000 tons, the “Victory”, which was washed ashore on the 14th April and was wrecked. It was on it’s way from Newcastle to San Francisco laden with coal and with a crew of twenty-eight who were all lost. The captain was found floating off Spurn Point and taken to Grimsby but Hugh was washed up on the beach at Donna Nook.

6/ Donna Nook Shipwreck, May 1886 (Four Deaths)

The “Mermaid” was bound for Hartlepool when it came ashore at Donna Nook. The coastguard, Edward Long, and a farmer named Brooks from Somercotes saw four men leaving the ship in a lifeboat and so rushed to rescue the rest of the crew who were still stranded. They managed to get most of the men, when the captain, the mate, and another got into the vessel. A large wave engulfed the life-boat and they were thrown into the choppy waters of the German Ocean. One of the men got back to the vessel and Long grabbed an oar to keep himself afloat, but Brooks, the master and mate and the divisional carpenter were drowned. Deceased are Brooks, a coastguard named Richards, and the master and mate of the “Mermaid”. The carpenter left a widow and several children.

7/ Donna Nook Drowning, November 1884

John Phillips was drowned in the mouth of the Humber, whilst endeavouring to give and render assistance the smack “Economy” which at the time was in distress, and was signalling for relief from off the shore. John Phillips was interred at North Somercotes Cemetery and was witnessed by a large crowd. The coffin was conveyed on the lifeboat carriage belonging to the coastguard and covered in a Union Jack. Coastguards marched with arms reversed with the men included, those from between Tetney Haven and Sutton inclusive.

8/ Donna Nook, July 1890 (Another body!)

Donna Nook, body washed ashore

9/ Covenham, January 1865 (Childs Body Found)

The body of a child which had apparently been born alive was found in a privvy in this village on Monday last. As far as could be judged from the decomposition of the body it had been secreted at least a month. An inquest was opened Thomas Sharpley, the coroner for the district, but in consequence of the absence of necessary medical evidence, it was adjourned. Suspicion rests on a girl living in the village of being the mother but had no particulars at the time. (Was it “the girl”?)

10/ Covenham, near Firebeacon (Lane?), April 1866

Covenham, fatal accident

11/ Covenham Fatality, May 1865

A labourer named Clark in the employ of Mr Young of Covenham, met with his death in the following shocking manner on Friday the 28th April. He had been to Louth with the waggon and horses and was returning with a load of lime and had nearly reached home, when he fell and the wheels passed over his head, causing instantaneous death. He was a married man and leaves a widow and five children.

12/ Covenham Fatal Accident, April 1884

A man named Kirk who worked for Mr Drayton, a farmer, were both taking a borrowed machine home at about 5-30 when the horse suddenly got the better of Kirk and he threw the reins down. His master gathered them and Kirk was thrown to the ground, and when the horses eventually stopped Kirk was tended to. He was taken home but died early the next morning. Mr Drayton said they were on the road leading to Fen Bridge when the accident occurred and he stopped about 100 yards down the road when he got control of the animals again. Drayton said two men were holding up his head, but he was partly unconscious. The doctor said he received injuries to the brain as he suffered from rigid limbs and dilated pupils and noisy respiration.

13/ Covenham Murder, April 1859

Covenham, child,murder

14/ Binbrook Murder, April 1959

Twelve-year-old Janice Ann Holmes of Hall Farm Cottages was found dead in some woodland about half a mile from where she lived. Janice had walked a friend of her’s home at about 8-30 p.m. but was gone for ages. The mother called the police and they began a systematic search of Binbrook and the area surrounding it. After several hours her lifeless corpse was discovered in the woods. A local farmhand was later charged with her murder.

15/ Binbrook, March 1869 (Burned to Death)

Jane Swaby aged sixteen years, was burned to death on the 22nd February. She was described in the paper as being both idiotic and a cripple and she had been left alone in the house while Mum went to the neighbours. Jane tried to get something off the mantel-piece when her clothes ignited in the fire and she was so dreadfully burned that she succumbed to her injuries the next day. The verdict was one of “Accidental Death”.

16/ Binbrook, November 1864 (Crushed in a Mill)

A shocking and fatal accident occurred on the 12th November in Binbrook, to a boy named Thomas Griffiths aged 10. The boy had entered the mill of Mr W.Short on some errand when some moments later he was found by him amongst the machinery, crushed to pieces. An inquest was held on the mangled remains and the verdict was “the said Thomas Griffiths died from injuries received from the machinery of a windmill”.

17/ Binbrook, December 1900 (The building with the cutaway corner, off Mount Pleasant, the houses nearby were known as “Ranter’s Row”)

Binbrook, burning

18/ Binbrook (Bewitched Farm), December 1904-January 1905

Walk Farm, owned by Mr W.Drakes, was known in the years of 1904-1905 as the Bewitched Farm due to the poltergeist activity and strange happenings at the place. Some of them are so far-fetched that you might as well laugh out loud than believe them. A rabbit hanging on a hook, got down ran around a bit then crawled back up and hung itself where it was. Plant pots tilting on their sides etc. A servant’s clothing spontaneously combusted even though there was no fire lit in the room, and she received severe burns to the skin. Certain animals, mainly poultry, had their throats torn out by this unseen spirit, an empty wheelbarrow going uphill, and horses unable to pull an empty waggon. It was apparently the ghost of a girl who had been murdered at the farm. I  believe it’s still there, correct me if I’m wrong.

Walk Farm, Binbrook.

Binbrook, Bewitched Farm

19/ Binbrook Poisoning, March 1881

Binbrook, Poisoning, death

20/ Claxby Poisoning, March 1797

Fortunately for Elizabeth Brocklesby burning at the stake for the crime of murder was abolished in 1790, so the housewife from Claxby who poisoned her husband William Brocklesby was hanged at Lincoln for her terrible crime. As was usual with the bodies of murderer’s, they were handed to surgeons who carried out medical experiments and dissected for tutorial purposes.

21/ Claxby, January 1897 (Landlord Accidentally Shot)

Mr John Hill was the landlord of the Pelham Arms public-house in Claxby. He went out shooting on the moor and put down his gun so that he could climb across a ditch. He slipped and fell awkwardly, and when the search party found him there he was already extinct, from a dislocated neck. The faithful hound that he owned stayed by his side until the party arrived.

22/ Alvingham Child Murder, August 1874

Alvingham, child murder

Alvingham Child Murder, August 22nd, 1874

The child was found floating in Salter’s Fen lock (which is next to Keddington Sewage Works), by a licensed hawker named Maria Fearburn.

August 29th, 1874

18-year-old Elizabeth Phillips was charged with the wilful murder of her male child on or about the 8th August. She worked at Tealby for a farmer named Bland Herring, whose wife spotted she was pregnant when she first got the job there. Mr Herring’s wife went away between the 27th July and the 4th August and was told the girl had had a baby boy. She then left on the 8th August and returned on the 19th August minus the child, saying the sister to the father of the child had taken it to Hull with her.

March 20th, 1875

On Saturday, Elizabeth Phillip aged eighteen, a domestic servant, was arraigned for the murder of her illegitimate child by throwing him into the Louth Navigation Canal in the parish of Alvingham on the 8th of August,1874. Mr Laurence ably defended the prisoner, and the jury returned a verdict of “Not Guilty”, and she was freed.

23/ Louth Navigation Canal Suicide, Alvingham, July 1871

George William Brogden was found in the Louth Navigation Canal near Alvingham. His hat and stick were left on the bank, which seems to suggest a premeditated suicide. The corpse was found by Alfred Ticklepenny and a workman named Markham when they fished him out with a rake. They found a pocket-book on him as well as a pencil, ticket for Louth Athletics Club and some loose change. On the paper was written, “God bless you, father and mother, and forgive me, your son”. Deceased was only seventeen years old and everybody spoke highly of him saying he was an affectionate, hard-working and as pleasant a teenager as anyone could meet. Why the suicide at Salter’s Fen Lock?

24/ Louth Canal Fatality, October 1863

A young man named Hall aged nineteen, while engaged on board a vessel in the canal leading from Louth to Tetney Lock near Alvingham, caught his toe against a projection on the deck and fell overboard. Before they could get him out of the water, life was extinct. A verdict of “Accidental Death” was returned.

25/ Alvingham Child Poisoning, (Elizabeth Vamplew) July 1862

Alvingham, child, poisoning

to be held at Lincoln on Monday next- At the Jolly Sailor Inn last night, the adjourned inquest was held, when, after hearing the evidence of Professor Taylor, the jury unanimously returned a verdict of wilful murder against Elizabeth Vamplew.

August 2nd, 1862

13-year-old Elizabeth Vamplew pleaded not guilty to the charge of wilful murder of Kate Mary Taylor aged ten weeks, by administering “Battle’s Vermin Killer” to it. Vamplew had been given the day off to go to Grimoldby school feast and had been in the mother’s care all that day. When she was given to the girl at around eight p.m. and with the family retiring to bed, the baby began to cry. The child became increasingly poorly and vomiting. Vamplew admitted to giving it poison because “she was tired of lugging it about”. Found guilty of manslaughter.

26/ East Halton, May 1868 (Lightning Death)

At East Halton, a populous village near Thornton Abbey, a young man named Elm who was about twenty years of age and employed by Mr Slight at the village windmill, was engaged in altering the gear of the brake which is connected with the exterior of the mill,when he was struck by lightning and instantly killed.

27/ Brocklesby, July 1915 (Motorbike Accident)

The secretary of the Grimsby and Cleethorpes Amateur Swimming Association, Harry Hill, died at the Red Cross Hospital at Brocklesby, due to injuries he sustained while riding his motorbike between Kirmington and Limber and due to a side-slip. Mr Hill was only twenty-three years of age and was soon to have been married.

28/ The Cottams near Brocklesby, May 1849 (Murder)

Catherine Farrow, the wife of a cottager living on the Earl of Yarborough’s Brocklesby estate, was on her way to the next village, Keelby, and going through a field as a short-cut and must have met her murderer there. Her corpse was found on a path with her head smashed in, probably with a heavy instrument like a hammer or a stone. The police arrested a bloke called Charles Overton on suspicion of murder.

29/ Brocklesby Railway Station Death, November 1862

Brocklesby, railway, station, death

30/ Brocklesby/Barnetby, February 1879 (Four Killed in Bridge Collapse)

While workmen were engaged in demolishing Chalk Hill Bridge which crosses the railway from Melton Ross to Kirmington, an accident occurred which caused four men to die. It was said to be in danger of collapsing, such was the poor state it was in. They placed seventeen shots of blasting powder in various places but this had no effect on the structure. They decided to tear it down by gradually dismantling it, but when they had got a small portion of the brickwork out the entire bridge collapsed killing four and injuring over a dozen others. The names of those killed are -Edward Ambler, ballast guard and foreman of the gang, from Brigg; Robert Johnson of Brigg; Ellis Hornsby aged twenty-six, of Brigg; Thomas Robinson of Croxton.

31/ Barnetby Junction Fatality,  September 1873

Robert Marris aged twenty-three, who worked for the Manchester, Sheffield,and Lincolnshire Railway Company as a fireman, was killed at Barnetby Junction. Marris was sprinkling sand on the rails before the engine and somehow overbalanced and fell on the line, with the engine running over him and literally slicing him in two.

32/ Barnetby-le-Wold Triple Murder, August 1847

Mary Anne Milner was sentenced to death for the wilful murder of her mother-in-law, Mary Milner, Hannah Jickels who was her sister-in-law, and Ellen Jickels who was her niece. The callous cow murdered these women for the few quid she would have got from the burial clubs when the women met their maker. Milner made some sago pudding for the mother-in-law Mary Milner, and put some arsenic in it. The old woman died soon after and she collected the cash. The wheels were now set in motion and her next victims, Hannah and Ellen Jickels, would be along the same lines. This time Milner made them pancakes and laced them with arsenic as well. Before the day had ended they were both lying in the morgue awaiting an autopsy, and Milner could again collect the burial club money. People began to gossip and police got involved, and Milner broke down and confessed to all three killings. She later committed suicide in her cell with thousands waiting outside to see her hang.

33/ Barnetby Railway Disaster, October 1898 (Eight Killed)

An awful railway disaster occurred at Wrawby Junction near Barnetby Station, with the death toll of eight and around twenty more people seriously injured. The bodies were taken after the crash to the Railway Hotel in Barnetby. It had left Cleethorpes at 4-50 p.m., and had gone through the station at Barnetby, and got to the junction at about 5-20 p.m. when it collided with a heavy goods train that was being shunted, and it being an express train it travelling at a maximum speed of about 50 m.p.h. The dead were;- Emma Verity Wilson aged thirty-four, from Ossett; John Thomas Brown aged twenty-four, from Dewsbury; Amaziah Butters aged forty-four, fish buyer from Cleethorpes; Edwin Iredale from Elland (Leeds); Martha Bennett aged fifty-four, from Leeds; Eliza Lane from Brereton Ave, Cleethorpes; plus a couple of unidentified others.

34/ Brinkhill Death, (between Louth/Spilsby) March 1895

Brinkhill, fatality

35/ Appleby near Scunthorpe, May 1882 (Fatal Accident?)

An inquest was held at the Schoolroom at Appleby, on the body of Thomas Cavill Nelson, who was shot accidentally the previous day. Deceased’s groom, John Eyre, said that he left at 10-30 that morning, with a gun in hand and soon afterwards he heard a groan. He ran to the garden and found Nelson on the ground with the muzzle end of the gun near his feet. He mumbled to him “that he was leaning over and the gun just went off”. Within the hour he was dead. The brother of the deceased, John Nelson, said that his brother normally carried a gun about to shoot birds on his strawberries and rats near the poultry.

36/ Bonby Suicide? near Brigg, July 1884

Sixty-two-year-old George Curtis was an agricultural labourer from Bonby in North Lincolnshire. The old fella had been depressed of late. At six a.m. on Saturday morning he went for a walk along the banks of the River Ancholme and did this for about five hours. At lunch-time, the same day he was discovered bolt upright in the river near his home village, with his jacket left folded on the bank. The verdict was “Found Drowned”, as they couldn’t ascertain whether he had deliberately or accidentally entered the Ancholme.

36/ Bonby Murder, October 1850

An affray took place in Bonby between seventy-two-year-old Robert Meggitt and Robert Sinderson, who lived near the old man. Late one evening the vile-tempered old coot woke his son and grandchildren up from the noise of the harsh beating he was dishing out to Mrs Meggitt. They shouted for help and Sinderson turned up and intervened in the husband/wife scuffle. He pinned Meggitt to the bed and told Mrs Meggitt to get out of the house. The old man wriggled free and grasped his pen-knife and stabbed Sinderson. He managed to stagger out and get back to his house, with his bowels protruding and losing blood at a fair rate. He clung to life for a couple of days but died from the horrific injuries he got in the attack. (What sentence did Meggitt get?)

37/ Burwell, (Concealment of Birth) December 5th, 1868

Burwell, concealment of birth,

December 19th, 1868

Maria Boyers aged twenty, pleaded guilty of concealing the birth of her child at Burwell on November 27th, 1868.  Sentenced to two months imprisonment with hard labour.

38/ Burwell Ice Fatality, February 1860

On the 10th February at Burwell, a group of people had decided to go skating on the frozen over pits, with John Dickinson (who worked for J.Heanley of Ruckland) going that little bit further. The ice cracked and John fell in and he was under the ice for three hours, before his lifeless corpse could be extricated.

39/ Stag’s Head Inn? Suicide, Burwell, January 1867

On Wednesday last, Mr Robinson, a farmer and innkeeper of Burwell near Louth, put an end to his existence by hanging himself in the brew-house. The deceased was seventy-five years of age and had been rather unsettled in his mind for some time, and it is supposed that he was suffering from an attack of temporary derangement when he committed the rash act. An inquest was held on the body by T.Sharpley, Esq, coroner, on Thursday, and a verdict to that effect was returned. (Was brew house at Stag’s Head pub?)

40/ Stag’s Head Inn, Burwell near Louth, January 1880 (Man Found Dead in Mash Tub)

Considering how big Burwell is, it had a fair bit of tragedy in the two decades between 1860 and 1880. This one is a singular accident that happened to the brewer at the Stag’s Head Inn (Last time I drove past this, it was closed and up for sale). George Ward was a 44-year-old brewer and butcher from No 34, James Street, Louth, who was working for Mrs Odling at the Stag’s Head. He was there all night and the following day in brewing and was helped by a man named Atkinson. He was pottering about all day, the odd cup of tea, nothing alcoholic to drink, when Atkinson returned to see if everything was going OK. On entering the brew-house he observed that he was in a peculiar position. While standing on the floor his head and shoulders were partly submerged in the tub of new beer. He raised the alarm but the chap was quite dead. It was thought to be the carbonic acid gas that had killed him, and it arose from the mash-tub when brewing.During fermentation at certain stages the liquor gives off gases of various kinds, and these could produce fatal effects. His wife, Charlotte Ward, said he had a fit during the summer but didn’t know which type it was. Could he have had a fit while brewing? Not really, because his body would have fallen to the ground and not stood upright, as he found. The verdict was “Inhalation of carbonic acid gas caused his death”. (Is Stag’s Head cursed or what?)

41/ Burwell Suicide, May 1869

Burwell, suicide

42/ Asterby Child Murder, (Louth/Horncastle) April 1895

Sarah Gibson aged sixteen was left in charge of the youngest child of the house, her brother aged only two years. Mrs Gibson had gone to the next village and her husband was expected soon, so there should have been no worries. William Gibson entered the house and found that his daughter had gone out but the little boy was laid on the floor, drenched in blood. Sarah had smashed the child over the head with a poker because she was mad at him for shoving her. A verdict of “Wilful Murder” against the girl of weak intellect.

43/ Croft near Skegness, March 1843 (Manslaughter)

A ghastly discovery was made at the little village of Croft, purely by accident. A young lad thought some of the folks of Croft might like to see a seal and tapped on doors asking them. He ended up at Mrs Evison’s cottage, who lived with her sister there when he heard a faint voice calling for help. He ran to Mr Searby, a farmer who lived next door, and they went back to check it out. The two women were bound together both hands and feet and covered with the bed sheets. Poor Mrs Evison had died and her sister was in a deplorable condition. A thieving criminal had climbed in the window attacked the women and tied them up, then robbed them, and got a bite to eat and then legged it. He is now wanted on a charge of murder. (Ever find the guy?)

44/ Ashby near Scunthorpe, October 1913 (Strange Death)

Ashby, peculiar fatality

45/ Ashby (Scunthorpe), August 1920 (Child Burnt to Death)

Ashby, child burnt to death

46/ Farlesthorpe (Alford), July 1884 (Fatal Accident)

Mrs Lucas of Mumby and late of Farlesthorpe fell down some steps on Wednesday and dislocated her neck. It appears the neighbours, not having seen the old lady about as usual, became alarmed and ultimately broke the door open and they found her lying dead at the bottom of some steps leading to a bedroom. It is singular that her husband, the late Saint Lucas, broke his neck in the same manner about nine years ago.

47/ Authorpe (Alford), May 1875 (Fatal Accident)

A fatal accident occurred at Authorpe to a man named James Farmery, residing at Aby. He was engaged with Mr Turner, the proprietor of the brick-yard, in taking away some centres from a newly-erected arch, when it fell upon him and killed him instantly. The body was extricated and it was found to be badly mutilated and was left exposed for some hours before removal. The verdict was “Accidentally killed”. Deceased was fifty years of age and has left a wife and a family. Mr Turner suffered from a fractured leg and is now progressing favourably.

48/ Broughton (Brigg/Scunthorpe), August 1865 (Fatal Accident)

A fatal accident occurred at Broughton to a labouring man who was working digging gravel in a pit and having incautiously undermined, a mass fell upon him and so fearfully crushed him that when extricated life was extinct. The calamity is not likely to end with the man; his wife, who was abruptly informed of the death of her partner and being far advanced in pregnancy was at once stricken down, and the case is likely to terminate fatally. The verdict was “Accidental death”.  The deceased whose name is Houghton was a native of Wrawby.

49/ Belleau Rectory Fatality, May 1869

50/ Belchford Suicide, (Horncastle) October 1879

Isaac Lammiman aged fifty-four years killed himself by hanging in his granary. He had been much depressed on account of the adverse state of agriculture. James Maltby went to his house at nine a.m. to borrow a horse to move some trays from Horncastle and deceased’s wife said he wasn’t at home. He then heard a cry of “Maltby, Maltby, what shall I do?” as he was walking down the road, it was his wife at the granary window. He ran back and found Lammiman hanging by his neck. The body was cold to the touch.

51/ East Barkwith, July 1888 (Killed by Lightning)

Mrs Ann Overton, the wife of John Overton the publican, was found dead in a field near her residence. Her daughter Eliza, said her mother had just gone into the garden when a thunderstorm came overhead. She was looking at some hay-makers in the next field and had been gone a while when they found her lying on the ground underneath some trees. Eliza shook her but discovered no life in her body. The doctor arrived and found her hair singed as was the collar of her jacket, the skin on her face was black, with her cap also singed. Her slippers were in tatters. He had no doubt that Ann had been struck by lightning.

52/ Cumberworth near Alford, June 1889 (killed by a Horse)

Cumberworth, unusual death

53/ Bardney Railway Death, March 1883

John Flack was knocked down by a G.N.R. passenger train and was horribly mutilated. Flack was from Suffolk and was looking for work, and was spotted by the driver of a down train from Peterborough to Doncaster walking up the line. The up train from Lincoln to Peterborough was only 200 yards to the rear. The driver shouted at the man but got no answer, and deceased was then knocked down and killed. A surgeon from Bardney stated that the top of his head and his back were completely destroyed. The brain had disappeared and the head was empty; both legs were also severed from the body. The wife of the deceased identified his clothing as that of her husband.

54/ Bardney Railway Death No.2, March 1882

Bardney, railway death

55/ Anderby (Mablethorpe/Skegness), September 1877 (Horrific Death)

An inquest was held on the body of George Wallis aged fifteen. He was assisting at a threshing machine for Miss Gibbons of Anderby, when he stepped into the drum and had his right leg drawn in and fearfully mangled. They tried to liberate the poor lad from his perilous position and when they did he was conveyed home to Mumby. The doctor arrived and bound up his leg in order to stop the bleeding. Two doctors returned later on to amputate the leg but the poor lad was sinking. This intention was abandoned as he would have died under the operation. He sank further and further until at one a.m. on Sunday morning he expired. The boy was there with his uncle learning about the business, and just as the accident occurred they were about to stop the machine with the operator having his hand on the handle to turn off the steam. He was interred at Mumby with many young people turning up and following them to the grave.

56/ Bilsby (Alford), August 1877 (Terrible Accident)

Mrs Hundleby, the mother of the nine-month-old child that died, placed it in an armchair with a scarf around its body and attached it to the back of the chair to stop it falling off. She went out for a bit and came back and fed the child, only this time going next door and leaving the bairn to be looked after by a six-year-old girl. After a few minutes, the girl went to get Mrs Hundleby and said the little one was crying. When they got back, the child had slipped through the scarf up to the neck and got through the back of the chair and not getting clear of the scarf, was thus strangled. She snatched it up and ran into the street screaming. A man named Leechman took hold of the child, but it was extinct. A verdict of “Accidental strangulation” was returned and the mother was reprimanded for her gross negligence.

57/ Bratoft Suicide, (Spilsby/Skegness), October 1880

Bratoft, suicide

58/ Castlethorpe near Brigg, April 1906

Harry Lamming, a tinsmith, was driving the horse and gig with his wife and child as passengers when the horse shied. All were thrown down to the ground with a hefty bump but Lamming landed head first. He sustained a fractured skull and was dead within a few hours. Mrs Lamming and the child are both recovering favourably at this time.

59/ Calceby, July 1848 (Attempted Murder)

Elizabeth Garner aged thirteen was indicted for administering arsenic to her mistress, Mary Smith, with intent to murder her. Garner left home and got a job at the home of the bedridden old woman living in Calceby near Alford. The girl became home-sick, and the mother-in-law had gone to see Mrs Smith and ask her to allow her to leave, but she was told to hang on until she had got somebody else for the job. Garner found some mixture used to destroy vermin on sheep and that contained arsenic, mixed it with some milk and gave her some of it. The old lady spat it out and ordered the girl to take a swig, which she did and she too spat it out. Mrs Smith started vomiting and complained of burning in her throat. It had all the indications of poisoning according to the doctor who was called in. Smith gave the contents of the milk-jug to the doctor, to analyse. He found it contained arsenic and the girl was quizzed about it. Garner stated: “I knew it was poison; I believed it would kill the woman. I gave it her, to be set free”. The jury found her guilty and she was sentenced to death. (I have a feeling that she didn’t die on the gallows but was given a lenient sentence due to her youthful status).

60/ Eastville Poisoning, April 1860

Love the name Eastville, always thought it should be in Kansas in the late 1800’s. It is not, and lies between Skegness and Boston. It tells of a twenty-two-year-old woman from Eastville was accidentally poisoned by arsenic, which she found in a cupboard in the house. She had mistaken the jar for sulphur. (Did she die?)

61/ Eastville Station Fatality, August 1881 (Still there, but now derelict)

station, fatality,Eastville

62/ Frodingham Drowning, July 1882

On Wednesday afternoon a youth named Arthur Brown was drowned whilst bathing in a pit adjoining the Trent Ironworks. Another lad was with him at the time, and seeing his companion sinking, ran to the works and gave an alarm, but before the little fellow could be got out in time and life was extinct.

63/ Frodingham Railway Death, November 1899

A collision occurred at Frodingham Viaduct when a goods train for Frodingham was creeping slowly over the viaduct when a couple of light engines crashed into its rear. The guards’ van of the goods train was smashed to smithereens with the guard being killed instantly.

64/ Frodingham, December 1892 (Arch Collapses- Four Dead)

An arch at the Frodingham Steelworks near Scunthorpe, collapsed, causing four men to lose their lives. It was a brick arch with a layer of concrete on top, used as a smithy. The men were all bust at the time and received no prior warning, they were all crushed and burned to death underneath the tons of rubble. Men were arranged into groups to help clear the debris, but the task took several hours before all the corpse could be found and brought out. The dead were: Moses Parker, a striker from Frodingham; William Hobson, striker, Frodingham; Joseph Shucksmith, crane driver, from Ashby; and John Southwick, blacksmith, from Scunthorpe.

65/ Driby near Alford, (Fatal Accident)July 1883

Driby, fatal accident

66/ Fiskerton Murder, July 1864

Richard Thomas Parker, a butcher aged twenty-nine, was charged with the wilful murder of his mother, Elizabeth Parker on May 16th at Fiskerton. There was another charge of attempted murder on his father, Thomas Parker. His mother let him go to Sheffield on an excursion trip and when he came back he seemed in a volatile mood, by answering his mother back and when his father intervened, he swore at him. Richard then went to get his gun and returned and fired off two shots, one at his Mum and one at his Dad. When he was apprehended for the shootings someone heard him say,”I have shot my mother, and I shall die like a pig on the scaffold”. An excuse for his behaviour was that he had sustained a head injury some years back when he came off a horse. That mixed with his drinking habits, the two clicked and he turned into a psychopathic killer. He got his wish and he was sentenced to death.

67/ Epworth, December 1869 (Attempted Murder)

William Daniel Webb aged forty-four, a tinman, was charged with feloniously wounding Ann Webb his wife, with intent to kill and murder her at Epworth on the 21st of October 1867. His Lordship remarked that he was morally guilty of murder and should, therefore, be sentenced to fifteen years penal servitude.

68/ Epworth Rectory Hauntings, December 1715-January 1716

The Reverend Samuel Wesley, his wife, and some of their nineteen children were the focus of some poltergeist and spectral activity in their home, Epworth Rectory. John Wesley, the most famous of Wesley dynasty for founding the Methodists was at boarding school, so never got to experience the haunting. Moaning and wailing, sounds of footsteps and banging noises kept them awake at night. One of the daughters saw a typical ghostly figure akin to being dressed in a white gown, the spectral figure got the nickname “Old Jeffrey”. No more was heard of it after January 1716 as the haunting stopped.

69/ Epworth Suicide, February 1907

Epworth , Suicide

70/ Eastoft Murder, (Scunthorpe) October 1902

Charles Williams, a simple farm worker from Eastoft, was stabbed by a 40-year-old potato picker named John Walsh. Williams was on his way back from Luddington with a girlfriend when on the outskirts of Eastoft Walsh flew at him in a rage and knocked him down. They scuffled for a bit, and after a while, Williams gasped “He knifed me”, then Walsh attacked her. She wasn’t as badly injured as Williams and managed to get help. When they returned to the spot, Williams was in a ditch. Police arrested Walsh and in the meantime, Williams had expired from his stab wounds. The actual stab wound was in his thigh and had severed the femoral artery, causing the death to be from haemorrhage from the cut. He was found guilty of murder. I presume the death sentence was forthcoming?

71/ Eastoft Murder, March 1870 (Murder in January 1870)

Eastoft, murder

 

72/ Dalderby Bridge Suicide, near Horncastle,  August 1888

Early one Sunday morning, the body of a respectably dressed man was discovered at Horncastle near the Dalderby Bridge. A revolver shot had penetrated his forehead and the weapon itself was lying by his side. The body was quite cold and was partly lying in the water. The deceased had upon him thirty-five shillings and a silver watch and chain. He was apparently a foreign horse dealer who was in Horncastle for the annual fair, but there being no papers in his possession there is no clue to his identity.

73/ Friskney, September 1851 (Death-bed Confession)

A boy named Enderby disappeared in 1835 or 1836, and was only about thirteen years old and was the adopted son of Mr Enderby, a Skegness publican. On the day he vanished he was up at three a.m., to get some horses and go to Louth with some corn, but was never seen or heard of again. A man named Candy Taylor, a full-time criminal in the Friskney area, confessed to the boy’s murder while he was on his death-bed. His accomplice, a man named Milnes from Croft, also mentioned something about the boy’s murder before he croaked some years ago. Apparently, the lad had witnessed them slaughtering a sheep so to prevent the lad from grassing on them to the authorities they killed him and buried his body at Ingoldmells.

74/ Brackenborough near Louth, May 1881 (Fatal Accident)

 

He was fifty-one and was interred in the churchyard at Covenham. The verdict on May 28th-“Mr Robinson’s death was caused by being thrown from his conveyance”.

75/ Benniworth Suicide? September 1888

Benniworth, suicide

76/ Crowle near Scunthorpe, January 1877 (Butcher Sells Wife)

William Liggot, a pork butcher, sold his missus to the landlord of the Fishmonger’s Arms, Chapman Pidd, for the princely sum of £40. It was all done above board with a solicitor drawing up the articles of sale then the £40 was handed over and the wife had a new husband. Pidd’s wife died a few months ago and had become lonely and jokingly asked Ligott if his missus was for sale.

77/ Crowle, February 1884

At Retford, information was received that a man well known to police, named Thomas Cunningham, was wanted for the attempted murder of P.C. Thomas Dunn at Crowle. Cunningham was out poaching and shot at the officer. He was some time ago before the Retford Bench for the attempted murder of a P.C. at Stockwith. The officer, Thomas Fryer, had arrested Cunningham and another but when in the cell they “rounded on him” and but for the assistance of a person who was passing the station who heard the commotion, the officer declared the belief that he would have been murdered.

78/ Crowle, April 1871 (Boys Death Playing at Hanging)

William Meggitt aged thirteen and a half, met his death while playing at hanging. The mother, Sarah Seaton, had gone out one day and left him working in the garden. When they returned in the evening they discovered him suspended by the neck in a pig-shed, quite lifeless. John Clark, the husband, found him on his knee’s with the rope around his neck and the other end tied around a beam in the roof about five feet from the ground. His head was tilted slightly and his hands at his side, with a proper noose used. The boy was always saying about hanging but it was thought to just have a morbid fascination for it, but it ended in tragedy and he actually hung himself while probably seeing what it was like.

79/ Crowle Drowning, August 1920

Crowle, Drowning

80/ East Ferry Murder, December 1882

East Ferry, Murder

February 1883- Execution at Lincoln

Fifty-year-old James Anderson, a mariner who murdered his wife on December 6th, 1882 at East Ferry was hanged at Lincoln Gaol. When the Reverend told him that he was going to enter into eternity and asked him how he felt about it, he simply replied:-

“Well, I’m simply going home, and I don’t want to stay here. There’s nothing here I care for”. Marwood entered the cell a few minutes before nine o’clock and continued to tie the arms behind his back. After the clock struck nine he was conducted to the scaffold, and he appeared to be somewhat pale but calm and collected. The white cap was placed over his head by Marwood and the noose adjusted around his neck. The executioner stepped back to a level at the side of the drop and pulled the handle over, and the body dropped into space with a thud. The rope quivered a little but death was instantaneous. The drop was eight feet. The black flag was then hoisted on the clock tower. The body was allowed to swing for an hour then taken down and removed to the dead-house.

81/ Aby Suicide, near Alford, January

A terrible case of suicide took place at Aby, when Mr Joseph Peacock aged fifty-five, nearly severed his head from his body under circumstances detailed below. He was much respected in the village, with him being the Vice-Chairman of the Lodge of Oddfellows. He had been a lay preacher with the Wesleyan Methodists for about twenty years and a teacher at the Wesleyan Sunday School-indeed some of the symptoms indicated that religious mania was the cause of taking his life. He leaves a widow and family. He was found in the closet adjoining the house by his wife at about seven a.m. He was clearly suffering from insanity or something similar. The verdict was one of “suicide whilst not of sound mind”.

82/ Aby Railway Station Fatal Accident, March 1867

Aby, fatal accident

83/ Burgh-le-Marsh, (Skegness) 1629 (Mary Rose Shipwreck)

I doubt whether this is still carried on but the church bell at Burgh-le-Marsh was rung at 8 o’clock in the evening, between the months of October and March. It was some sort of tradition because in 1629, the Mary Rose (not that one!) was nearing the coast and the locals would ring the church bell to warn the ships if they came to close, a sort of sonar lighthouse. On this occasion, they decided not to and claim some of the booty that would wash up on the beach, but the vicar went to the church and locked himself in, and rang the bell to warn them off. The angry villagers broke down the church door and found him lying dead on the floor after he’d suffered a heart attack by exerting himself.

84/ Burgh-le-Marsh Suicide, July 1884

Marshall Heanley aged about seventy was discovered hanging from his bedpost by his daughter at about nine a.m. on Monday. The verdict was returned that deceased had destroyed himself by hanging whilst in an unsound state of mind. He was well respected in the area and up until a couple of months ago he lived at Croft Grange and was a farmer and a member of the Lincolnshire Chamber of Agriculture.

85/ Burgh-le-Marsh Railway Death, August 1863

Burgh-le-Marsh,Railway death,

86/ Burgh-le-Marsh Railway Station Fatality, October 1885

Maud Pickett aged ten years, died in the house on the previous day having been brought from Burgh Station where she met with an accident on the line. The little girl was run over by some railway carriages at Burgh Station, where a gentleman on the train offered to take her to Louth to attend the hospital there. She died in the hospital after a couple of days there. The jury questioned whether it was wise to bring the girl twenty miles to Louth or go to Boston which was nearer. Her father, who was the railway porter at Burgh Station, said she was in the goods shed, and Harris, the shunter, was taking two waggons out when he heard her scream. Her left leg had been almost severed by the carriages running over her. It was decided that it was best to take her to Louth. It is believed she fell between the buffers. “Accidental Death” was recorded.

87/ Burgh-le-Marsh, (Skegness) October 1880 (Two killed)

A dreadful accident occurred at Burgh-le-Marsh resulting in the death of a waggoner and a little girl and seriously injuring a dozen others. The whole affair has cast quite a gloom over the neighbourhood. At six p.m. on Monday evening, a waggon drawn by three horses was returning from the harvest field with a load of beans, upon which were seated a number of children. When near the church the kids shouted “Harvest home!”, which startled a baker’s horse in a tradesman’s door. He backed against the waggoner, throwing him to the ground. The horses took fright and galloped down the street with the waggon passing over the man’s body. They ran on and turned a corner sharply, throwing the twenty or so children against a wall. Two doctors appeared on the scene to help the wounded, The case of poor Archer was hopeless and he died on Tuesday, leaving a wife and five children. Archer East aged thirty-six is dead, and Lucy Peacock aged nine is also dead. Peacock had her skull fractured and died on the same night. East lingered till the next day with his bowels and bladder ruptured.

88/ Burgh-on-Bain Drowning, (between Louth/Mkt Rasen)  September 1883

Burgh-on-Bain, child, drowned

The mill was all the way down Mill Lane, right to the end, up to the River Bain (I think!)

89/ Between Claythorpe/Alford Stations, January 1881

A foreman platelayer named John Portasaged thirty-eight, met his death on the G.N.R railway whilst laying new rails between the Claythorpe and Alford Stations. He was sitting at one end of the rails in a waggon, his legs were injured by the rails hanging over the next waggon closing upon him, when the train stopped. He had no broken bones but he was taken to Louth hospital. The first few days he was doing fine but erysipelas set in and he died at eight o’clock on Sunday night.

90/ Claythorpe Railway Station Fatality, August 1884

A porter at Claythorpe, by the name of Samuel Desforges aged twenty-five, was run over and mutilated by an excursion train which was expected to pass through the station. Deceased had shut one gate and was running to shut the other when the train caught him. Nobody witnessed the accident. The clerk in charge at Claythorpe said that Desforges had to attend to a man with corn near the end of the goods shed. It was also his duty to attend the gate while he and others were on a break; also to set the signals and close the gates. At 7-50 a.m. an excursion train passed through the station and he was run over and killed.

91/ Claythorpe Railway Fatality, May 1865 (Near South Thoresby/Alford)

Claythorpe, railway, death

92/ Firsby Clough/Thorpe, (Spilsby/Skegness) April 1849

John Ward, who lived in Thorpe near Spilsby, committed matricide by shooting his mother in the head and killing her instantaneously. John had taken a fancy to a domestic servant at the house and his mother had told him off and told him not to fraternize with her anymore. He ran out shouting that if they couldn’t be together, he’d shoot her. After several hours he returned. He crept into the house and saw his Mum asleep in a chair by the fire. He got a gun and blew her head away, at point-blank range. Then he grabbed the love of his life and locked her in his room. She craftily escaped by saying that if they were to run away together she needed her clothes and he let out, and she ran next door for help. He went after her but was stopped from doing so by the owner of the house. Feeling a bit of a failure he tried to slit his own throat but he couldn’t even do that right. A doctor found him and sewed his wound up.  (On the bank of the Lymn, a side drain connecting with the river about a mile from Thorpe village, is a farm known by the name of “Firsby Clough”.)

93/  Firsby Death, January 1916.

Firsby, fatality

 

94/ Firsby Suicide, May 1880

Firsby, suicide

 

 

95/ Donington-on-Bain Suicide, June 1869

William Fletcher, sixty years old and a shoemaker by trade and from Donington-on-Bain, killed himself by taking laudanum. Not known as a hard drinker he had in the past few years gone off on two or three-day binges in the surrounding public houses. He had been on one of these binges and put an end to his deplorable career by taking four ounces of laudanum. Whether this was to help cure his previous debauchery or to commit suicide, we will never know. The verdict suggested suicide, but what state of mind he was in, there was no evidence. Nobody had a bad word to say about the old fella saying he was kind, punctual, and always civil to everyone who met him.

96/ Donington-on-Bain Child Murder, May 1873

donington-on-Bain, child murder

97/ Donington-on-Bain Railway Deaths, February 1877 (Two Killed)

Adam Chambers, a foreman plate-layer on the Louth and Lincoln Railway, was killed when he was run over by a moving trolley on the line. They were moving two trolleys with some material on them between Willingham and Withcall stations, Chambers was on one of them, with three others. When they got near Donington-on-Bain, on one of the trolleys, the men saw a red light which means danger, so they got off the two-ton trolley as quickly as possible and none were injured except Chambers, who was run over by the trolley behind them. He lost two or three pints of blood before he got to Louth Hospital, and his leg had two large lacerations in it. He lingered for a day but finally expired from his injuries. Another man was killed at Donington-on-Bain Railway Station. Frederick Flintham aged twenty-five, was on his way back from Louth Market and was on the 6-35 p.m. train to Donnington. About 150 got out at Donington, and as the train was moving off he was yelling out “good night”, and he slipped and fell under the wheels of the penultimate carriage. He was pulled up from the tracks and was to be rushed off to Louth Hospital, but died within half an hour. He has left a widow in a destitute condition.

98/ Donington-on-Bain Death, January 1869

99/ Farlesthorpe Suicide, (Alford) April 1881

John Dales, who lived on a small farm near the highway at Farlesthorpe, committed suicide in a most determined manner. He was a thirty-eight-year-old, well built, sober, and diligent sort of bloke, with a wife and four kids to provide for. He had been to Alford that day to buy seed and called on Mr Chapman saying that he would see him tomorrow about some business concerning his farmland. He had tea at eight p.m., then fed the horses at 8-30, but did not return. The mother-in-law, Mrs Bilton, with whom they lived, called him in but got no answer. The horses were “winnying” so she got a lantern and went to see where he was. The wind blew her light out so she checked the straw shed, less than six foot high, and touched a body in the dark. Thinking he was messing about she threw her arms around him, only to find him hanging dead. She screamed “Oh Jim! What have you done”, and ran to get her husband. He cut him down but he was completely limp and lifeless. About two weeks ago he was converted by a preacher, Lot Ward of Alford, when he was told to cry out for mercy and pardon his sins. The verdict was “Suicide whilst of unsound mind”. (Farlesthorpe had a population of 97 in 1881).

100/ Brocklesby Hall Fatality, August 1881

Brocklesby Hall, fatality, death

 

An inquest was held at Brocklesby Hall on the body of John Henry Brooks aged twenty-three years, a member of the First Lincolnshire Light Horse Corps. Deceased, who is the son of Mr Brooks, an eminent agriculturist of Wootton Grange, was on parade on Wednesday morning, July 27th, just as troop was forming line previous to breaking off from the first morning parade, Mr Brooks’ horse reared up and backed about. Its rider tried to get it into proper position but again pranced about and reared up and fell with its rider, who fell clear of the horse then alighted on his head and shoulders and when picked up was unconscious. He was removed to one of the bedrooms in Brocklesby Hall. Deceased died from concussion of the brain. Verdict- “Accidental Death”.

Posted by dbeasley70

Lewisham

1/ Electric Picture Palace, Deptford, May 1917 (Four Children Killed)

Four children were killed due to mass hysteria at the Electric Picture Palace in the High Street, Deptford. The “Children’s Programme” was on and the place was full, with a few grown-ups supervising. Nearing the end of the show a few kids made a dash for the exits. People passing by outside thought there was a fire because of the scramble going on, and consequently, someone shouted “FIRE!”. Now the panic began, and there was screaming and shouting and trampling on those underfoot. In the melee, four lost their lives. Two were suffocated and another two died on their way to Miller General Hospital. The names of the dead are -Edward Webster, aged seven of Dorking Road;-Edward Turrell, also seven, of Berthron Street:-Mollie Ryan, only four years old of Junction Road and Sarah Johnston, aged nine of Watergate Street.

2/ New Cross Road, Lewisham, (Guillotine Suicide) February 1876

Francois Augustus Chere, a 38-year-old Frenchman was trying to scratch a living and pay the rent on his lodgings in New Cross Road. The penniless craftsman went inside and got two planks of wood and a large tanners knife, then with these items he constructed a home-made guillotine and used it to chop his head off.

3/ Catford Train Death, July 1895

Catford, train fatality

4/ Barnes Terrace, Lewisham, January 1846

One Sunday morning, a young lady hopped into a cab and made her way to Barnes Terrace. While it was pouring with rain she got out, paid the fare, telling the cabman that she would “soon be very well” and then threw herself into the Thames. The body has not yet been recovered. (Who was she?)

5/ Deptford Child Murder, July 1871

The dead body of a new-born infant was found in a field on the Greenwich side of Deptford. It was partially clothed and had its throat slit from ear to ear.

6/ Deptford, April 1887 (Starving Child to Death)

7/ Deptford Manslaughter, July 1885

John Read, an ex-police sergeant at Deptford, was yesterday committed for trial for the manslaughter of his daughter, Emma aged twenty. The evidence showed that the prisoner was “continually drunk”, and that he abused his children if they did not bring him any money to buy a drink. The death of the poor girl Emma was traced to his violence.

8/ Bull Inn Suicide, Lewisham, November 1851

An elderly woman who was working as a servant at the Bull Inn, Lewisham, killed herself in the garden at the back of the property. While peeling some spuds she tried to commit suicide, but not finding the knife sharp enough she went off to sharpen it up then came back and tried again, this time being successful.

9/ Wesleyan Chapel Suicide, Deptford, March 1863

A suicide was committed in the Wesleyan chapel at Deptford by 60-year-old Thomas Redman. He was a builder doing some work on the chapel ceiling, and he left at six a.m.to go and start work. His son was helping him and he turned up later at nine a.m., and it was he that discovered the body swinging from scaffolding, hanging from a rope. The body was cut down and the surgeon thinks that he had been dead for some time probably as he first got to the chapel at 6 a.m.

10/ Deptford Poisoning Case, July 1889

Deptford, poisoning

11/ Forest Hill/Honor Oak Park Stations, July 1893 (Child Murder)

The corpse of a naked young boy was found by William Taylor, a plate-layer from Dalman Road in Forest Hill. It was on the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway between Honor Oak Park Station and Forest Hill Station. The police surgeon stated it was a fully-developed infant and that it was probably thrown from a passing train.

12/ East London Industrial School Suicide, Lewisham, March 1899 (See No.18)

A fifteen-year-old boy named Julius Nathan committed suicide at the East London Industrial School in Lewisham, by hanging himself. A fellow pupil said that he had told him that he would “do for himself one of these day’s”, and he would amuse the other lads by enacting him hanging himself, when he stood on the bed and sang a song, then put his head in a noose.

13/ Lewisham Suicide, March 1892

Lewisham, suicide

14/ New Cross Station, March 1888 (Double Infanticide)

A dreadful discovery was made at New Cross Station in a London to Brighton train which was being shunted back again to New Cross. Underneath one of the seats was a flat basket, and on inspection, the two babies were found. It is thought they are about a month old and are twins. It said that it was obvious a murder was carried out because they had both been vaccinated and this is also a major clue.

15/ Deptford (Railway Deaths)August 1854

Some workmen were cleaning the underside of the railway carriages which had been hoisted by a machine called a jack, when a carriage slipped on its side and fell onto E.Baldock and Charles Grey. They were extricated and taken to Guy’s Hospital, but the severe injuries caused by the huge weights involved may prove too much and both are unlikely to recover. (Did they?)

16/ Lewisham, August 1889

17/ Dartmouth Hill House, Blackheath, (Greenwich/Lewisham) February 1892

During the excavations at Dartmouth Hill House, which is due for demolition, the workmen found a number of adult human bones. It is on the site of a former copper in the laundry. About 25 years ago a gardener and his missus lived there, and they argued constantly, and rather mysteriously the wife vanished off the face of the earth at the end of 1870. He told friends and family that she just got up and walked out on him. Police were sceptical but they had no body, so he might be telling the truth. The husband left after a year and got remarried. This is thought to be the wife’s corpse and police are trying to trace the whereabouts of the husband.

18/ East London Industrial School Suicide, Lewisham, March 1899 (See No.12)

19/ Loampit Hill, Lewisham November 1908 (Body under Floorboards)

The corpse of a woman named Bertha Hume aged twenty-seven, who was also married, was discovered under the floorboards in a house in Loampit Hill, Lewisham. Bertha had been strangled. The husband, George Hume aged forty-seven, was found wandering about and has been put in a padded cell in a lunatic ward of Lewisham Union Infirmary. She had been missing for a week and her husband was arrested, it was thought that she had legged it from her nutty husband. Police made a thorough search of the property and came up trumps when they pulled up the floorboards. He was arrested trying to strangle his son and they knew he was had lunatic tendencies so they had him incarcerated in a proper facility.

20/ Forest Hill Child Murder, October 3rd, 1885

At Greenwich yesterday, Martha Howard aged 27, married, of Forest Hill, was charged with the wilful murder of her female child, aged 5 months, by striking it with a chopper. The police were called to the house occupied by the prisoner and her husband when the woman said:”I’ve killed a child; I want to be hanged.” She had been previously found with the child, the head of which was almost severed from the body, lying across her knees. She was remanded.

21/ Forest Hill Child Murder, October 23rd, 1885

Forest Hill, child, murder

 

22/ Churchyard of St Paul, Deptford, October 1874

The bodies of five infants were found in an unused receptacle in the Churchyard of St Paul in Deptford.The remains of a child’s body were spotted by a man and when reported to police, they excavated the area around where the body was found and another four children’s bodies were unearthed. Two of them had died recently, the parents had momento cards of them being interred in the Deptford Cemetery by a local undertaker. Police are investigating the matter. (Have they been improperly buried or just dumped there by an undertaker?)

23/ St John’s Station, Lewisham, (Three Dead) March 1898

of the accident, it would be unfair to hazard a guess until after a full inquiry which will necessarily be held. A thick fog prevailed at the time.”

24/ Lewisham Reservoir Child Murder, January 10th 1885

Lewisham Reservoir, child, murder

25/ Lewisham Reservoir, January 17th, 1885 (Child Murder)

26/ Brockley Cemetery (Exhumed the Bodies) July 1889

Brockley Cemetery

 

27/ New Cross Railway Suicide,  August 1870.

 

28/ Sydenham Station (Fatal Railway Accident)   July 1870.

29/  Imprisonment for Child Neglect, Deptford.  February 1904

30/  Murder of his Daughter, Deptford. (Execution at Wandsworth)  March 1905.

31/  Deptford Double Murder, April 22nd, 1905 (Murder of Mr & Mrs Farrow)

Deptford Double Murder,  May 27th, 1905  (Murderers Executed at Wandsworth)

32/ Suicide at Venner Road, Sydenham.  October 1906 (Venner Road is still there)

33/  Suicide at Deptford Cattle Market.   November 1907

Posted by dbeasley70

Leicestershire & Rutland

1/ Leicester, December 1878 (Woman Freezes to Death)

The weather in Leicester this month has been more severe than anything experienced for years and with the frost so intense, the River Soar was frozen for miles and traffic was entirely suspended. About three-thousand people skated on the river. During the skating, the body of a woman who had been frozen to death was found. She left her home on the previous evening and nothing was heard of her until she was found frozen to death.

2/ Ashby-De-La-Zouch, ( Manslaughter at a Football Match), March 1878

Manslaughter, footbal match, Ashby-de-la-Zouch

3/ Blaby Suicide, March 1895

Blaby, suicide

 

4/ Leicester, August 1896 (Attempted Suicide with Gunpowder)

5/ Glaston Hall, Rutland, March 1886 (Dead Body in Haunted House)

A man by the rather Dickensian name of James Liquorish was walking near the Old Glaston Hall. He met with some schoolboys from Uppingham School and they went into the ruins of the hall. The lads wanted to see the “Haunted Room”, which was known locally for having the occasional spectral sightings. The young lads suddenly screamed in horror and ran from the building. Liquorish looked around and saw the decomposed remains of a man hanging by the neck from a door lintel. The body was cut down after Liquorish went to get assistance. He was presumed to have been there for a week or so. The body was identified as William Church, a seventy-year-old former groom, and his flesh had been eaten by bats and rats that infested the ruins. (Still there?)

6/ Hinckley Fatal Accident, April 1876

The market town of Hinckley rung a bell with me as I remembered when I was a kid reading about the tombstone that used to bleed, all down to a soldier who stabbed a young man, I think! This one involves a tree felling accident. Joseph Bloxham was busy felling the trees at Hinckley when a helpful chap offered to help him by climbing up and tying a rope around each tree so they could pull them in the right direction. He agreed and he went up a poplar tree, but the tree fell with him on it and its feared he may not live. Worse news was that of a boy, who was nearby, was killed outright and another three children were injured. (Did he survive?)

7/ Breedon-on-the-Hill Murder, August 1886

Breedon, murder

8/ Grimstone Tunnel Suicide, near Melton Mowbray, July 1899

The body of a gentleman from Kent, Richard Crabbe, was found on the railway line at Grimstone Tunnel. He was going with sister, attendant and valet from London to Ben Rhydding (Bradford-West Yorkshire) for a holiday break. When the train entered Grimstone Tunnel, Crabbe flung open a window and jumped out. The train stopped at the nearest station and a search was made in the vicinity and he was found with his body smashed to atoms by another train going in the other direction. Verdict “Suicide whilst of unsound mind following influenza.” (Grimstone Tunnel is still there and used as a test track!)

9/ Three Swans Hotel Suicide, Market Harborough, August 1893

A gentleman who used to reside in Market Harborough and was a Liberal politician in the town and of Leicestershire killed himself. J.A.Nunneley, who currently lived at Mount Edgcombe Gardens in London, shot himself in a room at the Three Swans Hotel in the town. (Still there on the High Street – It is a Best Western now)

10/ Rothley Temple Fire, February 1899

Rothley Temple fire

11/ Granby Coffee House Suicide, Leicester, August 1882

John Warburton was a resident of Chesterfield, who had been engaged to a widow named Wadsworth. He was due to be married on Bank Holiday but he went to his Mum’s house at Spencer Street in Chesterfield. Sound advice from his mother was to go back and get married, so he left for the purpose of getting wed on Wednesday. He lied and went to Nottingham and Leicester. (This could be Nottingham by the way!). While at the Granby Coffee House he put some poison in his coffee and collapsed. He said, “I’m a dead man; I’ve taken oxalic acid, which I bought this afternoon”. On his dead body was a letter stating to his sweetheart  “My Dear Pauline Wadsworth” and saying that he “deserved all that would befall him for not keeping my promise”. He also said that certain property in Lancashire should be given to the woman he should have married.

12/ Loughborough, January 1907

A horrific discovery was made at Loughborough in Leicestershire. Three children aged five, three and one respectively were found dead in bed. Their mother had slept with them all night and an inquest was adjourned for the Monday for post-mortem and further inquiries. (What happened ?)

13/ Ragdall, Leicestershire, January 1880 (Now Ragdale)

Ragdall, fire, fatalities

of the children can survive.

14/ Leicester Cemetery, (Funeral Death) December 1879

On Tuesday the remains of Miss Ada Helen Bruin, Councillor Bruin’s daughter, who was accidentally drowned while skating at Groby Pool near Leicester, were interred in the family vault in Leicester Cemetery. Among those present were Mr Bruin, her father and other friends and relations. The coffin was covered with the choicest flowers. Before the remains were conveyed into the cemetery, a painful incident occurred. One of the bearers was Mr Blockley a middle-aged man and who was the manager of Mr Bruin’s establishment in Granby Street. It appears that Mr Blockley was walking by the side of the hearse and had nearly reached the cemetery gates when he fell. He was conveyed to the cemetery lodge where he died in a few minutes. Death was due to heart disease and his body was removed from the cemetery in the hearse which had been used to convey the remains of Miss Bruin.

15/ Leicester Station Body, September 1872

One evening a hamper was received at the Leicester Station and on it was an address that no one knew or had heard of. The hamper was opened to see if any more information could be gleaned as to the correct whereabouts it should be sent, but inside was the body of a small girl whose neck had strangulation marks on it. (Who was she?)

16/ Willesley, near Ashby-de-la-Zouch, June 1885

17/ Market Bosworth, May 1885 (Vicar Catches Fire)

Market Bosworth, vicar, burned

18/ Blaby Suicide near Leicester, April 1892

Thirteen-year-old Helen Martin committed suicide under painful circumstances. She worked at a shoe factory and she had complained to the manager earlier in the week that she had been assaulted by two boys who worked there, so, in consequence, he fired them. Some members of the work-staff had ignored her and told her what they thought of her, in no certain terms, and she left the factory despondent and a virtual outcast, so she went to the canal at Blaby and drowned herself.

19/ Taylor Street Corpse, Leicester, February 1899

The body of six-year-old Charles Alson was found in an ash-pit near to where he lived on Taylor Street. He had been missing for nearly a month and his head was smashed in and he was dreadfully decomposed. How he got into the pit or how his injuries were caused is a complete mystery.

20/ Syston Suicide, January 1890

Syston, suicide

21/ Bitteswell near Lutterworth, January 1899 (Murder)

A grisly murder was committed at Biteswell in Leicestershire. A baker was on his way to work when he spotted flecks of blood in the bakery and then discovered the body of Josiah Hubbard. He died from head injuries which were inflicted by his nephew. He has since been arrested and is believed to be insane. Josiah was a seventy-year-old who kept himself to himself, and he kept the nephew financially. The nephew turned up drunk one evening and he and Josiah had strong words with each other. When found by police he still had blood spattered clothing on and insanity is said to run in the family, as several relatives had died in the Asylum.

22/ Croft Railway Station Fatality, near Blaby, August 1904 (Name?)

A day-tripper from Leicester was killed at Croft Railway Station (now closed) when he tried to run across the track but was run over by a passing express train. Parts of his body were distributed amongst the crowd of people waiting at the station.

23/ Loughborough Murder, August 1885

The man, George Turlington, who was stabbed while going home at Loughborough on Saturday evening, died at his residence at Quorn from his injuries. The man in custody, Andrews, will now be charged with murder.

Loughborough Murder, August 1885

Loughborough, murder

24/ Uppingham, Rutland, September 1889

William Aris, the son of the landlord of the Horse and Trumpet, attempted to murder a girl he liked, then blew his head off. Late one Friday night he fired three shots at Annie Armsby, who was just a domestic servant whom he’d fancied for quite a while and then put the gun in his mouth and pulled the trigger. Annie was alive when the paper was written, but I don’t know if she made it or not! Aris was an immature 24-year-old who had a crush on her but when she said she didn’t want to see him anymore and then to be seen by Aris with another man, this is what made him flip and try to kill her. (Did she make it?)

25/ Leicester, April 1899

At the Leicester Police Court yesterday Albert Elijah Woodward was charged with the manslaughter of his mother, who fell in the kitchen on March 30th and broke several of her ribs. Before death, she alleged that the accused pushed her down, but his explanation was that it was an accident. The police yesterday offered no evidence, and Woodward was discharged.

26/ Dunton Bassett, September 1885 (Starved to Death)

An inquest was held in Dunton Bassett on the body of a child aged seven months, daughter of a travelling showman named Oliver Gamble. The evidence pointed to wilful neglect of the mother and death having resulted from starvation. A verdict of manslaughter was returned against Mrs Gamble, who was afterwards apprehended and committed for trial on the coroner’s warrant.

27/ Oadby Schol Shooting, April 10th 1899

Oadby School Death, April 11th, 1899

 

Oadby School Death, April 14th, 1899

28/ Leicester Factory Suicide, April 1892

Frederick Clark, a nineteen-year-old machine hand at Messrs Richards Wool-spinning Factory, shot himself at the factory where he worked. Leicester has seen an epidemic of suicides in the past couple of weeks and this was the sixth case of attempted or actual suicide. (Why all the suicides?/Why at work?)

29/ Milnthorpe Well Suicide, October 1835

A strange suicide if ever there was one! Mr John Belton of Whasset in a bout of depression climbed down a well. His brothers saw him and then tried to coax him out, but he kept on refusing to come out. They heard a splash and he dropped into the water and the brothers lowered a rope, but again he refused to grab hold of it and before they could get down there, he was already dead.

30/ Leicester Railway Murder? August 1886

Leicester, railway carriage, murder

31/ Old Dalby Murder, near Melton Mowbray, October 1835

George Turner, an innkeeper’s son from Old Dalby was accused of the murder of Henry Wells, a local farmer. They met at a beer-shop just outside Old Dalby and Turner, who was drunk as a skunk at the time, decided to argue with Wells but he didn’t rise up to him, instead bought him a pint to calm him down. Turner lay in wait for him outside and inevitably a fight broke out and a passer-by named Adams intervened. When Adams left them, Turner again started on him and it is probably then that Turner beat him to a pulp. The murderer went home and did a few chores and then sat down to eat with his family. Turner was arrested later on and told police that he’d jumped on the man’s body, cracking eleven ribs and booted him in the head. His injuries were so severe that he died of internal bleeding. Wells was about fifty and his murderer was twenty years younger and was considerably bigger build. The murder was at five o’clock in the afternoon in broad daylight.(Outcome?)

32/ Montsorrel Blasting Quarries Fatality, March 1892

During some blasting operations at Montsorrel Blasting Quarries, Leicestershire on Tuesday morning, an explosion of gunpowder occurred and Edward Holmes, a workman, was blown down by the rock, a distance of eighty feet and killed. Another man named Harper was also badly hurt.

33/ Syston Station September 1885

Syston Station, death

34/ Leicester Canal Suicide, December 1875

A young Yorkshire lass was staying in Leicester for the Christmas holidays and for some reason she drowned in the local canal. Kate Eliza Wright aged twenty-one and from Pontefract was a few years ago engaged to her cousin from Leicester but her friends didn’t agree with her choice and told her, so the engagement was called off. Since this time she had been depressed and sullen and when she was asked to stay in Leicester by her brother-in-law, she jumped at the chance. When she went missing, the canal was dragged and her body came up to the surface. Two boys later came forward and stated that they saw her jump from the West Bridge, but neglected to mention it to police. The verdict was “Temporary Insanity”

35/ Loughborough Manslaughter, March 1899

A sad shooting accident occurred at Park’s Farm near Loughborough. During the absence of their parents at a market, a boy and girl named Handley began playing with a gun which was hung on a beam in the house. The girl asked if the weapon was loaded and her brother pulled the trigger to find out, with the result that the girl’s head was blown off.

36/ Coalville Murder/Suicide May 1899

Coalville, murder, suicide

37/ Hute Lodge Farm, Earl Shilton, February 1900 (Murder?)

Mr Thomas Clarke who lived at Hute Lodge Farm in Earl Shilton was found in a pond in his grounds. A gash in his throat had been inflicted with a pen-knife but no traces of that were near the body. He was a well-known agriculturalist and had been doing work on the farm that day and was seen conversing with workmen a couple of hours before his demise. He left a widow and ten children.

38/ Barwell Suicide, March 1899

Miss Gertrude Sarah Moulds, a shoe manufacture’s daughter from Barwell, committed suicide in a grisly manner. She locked herself in her room and then instead of slitting her throat from ear to ear, she went from chin to breast-bone. She had been bed-ridden recently because of nervous debility.

39/ Anstey Manslaughter, May 1899

40/ Sutton Cheney, September 1842

A wheelwright and assessor of taxes for Sutton Cheney, William Evatt, had been despondent for some time. When the income tax papers were sent to him, he suddenly became worse (has that effect on most of us!), stating that the workload was too much. According to his friend, Mr Webster and his housekeeper, he just went into meltdown and appeared to be a madman. One morning he was found hanging by the neck from a beam in his room. “Temporary Insanity” was the verdict.

41/ Cottesmore Hunt Kennels near Oakham, Rutland September 1896 (Murder/Suicide)

This was down to two stablemen arguing with each other, then getting violent, one of them struck the other causing death. The two men were Francis Rodgers and Charles Packer and it was Rodgers who struck Packer with a poker. He battered him three times with the implement, shattering the skull. Evidence afterwards suggested that just one of the blows would have killed him outright. Rodgers was arrested and taken to Oakham Police Station and it was here he tried to hang himself in his cell. He crafted his clothing into a rope then hung it from the cell bars on the window, but he was discovered just in time and cut down. The poor chap who was killed had only been there a couple of weeks.

42/ Criterion Restaurant, Leicester,  July 1885 (Two Dead)

Leicester, restaurant, accident, two , fatalities

43/ Moria Colliery Deaths, Ashby-de-la -Zouch, September 1832

Eight men at the Moria colliery near Ashby-de-la-Zouch were ascending the coal-pit when the engineer forgot to stop the engine when they got to the pit-mouth and as a consequence, they were drawn among the machinery with two being killed immediately and various others injured. They were dragged over the wheel and thrown to the ground with immense force a height of thirty-three feet. A verdict of manslaughter was brought against William Jewsbury the engineer and he was placed in gaol to await trial.

44/ Leicester Murder, July 1919

Annie Bella Wright a 21-year-old rubber worker, was found dead in a country lane near Leicester on the 5th of July. The method of murder was a gun that fired from five yards or so away, while she was cycling by. The bike was next to her but she hadn’t been assaulted. A man on a green bike was seen cycling with her on the night of the murder and police are looking for him.

45/ Ravenstone Suicide, May 1891

46/ Loughborough Abduction, September 1885

Loughborough, abduction

47/ Silsby Child Murder, near Leicester May 1874

At Silsby, about seven miles north of Leicester, the body of a two-year-old child was found near the village with its throat cut. The supposed murderess is the mother, Sarah Newby, who is the mother of four children, three of which cannot walk. The dead child was Mary Newby, one of the twins and it was partially disabled. On Monday night at around midnight, she reported the child missing from its bedroom and P.C. Allen was sent to investigate. She said she put the kids to bed at eight p.m., then went out to see a friend and when she returned fours later she was gone. The body was found days later with its throat slit and lying in a ditch near to the mother’s house, also with its bowels cut open. The mother was chief suspect and taken to Loughborough Police Station and when police checked her room, they found spots of blood in the child’s room. This suggests that the little girl was murdered in her sleep and then an attempt was made to dismember the body and get rid of the remains, but instead was dumped in a ditch nearby. (Guilty of Murder?)

48/ Shepshed Suicide, May 1871

An unknown man committed suicide at Shepshed, about sixteen miles from Leicester. He was well-dressed and looked like a preacher when he entered the Jolly Farmer pub one night and ended up staying the night. The landlady tried to wrangle some information from him, but he remained silent. On Sunday he had breakfast and left the building and only a couple of hours later, some workmen found him face down under a bridge that crosses Iveshead brook. (Who was he?)

49/ Gynsill Lane Fatality, Anstey, April 1899

50/ Ketton Suicide, Rutland, November 1864

A bizarre case of suicide only a few days after getting married! The unnamed woman was married to her second husband, this was despite having five kids in tow as well, but went and bought threepence worth of “Battle’s Vermin Killer”, which as I’ve stated before had probably killed more humans than vermin. With a blob of treacle, she mixed the poison and then ate it. This is where it gets sad, because now she hears the kids crying and she suddenly has the feeling that she wants to remain on earth, so she gets a neighbour, and they tried to make her sick and expel the vermin killer/treacle mixture, but despite efforts, she was dead within the hour.

51/ Desford Railway Tragedy, October 1881

Desford, railway accident

52/ Syston Drowning, July 1889

Syston, bathing fatality

53/ Syston Railway Station Death, February 1892

Syston, railway, death

54/ Melton Road, Leicester,  January 1916 (Chauffeur Killed)

Leicester, chauffeur killed

55/ Uppingham, Rutland, July 1887

A man named Cort, a well-sinker was engaged at the new waterworks at a great distance underground when the brickwork and an enormous amount of rock suddenly collapsed and killed him immediately.

56/  Barrow-upon-Soar Murder, September 1870  (66? 68 North Street, now the Lime Tree Nursery, was the Trap, ex Lime-Kiln)

 

57/ Coalville Explosion- Three Deaths,   August 1870.

58/  Leicester Axe Murder?  December 1870  (Did Margaret Noon survive?)

59/  Leicestershire Railway Deaths,  December 1870  (Kibworth Station & Swannington)

60/ Thringstone Child Murder,  January 1866

61/ Fatal Explosion at Leicester (King Street)  June 1866

62/ Death on the Railway, near Ashby-de-la-Zouch.  November 1866

63/ A Woman Frozen to Death at Aylestone,  January 1867

64/  Murder of a Policeman, Sileby near Loughborough.  May 1903.

July 25th, 1903. Execution of Sileby Murderers.

Double Execution at Leicester- Both Men Protest Their Innocence.  Thomas Porter and Thomas Preston, shoe hands, were hanged at Leicester Gaol on Tuesday morning for the murder of Constable Wilkinson, at Sileby. Both men walked to the scaffold and proclaimed they were innocent. Death in both cases was instantaneous. Both men had given respectful attention to the chaplain’s ministrations.

65/  Leicester Man Slits Girlfriends Throat,  July 1905.  (Was it at Grosvenor Street in Leicester?)

66/ High Street Suicide, Melton Mowbray.   January 1906

67/  Boy’s Suicide in the Canal, Leicester.   December 1907

68/ Fatal Fall From a Tree, Teigh near Oakham.  July 1907

The coroner, Mr V.G. Stapleton, conducted an inquest on Tuesday, at Stamford Infirmary, upon Edward Exton, farm labourer, of Teigh, near Oakham, when he was admitted to the institution on July 13th, suffering from a broken leg. Richard Watchorn, a farmer from Teigh, and Edward Rawlings, a farm labourer from the same place, gave evidence that deceased when leaping off the branch of a tree, lost his balance and fell. Dr Evans said death ensued from tetanus, as the result of injuries. A verdict of “Accidental death” was returned.

69/  Rotting Corpse Found in a Wood, Ryhall, near Stamford.   March 1907

70/  Fatal Cycling Accident, Tinwell, Rutland.  July 1907

71/  Murder/Manslaughter at Newbold Verdon.  October 4th,1880

Thursday, 4th November 1880

In the case of William Arnold, a coal miner, charged with the wilful murder of Elijah Statham, at Newbold Verdon, on 26th of September, whose trial we reported yesterday, the jury returned a verdict of “Guilty of Manslaughter”, and his Lordship today passed a sentence of seven years penal servitude.

72/  Murder of a Female Child, Wigston.   November 4th, 1880

Thursday, 11th November 1880

The High Sheriff of Leicestershire has fixed upon the 23rd of this month, for the execution of Elizabeth Stacey, laundress, convicted of the wilful murder of her illegitimate child at Wigston. A petition to the Home Secretary praying for a commutation of the sentence has been signed by several thousand people, and there is a strong feeling against the extreme penalty of the law being carried out.

73/  Body on the Railway Line, Syston.  December 1880

Yesterday morning the body of  Mr John Golightly, inspector of bridges on the Midland Railway, was found in a mutilated state on the line at Syston, near Leicester. The deceased, who was nearly seventy years of age, was well known all over the line. He was walking to inspect a new bridge, when, in avoiding one train, he stepped in front of the newspaper express and was cut to pieces.

Posted by dbeasley70

Lancashire

Lancaster County Asylum Suicides

1/ May 1905

A patient was left to bathe for a couple of minutes when a clutch of inmates decided to help out. They decided to use boiling water! The patient died from scalding.

2/ September 1895

As you can see from the above postcard, (top pic) Lancaster County Asylum is an imposing building. A native of Liverpool, Nathaniel Taggart decided to commit suicide by jumping from one of the windows.

3/ March 1907

Sarah Ann Buss aged thirty-eight, became a patient here because she was a suicide risk. Part of the nurse’s training was to keep bathroom doors locked and don’t leave them alone. One nurse wanted a quick soak herself and filled the bath and then went for a cup of tea. Not the best idea! Sarah sneaked in and was found on her return with skin burns and scalding. The coroner was very scathing about the lack of a system that staff could follow, but no blame was attached to the nurse.

4/ Kirkham Triple Murder, near Preston, May 1886

Triple murder, Preston

5/ Blackpool Tower Tragedy, February 1897

A painter was going about his business, over three hundred feet up Blackpool Tower when he got wedged in the moving balance-weights that operate the lift. One of his legs and an arm was torn off by the machinery and both he and another workman, by the name of Makinson, almost fell to the pavement below, but another painter grabbed hold of them and prevented certain death. (Did he die? Who was he?)

6/ Upholland Haunted House, August 1904

The haunted house is a four-storey building overlooking the churchyard and the supposed ghost has been the subject of an inquisition on the part of three members of the council. Strange noises are heard at night in a certain bedroom and when a light is shone to find out what it is, it ceases, then when dark again it carries on. Plaster is ripped from the walls, stones are wrenched from their setting and paper is torn from the plaster and strewn all over. The mother of the family who lives there has not slept properly in a fortnight. One of the councillors who stayed in the building had a stone thrown at him and when he tried to remove the paper from the wall, he had to use a pen-knife to gouge a tiny piece off. When it went dark, the paper had been ripped to shreds. The stones that moved are unable to be lifted by one man and the whole scenario is a freaky one. (The house that used to be next to the White Lion became known as the “Ghost House”. It was demolished in 1927 and parts of it were found to be of ancient origin)

7/ Rawtenstall Fatal Explosion, April 1899

8/ Croston Church Suicide, near Preston, January 1903

An amazing act of suicide in a parish church took place in the village of Croston near Preston. Thomas Nelson, the 66-year-old sexton of Croston parish church left home to go and ring the six o’clock bell. The bell wasn’t heard, so his daughter went to see if he was all right and when she searched the church for him, she saw him hanging from a bell rope. He had of late been drinking very heavily and this may be partly the cause of why he did this.

9/ Poulton/Cleveleys Fatality, July 1885

A fatal accident occurred on Thursday night between Poulton and Cleveleys on the Fleetwood line. Thomas Etherington, a foreman platelayer, was at work on the line when a goods train from Fleetwood came along. He stepped on the downline just as a passenger train came round the curve and he was knocked down and instantly killed.

10/ Leyland, (Fatal Quarrel) April 1889

11/ Pleasington near Blackburn, (Decomposing Body Found) April 1875

A group of mason were walking in Alum Scar Wood, Pleasington when they found a body of a dead man in the stream that passes through the wood. It was in a bad state of decomposition, was partly naked and had been covered in leaves, that had fallen from the trees. An approximate guess of the length of time he’d been lying here, was several months. When they tried to lift out the body, it fell apart and innards dropped out. The clothing found nearby had two and a half pence in his pocket, no form of identity and a comb and a brass handle from a knife.

12/ Chorley Suicide, April 1885

13/ Lytham St Annes Golf Club Suicide, April 1908

At about seven on Sunday evening, Dr Muggleston from Lytham found the body of Oscar Baron from Rochdale, in the lavatory at the Dormy House, the residential part of Lytham and St Annes Golf Club. He had come for the weekend for a bit of golf but he ended up slitting his throat with a razor in the lavatory area. He was involved in a cotton waste business and he lived in Crimble Hall, Summercastle, near Rochdale, but for the past few days, he had been in a strange mood.

14/ Garstang Drowning, September 1906

15/ Burnley Murder/Suicide, April 1893

Eli Eastwood, a fish hawker, was found drowned in the canal at Burnley and the woman who he lived with was found murdered. Elizabeth Longstaffe was a middle-aged woman and her body and head had been viciously battered in with a poker, which was near the body and was covered in blood and hair. Not only would these wounds have killed her but he had cut her throat with a razor as well.

16/ Backamoor Church near Blackburn, (Buried Alive) August 1902

A 23-year-old labourer named Haworth was busy digging a hole twelve-foot deep at Backamoor Church near Blackburn, when the sides caved in and he was buried under a huge pile of earth. When somebody finally found him, just the top of his head was visible. He was then hurriedly got out, but unfortunately, it was too late to help the poor fellow.

17/ Skelmersdale near Ormskirk, (Fell into Threshing Machine) September 1871

(Did she survive the accident or did she die?)

18/ Lathom Bathing Fatality, July 1885

On Sunday, John Thomas Lawrence aged twenty who was a drawer in a colliery, went with three other men to bathe in a reservoir at Lathom. The deceased was the first to go into the water and when he had got about thirty yards from the side, a man named William Roughley called to him to mind the holes. Soon after that the deceased sank suddenly and did not come into sight again. The body was recovered in about an hour.

19/ River Lune Drownings, September 1885

On Saturday night two men named Edward Coke of Lancaster and Frank Harrison of Plymouth were crossing the river Lune, which was much swollen by rain when their boat was struck by a heavy wave and upset and both men were drowned.

20/ Burnley Tram Accident, September 1885

Last evening a boy named Randolph Boys aged seven years, was run over and killed by a tram engine on the Burnley and District Tramways in one of the principal thoroughfares of Burnley. He had just left school and was watching some sheep being driven along the streets when the accident happened.

21/ Habergham near Burnley, (Child Cruelty) June 1885

22/ Nelson Drowning, May 1891

At an athletics meet at Nelson in Lancashire, a crowd of thousands had flocked to see the athletes at various events. While this took place, the body of a six-year-old boy named Rushton was discovered in the river next to the field where the event took place. The probable cause was that he drowned while desperately trying to get across the stream near the sports ground and he fell and drowned.

23/ Lytham Drowning, April 1899

Drowning accident, Lytham

24/ Palace Music Hall Accident, Blackburn, August 1905

25/ Cottam near Preston, June 1849 (Murder/Suicide?)

The bodies of William Hull, a Preston bricklayer and Margaret Hull, his wife, were found in the canal at Cottam about three miles away from Preston. Hull had been under the influence of alcohol for a while and threatened to drown his missus. The how’s and why’s are just guesswork, but the verdict of “Found dead in the canal, appearing to have been drowned, but how they came into the canal there was no evidence to show”, was saying it was probably the husband killing the wife, then himself.

26/ Lancaster Barracks, (Soldier Strange Death) March 1885

Lancaster Barracks, soldier death

27/ Steamship “Fenella” January 1899

February 3rd, 1899- The inquest was concluded yesterday at Fleetwood upon the body of William F.Quayle, a Liverpool schoolmaster, who was one of the passengers washed overboard from the steamer “Fenella” during a passage from Liverpool to Douglas on January 2nd. The jury returned a verdict of accidentally drowned and recommended that the Isle of Man Packet Company should exercise more authority in compelling passengers to go below in case of danger.

Steamship “Fenella” March 9th, 1899

The body of J.F.White, one of three passengers washed overboard from the “Fenella” during her ill-fated passage from Liverpool to Fleetwood in January last, was found in the nets of a Fleetwood trawler yesterday morning and conveyed to that port.

28/ “Fenella” March 9th, 1899

“Fenella” March 11th, 1899

29/ Garstang, September 1888 (Wife Murder)

The wife of a labourer named Neil from Garstang, suffered horrendous injuries at the hands of her husband. He punched her, jumped on her and threw heavy objects at her, then smashed a stool over her, smashed her head on the floor and finally tried to roast her before the fire. Today he’d probably get three months suspended sentence and a course in anger management, but he was arrested but the sentence is not known. (Anyone know?)

30/ Blackpool Swindler, August 1889

 

31/ Pendle Hotel Tragedy, Chatburn, June 1901

A Sunday school party of twenty girls from Accrington were in a coach driving to Downham. The coach stopped at the Pendle Hotel at Chatburn and whilst the driver was watering the horses they suddenly bolted and went down a steep hill, straight into the Post Office. Everyone was thrown out and seven were seriously injured, with two not expected to pull through. The force was such that the coach was smashed to atoms and both horses killed.(Anyone Die?/Pendle Hotel still there?)

32/ Blackpool Train Suicide, September 1859

A gentleman from Preston killed himself on the train due at Blackpool at 9-15 on Saturday night. Before getting to Poulton station, the passengers in the same carriage knew he had taken laudanum and was nearly unconscious as a result, but no one summoned medical help. When the train pulled into Blackpool he fell among the carriages but was lifted on the platform and he then made his way down the street, with a small crowd in tow. He was found leaning against some railings by a couple of fellas and was taken to the Railway Hotel but he died there almost straight away.

33/ Howick, (Boy Found Hanging) May 1885

34/ Cliviger Railway Suicide, August 1885

Cliviger, death, railway

35/ Wesleyan Chapel Mass Hysteria, Bacup, October 1847

Mr Jackson, a well-known speaker on temperance was going to preach at the Wesleyan Chapel in front of about 1500 people. While the service was taking place, a rumour that the gallery had given way began to spread, then the inevitable mass hysteria and a mad panic for the exits. A woman and a young lad were trampled to death and another young man died the next day of his injuries. It was a case of the fastest and biggest treading on the weaker masses to get out, where little children were bruised and girls dresses torn and hats, shawls and shoes were left in the melee. The death toll was three, but there are another two in a critical condition and were not expected to pull through.

The true cause for the alarm was a pipe from a stove came out of the wall and made a funny noise. It was a sort of knocking sound and some women thought the props had given way in the chapel. The chapel was examined for structural defects after the accident and it was found to be safe and sound. (How many died? Is the chapel still there?)

36/ Preston Bicycle Death, March 1899

37/ Preston, (Fatal Accident) April 1899

38/ Preston, (Fairground Death) May 1899

During a fair at Preston, George Slater aged fifty-three, an engine tester of Skeffington Road in Preston, went on the steam roundabout called the “Cocks and Hens”. Just as it was slowing up, Slater fell off, alighting on the back of his head. He was picked up unconscious with a terrible wound on the back of his head and was removed to the infirmary, where he died shortly after admission.

39/ Chorley Murder, August 18th, 1885

Chorley Murder, August 22nd, 1885

Alfred Holbrooks and Andrew Goldsberry were charged at Chorley yesterday with the murder of James Fallow. According to the evidence, the deceased and a man named Corrigan were molesting two youths and the prisoners interfered. Fallow was knocked down and kicked in the head and neck by the accused. Both prisoners were committed to the capital charge to the Manchester Assizes.

Chorley Murder, November 9th, 1885

40/ Dutton Manor near Blackburn, February 1918

The death of a beloved family pet dog caused the depression of Mrs Margaret Dugdale, the wife of Norman Dugdale J.P., of Dutton Manor near Blackburn. The dog had been put down, due to old age and she had become inconsolable ever since.

41/ Burnley Child Murder, May 1900

Dennis O’Hara, a labourer, handed himself in at a police station at Burnley on a charge of killing his six-year-old daughter. O’Hara had been separated from his wife for six months and he’d taken to the bottle as a result. She was seen leaving Sunday school near his house and was found, later on, strangled in a chair, with a rope around her neck. The neighbours had neither seen nor heard a thing.

42/ Warmden near Accrington, (Frozen to Death) January 1890

43/ Chorley Railway Station Fatality, September 1885

Yesterday morning, in the goods yard at Chorley Railway Station, John Jones, yard man, was assisting in shunting operations when he was run over and killed.

44/ Chorley Suicide? August 1904

Colonel Henry Darlington was discovered in the garden of his home, Birkacre House near Chorley. His head was blown to bits and in between his legs was a double-barrelled shotgun. The Colonel was head of a firm of solicitors, Darlington and Sons in Wigan, and he commanded the 1st Battalion of the Manchester Regiment. At first glimpse, it would seem to be suicide but it was deemed to be accidental. (Birkacre House still there?)

45/ River Lune, Lancaster, (Drowning) August 1873

46/ Preston Murder/Suicide, September 1904

This story is one of a publican named Arthur Aston, who ran the Old Legs of Man Hotel in Fishergate, and his attempt to shoot his wife, then kill himself. One evening, Mrs Aston went to a friend’s, by the name of Roberts and was joined there later by her husband. Aston asked Mrs Roberts to go and buy something for him and when she came back, she found them both lying in a pool of blood in her kitchen. Mrs Aston had gunshot wounds to her face and above her right eye, but she was still alive. Mr Aston had a bullet in his head and the revolver he had in his hand had three chambers discharged. He is currently at death’s door and she is critical, but she uttered the words “He did it”. Jealousy is the motive.

47/ Poulton Suicide, August 1889

48/ Clitheroe Child Murder, May 23rd, 1885

At Bolton-by-Bowland Police Court yesterday, Grace Isherwood aged twenty-six, wife of John Isherwood, a farmer from Newton and Isabella Gardiner, her sister aged eighteen who was a domestic servant of Dalton-in-Furness, were charged with the wilful murder of Thomas Gardiner aged two years, the son of the prisoner Isherwood, by drowning him in a brook.

Clitheroe Child Murder, May 29th, 1885

Clitheroe, child murder

Clitheroe Child Murder, August 5th, 1885

 

49/ Blackpool, (Killed by Lions) August 1905

A butcher who worked for the Blackpool Tower Co. found two lionesses and a lion cub wandering about the Aquarium Yard, Lytham Road at Blackpool. He had gone to feed them and they were in the yard and the other in the lion-house and rather bravely he got two back in their house. Both he and Mr Walmsley got them all into the cages, but a horrendous discovery was made when they trying to find out how they escaped. On the floor lay William Livesey, a carter who worked for the Tower Company. He was nude and ripped to shreds, his left leg was dislocated and portions of the body had been eaten away. His back and chest had deep claw marks. A witness by the name of Beck, saw Livesey and another bloke go towards the lion-house and a man was seen running away. It is thought that alcohol played a major part in the stupid act of going into the lion-house.

50/ Ormskirk Suicide, June 1879

52-year-old William Meadows, a rather eccentric gentleman as described by those who knew him, had declined any offers of work recently. He spoke to no other person than his niece and he would stay upstairs for days at a time and come down for food when no one was about. He hadn’t been seen for a couple of days, so a forced entry was made into his room and he was found hanging from the bed-post. A verdict of “Suicide whilst under temporary insanity” was returned.

51/ Preston, (Set Woman on Fire) December 7th, 1885

Preston December 8th, 1885

Archibald Titterington, a spinner was charged with having caused the death of Louisa Walsh of 3, Simpson’s Brow. The prisoner, who is a married man, went into Walsh’s house with her on Saturday night the 28th ult. and had some words with her. He threw a lighted candle at her and it set her cap on fire. The flames took hold of her clothing and she ran into the street screaming. Some men extinguished the flames and she was taken to the Infirmary. She lingered until Sunday evening when she died. The prisoner was remanded.

Preston December 9th, 1885

52/ Blackburn Haunted House, May 1908

A series of bizarre things have been happening at a workman’s house in Blackburn. Nineteen items, including vases and ornaments, had been flung about in rooms where the family were seated. It sounds like poltergeist activity. Even a couple of clocks have stopped for a few days in succession at noon exactly. The owner visited Lancaster a few days back, learned that two of his relatives had died within a week of each other and then the poltergeist activity stopped on the day of the second relative’s funeral.

53/ Burnley Murder, February 3rd, 1899

 

Burnley Murder, February 8th, 1899

Walter Lusk, an ex-soldier, was charged with the murder of John Colwill German, a coach wheeler, on Saturday night week. German was walking along Edward Street when Lusk, who was drunk, came out of his house and knocked him down and kicked him. German was taken to the hospital but died the next day, his skull being badly fractured. The prisoner was committed to Liverpool Assizes.

54/ Nelson Fatal Quarrel, December 1885

55/ Whalley Abbey near Blackburn, (Corpse Found) January 1889

A dead body of a man was discovered in a room of an old tower at the entrance to the Abbey grounds. He had on him a membership card for the Caulker’s Association and had the name “Francis Chedley, St John’s”. It is thought he is a United States sailor, as there was also a card from the United States Hotel, Liverpool on him. The post-mortem suggests he’d been dead for a week or so and was in his mid-forties. Apart from this small collection of clues, there is little else to go on.

56/ Preston Suicide, January 1877

Elizabeth Blezard, a 19-year-old reeler, was found in the Fishwick Mill Lodge at Preston. She was seen the previous night but was found only a matter of hours later, the next morning. A letter on her contained these curious words:

“A talken that I did for love, there shall be seen a milk-white dove, which o’er my watery grave shall fly, tis their you find my body lie. His words are pledged into me, he never may prosper nor happy be, farewell vain world, false Jim adieu, I drown myself for the love of you. This tie that I have round my neck, I hope to carry to my grave. Farewell dear Rachael, who I always loved, I pray for thee in Heaven above.”

The “false Jim” mentioned is the lad she seeing at the time but who became engaged to another girl. “Rachael” was a companion of Elizabeth’s.

57/ Blackpool, (Athletics Death) February 1895

58/ Leeds Liverpool Canal Suicide, Nelson, March 1892

An inquest was held at Brierfield near Nelson on Monday, touching the death of fourteen-year-old, Josiah Hartley, whose body was found in the Leeds Liverpool Canal on Sunday. On March the 3rd he was summarily dismissed from his job as a cotton weaver and this caused depression of spirits. He committed suicide the same day.

59/ Leeds Liverpool Canal Fatality, Burnley, May 1899

A fatal bathing accident occurred yesterday at the Leeds Liverpool Canal at Burnley, the victim being Alfred Varley, a labourer who was employed at the Mitre Timber Works. Varley and other workmen were bathing in their dinner hour when Varley was missed. Search was made but he could not be found. Police dragged the canal and found the body, which was taken to the mortuary. Varley was only nineteen-years-old.

60/ Leeds Liverpool Canal (Child Death), Burnley, June 1899

Frederick William Dewar aged five, residing with his parents at Milner Street in Burnley, was playing with some friends on the banks of the canal on Thursday when he accidentally fell into the water. It was some time before assistance was forthcoming and the body recovered. Artificial respiration was resorted to without avail.

61/ Walton near Preston, (Body Found in Woods) September 1882

62/ Lowerhouse Lodge, Burnley, (Bathing Fatality) June 1899

63/ Newchurch near Bacup, (Suicide and Murder) May 1886

Two sisters named Jackson were found drowned in a mill lodge at Newchurch near Bacup. The older sister who lived at Bacup had just got two weeks notice to leave her job at Oakenclough Mill where she was employed as a weaver. She went to Newchurch to see her sister and they were seen together, walking past the mill lodge where they were found. They were discovered the next morning, with a message left on the bank, saying that they intended to commit suicide. An uncle told police of an incident a few months ago that the elder sister had threatened to drown the younger after a quarrel they had. The verdict was that: “The elder sister had committed suicide whilst of unsound mind and the younger was found drowned, but there was no evidence to show how she got into the water.

64/ Lytham St Annes, (Lady’s Suicide) August 1885

65/ Talbot Inn, Lytham, (Strange Death) April 1885

66/ River Ribble, Preston, (Accident or Suicide?) July 1881

Hugh Doherty from Walton near Preston, who should have been wed on Saturday, committed suicide. He had been out with some mates and on the journey home, they passed the River Ribble, which was in full flood. He shouted “Goodbye” and tried to jump over the railings but a mate of his grabbed him and there was a scuffle and Doherty escaped and dived into the river. He was swept away at a fair pace and was probably taken out to sea by the fast-flowing current. The body was not found.

67/ Bastwell Murder, near Blackburn, March 1876

Portions of the body of a teenage girl without head or limbs, which was wrapped in newspaper, were discovered in a field in the village of Bastwell near Blackburn. Later information came about that the body was that of Emily Holland, a local girl. William Fish has confessed to her murder and to chopping her up and dispersing the remains.

68/ Fleetwood, (Freak Death) February 1885

69/ Fleetwood Fatal Accident, December 1885

Johannes Guedon, a Dutch sailor on board the steamer Paola at Fleetwood, was accidentally killed. The vessel was ready for sea and the deceased and another member of the crew was lifting the hatches, when Guedon fell backwards into the hold, a depth of eighteen feet. Medical assistance was obtained but his injuries were so serious that he died in an hour and a half.

70/ Fleetwood Station Death, February 1885

71/ Fulwood Barracks, Shooting, Preston, March 21st, 1885

 

72/   Fulwood Barracks  March 27th, 1885

73/ Lancaster Soldier Suicide, July 1841

Peter Ormrod, a deserter from the 10th Regiment of Foot, went missing for seven weeks, AWOL. He was tried in a court-martial and sentenced to several months in prison. When he finished the sentence he left gaol with nothing and was unsure if the Regiment would take him back. He was forced to steal and was sentenced to a year in prison. After nine months had gone by, he kept saying that he’d rather kill himself than go back to the Regiment. The gaoler wrote to the colonel of the Regiment asking if they would take him back and the reply was”the prisoner would be claimed”. Ormrod kept his word and hung himself from the bars above his door.

74/ Preston, (Toy Cannon Suicide) May 1889

William McGregor aged sixty-three, killed himself in an extraordinary manner at Preston on Saturday. He placed a toy cannon on the top of a wringing machine and exploded it with a hot iron, with the charge blowing out his brains. The action was obviously premeditated.

75/ Blackburn Murder/Suicide, March 1892

murder, suicide, Blackburn

76/ Lytham St Annes, (Suicide Made Sure) January 1874

James Whiteside was a strange old character and was known locally as a bit of an eccentric. The 70-year-old was found hanging from a noose tied around a beam in his brother’s barn near Lytham. To fasten the rope he would have had to get on a scaffolding, then place his head in the noose and swing off. When found, his feet were a yard from the ground and he was cut down immediately. A policeman found a pistol in his pocket and it was loaded and ready to fire. Also was a knife, £10 in gold and other bits and bobs, but he had a Plan B and a Plan C just in case the others methods didn’t work.

77/ Blackburn Wife Murder, July 1889

At Blackburn on Monday, William Cox aged thirty-seven, a bolt maker, was charged with having caused the death of his wife. It is stated that early on Sunday morning he went to a neighbour’s house and asked a woman to go and look at his wife. She did so and found her lying dead on a mattress in a pool of blood. The woman had been kicked in the abdomen. Cox was remanded pending the inquest.

78/ St Annes -on-Sea (Lytham) June 1895 (Military Suicide)

Colour-Sergeant Aspin of the North Lancashire Militia, encamped at South Shore, St Annes-on-Sea, blew out his brains at five o’clock on Monday morning. He placed the muzzle and released the trigger with his toe. The men of the Company say that he had been low-spirited all the past week and scarcely able to drill them.

79/ Oswaldtwistle Suicide, November 1903 (Really Sad!) This is one of my “Favourites” if you can call them that. Would love to find out who she was or where she is buried.

80/ Clitheroe, (Cork Leg Gives Way) November 1896

Hannah Birch aged seventy-one of Hayhurst Street in Clitheroe, who wore a cork leg as the result of an accident eight years ago, slipped in going downstairs on Saturday through her artificial limb giving way. Her fall occasioned concussion of the spine, from which she died shortly afterwards.

81/ Blackburn, (Wrestling Death) August 1896

Robert Calverley, a Blackburn weaver, entered a public-house near his home on Saturday night and began to wrestle with another man. During the tussle, Calverley fell under his opponent and was so badly injured that he had to be carried home. Medical aid was summoned and it was found that his spinal cord had been ruptured. He died on Monday morning.

82/ Parbold Quarry Death, November 1896

The death is reported of Mr Thomas Taylor, quarry owner of Parbold near Wigan. While he was superintending the removal of some blocks of stone in the quarry, a large piece fell from the face of the cutting, killing him instantly.

83/ Blackpool Manslaughter, October 3rd, 1885

Blackpool Manslaughter, November 9th, 1885 (Continued from above)

84/ Preston, (Boys Bury Lads Corpse) September 1890

The body of a young boy named Bunting who lived at Gordon Street in Preston was found after an amazing confession by two boys. Robert Pentowy and William Vickers said that last week, along with two other lads, they were messing about on the canal bank and got “larking” with a crane. Bunting grabbed the chain and three others swung him around, till he hung over the water. They all legged it, except Pentowy, who tried to bring him in again. After screaming to the others to help him Bunting fell in the canal. They all returned later on, and one of them brought his body to the canal side, then carried away, but being frightened of the repercussions they buried him behind some new houses off Brook Street. The body was recovered by a labourer a couple of days later. Police are investigating the matter.

85/ Burnley Bank Manager Suicide, May 1899

86/ Burnley Child Murder, March 1899

Martha Dixon aged nineteen, servant, was indicted for the murder of her child at Burnley on March 2nd last. It was alleged that immediately after the birth of the child the prisoner threw it into the canal, where it’s body was recovered a week later. The jury decided that the evidence was not sufficient to support the capital charge and found the prisoner guilty of concealment. She was sentenced to one month’s imprisonment.

87/ Burnley Murder/Suicide, May 1899 (Did she die?)

88/ Church Street Attempted Murder, Preston, April 1906

At a house in Church Street in Preston, a butcher by the name of Albert Dewhurst was stabbed in the chest by his wife. Albert left home at 7-15 a.m., but on returning for something he was met by his wife who had a knife in each hand. She flew at him and plunged the knife into his chest causing a small gash, but internal haemorrhaging caused his death a few minutes later. One witness said he threw up his arms and fell dead, while he was on his way out of the house to the market. The wife ran up to her bedroom and locked herself in her room. The police broke down the door and grabbed hold of her just as she was going to stab the daughter. (What happened to her?)

89/ Blackburn Mill Fire, February 20th, 1885

 

Blackburn Mill Fire, February 21st, 1885

Efforts were made throughout Thursday night and the whole of yesterday to recover the five bodies buried by a fall of a wall during the fire at Knuzden Mill near Blackburn. The task was rendered dangerous by the tottering condition of the burnt-out building and yesterday another large portion of the walls fell. Portions of one body, identified by scraps of clothing as that of James Hall, painter, were recovered but the search for the other bodies will have little result, as the material under which they are buried remains at a red heat. Fragments of human bones were found yesterday, but their identification is of course impossible.

Blackburn Mill Fire, February 23rd, 1885

The bodies of the seven persons who perished in the fire at Knuzden Brook Mill, Blackburn, have now been recovered from the ruins and identified. One of the side walls of the mill fell on Saturday and demolished a large weaving shed which, it was hoped, would have started very shortly. By this fresh accident, about 300 additional workpeople will be deprived of their employment.

90/ Anchorsholme Crossing Fatality, Fleetwood, August 1905

While cycling from Fleetwood to Blackpool, Thomas Rossall, a labourer from Great Eccleston, attempted to ride around an electric tramcar which was stationary at Anchorsholme Crossing. He was caught by another car proceeding in the direction of Blackpool, knocked down and pinned beneath the lifeguard. He received shocking injuries and died at Fleetwood Cottage Hospital.

91/ Avenham Park? Preston, (Boating Fatality) May 1905

92/ Clayton-le-Wood Suicide, near Chorley, July 1868

The body of a man was found in a wood at Clayton-le-Wood, with a revolver in his hand and in an appalling state of decomposition. He had left some papers on his body to identify himself and it turns out it was William Henry Hately of Lymm near Chester. He was twenty-seven and had been to see his uncle in Chorley, when on the 18th June he went out, saying he’d be back soon, but never returned. The facial features are unrecognisable and it is being treated as a suicide.

93/ Preston Murder, June 1866

Murder, Preston,

 

94/ Garstang, May 1901 (Wife Drowns Three Kids)

Mrs Simpson, a miller’s wife, residing at Sandholme Road Cottages, drowned her three children in a washing tub. Her husband left home to go to work and when he came back at ten o’clock that night he found his children had been drowned. The 26-year-old mother had done the dastardly deed in a dolly tub. The youngest was only eighteen months old, was still warm when found and the others aged four and five respectively, had been drowned earlier. They were all laid in bed and fully dressed. The wife was arrested and the husband is inconsolable at this time.

95/ Blackpool, (Fatal Trap accident) June 1885

 

96/ Blackpool Cart Fatality, July 1885

97/ Farington Family Murder, near Preston, April 1906

In a cottage near the church in Farington, lived Henry Catterall a 55-year-old labourer along with his wife and their 12-year-old daughter, Jane Ann. The daughter knocked on the door of a neighbour, Mrs Craven, at six a.m. and asked her to come and see her mother who was ill. Mrs Craven went a little later and knocked on the door, but got no reply. She then went to Mrs Maddock, another neighbour, and they went back together. While trying to gain entry a groan was heard and as they looked up to the bedroom they saw a girl’s face at the window, with blood gushing from her neck. They eventually broke in and found Catterall and his missus lying dead in the bedroom, the wife with several cuts and wounds and the husband with his throat slit from ear to ear. Jane Ann was still alive but died later on that evening. It is supposed that Catterall who had been depressed of late, had killed them then committed suicide.

98/ Lancaster County Asylum, (Two Suicides) April 1904

Gertrude Lumsden aged twenty-seven and from Manchester was admitted to the Asylum, and on the same night, she tried to kill herself twice, by suffocation. She shoved a stocking down her throat and tied some cloth round her neck. On the following morning, she leapt out of bed and grabbed a bottle, threw it on the floor, picked up a shard of glass and severed her jugular vein.

The second suicide was shortly after the first one and involved 26-year-old William Pearson. He and another patient, Thomas Hall, had an argument last week but no violence ensued. The next day while the attendants were busy, Hall attacked Pearson and gave him a fractured skull. The jury returned a verdict of “Wilful Murder” but the Coroner refused to accept it. He said there was no evidence against Hall so they changed it to “Deceased died as a result of a blow to the head, but how it was delivered is not known.”

99/ Blackburn, April 1885

John Edmundsen, an engineer at a large cotton mill in Blackburn was killed yesterday by the bursting of the engine cylinder, portions of which drove him through a window into the mill yard. The mill machinery was stopped by the accident.

100/ Blackburn Fire Death, December 1885

A fire broke out on Thursday in the dwelling house No 22, Pollard Street, Blackburn, occupied by John Booth, weaver, but it was soon extinguished. Booth and his wife were out but there were two children asleep in bed. One of them, a boy aged two, was taken out dead through suffocation; but the other, a boy of five years of age, was rescued.

101/ Blackburn Pub Murder, October 1885

An inquest was held at Blackburn touching the death of Richard Kellett aged thirty-one, a weaver. Last Saturday night when in a public-house, he was accused of having been in prison and a quarrel ensued when he was stabbed under the left eye by a labourer named William Boyle? with a pocket knife. He died from the effects of the wound on Thursday.

Blackburn Pub Murder, November 1885

102/ Blackburn Fatal Argument, April 1885

 

103/ Blackburn, (Sisters Fatal Quarrel) January 1885

 

104/ Sir Walter Scott Pub, Preston, (Murdered on Wedding Day) August 1881

 

105/ River Ribble suicide, Preston, May 1885

At Preston yesterday there was taken from the Ribble, the body of a young woman, who appears to be about twenty-five years of age and who was respectably dressed in black. There were no marks of violence on the body and it is believed that the case is one of suicide.The body was removed and the facts reported to the coroner.

106/ River Ribble, Preston, July 1885

On Sunday afternoon, James Walsh, a piecer aged twenty-two, son of a widowed mother living in Adelphi Street in Preston, was drowned in the Ribble, opposite the new dock works. He went into the water with some other young men and having swum across, was returning to the Preston side when he cried out “I am done” and sank. It is supposed he was seized with cramp.

107/ Preston, (Cot Death?) August 1885

The body of an infant, three months old, the son of William Woan, spinner, was the subject of an inquest. The mother of the child said that on Saturday about midnight she went to look at the baby, which was in bed with her 3-year-old sister. She found the girl “lying on the child, her face close to its face” and as the baby did not stir she took it downstairs and found it was dead.-“Accidental Death”.

108/ Birley Arms, Newhall Lane, Preston, (Fatal Fire) November 1885

109/ Clarence Street, Marsh Lane, Preston, (Murderous Assault) November 1885

110/ Blackpool, (Body Discovered) April 1899

The body of a man who had been drowned was found on Saturday morning at South Shore, Blackpool. It has since been identified as that of Charles Fisher, a solicitors clerk aged twenty-six, of Blackburn, which town he left to go to Lytham on Friday. The body was fully clothed. How the man got into the water is a mystery. His relatives consider that a theory of suicide is out of the question.

111/ Blackpool, June 1899

A sad accident occurred yesterday to the only son of Mr Allen Clarke, a well-known Lancashire dialect writer, who lives in Blackpool. The boy went out fishing about 5-30 and fell into a pond. The alarm was raised by his companions and two men dived into the water, but they never found him. A drag was employed and the body got out. Mr Clarke is on a holiday ramble in Germany and Belgium.

112/ Royal Albert Pub, Blackburn, June 3rd, 1899

 

Royal Albert Pub, Blackburn, June 6th, 1899

113/ Blackburn Drowning, May 1899

A sad drowning accident occurred at Blackburn last evening. A lad of fourteen named William Southworth was bathing with a companion in the Leeds Liverpool Canal near the Bon Accord Mill, when his little brother on the bank saw him go under. His cries attracted attention but all efforts to recover the body were futile until the police got the grappling irons. It is supposed the lad was seized with cramp.

114/ Little Harwood near Blackburn, June 1899

Wilfred Parker Clarkson aged ten years drowned at Blackburn on Monday night. In company with another lad named Haworth, he was floating sticks in filter beds at Little Harwood, when Clarkson overbalanced and fell into the water. Haworth raised the alarm and some men by the aid of a clothes-prop got the lad out of the water, but though artificial respiration was resorted to, life was found to be extinct.

115/ Blackburn Drowning, June 1899

Robert Seed aged fifteen, a weaver, was drowned at Blackburn while bathing with his cousin, William Duxbury and three other boys. Duxbury went to the lad’s assistance when he saw him in difficulty. Seed caught hold of him and a desperate struggle ensued before Duxbury was able to free himself and swim to the side. The poor fellow’s body was recovered from seven feet of water.

116/ Blackburn, (Burned to Death) February 1899

117/ Chorley, May 1899 (£50 for loss of son)

118/ Beach Hotel Suicide, Blackpool, July 1877

Everard J.Briggs, a twenty-eight-year-old clerk from Weaste, went to Blackpool for a short break. He checked into the hotel at eight o’clock, then went for a walk and put in an order for his breakfast next morning, and an alarm call at 7-30 a.m. The next morning, the boot boy, Reuben Cooper, was asked by Briggs what the time was, to which he replied: 6-45. Then later Cooper took the boots to his room and again he asked what time it was. This time it was 7-23. Later on at ten o’clock, since there had been no sign of him, they forced the door and found him on the floor in a pool of blood with a gun in his hand. It was later learned that he hadn’t been to work for three weeks and his mind seemed elsewhere.

119/  Blackburn Railway Accident (Two Dead)    July 1870 (Says Plessington, but it should be Pleasington)

120/ River Ribble Drownings, Preston.   October 1870

121/  Upholland Railway Death,   December 1870

122/ West End Pier Suicide, Morecambe.  February 1902.

Posted by dbeasley70

Lambeth

1/ Stockwell Murder, Lambeth, October 1871

Stockwell, murder

2/ Lambeth Palace Suicide, January 1881

Lambeth Palace, suicide

The Archbishop of Canterbury’s town residence, Lambeth Palace (above) had a bit of a buzz about it in 1881, when in one of the tower’s there was the suicide of a man who cut his throat and nearly severed his head off in the process.

Mr and Mrs James Somsons had been in the Archbishop’s employ for quite some time, with Mr.Somsons acting as the palace-keeper. They both went to bed together, but the next morning she went to wake up hubby and he was missing. The gardener, Anning, helped in a search and upstairs he noticed some blood, a large amount. He went into the room and found deceased lying on the floor with a huge gash across his throat and a knife lying nearby. He was part-dressed and the window was open, this was thought to be because he was going to throw himself out as well. Somsons must have passed out due to blood loss otherwise he would have achieved his goal.

3/ St Annes Asylum, Streatham May 1895

A female patient at St Annes Asylum in Streatham, has committed suicide by jamming a red-hot poker down her throat.

4/ Waterloo Station, (Dead Infant Left) January 1884

C.I.D. officers are making inquiries into the murder which has just been brought to their notice. A train arriving at Waterloo from Richmond New Station was checked over by an attendant and when in the first-class carriages, he discovered a package wrapped in grey paper. The inevitable dead infant was found wrapped in white calico. A post-mortem examination revealed that the baby boy had strangulation marks around his neck, and as yet it has not been identified or no clue as to the parents was left behind.

5/ Surrey Gardens Tragedy, October 1856 (Near The Oval and Kennington Park Road)

This is a quick summing up of the disaster at Surrey Gardens. It was the largest music hall in London and there were thousands crammed in to see a preacher called Spurgeon do his religious routine. He read from a scripture then said a prayer and then sang a hymn, and when he was about to say “Amen” someone screamed out “Fire Fire, the place is falling”. Then mass hysteria ensued and panic as people trod on each other, climbing over railings and stairs giving way because of the huge numbers using them all at once. Spurgeon himself tried to calm things but the end result was eight dead and over fifty injured.

6/ Cornwall Road Manslaughters, Lambeth, April 1899

7/ Canterbury Theatre of Varieties Murder/Suicide, June 1889

The Canterbury Theatre of Varieties in Westminster Bridge Road was the scene of the murder of George Letine, a music-hall artist and the attempted suicide of Nathaniel Curragh. Letine was actually an acrobat, part of the Letine Troupe and they had just been on stage at the Paragon Music Hall, and then just rolled up outside the Canterbury. The ladies of the troupe got out the carriage and went to get changed quickly and Mr Letine was left alone nearby, when a man came out of the shadows of the stage door and said “I have been waiting for you a long time, and now I’ve got you”, then stabbed him in the stomach. He then calmly walked over to the other side of the street and put a gun in his mouth and fired. Letine was rushed to hospital but expired soon after. Curragh was said to be in no immediate danger and looks as though he will pull through.

8/ Canterbury Theatre of Varieties Murder, July 6th, 1889

9/ Victoria Theatre Tragedy, (The Old Vic) December 1858

Mass panic caused the deaths of fifteen people at London’s Victoria Theatre. The deceased are young lads aged between fourteen and twenty-one, no women died. A pantomime was on stage and a gas leak exploded, then someone shouted “Fire!”, then people scramble to get to the exits and the youngsters were trampled upon by the hoards. (In the end, sixteen people were killed)

10/ Stockwell Tube Station Suicide, January 1918

This one is particularly sad, as you’ll see at the end. It is the suicide of Herbert Ernest Pindler aged forty-four, who had been for three years been working seventeen-hour days in a munitions factory due to the First World War. In April of 1917, he had a breakdown, became delusional then attempted suicide by slitting his throat. In time he recovered and went to work at an opticians. His father had arranged to meet him at Stockwell Tube Station. While he was waiting on the platform he saw his son dive in front of the tube train. The body was terribly cut and mangled and he died there and then.

11/ Victoria Road Murder/Suicide, Clapham Common, March 1900

James Roberts, a forty-five-year-old unemployed gardener was that tired of life and the struggle to make ends meet, that he hung his 14-year-old imbecile daughter, Jeanette, from a beam and then killed himself in the same way, on the same beam. He had been out of work for some time and his wife left them both and this when he decided to end it all. They were living above a stable in Victoria Road and the whole situation had become far too much for Roberts to bear.

12/ Lambeth Christmas Deaths, January 1890

13/ Chester Street, Lower Kennington Lane, Lambeth, August 1880

This one is still there but now is Chester Way. This suicide took place at No.43, Chester Street and the victim, Mr Dixon did it by hanging. He was cut down but was already dead. The reason for his self-destruction was a common excuse in Victorian times, and that was having no work to pay the bills and to put food on the table.

14/ South London Music Hall Suicide, November 1906

This is a gruesome discovery when you turn up to work one morning and find the night-fireman hanging from the bars of the gallery. This happened at the South London Music Hall on London Road. The victim was Samuel Harmer, and as he was cut down it was obvious that he was already dead. When at work last night, the twenty-five-year-old was in a good mood and he had just been with his fiancee to the performance. He had only been there three months but was a reliable and steady worker and no reason for this rash act. His fiancee was totally beside herself when she heard the news.

15/ Brixton, May 1900 (Stabbed Twenty-seven times)

Nowadays, police and forensics would class this as personal killing due to the number of stab wounds dished out to the victim. Mrs Wakenell was forty-two and had been stabbed twenty-seven times with a pair of scissors, which were left sticking out of her chest. The deceased and her husband were separated and she only rented a couple of rooms, in which she lived with her sixteen-year-old son who had discovered her body. Nothing unusual was seen or heard, but the victim was seen in the street after midnight on Friday. Why out so late?

16/ Lambeth Tragedy, July 1889

At Lambeth police-court on Saturday, James Crickmer, a pawnbrokers’ salesman, was charged on remand with the wilful murder of James Howard by stabbing him and with attempting to murder Margaret Webb. On application from the Treasury, the prisoner was further remanded. The woman Webb was brought to court afterwards and pointed out the prisoner as her assailant.

17/ Edward Street, York Road, Lambeth, April 1892

18/ Clapham, February 1845 (Infanticide/Suicide)

Eliza Daniels gave birth to an illegitimate child in her bedroom. Then she suffocated the newly born and grabbed a razor and then slit her own throat. Her mistress heard a commotion upstairs and there she found the dead baby and Daniels was bleeding from three large gashes. Medical assistance was procured but it was just too late, and she expired soon after.

19/ Lyam Road Pram Fatality, Brixton, September 1885

A little child named Blogg was wheeling a baby in a perambulator in Lyam Road, Brixton, on Tuesday, when by some means it was overturned. Before the infant could be picked up, the wheel of a contractor’s cart had passed over its head and it expired within an hour after the occurrence.

20/ Waterloo Station Child Murder, June 1883

The Metropolitan Police force are trying to trace the people implicated in the murder of a female child, found in a railway carriage at Waterloo Station with its throat cut from ear to ear. Passengers had just got off the train, and the porters were going through the carriages when one found a large bundle. It was unwrapped and had some pieces of calico and brown paper crudely wrapping the remains of the girl.

21/ Waterloo Station, August 1885 (Death by Plum)

22/ Streatham Station Suicide, September 1897

A terribly mutilated body of a young lady has been discovered on the railway line near Streatham Station. Later on, she was identified as the daughter of the landlord of the Duke of Edinburgh public-house in Wimbledon. It is clearly a suicide.

23/ Newington Place, Kennington,  November 1840 (Suicide in Water-butt)

Sixty-one-year-old John Bowler of 38, Newington Place, had been ill for some time and the gardener was asked to sleep in the same room as him in order to keep an eye on him. One night a partner of his, Mr Jarratt, popped in to see him but he was nowhere to be found. The gardener looked around the grounds for him and saw his hat next to water butt. The feet of Bowler were protruding from the top and his head was underwater. He was dead but seemed to have been there quite a while.

24/ Surrey Theatre Fatal Accident, October 1858

It was a Monday night and the crowds were gathering outside, ready to be let into that evening’s performance. The doors opened and in they rushed, but one gentleman who had gleaned a front row seat, over-balanced and plummeted into the pit. He landed head first on a wooden seat and split it in two. He was concussed and taken to St Thomas’s Hospital but died the next morning. He is yet to be identified but wore a black hat, cords, and was about forty years of age. (Who was he?)

25/ Linom Road, Clapham, November 1896

Mrs Brown, alleged to have been savagely assaulted by her husband who was a commercial traveller, with a hammer on Monday week at their residence,14, Linom Road in Clapham, died late on Saturday night in St Thomas’s Hospital. Brown, who is suffering from several self-inflicted wounds, is progressing favourably.

26/ Atlantic Hotel, Brixton, October 1897 (Is it still there?)

27/ Philadelphia Terrace Skeleton, Lambeth, September 1895

An awful discovery was made when some workmen were demolishing some house down Philadelphia Terrace, which lies of Westminster Bridge Road. Hidden betwixt the floor and ceiling were the skeletal remains of a child. It wasn’t mummified or badly decomposed, so it must have occurred recently, but rats had stripped it of its flesh. It seems to have been murdered as there were indentations in its little skull and police are looking into the matter. (Who did this?)

28/ Vauxhall Station Suicide, August 1873

The body of a man was found in the toilets at Vauxhall Station, with his throat cut from ear to ear. At 11-30, the night-watchman was making sure everything was OK when he tried one of the doors at the W.C.’s. It was locked and getting no reply, he forced it open. Inside was a fair-haired chap, about thirty-five, five feet six inches tall with a brown jacket and black trousers on. He had a penknife, a pencil and a handkerchief on him and when the body was moved it was stone cold. He had been there at least three hours. Did the bloke poison himself? Was it a heart-attack?

29/ Surrey Theatre Fatality, September 1846 (Lad Trampled to Death)

One evening, just as the audience was leaving the building, a young lad of thirteen named John Morris, got caught up in the melee and was knocked down on the gallery staircase and before he could be lifted out he was literally squashed to death by the crowd. Not unusually in Victorian times, he was picked up and conveyed to his lodgings in Pitt Street, St George’s Road in Southwark.

(Surrey Theatre stood in Blackfriars Road, near the junction with Westminster Bridge Road in Lambeth, which was then the entertainment district of London.)

30/ Waterloo Road Railway Station, November 1849 (Suicide through Brotherly Love)

The suicide of Dr J.Allen, R.N. took place on a platform at Waterloo Road Railway Station, just as a train was setting off. He jumped under the engine and was crushed to smithereens. His brother had died recently and he became depressed and dejected. He had served in China, in his Royal Navy capacity and South America too and had just been given the job on the transport ship “Bangalore”. He and his brother were very close and although only thirty-four-years-old, he wanted to join him.

31/ Tulse Hill Railway Station Mystery, February 6th, 1899

 

32/  Tulse Hill Railway Station Mystery, February 8th, 1899

Tulse Hill Station, mystery,

33/ Lambeth Double Suicide, August 1917

An inquest was held on the deaths of Nora Mahoney and Rose Boore, who were found in bed, dead from gas poisoning, with their arms around each other’s neck. The history of the two women is that Mahoney was engaged to a sailor, got a mouthful from her mother about her friendship with a Frenchman named Menecus, so she left to go and live with Boore. Boore told a waiter where she worked “I am going to die”. A letter was left behind, signed by the both of them and it was short and sweet.

“To my dear boy,-Maggie wished us bad luck, and it has come true. After this, she can make no more mischief. Goodbye”

The “Maggie” mentioned in the letter, was a maid at the restaurant where they both worked.

34/ Clapham Junction Suicide, October 1900

Ernest Cooney was a sixteen-year-old in the 3rd Volunteer Battalion Royal Fusiliers and was discovered in a railway carriage near Clapham Junction with a bullet hole in him. His mother said everything had been all right up until he went to camp at Pirbright. It was here he learned to play cards and had been gambling his money away at an alarming rate. He had lost £18 in two months, which for someone who earned twelve shillings a week as a tobacconists packer, was a huge amount to fritter away.

35/ Paradise Street, Lambeth, February 1887 (Haunted House Discovery)

Several workmen were digging up the backyard of number 36, Paradise Street, in Lambeth, preparing for the widening of the South Western Railway, they found some bones and four skulls about three feet below the surface. A police surgeon confirmed they were human remains and had been underground for numerous years. The present owner was told that the area was once a market garden and that when she moved in several years ago, the neighbours told her she wouldn’t be there long as the place was haunted, with murders having been committed there. (Who were the skeletons?/Was it haunted?)

36/ St Thomas’s Hospital Murder, July 1889

St Thomas's Hospital, murder

37/ Dows Street Fatal Fire, Lambeth, April 1885

38/ Vauxhall Station Suicide, October 1887

Thomas Edward Turner aged twenty-six threw himself under the passing train at Vauxhall Station and died at St Thomas’s Hospital from the injuries he sustained. The reason for the act of self-destruction was quite a melancholy tale in itself. A railway guard by the name of James Peace spotted him laying down on the tracks as he was leaving Vauxhall, so he put the brakes on the train then gave an alarm and then carried on. A suicide letter was found on the remains, and it said:

“Miss Georgie Francis, c/o R.Warner, York Road, Lambeth- My own darling wife. I received your cruel letter. By the time you get this, I shall be dead. I can only ask you, as I am now out of the way, for God’s sake and for the love you may still have for me, to give up that cursed dog, Paris. You will be able to earn sufficient to keep yourself without me. I cannot live. May God bless you.

I am going to throw myself under the 9-24 at Waterloo. All I can say is, God, bless you. My heartiest curses on the persons at 65, Stratford Road, Birmingham. God bless you, from your husband Tom”

Neighbours said that the deceased’s wife was an actress and the pair had lived in Birmingham before moving here, but that she had run off with another bloke and poor Turner ended up in lodgings off the Lambeth Road. The landlady of his lodgings stated that Turner hadn’t eaten or slept properly for a week and was upset at not meeting the fellow who had run off with his missus.

39/ Gresham Arms Hotel, Brixton, September 1900 (Haunted Hotel)

Supernatural occurrences are causing management and staff at the Gresham Arms Hotel in Brixton to hand in their notices as they cannot put up with the ghostly goings-on. The bells in the hotel ring all at once, plus other bangings and battering of large objects, coming from the cellar. Doors that were locked on the night-time are wide open in the morning and gas jets seem to light themselves, as if by an unknown hand. The snooker balls are locked in a drawer at night and the following morning they are strewn all over the table as if they have had a frame or two in the night. A barmaid left the premises and her job when she woke one evening and saw her bedroom door slowly opening by itself. The manageress has also left her position. A barman who works there, an ex-soldier from South African duty, has tried to do a Scooby-Doo and the gang, by solving the puzzle himself. He is not sure, but rats or mice could be ringing the bells at night-time.

A group of spiritualists were dragged in to investigate and when they entered the hotel, the bells, whose wires had now been cut, started ringing ferociously. A medium contacted a spirit who was said to have died in the hotel several years ago. After this door began opening and shutting by itself and then a poker was thrown down the stairs.

***The Gresham Arms- just north of Gresham Road, off Wiltshire Road. As of 2016 it was disused and used to be The Gresham pub in Fyfield Road, Brixton-SW9 7HT.***

40/ Lambeth Poisoner, (Neill Cream) August 1892

Thomas Neill Cream, Poisoner

41/ Stockwell Park Crescent Suicide, October 1892 (Strange Story!)

Either this guy is a man of saintly proportions for what he did for this lady, or as gullible as s**t. Edith Ricketts was the assumed name of this lass, while she lived with Mr William Simon Percival Ricketts, a surgeon-captain in the Indian Medical Service. She was found in the apartment suffering from the effects of carbolic acid or chlorodone poisoning and lived for another 24 hours, but then passed away. This is Mr Ricketts’s story- He knew her as Edith McBean or Hamilton. That should set the alarm bells ringing when she’s got two different names! She said her father was a doctor in Sydenham and told him she was twenty-two-years-old. The first time they met was in Brighton on June 6th and she gave him some hard-luck story about how she couldn’t get work and how hungry she was. He bought her some dinner and then she suggested that she could accompany him back to London and he could help her get a job. He agreed. While she stayed in Stockwell, he was in Kent for a month or so, and when he got back she begged him that they could live together. Again, he agreed! She was passed off as his wife, so adopted the name, Mrs Ricketts. He had to go away again, this time to Bedford and while away he received four letters from her and he sent £5 to help her out. This was in September and now he came back to a dead body. (Who the hell was she?/ Was he all there?)

Yeah, of course, I’ll buy your food/Yeah, of course, you can move in with me/Yeah, of course, you can pretend to be my wife/Yeah, of course, I’ll send you money? Is he thick?

42/ Cornwall Road, Waterloo Road, December 1883 (Bridegrooms Suicide)

The arrangements had been made for a Christmas Day wedding for 25-year-old John Denton. On the day, his mother and younger brother went down to the church to watch him walk down the aisle with his new wife-to-be. The bride was waiting there at eleven o’clock, along with her parents and other relatives, but when it got to twelve o’clock, they got nervous. The mother and brother went to find him. Meanwhile, at number 37, Cornwall Road, where Denton lodged, the landlord heard a massive thud and went up to find Denton laid on the floor with a dark liquid oozing from his mouth. A bottle next to him was labelled carbolic acid. The young groom was whisked off to St Thomas’s Hospital but died a few hours later.

43/ Stockwell, October 3rd, 1885 (Double Child Murder)

Stockwell, double child murder,

Stockwell, October 6th, 1885 (Double Child Murder)

Yesterday morning Mr William Carter, coroner, opened an inquiry at Clapham touching the deaths of Mabel Eunice Mary Bicknell aged three and a half years and Eva Constance Bicknell aged eleven months, the daughters of a warehouse keeper living at Edithna Street, Landor Road, who it was alleged had been murdered by their mother, Mary Catherine Bicknell, who is under remand by her own confession. The jury returned a verdict of wilful murder against the mother.

44/ Stockwell, October 9th, 1885 (Double Child Murder)

45/ Lark Hall Lane Murder, Clapham, January 1885

Horace Robert Jay, a Clapham barman, was executed within Wandsworth prison yesterday morning for the murder of a girl named Florence Ellen Kemp in a fit of jealousy. Lark Hall Lane was where the murder took place.

46/ Canterbury Music Hall Gymnast Murder, (143, Westminster Bridge Road) July 1889 (Bombed in 1942)

Gymnast murder,Lambeth

47/ Wandsworth Rd Station Fatality,   September 1870.

48/  Brixton Station (Railway Fatality)  August 1870.

49/ Waterloo Station (Fatal Accident)  August 1870.

50/ Waterloo Road Fatal Fire (Six Children Killed)  132/134 Waterloo Road, forming the corner of Aubin St; L.C.C Fire Brigade Station still there!

51/  Brixton Baby Farming, (Waters and Ellis)   July 1870.

Wednesday, October 12th, Execution of Margaret Waters, Horsemonger Lane Gaol. (The Gaol is where Newington Causeway is today, in Southwark, but the crimes were committed in Lambeth)

52/ Suicide Due to Slander (Body found near Lambeth Palace)    December 1870

53/ Omnibus Fatality near Kings College Hospital,  November 1870

Last evening Mr Bedford held an inquest at King’s College Hospital touching the death of Mr Henry House, aged thirty-four, a man cook. Mrs Elizabeth Lee stated that she was standing on her doorstep on Saturday night last, when she observed the deceased coming across the road towards her, and just as he reached the curbstone, he slipped back and fell into the road. At that moment an omnibus, driven by Thomas Brown, in the employ of the General Omnibus Company, came by, and the wheels passed over the poor man, smashing his breastbone and fracturing several of his ribs. He was carried to King’s College Hospital, but gradually sank, and died on Monday evening. Accidental Death was the jury’s verdict, and they exonerated the driver of the omnibus of all blame.

54/ Accidental Death at Vauxhall Station,  October 1870

55/  Man Killed in Omnibus Accident,  November 1903 (Opposite Christ Church)

56/ Death at Waterloo Station, January 1904.

57/  Member of Italian Nobility Dies in Stockwell,  October 1906

Posted by dbeasley70

Kingston Upon Thames

1/ Surbiton, December 1883 (Mangled Remains)

The remains of a man and woman, completely mangled to bits, were found on the railway lines of the London and South Western Railway, between Surbiton and Ditton. The woman’s arms had been severed from her body, and the pair had massive head trauma. Nearby was a wicker basket, with a couple of rabbit skins in; it is believed they were rag and bone collectors.

2/ Kingston-upon-Thames, August 1872

A laundry woman on her way to work at 7 a.m., spotted a body of a young lady in the mill-stream at Kingston-upon-Thames. The police pulled the body out and identified it as that of a domestic servant who worked locally.The stream runs close to the property she worked at, and it believed she went out one night, and simply dropped into the water. The girl was also pregnant by a local lad whom she’d been seeing. Her sister passed out on seeing her sister’s corpse removed from the water’s edge.

3/ Kingston-upon-Thames, January 1876 (Two Brothers Commit Suicide)

43-year-old John Rule was found dead in his bedroom with his hands around his throat. His mother found the body and found a cord tied around his neck, double-knotted at the front. He had been depressed of late having had no work for nearly a month. Things were to get a whole lot worse for the mother, as the next she would receive news that her other son, Robert, had been so affected by his brother’s suicide, that he drowned himself in the mill-stream.

4/ Kingston-upon-Thames, June 1844

A 60-year-old ex-customs and excise man, by the name of Adkey, put a gun in mouth and blew the top of his head of, while sat up in bed.The place was a mess, with blood spatter and parts of the brain decorating the walls. He had been in financial difficulty and despite a pension, he was discovered living like a pauper.

5/ Near Kingston-upon-Thames, August 1885

kingston-upon-Thames, human remains

6/ Kingston-upon-Thames Suicide, June 1851

The wife of a Hammersmith cheese-monger, left the house one morning and plunged into the Thames near Kingston. The pair had only been married ten weeks and the suicide explains why she felt the need to drown herself. It went as follows:

“Dear Mr and Mrs Nutt (Her late guardians) -I have left my husband under the most dreadful circumstances; he has accused me of being seduced by my father when I was only seventeen years old and also allowing Mr Nutt the same improper intercourse. Last night he seized me by my hair, drew my head back and held a razor to my throat. He then jumped on me and tried to strangle me with his bare hands. I still persisted in my innocence of such dreadful crimes; but feeling certain he would murder me, I owned, although every word I spoke was a lie, that all was quite true. I hope God will forgive me for being so wicked, and saying what I knew was not right of my dear father and Mr Nutt. I felt so hopeless, I did not know what to do; indeed, I am almost out of my mind, and what I shall do with myself I do not know. Accept my love, and thanks very much for the greatest kindness I received from you. I got away from home whilst at the market. He left me in bed, and I promised I would remain there, but I could not. I am at Kingston. How long I shall stay here I do not know. I write in such distress of mind I hope you will excuse all my errors. With kindest love to you both and the dear children, believe me, to remain yours most affectionately-Mary R.Pratt”

The other letter found, was to her brutal husband, and it read:-

“James- For the last time I address you. May God forgive you as I do for the wicked accusations you have brought against me. When I took an oath to you last night, it was quite true, and all I said afterwards a lie, prompted by the fear of being murdered. May every wife do her duty as well as I have done, even though she has a drunken husband. Goodbye! I never expect to meet you again, your broken-hearted wife -Mary R.Pratt”.

The jury gave a verdict of “Temporary derangement”, but under the threat of violence, the poor woman deserved better than this.

7/  Aunt Murders Her Niece, Walton-on-Thames.   September 1905

8/  Death Due to Excitement at Meeting, New Malden.   January 1906

Posted by dbeasley70

Kesteven & Lincoln

Kesteven consists of the towns of- Bourne, Grantham, Lincoln, Sleaford and Stamford, plus the surrounding villages.

 

1/ Somerby Hill Fatal Accident, near Grantham, May 25th, 1907

The paper describes four people being killed, but the postcard above says it was three and several injured. It doesn’t look that serious on the face of it. It also says that it was Mr Wilkinson of Lenton who was on his way to Grantham market with goods and a dozen passengers on his waggon when the horse began to kick out. Mr Wilkinson tried to calm the beast by the head but he missed and the horse bolted down Somerby Hill and collided with a two-horse waggon. A woman named Miss Florence Piggins aged forty-seven, jumped off but landed on her head on the road and was killed on the spot. A man named George Bradford aged forty-four tried to stop the horse, but he was run down and had both legs were broken. He unfortunately died later on at Grantham Hospital. The other two deaths were 67-year-old Mrs Isaacs from Ropsley who died on her way to the hospital and Mrs Ely of Great Humby who received spinal injuries, which proved too severe as she succumbed about three hours after the crash.

2/ Fossdyke Canal (Lincoln) November 1895 (Child Murder)

A domestic servant by the name of Hannah Wright was sentenced to death at Lincoln for the murder of her illegitimate two-year-old boy, by drowning it in Fossdyke Canal (Fossdyke Navigation runs off Brayford Pool in Lincoln). She had told her sister that the father of the infant didn’t even know it existed. She went down to the canal and manually held it underwater until life was expired. When questioned about the murder, she readily admitted to killing him.

3/ Dyke Death, near Bourne August 1887

Arthur Albert Kettle aged fourteen was driving a horse and cart laden with oats and was on the way to his master’s farm. Despite being not told to do so, he rode on the shaft and he fell off and then the cart ran over his head. Kettle died within five minutes of the accident. The verdict accordingly was “Accidental Death”.

4/ Great Gonerby Churchyard Suicide (Grantham) September 1865

Mrs Sarah Farnsworth aged fifty-two, of Westgate in Grantham, left home one Tuesday and disappeared for a couple of days, then her body was found in Great Gonerby churchyard. Her daughter Elizabeth, said that her mother was always short of cash ever since she left her shop-keeping job about six years ago. A friend of her’s, Jane Ward, said that she asked her to lend her a couple of pence, which she did, she then scuttled off in a hurry. Then on Friday, a boy named Ashbourn told the local policeman John Preston, that there was the dead body of a woman in the churchyard. Upon inspection, it was found to be Sarah who was sat upright with her back leaned on a gravestone, with a prayer-book next to her. Her pockets had two empty bottles in them, probably laudanum bottles and the post-mortem revealed she had died from narcotic poisoning. “Suicide whilst of unsound mind”.

5/ Clayton & Shuttleworth, Lincoln, (Shocking Death) September 1906

Lincoln, shocking death

6/ Stamford, (Horrific Death) April 1904

Seventeen-year-old James Caunt was admitted to hospital with terrible internal injuries, sadly three hours later he died from them. Three workmen who were mucking about with a force pump said that Caunt joined in the japes and put the nozzle between his legs. His innards began to swell and he was in great agony when admitted to hospital. He managed to tell a nurse that two men had held him down and the other bloke had shoved it up him. (Presumably his bottom!) He died from his gut rupturing and peritonitis setting in. The men, James Thorold, George Burrows and Charles Baker were found guilty of manslaughter and of”feloniously killing him”. What a way to die, poor bugger!

7/ Old Ship Inn, Pointon, August 1906 (This pub is still there! Murder/or Suicide?)

Mrs Hind, the wife of the landlord of the Old Ship Inn at Pointon, was discovered lying in a heap on the living-room floor with three bullet wounds to the body. A shot had ignited her clothes and the resultant burns, caused her to be rushed to the hospital. She died a month later of her burns.

8/ Sleaford Railway Station, (Fatality) October 1894

William Trolley aged forty, a plate-layer who worked for the Great Eastern Railway Co., was run over by a goods train at Sleaford. He was killed about twenty yards from his house, having the top of his head severed off, causing instant death. He leaves a widow and six children.

9/ Belton Park Suicide, December 1915

Belton Park, suicide, Grantham

10/ Belton Park Death, July 1869

Volunteers from adjoining counties met at Belton Park for inspection by Colonel Wombwell, with the Robin Hoods of Nottingham excelling in the exercise. In the searing heat of July 1869, they marched to Belton Park, which is a couple of miles from the railway station. The bandmaster of the March Rifle Corps dropped down dead from heat exhaustion and it is also thought that another death has occurred at the same time. Around fifty men were treated for heat exhaustion and whisked off to hospitals. There were several thousand men in the area performing these manoeuvres.(Anyone know any more?)

11/ Lincoln Lunatic Asylum Suicide, December 1864

Sixty-year-old Samuel Baker, who was a patient at the Lincoln Lunatic Asylum, killed himself by hanging. He was clearly in the right establishment because he believed that every meal he ate cost him a £1000, therefore he hardly ate a morsel while there. He tied one end of his handkerchief to the doorknob and other around his neck, then sank down to the ground slowly strangling himself.

12/ The Strugglers Inn Suicide, Lincoln, October 1883

This pub is right next to the castle on Westgate and this is where crowds would gather to watch the public executions. I believe it to be the case that the condemned prisoners were allowed a pint in here before they were strung up. Is it true? Anyway, in October of 1883, Charles Lewis aged fifty-three, was discovered in a hayloft adjoining the Struggler’s pub, hanging from a beam. The brother of Lewis said he was a very depressed sort of person, unmarried and was addicted to drink. The man who found the body, William Brown, said he went up to the granary and saw him hanging by a rope. He was in the pub the previous night enjoying a jar or two and didn’t seem despondent in any way.

One thing that could have led to his suicide was the fact that he had nowhere to live since their mother died a few months ago. When found by P.C. Calvert he had no money on him and his feet were on the ground, with one hand was grasping the rope. The verdict was the same as always in these cases, with “Suicide during temporary insanity”.

13/ Boothby Pagnell Fatality, September 1909

14/ Burton (Lincoln) November 1888 (Decomposed Corpse Found)

An atrocious discovery was made at Burton Fen when a couple of men named Gray were going through the cemetery plantation in Burton Fen, when they stumbled upon the body of a man in the water. He was badly decomposed, wearing a black jacket and a pair of cords and was about sixty odd. He had no front teeth and had a full beard. The corpse was identified as that of William Meadows, who worked for a builders in Lincoln, who went missing in early July and hadn’t been seen until now. His wife was extremely worried as to his whereabouts and thought he had gone to America to see his daughter.

15/ Stamford Suicide, March 1888

Thomas Williams aged fifty-seven killed himself by jumping off the iron bridge over the River Welland into the water. A passer-by named Taylor heard the splash, but could not help the man as he himself couldn’t swim. He went to get help elsewhere and police dragged the river, the body was finally recovered. Williams suffered from severe rheumatism and this preyed on his mind as the work had dried up about three years ago.

16/ Sleaford Railway Station Death, March 1883

Robert Nichol, a signalman’s labourer in his seventies from Boston, was knocked down by a train at Sleaford Railway Station. He worked on the Great Northern Railway and was working on the new station at Sleaford. While shifting to avoid a locomotive he stepped right in front of a ballast train. His legs were nearly severed in the accident and he was carried to the waiting-room, to await medical attention. When on his way to the hospital at Boston, he dictated the terms of his will. When he arrived both legs were amputated and it was found he had serious head injuries as well.

17/ Lincoln, (Suicide by Mirror) August 1889

Lincoln, suicide by mirror

18/ Deeping St Nicholas, (Traction Engine Death) October 1909

A shocking accident befell poor Mary Mulligan as she came back home from Roman Catholic funeral with her brother, who is a Catholic priest, as they were cycling. It was a bit windy and she was riding one-handed, with the other holding on to her hat when they saw a traction engine coming up. While in the process of passing the huge vehicle she skidded and her arm fell under the machine. As she screamed in pain, her head and body were dragged under as well, causing her to killed on the spot. Sadly Miss Mulligan would have gone to a convent near Manchester to finish her education.

19/ Bourne Workhouse Suicide, February 1897

An inmate of the Union Workhouse at Bourne, Thomas Smith, despite being well into his eighties, decided that suicide was the best option for him, so he slit his throat with a razor in the yard adjoining the day room.

20/ Traveller’s Rest Inn Death, Lincoln, October 1880

As far as I know, this pub is still there but used for student accommodation nowadays. Anyone staying there, hold a seance and see if you can muster up the spirit of Mrs Mary Butler, a 48-year-old widow who was landlady of the Traveller’s Rest. She went to bed at ten p.m. one Sunday night and during the night her two daughters heard a noise. They called out to their Mum but she never answered and on closer inspection, she was found to be deceased.

21/ Lincoln Railway Station Suicide, August 1854

As the train stopped at Lincoln station at 3-30 p.m., as a porter opened the door to the first-class carriage they discovered the corpse of a gentleman with a bottle of poison next to him. His identity at the time was unknown.

22/ Temple Bruer Child Murder, February 1879

Temple Bruer, child murder,

23/ Ruskington Fatal Accident, (Sleaford) November 1917

This rang a bell as soon as I heard the name. I remember seeing Richard Madeley on “This Morning” getting terribly excited by the tales from locals who rang into the show, saying that they had seen a face in their car windows while driving near Ruskington. They nicknamed it “The Ruskington Horror” and no feasible explanation was ever put forward, as to the cause of this highway haunting. I doubt it was this lady though. While crossing the railway line at Ruskington, Mrs Pattinson the wife of Alderman Robert Pattinson, a well-known figure locally, was run down by a passing train and killed instantly.

24/ North Hykeham Filicide, September 1901

Mary Jane Roe of North Hykeham, grabbed hold of her three-year-old son and cut his throat with a kitchen knife. Then, in  “Amityville” style, she calmly moved about the house and walked upstairs and slit the throats of her eight-year-old and her five-year-old, who were asleep in bed. The youngest, Alfred, was killed at the scene, but the other two pulled through. Roe was arrested and is in custody. (What happened to her?)

25/ Brayford Pool Body (Lincoln) October 1884

The body of a male child was fished out of Brayford Pool when discovered by George Barton, the water bailiff. He was in a boat on the Pool when he spotted, what he thought was a package, floating on top. He managed to grasp hold of it and found to his horror it was the body of a child wrapped in a newspaper. The body was taken to the mortuary and police are looking into the matter.

26/ St Leonard’s Street, Stamford,  (Tragedy at a Well) December 1900

27/ Heckington Murder, March 1833

William Burbank was a well-known member of the village society at Heckington. He had a good day at work, making a few bob on the way. He went to celebrate with a drink in a beer-house at three p.m. and got talking to a group of men who were in there propping up the bar. When he mentioned he’d made a few quid, their ears pricked up and when he left an hour later, to head off to Boston, he was followed by William Taylor who bludgeoned the old fella to death. He smashed in his jaw and broke other bones in his body, giving him a really good kicking, then robbing him of all his cash. His mutilated body was found early the next morning. William Taylor was arrested and later convicted of the murder of Burbank. He was hanged at Lincoln on March 18th, 1833.

28/ Bourne Drowning, February 1887

An inquest was held into the death of Stephen Russell, a shoemaker, who was discovered lying face down in approximately two feet of water in a stream that ran past his back door, wearing only his socks and a shirt. The landlady reports seeing him in bed earlier on and said he had been receiving medical treatment lately. He was alive when fished out but died after less than a minute. The verdict was, that he had died from shock and drowning, but the mystery remained as to what he was doing there.

29/ Nottingham and Grantham Canal Body, July 1888

William Bond Newcombe, a forty-year-old groom, was discovered floating in the Nottingham and Grantham Canal. His father identified the body and stated that he was a single man and lived in Swinegate. He was found by William Brassley of Harlaxton, who saw the man on the surface but went to tell the police, rather than fish him out.

30/ King Street/Sincil Bank, (Drowning Mystery) December 1915

Drowning mystery, Sincil Bank, Lincoln,

31/ Monks Abbey Crossing Suicide, Lincoln, February 1892

As the Cleethorpes train approached the station at Lincoln, due in at 9-17, it went over the crossing at Monk’s Abbey. The stoker saw a man sitting on a gate, then he suddenly ran to the tracks and put his head down on them and let the train run over him. They found the mutilated remains later on, with the head virtually non-existent. The remnants of the unknown man had brown beard and moustache, around thirty-ish and about five feet seven tall.

32/ Barkston Junction Manslaughters, (Grantham) March 1874

John Whittle, an engine driver, was charged with the manslaughter of Henry Crawford and Arthur Casburn. This was as a result of the fatal collision at Barkstone Junction, approximately three miles from Grantham on January 10th in a dense fog. He was found not guilty of any neglect that would render him open to a manslaughter charge and it was deemed to be an innocent mistake. Whittle was discharged.

33/ Ewerby Lightning Fatality, (Sleaford) May 1891

Whilst working in a field at Ewerby near Sleaford one Wednesday afternoon, a labourer named Bee was struck by lightning and was instantly killed. Two companions escaped unhurt.

34/ Helpringham (Sleaford) June 1895 (Not very often you see this jury verdict!)

Helpringham, lightning death,

35/ Morton near Bourne (Burned to Death) January 1909

A horrific burning fatality occurred at Morton near Bourne when 14-year-old Jessie Beatrice Frone was trying to look after a five-year-old child and adjust her hat in windy conditions, then disaster struck. She was trying to adjust her hat and put the lantern, which had broken glass in it, between her arms. The flame, fanned by the wind, caught her clothes and next thing she knew she was on fire. Poor Jessie died from the third degree burns to her skin.

36/ Durham Ox Crossing Fatality, Lincoln, May 1885

George Willey’s wife, of No.24, Montagu Street, was standing at the Durham Ox Crossing chatting with her husband and two other blokes. The gates closed, in order that a pair of trains could pass through. This little party were right where the tracks fork in different directions, and to top it all Mrs Willey’s dog ran off and she made an effort to save it. She was struck and landed a couple of yards away, on the line, then the rest of the train ran over her virtually cutting her in two. “Accidental Death”.

37/ Welham Street, Grantham /River Witham (Baby’s Body) September 1887

A man by the name of Rose was walking along the River Witham bank, near the bottom of Welham Street, when he noticed something in the water. It was a parcel wrapped in brown paper and Rose’s dog managed to fish it out. When unwrapping the package he finally found the body of a baby boy. The post-mortem revealed that it was fully formed, had never breathed but it had a bruise on its head. The Coroner suggested a verdict of “Still-born” be returned, which was duly done.

38/ Lincoln Castle Executions (1722/1747)

Lincoln Castle Executions

39/ Thurlby (near Bourne) August 1890 (Double Murder /Suicide)

A man named Charles Holliday lived with Hannah Hall in one of the cottages less than a hundred yards from the railway station, along with 7-year-old Charles Hall and their six-month-old, Harriet Holliday. He went off on Saturday night and when he returned on Monday morning all the curtains were drawn with no sign of anyone about. The neighbours were worried, so a policeman went to look for Holliday and found him and asked him to come back home to find out if all was OK. The door was forced open and the first thing they saw was Hannah Hall, hanging from a beam with an upturned chair nearby. Even more horrendous a sight was to greet them upstairs, when they found the two children laid in bed with their throats slit. The little boys head was nearly detached from the body, with the baby also badly mutilated. It is believed that thirty-seven-year-old Hannah Hall was an alcoholic.

40/ Grantham Area (Man Decapitated) March 1899

A verdict of accidental death was returned yesterday in the case of a man who was found decapitated on the Great Northern line near Grantham. From inquiries made at Newcastle, it is believed that he was John Hemingway Woodhead, lately carrying on business there as a builder and contractor.

41/ Tallington Crossing Decapitation, November 1883

A fatal accident occurred to a Mr Porteous, a tradesman from Peterborough in Cambridgeshire. He was crossing the railway line at Tallington when he was run over by an engine and decapitated. He was an owner of a lot of property in the Peterborough area.

42/ Lincoln Fair Fatality, May 1888

Lincoln Fair, fatality,

 

43/ Canwick, March 1857 (Skeletons Discovered)

While some workmen were excavating earth on Major Sibthorp M.P.’s estate at Canwick, they found a couple of skeletons about a foot and a half below the surface. One is adult and the other is of a child, approximately three-years-old. The adult was in the foetal position and close to the bodies was a razor and a small dagger, both rusted up. The local villagers were scared to go near the place where they were dug up, saying that it filled them with dread and despite not knowing that there was a pair of skeletons under the ground. It looks to be a case of double murder. (What became of the bodies?/Was it murder?)

44/ Leadenham (Sleaford) (Hayfork Fatality) September 1887

Arthur Theaker aged thirteen, died from injuries received while working for Mr Howard of Leadenham. He fell from a ladder straight on to a hay fork, with the prongs having penetrated his head. The doctor was called at 5-30 p.m. and by this time he was unconscious. The skull was fractured and the fork prong had entered the brain. He lingered until the next day when he finally succumbed to his horrific injuries. It was deemed “Accidental Death.”

45/ Fighting Cocks Manslaughter, Corby Glen, (Stamford/Grantham) November 1886 (The pub is still there!)

George Parker met with his death outside the Fighting Cocks public house in Corby Glen. He got into an argument with a bloke named Edward Bullock on the 10th November, all about politics and then the inevitable fight took place. The landlord threw them both out, but they carried on outside and Bullock punched Parker in the face, then he smacked his head on the pavement. He suffered from a fractured skull and died the following day from compression of the brain and Bullock, the 24-year-old shoemaker was charged with manslaughter.

46/ Lincoln Double Murder, June 1885

Lincoln, double murder,

47/ Grimsthorpe Castle (near Bourne) (Car Crash) May 1902

A fatal car accident took place near to Grimsthorpe Castle. The chauffeur to Lord Willoughby de Eresby was driving his master’s car with three adults and a child as passengers when the car spun out of control when going down a hill. The passengers were thrown free, but the chauffeur was killed at the scene. A coachman received terrible injuries and is not likely to pull through. All others were OK, with the child was luckiest of all, being flung over a hedge and sustaining minor cuts.

48/ Stamford Drowning, August 1882

A lad named James Roberts living in St Leonard’s Street, Stamford, was drowned whilst bathing in the river near Studd’s Mills on Wednesday afternoon.

49/ Lincoln Lunatic Asylum, (Set Himself Alight) May 1833

A patient at the Lincoln Lunatic Asylum, Charles Stephenson, had a habit of self-immolating and this came to a head when smoke was seen to come from a window in his room. He somehow managed to set light to his clothes. He was in the infirmary for four or five days, in terrible agony until he passed away. He was sixty-three and had been in the asylum for a number of months.

50/ Dunston Fatality, April 1909

A car in which Lord Westmorland and other Blankney Hall guests were driving, overtook a horse and cart being driven by a boy. The horse reared up and knocked the young lad down, then ran over him. The motor-car conveyed the boy to Lincoln Hospital but he died on the way. He was later identified as having the name Asher and was only fifteen years of age.

51/ South Stoke Suicide, near Grantham, August 1892

South Stoke, suicide

52/ Stamford Railway Remains, April 1909

The mutilated remains of a middle-aged man was discovered on the Midland Railway near Stamford. The four p.m.train from Peterborough found traces of blood on the engine, so this is thought to be the train that struck the stranger. When he was discovered he had both legs missing as they had more than likely been sliced off by the train.

53/ Bourne Manslaughter, July 1891

Two men named Garfoot and Fairchild who were both employed on the Great Northern and Midland line at Bourne, were both lodging in the same house, when an argument erupted, with Garfoot accusing Fairchild of taking too much interest in his missus. Garfoot beat the hell out of Fairchild and gave him a fractured skull and had a leg broken, along with a shattered ankle, as a result of the altercation between the two of them. Fairchild lay in hospital in a critical condition and Garfoot was arrested.

54/ Stoke Grange near Grantham July 1887

An awful accident occurred at Stoke Grange, about eight miles from Grantham, when Frederick Minta, a farmer, was trying to get a tree trunk from out of the River Witham. A team of horses dragged the giant hunk of timber onto the bank, when Minta got snagged up in the chains and the huge tree was dragged over his body. He screamed at the others to release the tree, but they levered it up so he could be released and he died about ten minutes after being freed.

55/ Reepham, (Awful Death) March 1883

Reepham, shocking death

56/ Edenham Double Suicide, near Bourne, July 1907

Claude Deering Dean and Emily Lockwood struck up a close relationship while he was Long Eaton. Not unusual you might say, but the problem was that he had a wife and kids in Birmingham. They became infatuated with each other and passed off as husband and wife. They decided on a suicide pact together, by both taking a swig of oxalic acid, then jumping into the river at Edenham. The law states that if attempt suicide together and one of you survives, the other one can be tried for murder. This is just what happened and Deering was sentenced to death for his part in all this, but he was reprieved at the last minute and given the sentence of penal servitude (hard labour), for life. He was Richard Deering in some newspapers!

57/ Stanley PlaceMurder, Lincoln, April 1891

Twenty-four-year-old Arthur Spencer, a butcher by trade, was seeing a 30-year-old widow with four kids by the name of Mary Garner. He asked her to marry him, but she wasn’t interested and kept on refusing his offers. He laid it on the line one evening and said that if she didn’t marry him, he would kill her, then commit suicide. Mary laughed it off but he turned up at her home in Stanley Place one night and shot her in the chest. Mary managed to get to the neighbour’s house but she died within the hour. Spencer was found on the floor of her house with a gunshot wound to the mouth. He survived and was later on, in July 1891 sentenced to death for her callous murder.

58/ Woolsthorpe-by-Colsterworth, August 1884 (Double Child Murder)

Sarah Ann Rippin of Woolsthorpe-by-Colsterworth near Grantham was charged with the murder of her two children. Annie Elizabeth Rippin, thirteen months and John Thomas Rippin aged three years were the victims. She took them to the pond at Colsterworth and drowned them, then this story was repeated to her neighbour who then informed the local police. The policeman went to the home of Sarah Rippin and asked her where the children were. She pointed to the pond. They immediately dragged the pond and found the two, with their heads buried in the silt at the bottom of the pond. (What happened to her?)

59/ River Welland at Stamford, (Child Drowns) February 1895

60/ Norton Disney Gamekeeper Murder, February 1877

Henry Walker, the gamekeeper on Viscount St Vincent’s estate at Norton Disney, was with a watcher named Wells in a woods about a mile from the village. They heard a gunshot coming from a plantation so they hurried in that direction. Two poachers came out of nowhere and threatened to blow their heads off if they came closer. They ignored them, but the two poachers ran off through the plantation and they eventually lost them. They caught up with them and this time when they were told not to come any nearer, they again ignored them, but this time the poacher shot him in the legs. Wells went to get help and Walker was taken back to his cottage. He was medically cared for but he died a few days later. Three men were arrested, but Wells couldn’t identify two of them, so the real killer was still out there somewhere. (Was anyone ever tried for Walker’s murder?)

61/ Helpringham (Sleaford) June 1895 (Lightning Fatality)

Two brothers by the name of Dove, along with another man named Massingham, were in the corn-fields labouring at Helpringham, when they were struck by lightning. Massingham and one Dove brother were badly injured, but sadly the other Dove brother died at the scene. Massingham is in a critical condition. (Did Massingham make it?)

62/ Skellingthorpe (Concealment of Birth), (Lincoln) July 1869

A 1fifteen-year-old domestic servant named Mary Ann Hollingsworth, was up in court on a charge of wilful murder of her female infant on May 2nd,1869 at Skellingthorpe. The judge said there was no case for murder and although she might have known her condition and attempted to conceal it, her child was delivered without her knowledge, with her having mistaken the symptoms. Even though he knew of the delivery afterwards and having not mentioned it, they could not find her guilty of concealing its birth.

63/ River Welland Drowning, Stamford, July 1888

64/ Uffington Newly-Wed Suicide, (Stamford)  September 1865

A suicide in the village of Uffington near Stamford, has caused quite a buzz in the neighbourhood. Richard Barsby, a sixty-four-year-old labourer married a sixty-year-old widow, Elizabeth Kirby and while he went out to work she stayed at home and did the house-wife chores. Barsby comes home one evening and finds Elizabeth dead, with a glass next to her and some powdery residue at the bottom of it, probably laudanum. He found a letter with the wedding ring in, explaining that she was fed-up and wanted to die, despite being newly married.

65/ Timberland Suicide, September 1888

The postmaster at Timberland, Thomas Abbot, was found in a water-butt with the top half of his body immersed in the water. He had calmly put his hat and stick down then committed suicide by going head-first into the tub.

66/ Washingborough Shooting,  May 1859

I doubt if you’ll see the headline “Harry Enfield Accidentally Shot”, but that was exactly what happened in this case. Henry Enfield was part of a group of poachers who were on their way to Washingborough, when the loaded gun in his pocket fell out and went off, sending the bullet straight into his head, nearly blowing off one side of his face. This was all seen by a passing train guard who was on the Boston/Lincoln train at the time. When he rolled into the station, he explained what he had spotted to a copper and they, in turn, went to Washingborough and took care of his corpse.

67/ Lincoln Workhouse Suicide, January 1883 (On Burton Road)

Lincoln Workhouse Suicide

68/ Little Bytham Railway Station Fatality, September 1884

William Camm, a platelayer aged thirty-three was killed at Little Bytham Railway Station while working for the Great Northern Railway Company. Camm was with Charles Edinburgh, William Taylor and Robert Daft re-sleepering the siding and they had to move some trucks which were in the way. They had removed two and were moving the third, when the last one started to slide towards them and caught Edinburgh and Camm between the buffers, which neither saw or heard coming as an engine was blowing off steam at that exact time. Both men were whisked off to the hospital, where Camm died and Edinburgh escaped with a few minor cuts and bruises.

69/ Coleby/Coleby Lodge Fatal Accident, (Six miles south of Lincoln) December 1883

Joseph Goy was a forty-three-year-old labourer who worked for Mr Howard of Coleby Lodge near Lincoln. Goy and another man named Baker, were putting some sheeting on the top of the haystacks, which had been blown off in the night, back on, when Goy was blown by the gust of wind onto the hard frost-bitten earth. The distance was about fifteen feet and he landed on his head and dislocated his spinal column, therefore rendering him paralysed. At Lincoln County Hospital it was discovered that he had no use of his arms, legs or chest muscles, and from here on he got progressively worse and eventually died of his injuries.

70/ Stamford Child Murder? August 1867

Edwin Goldsborough aged thirty-six and Louisa Elston, alias Tomlin, were charged with the murder of Alfred Elston on the 16th March last. Both of them were inmates of the Thrapstone Workhouse in Northamptonshire and it was while they were here that someone heard the two of them planning to go off together and that she would take the child with her. When they arrived in Stamford, he told her that the child was a hindrance and she should get rid of it. Not long after this conversation, Louisa told a policeman that her child had fallen in the river. He was suspicious and they were taken to the police station. In the end, Goldsborough was let off and she too received a “Not Guilty” verdict of murdering her child.

71/ Mint Lane off Mint Street, Lincoln, (Suicide by Poisoning) June 1889

Lincoln, poisoning suicide,

 

72/ Welton Cliff Suicide near Lincoln, February 1885

Edward Knowles was a sixty-seven-year-old farmer from Welton Cliff near Lincoln. His wife woke up one morning to find him missing from bed, but she thought he had gone out early. Time ticked on and she got worried as to his whereabouts when a search was made to look for him. He was discovered in a pond in one of the fields and it was clearly a case of suicide, not an accident.

73/ Fulbeck Hall Hunting Death, (between Sleaford and Newark) March 1868

The splendidly named General Mildmay Fane, Colonel of the 54th Regiment, died in a hunting accident near to his country seat of Fulbeck Hall. His horse stumbled and threw him off, where he landed head-first. When attended to, he was found to be already dead with his neck having been broken.

74/ Claypole Station Fatality, near Grantham, November 1866

A verdict of “accidental death” was the outcome of the inquest into the death of a little girl at Claypole Station near Grantham. Seven-year-old Ada Newton, the signalman of Claypole Station’s daughter, went to speak her father when the express train was due to thunder through the little station. The father’s job is to signal if the line is clear, to pass the station and he was getting ready when Ada crossed the line, where the entire train, carriages and all, trundled over her frail body. She was badly mutilated and death was obviously instantaneous in this case. (No doubt closed and abandoned?)

75/ Deeping St Nicholas (Lightning Fatalities) July 1866

76/ Branston, (Concealment of Birth) July 1860

Ann Nutt was up on a charge of wilful murder of her illegitimate child at Branston on the 16th April. She was acquitted of this and convicted of the lesser crime of concealment of birth. The housekeeper had already been in custody for three months, so the judge ordered that she serve another three months with hard labour, for what she had done.

77/ Eagle, (Religious Suicide) March 1888

Between Lincoln and Newark lies the village of Eagle and it was here that 72-year-old Mr Crosby decided that suicide was a good option for him. His wife got up and started to make breakfast but when she called him to come down, there was no reply. She went up and found him hanging by a piece of cord from the bedpost. She raised an alarm and he was cut down by neighbours. No reason could be assigned for his self-destruction, apart from his depressed state of late, as the uber-zealous religious fanatic had seemed less hopeful for the future, so he had killed himself. Religion was not the answer!

78/ Sleaford Railway Station Fatality, November 1883

Another death near the station at Sleaford. This one was labourer Thomas Gray, who was run down by an express train while crossing the line at the West signal-box, not far from Sleaford Station. The gates were locked, as the train was due, but it’s thought that Gray climbed over the fence and was then struck by the train. A G.N.R shunter shouted at him that the train was coming and he ran to the other side but unfortunately he never made it. The train driver said he blew the whistle, but Gray just ignored it and before he could stop he had collided with him, leaving the body badly mutilated. The landlady of the house he lodged at said that he was a little deaf. He had also been unemployed for three weeks but was still in good spirits. The remains were carried to the Nags Inn, with a foot severed off and one leg carried some distance by the train. Also, one of his hands was just hanging on and the head smashed to a pulp.

79/ Lincoln High Street, (Tram Death) August 1886

Lincoln High Street, death, tramcar,

80/ Upper Bracebridge Train Death, (Lincoln) April 1880

A dreadful accident occurred at Upper Bracebridge near Lincoln, while eight-year-old Elizabeth Poole was playing on Bloxholme Road with her cousins, two lads named Darcy, when a locomotive attached to a threshing machine came past. The driver told the kids to stay away, but kids being kids the two boys jumped on the straw elevator section of the thresher. Elizabeth just carried on walking next to the apparatus, when she tumbled and fell underneath. The wheels had gone directly over her head, causing instant death.

81/ Nocton Heath Poisoning, February 1849 (Was he ever found?)

A strange tale of a servant girl who was allegedly poisoned by the father of her child. The nineteen-year-old Mary Ann Melton who worked for Mr Hills, a farmer, was struck down with some kind of illness which was so severe that a doctor was called for and she was found to be collapsing all the time. The doctor, Mr Snow, was told by the girl that her sweetheart, John Clark, who worked as a shepherd, had told her to take some powders mixed with milk so she would miscarry. It turned out to be arsenic and she died after lingering a while. Mr Hills, whom they both worked for, was asked by Clark if he could lend him £10. He gave the lad the money and he wasn’t seen again. This was while his girlfriend was doubled over in bed dying from the poison he gave her.

82/ Colsterworth, November 1878 (Murder Confession)

In Nottingham one evening, a drunken chap named William Allen, went up to a policeman and confessed to a murder that he supposedly committed a couple of days ago on a girl named Elizabeth Bennett in a field in Colsterworth near Grantham. The police officer took it seriously enough to lock him up in the cells, while the matter was investigated. (Did he kill her?)

83/ Scothern Suicide, April 1882

Scothern, suicide

 

84/ Market Deeping (Stamford) (Child Catches Light) August 1904

In a field at Market Deeping, a little girl named Hilda Batty was burned to death in a horrendous accident. Her parents left her guarding some labourer’s clothes, who was a few yards away and the young lass couldn’t resist digging around in the pockets. A box of matches came out and she began to strike them, one by one, but a spark caught hold of her clothes and within seconds she was a ball of flames. She was rolled on the floor and the fire was put out, but she sustained third-degree burns in the process and consequently, Hilda died from the burns.

85/ Coleby (South of Lincoln) June 1829 (Skeletons Found)

Several human skeletons were found about twelve inches below the surface at Coleby near Lincoln. They were in a foetal position and were not laid out in a common burial way. Along with the bones, there were swords and daggers buried with them and were believed to be Roman in origin. (Where did these end up?)

86/ Grantham/Ponton Train Fatality, August 1883

The inquest took place on the body of Ada Woods, wife of labourer George Woods, who was killed on the G.N.R. line. It was revealed that she was near-sighted and a bit deaf, when taking George’s tea to a field he was working in she crossed the path which led from Grantham to Ponton. The London to Scotland express came hurtling through at the exact same time she was crossing the line and she was hit, head on. It was judged as an “Accidental Death” and her remains, which had both arms and a leg severed clean off. She suffered facial mutilation and her trunk was crushed as well. It was recommended that a bridge should be erected in this accident hot-spot, within a six-year period.

87/ Grantham Octogenarian Suicide, March 1890

88/ Tallington Train Fatality, (Between Market Deeping/Stamford) May 1856

This is the first of three rather sickening railway accidents to happen at this little village within a decade or so. It was around ten a.m. at Tallington Station and the engine was coming down the tracks, when the gatekeeper thought that the engine was going to hit the gates, he ran out to close them and as he did so, he couldn’t get out of the way of the train and it ran over him. He was killed on the spot and his body was moved to the Cavendish Arms pub to await the inquest.

89/ Near Tallington Station, (Train Fatality) August 1861

An employee of the Great Northern Railway, Charles Goodlord, was killed on the line between Tallington and Essendine. His job was to slow the trains down as they approached the place where the repair work was underway. Goodlord fell asleep on the job, right on the railway tracks and as the driver got closer, he blew the whistle but he never woke up and tons of metal went straight over him. He was killed on the spot.

90/ Near Tallington Station, (Railway Fatality) March 1867

A farmer named Baines was on the train was returning from a trip to Grantham where he had just bought a new threshing-machine. He was late for his train and was told that it was best if he stayed overnight and go back the next morning. He ignored this advice and clambered on a goods train that passed through his station, Tallington. When he got near, he leapt off the train and sustained serious injuries. He was taken to Peterborough Hospital but only lasted the night. The other sad portion of this story is that he left a wife and nine children.

91/ Howell near Heckington (Schizophrenic Suicide) November 1849

Howell is one of those places that consists of a handful of houses and a number of farm buildings and that’s about it. George Toynbee though, owned over 500 acres in this little parish, but committed suicide by taking a large dose of arsenic. He had been married six years and was only thirty-three himself, but he had been suffering from mental hallucinations and believed that hideous ghosts were constantly plaguing him. He also left four small children without a father. (Was is schizophrenia?)

92/ Billingborough (Sleaford) (Teenagers Death) July 1889

Billingborough, death

93/ Billingborough,  (Death Day After Wife) November 1903

An elderly couple, the Dawsons, lived at Billingborough near Sleaford. Mrs Dawson went to Sleaford for a few days on a visit to relatives, when she became extremely ill and died. The body was brought back to her home for burial at Billingborough. To eighty-year-old Mr Dawson, it was a shock to the system and when he observed the coffin with his wife’s body in it, he died the very next day. The two of them were buried together. (Are they in Billingborough churchyard?)

94/ Lincoln Wife Murder, January 1842

At the Lincoln Assizes, Francis Jeffreys, a 61-year-old farmer was tried for the murder of his wife. The only witness examined was his nephew and when he gave his evidence there was no doubt the old git had done his missus in. The Judge said that his uncle was clearly insane and had been like this for a long time. He was acquitted on the grounds of insanity. (Did he end up in Lincoln Lunatic Asylum?)

95/ Lincoln Station? August 1846 (Cannon Explodes)

The opening of the new Nottingham and Lincoln Railway saw a tradition of firing a cannon whenever a train departed or arrived at the station. In charge of firing the cannon was seventy-year-old Paul Harding, an ex-artilleryman, but now a pensioner. The Nottingham train rolled in and he fired the cannon when it suddenly burst and his shattered his right leg. In hospital they deemed it necessary to amputate the limb and now hopes of his recovery are slim. (Did he make it?)

96/ South Carlton, July 1864 (Suicide buried in Cemetery?)

policeman suicide, South Carlton,

97/ Lincoln Arboretum Drowning, September 1887

A sad case of drowning occurred at one of the ornamental pieces of water in the Arboretum at Lincoln. The victim was two-year-old Richard Downing West, who lived at Broadgate with his parents. His six-year-old sister was left to look after him while they were in the Arboretum and he fell into the lake whilst playing nearby. The keeper, Mr Hodson, was called over and pulled the little fella out but unfortunately, he was already expired by the time a doctor got there.

98/ Pyewipe Junction Fatality (Lincoln) November 1886

A wheel examiner named Metheringham was following his duties at work at the Pyewipe Junction near Lincoln, when he was run over by a passing express train. He was decapitated and had other horrific injuries. Metheringham had worked for the G.N.R. company for over a decade. The verdict was “Accidentally Killed.”

99/ Spittlegate Human Remains, Grantham,  January 1885

Some workmen were digging the foundations for a new store at Messrs Hornaby’s Works in Spittlegate when they stumbled across a stone coffin and close by were two human skulls plus other remains. The coffin was believed to date from the 13th Century, plus it had intricate sculpture work on it and a niche had been carved for the head to rest in. The bones were gathered up and when pieced together they formed the skeletons of three males. The site where they were discovered was once a leper hospital, which was in existence around 1270 in the Spittlegate area of town. Huge crowds visited the site.

February 1885

The bones that were excavated at the Spittlegate site in Grantham were re-interred exactly where they were discovered. The stone coffin was six and a half feet long and was carved from sandstone. It weighed sixteen hundredweight. (About eight hundred kilos)

100/ Spotted Cow Inn Fatality, Grantham, July 1889

Lincoln Drownings 1884

101/ January

Hannah Alsford aged fifty, of 8, Napoleon Place in Lincoln, killed herself by drowning in the Sincil Dyke. She was up all night, then went downstairs at about 5-30 a.m. Her husband James Alsford went down a bit later on but his wife was nowhere to be seen. He went around to her friends and relatives to see if he could find her. A skirt was seen in the ditch opposite the house and this was then dragged. Word came through while this was going on, that a woman’s body was found about a mile and a half away in Washingborough and it was proved to be that of Hannah.

102/ February

The body of Mary Hutchinson aged seventy-five who lived with her husband at Gadsby Court, High Street, St Botolph’s was discovered in Great Gowt’s Drain. She went out shopping one evening but never came back. Her husband John believed that she had stayed with her niece for the night so wasn’t really that worried. The next morning she was found floating in the Great Gowt’s Drain, just below Gowt’s Bridge. It was thought that she got lost and slipped and fell into the drain. “Accidentally Drowned”.

103/ June

James Connor was found drowned in the River Witham. John Robert Green went fishing near the swing bridge when his fishing hook snagged on something and when pulled up, it was attached to Connor’s clothing. The lad screamed out and a passing policeman went to his aid. Connor had just done a stint in prison just one month for thieving and also pertinent to his state of his mind. The lodger who lived with him saw him near the river, drunk as a skunk.

104/ Corby Glen Murder, August 1848

John Parker was up on a charge of murdering his own father. He was found dead from a gunshot wound in his house and the main culprit, was his son. The jury eventually came to the conclusion that Parker was “Not Guilty” of the crime so he was discharged. The local population of Corby Glen was not satisfied with the verdict and they probed deeper into the murder and obtained some vital evidence. It turned out that his father and he had a massive row and the wife of the deceased (Mother?/Step-Mother?) heard the gun fired, but didn’t do a thing. Fortunately, neighbours heard the commotion and found the father dead on the floor. He kept on telling them it was an accident and when questioned about what happened, he kept on contradicting his own story. (Was he found Guilty?).

105/ Uffington (Stamford) November 1906

A fourteen-year-old lad Medwell, was busy cleaning knives at Aldwinckle’s Farm in Uffington, when suddenly the door was flung open and this knocked a loaded gun over, which then discharged the contents into the lad’s head and shoulder part of his body, killing him instantly.

106/ Ropsley near Grantham, (Accidental Death) October 1897

107/ Norman Street, Lincoln, (Impaled on Railings) February 1888

Thirteen-year-old Joseph Burton from Gresham Street was cleaning a second storey window at C.C.Smith’s, photographers, at No 1 Norman Street, when he fell and was impaled on the railings below. He was rushed to Lincoln County Hospital where died after a few days. The iron railing had impaled the lad’s neck and this caused the paralysis of his entire left side.

108/ Great Gonerby Vicar Suicide, September 1860

The Reverend W.C.Inman of Great Gonerby, killed himself due to congregation numbers at his church were continuing to decline.

109/ Great Gonerby Murder/Suicide, near Grantham, October 1846

An extraordinary tale of murder and suicide and of impersonating a police officer as well. George Healey brought nineteen-year-old Mary Hill to his father’s house. She stayed a few days, then left, while he was out. He was infuriated and set out to hunt her down. He tracked her down to an aunt’s house in Fulbeck near Grantham. We’ll skip a few days of the story here and go straight to a police officer at Sleaford, who had just got word that a man had poisoned himself with laudanum in the Plough beer-house. The officer went to see the corpse and it was George Healey! When the police in Grantham were told of this they began to suspect that he had first murdered Mary Hill, then done himself in at Sleaford. What had happened, was that he was mad with Mary and went to a constables house in Great Gonerby, borrowed his truncheon and handcuffs and gone back to see Mary Hill under the guise of being a policeman. He got to the aunt’s house, went in and said she was going to arrest her for pinching some silverware. Basically, after this, he kidnapped her and kept her in a locked room, then took her down to the River Witham and had simply thrown her in. Then after this, he had gone to Sleaford and killed himself at the Plough. Phew! Either way, he killed her then himself.

110/ Lincoln Girl’s Suicide, June 1883

111/ Colsterworth near Grantham (Two Die in Fire)  May 1850

A man named Thickett from Great Gonerby, who worked for Joseph Grummit of Bassingthorpe-cum-Westby to pare and burn sods at Colsterworth, made a hut of turf for his wife and kids so they could be near him, while he worked. Early one morning, the husband left for work and while the two kids were still in bed, his wife decided to wash some clothes. When she came back to the hut she saw it was in flames and she ran to the railway to get help from workmen. When they got there, it was way too late and the place was an inferno. The charred remains of ten-year-old Eliza Elizabeth Thickett and Mary Ann Thickett aged seven were taken out when the fire subsided.

112/ Lincoln outskirts, (Suicide) August 1889

Councillor Henry Pratt aged forty-eight, of the wine and spirit merchants Pratt and Son, was found lying dead in the driveway which led up to his house, about two miles from Lincoln city. Next to the body was a double-barrelled shotgun, which had been fired twice and also an umbrella, which was used by Pratt to fire the trigger. He leaves a wife and five children. (Where was this property of his?)

113/ Helpringham (Siblings Devoted to Other) January 1904

William Barley aged seventy-three, and his sister Marie Trolley aged seventy-one, had lived together for the past three decades and were totally devoted to each other, one simple reason was because they had no-one else. The next door neighbours hadn’t seen either of them for a while, so they looked in on them but got no answer. They shoved the door open and found Marie hanging in the parlour and William dead in bed. the police think that, on finding her brother dead in bed from natural causes, she couldn’t live without him, so she went and hung herself.

114/ Sincil Dyke Suicide, February 1864

115/ Tallington/Deeping St James Murder/Suicide, December 1905

A young man named Shillaker murdered his mother, then shot his sister and then shot his girlfriend, Elsie Burgoyne at Tallington, a nearby village. Elsie’s mother wanted the two of them to get married and Shillaker went into Peterborough and bought a wedding ring and a revolver. He then shot his mother and sister in Deeping St James and shot Elsie in Tallington, after he had been for a stroll with her and got her to try on the ring. He shot her in the face, then put the muzzle in his mouth and pulled the trigger. The mother died at the scene and the two others are in a critical condition. (Did they make it?)

116/ Messrs Ruston, Proctor and Co. Lincoln,(Fatal Accident) January 1884

A striker named James Cooke aged twenty-four was accidentally killed at Messrs.Ruston, Proctor and Co’s Agricultural Works. His job was to crush coke, but the strap on the crushing machine flew off due to a chunk of clinker stopping the engine and Cooke was snagged in the machinery and was being rotated around several times at high speed. His right leg was torn off and his skull was crushed. It was judged to have been an accidental death, but it was all the fault of James Cooke as he should have known not to have taken hold of the strap while it was in motion.

117/ Dunston near Lincoln (Two Suffocate in Well) October 1908

Christopher Halkes, a builder, was inspecting a well at Dunston when he was overcome by the fumes and fell in. A lad of fourteen went to help him, but he too was overcome and he too fell into the toxic well. A labourer went down and he too was affected by the fumes, was quickly lifted out and was given mouth to mouth resuscitation. The well, on the grounds of the Vicarage, had been sealed up for approximately ten to twelve years. The teenage lad, Sydney Lupton and Halkes, died from suffocation by misadventure

118/ Dunston Fatal Accident, December 1884

Dunston, fatal accident,

Lincoln Drownings

119/ River Witham October 1880

Ten-year-old Peter Chapman Graves, drowned in the river Witham when he accidentally slipped and fell in while he was playing on a boat near Foster and Co’s foundry, when leaping about on a boiler. The body was recovered about a hundred yards from where he slipped into the water.

120/ Sincil Dyke (Accident or Suicide?) November 1885

Charles Baker, a twenty-eight-year-old fitter was found drowned at the Sincil Dyke in Lincoln. It turns out that Baker and a man named John Scarfe went to the races together, then went on a pub-crawl on the night-time. Scarfe was paralytic and was refused entry into most of the pubs, so they headed to Gibbeson Street, the place where Scarfe lived and he said that Baker could stay at his house for the night. They went over the footbridge and got to St Mary’s Bank and had nearly got to the end of Tentercroft Street, when Baker suddenly entered the water at Sincil Dyke. Scarfe was still drunk, so he was no help whatsoever and when help arrived the poor chap had disappeared under the water. The dyke was dragged but he couldn’t be found. The next day, his lifeless corpse was found among the weeds under the Pelham Street Bridge. It was not understood whether Baker had jumped into the water or accidentally slipped and fell.

121/ McDakins Bridge/Midland Railway Bridge,  May 1888

John Kent the five-year-old stepson of Mr Gregory of 67 High Street, St Botolph’s, was playing on the banks of the Upper Witham on Saturday evening. His body was found face-down in the water between McDakin’s Bridge and Midland Railway Bridge. He was spotted by three men and brought to the edge, but he had already expired.

122/ Lincoln (Child Cruelty/Depravity) October 1880

123/ Greetwell Mining Fatality, near Lincoln, August 1885

John Johnson was a thirty-eight-year-old ironstone miner who worked at the Mid-Lincolnshire Ironstone Company’s mines at Greetwell. Johnson and a chap named William Hemswell were in the mine one morning when a “baring” of the ironstone fell upon him. Johnson was getting it down by undermining it, so that it would fall and Hemswell was wheeling the baring away. Johnson was underneath with a bar loosening it and it fell upon him, knocking him down. The foreman had told him before, to come from under and go on the top to get it down. Hemswell thought that he landed on the edge of some rock. About half a ton of earth fell on Johnson and Hemswell seemed to think that such an amount would not have killed him. The autopsy revealed a few cuts and bruises on the deceased, but near the heart, there was a large abrasion and several ribs were broken inwardly. Death was due to shock and injury to the heart and the verdict was “Accidentally Killed.”

124/ Washingborough Body, near Lincoln, July 1897

Whilst a boat was travelling down the River Witham on the way to Washingborough, a body was seen floating on the surface and it was dragged out. He was identified as widower Edward Watson from Leicester, who had been to Lincoln to see his sister. This is the third such drowning in the Witham in the last week.

125/ South Hykeham (Suicide Due to Indigestion) May 1879

The village of South Hykeham, between Newark and Lincoln, was the scene of a tragic suicide of a local farmer named William Briggs who was seventy-years of age. Apparently, he had been down in the dumps and rather melancholy recently, because of his terrible indigestion and the weather being damp and dull. What’s new? He had breakfast one morning, then was going to go and hoe some barley in a field. He arranged to meet his son Richard at eleven a.m., but when he didn’t come the son got worried and went to look for the old fella. He saw his Dad’s hat near a pond, then on closer inspection, he found him floating in the pond. The pond was only three feet deep, but the old man had tied a noose around his wrists and tightened it with his teeth or by standing on it, then pulled it tight. This rendered him totally useless in the swimming department. This is the first suicide I have written about that killed himself because of indigestion and it being a bit cloudy!

126/ Toft near Bourne, (Fatal Accident) December 1888

127/ Waggon & Horses Fire Death, Langtoft, October 1888 (Waggon & Horses is next to the church on Bourne Road crossroads)

A fire at the Waggon & Horses pub at Langtoft near Bourne resulted in a fatality. Charles Woodward was killed by the chimney and a wall collapsing during a fire at the public-house. All the occupants were ushered outside and a few got through bedroom windows. While the fire was at its peak, Woodward was stood gawking at the flames when a wall and chimney fell down on him. He was extricated but was badly mangled and burned, with nearly every bone in his body broken. Another man Samuel Deaken was nearby and has life-threatening injuries as well. He was warned by police to stand back, but he ignored them.

128/ Boultham Railway Fatality, March 1882

Seventeen-year-old William Spalding was working on the construction of a new line between Lincoln and Spalding and had been doing the job for eighteen months. He was in Boultham uncoupling a couple of waggons, but he did it while it was moving. This was to be his undoing, as he slipped off and under the waggons, which weighed a couple of tons apiece and was run over. When they got him to County Hospital he died within the hour and it was discovered that his abdominal cavity had about four pints of blood in it, plus other severe internal injuries.

129/ Rippingale Machinery Death, September 1880

Frederick Foyster, alias Swan, was working in Mr Worman’s field reaping barley, where they used one of those new-fangled reaping machines. Foyster was driving it and sat in the seat between the horse and the rakes. All of a sudden one of the horses reared up, scared by something and Foyster was kicked off the seat by the horse and fell off in front of the knives of the machine. He had a massive cut on his thigh, so they rushed him to the local doctor. He, in turn, told them to take him to the Infirmary at Stamford, which is about fifteen miles away and this took four hours. He died from the loss of blood.

130/ Blue Anchor Pub Fatality, High Street, Lincoln, June 1866 (Still there at 133, High Street)

Blue anchor pub, fatality, Lincoln

131/ Metheringham Child Murder, July 1868

Lucy Buxton was charged with the wilful murder of her five-month-old son, by giving him Battle’s Vermin Killer. It was circumstantial evidence that pointed to the culprit being Lucy but the jury thought that was enough and sentenced her to death. She fainted on hearing her fate. The twenty-two-year-old domestic servant was later reprieved and the sentence was commuted into transportation for life, probably Australia.

132/ Helpringham, April 1894 (Death of a Footballer)

A young man named Hannarth, the manager of a sewing machine establishment at Sleaford named Singer and Co, was fatally injured whilst playing in a football match. He was playing for Sleaford Town as the goalkeeper and while defending the goal, he was charged with such force that he died a few seconds later. It was a collision between Hannath and a Helpringham forward named Garton, which caused his death. The autopsy revealed that he died due a rupture of the heart. He had used an alias to play football because his wife didn’t want him to. He left three children and a widow, who in the end, was right to be worried.

133/ North Hykeham Murder, November 1817 (Did they find the murderer?)

The body of fifteen-year-old servant John Perkins, was found in a roadside ditch on the road from Lincoln to Newark, in the village of North Hykeham. He sustained severe head injuries with a fracture of the left temple, plus other bruises which were caused by a blunt instrument, probably a stick. The murderer left a small clue behind, a tobacco box which is now in the hands of the police.

134/ Washingborough Murder, March 1870

Washingborough, murder

135/ Grantham Mystery, October 1862

This is a weird little mystery that occurred in Grantham. A lass by the name of Mary Hodson was up in court on a charge of stealing some items from her master, Charles Wand of Vine Street. She pleaded “Not Guilty”, but she was committed for trial and put in a police cell. A couple of hours later when she was being checked on by the warder, she was laid on the floor, dying and writhing in pain. As it turns out, her father had brought her something to eat, a pork pie in fact and she explained to the warder that it was that pie which was killing her. Doctors were summoned, but she died in her mother’s arms. As Grantham was not as technically advanced as other places, the testing for poisons in her stomach contents was sent down to London. (Was it her father that poisoned her?)

136/ Grantham Railway Station Fatality, March 1887

Just before eleven p.m. Saturday, Eli Addlesee, an engine driver was killed at Grantham Station. He had just brought in a goods train from Sleaford and arrived at the shunting yard, he got out and told the fireman that he was off to talk to the guard. On his way, around thirty-five waggons came along and he was struck on the back of his head. He was knocked out cold and killed on the spot. He leaves a widow and two children.

137/ Lincoln/Washingborough December 1882 (Railway Fatality)

John Henry Pacy aged twenty-five, was run over and killed on the railway line between Lincoln and Washingborough. He had been with his father the previous day drawing £16 out of the bank and then he told his father he wasn’t feeling very well, so the father said he could spend a couple of weeks with him at Eagle. The engine driver, Richard Mitchison, said he left Washingborough at 6-19 a.m., and when about half a mile from Lincoln he felt the engine go over something. He checked and it turned out it was the body of Pacy which was badly mangled.

138/ Washingborough (Fatal Skating Accident)  January 1879

139/ Greatford (Four Killed) October 1892

A granary at Greatford collapsed, causing the deaths of three men and one woman. Six people were in a barn at Messrs Dean, farmers, of Dowsby and Greatford, working away. They were Ambrose Cook aged forty; John Cook aged nineteen; Charles Charity aged forty-six and George Preston and Frederick Holmes. The woman, twenty-one-year-old Kate Arden was employed to hold sacks open, while up above them in the granary, a lad named Thomas Curtis would send the corn down a shoot. Around three p.m. the beam holding up the granary collapsed, sending the place into chaos. Ambrose Cook, John Cook and Charles Charity and Kate Arden, were buried under tons of corn and debris. They were extracted within the hour, but all were dead, probably having suffocated to death. The weight of the barley in the granary was way too much, causing the beam to break and four people to have been killed.

140/ School of Art Fatality, Monks Road, Lincoln, November 1885

The landlord of the Wheatsheaf Inn on Broadgate, Stephen Woodhouse aged fifty-five, was working in the School of Arts at Monks Road doing some plastering work. He was putting some laths on the ceiling in one of the upper rooms when the plank he was standing on snapped in two and he was precipitated fifteen feet, at first hitting a joist with his back then onto the rock-hard floor. He died about a week later, while in hospital.

141/ Fulbeck Railway Suicide, January 1874

This little village between Sleaford and Newark saw a teenager kill himself on the railway tracks. The lad was fifteen-year-old Thomas Sharpe, with no parents, he was brought up by a Mr Scott in Fulbeck. One day he went to the village shop and nicked a popgun. When Mr Scott found out he made him take it back, but the shop owner, Mr Lewarton, said he would tell the police. On top of this, Reverend Peacock told him off for being lazy in his work. One afternoon, he saw Richard Parker, a younger boy than himself and asked him if he wanted to see him be run over by a train. Parker was up for the offer and probably thought he was kidding, but when they got to the line, the three p.m. Grantham to Lincoln train came into view. Sure enough, Sharpe popped his head on the train-track and let the engine and carriages go over his head. Parker ran to the village in a state of shock and the train driver of the one after saw the mutilated remains and reported it to the authorities.

 

142/ No 1 High Street suicide, Grantham, September 1888

High Street, Grantham, suicide

work and threatened to destroy himself. A jury returned a verdict of “Suicide whilst in a state of temporary insanity”

143/ Metheringham Suicide, October 1887

 

144/ Cornhill Suicide, Lincoln, January 1885

145/ Billinghay Murder, August 1866

Billinghay murder,

Billinghay Murder, December 8th, 1866

Joseph Bones, charged with the wilful murder of Eyre Petchell at Billinghay on the 16th of August last- Evidence being given that prisoner was of unsound mind, he was ordered to be detained during Her Majesty’s pleasure.

146/ River Witham Suicide, Lincoln May 1879

A boat-woman named Ward was sitting in a canal boat on the Witham waiting for her husband to come home when she heard a fairly loud splash coming from just down the river. She immediately thought it was hubby, who was probably drunk and had fallen in while inebriated. A few people had gathered around and steps were taken to drag the river. In the meantime, her husband returned. During the search, somebody had gone to the police station and filed a missing person report on a 19-year-old domestic servant named Elizabeth Cross, who had disappeared. She worked at the Albion Hotel (St Mays Street, across the road from train station, Barbican Hotel) and a letter had been found there addressed to the cook, stating that was going to drown herself.

It was the usual story, deserted by her lover, can’t go on without him, etc etc. Finally her corpse was found the next morning floating below the locks and it was taken to the Druids’ Arms Inn.

147/ Stamford Manslaughter, February 1890

Thirty-year-old foundryman, John Walker, was accused of causing the death of 65-year-old Joseph Ireland at Stamford. Ireland was living with Walker’s mother and the son, when one evening while drunk he struck his mother.  Ireland flew into a rage saying that he wouldn’t let a thing like that happen in his house. He tried to throw Walker out and this led to a scuffle and punches were thrown. He managed to pin down the old man and knelt on the chest. Several passers-by managed to wrangle them apart and when the old fella tried to get up, he slumped straight back down to the ground and was dead within a minute. (What happened to Walker? Presumably, he was charged with manslaughter?)

148/ Stamp End Works, Lincoln March 1865 (Drowning)

William Parks aged twenty-eight, worked at the Stamp End Iron Works and was found one evening face down in the water, at the Lock near the Stamp End Works. He had been at the Lock Tavern enjoying a few jars and decided to go home over the Lock Bridge, which is hazardous when you’re ratted and its pitch black. About halfway along the bridge was a set of stone steps and he seems to have fallen down these and rolled into the water. Before anybody could reach him, he was drowned. Ironically, a hand-rail had put up on the bridge that very day, to prevent people from slipping in.

149/ River Witham (Another Suicide!) May 1887

150/ Boultham Murder (Lincoln) May 22nd, 1903

Leonard Patchett and his older wife, Sarah Ann, had a strained relationship right from the beginning of marriage. He liked a tipple and he would get violent with her on a regular basis. She got a job in Boultham and was a housekeeper to a man in Spencer Street. Patchett hunted his wife down to her new address and pleaded with her to come back home, which she didn’t totally dismiss, but told him he had to calm the drinking down. They parted company and Patchett went off to see his sister in Gainsborough for a few days and to try and work out what to do next. He kept on imagining that the gentleman she was working for, a Mr King, and his missus were having a secret fling. They met up again and went for a walk on Boultham Lane and again he asked her to return home, but she must have said “No” and he must have lost his temper and he strangled her. The lifeless corpse of Sarah Ann was discovered in a field near Boultham Lane three days later.

Patchett was found guilty of her murder and executed by William Billington at Lincoln Prison on July 6th,1903

151/ Grantham Train Mystery (Stoke’s Tunnel) September 1886

On Sunday evening the body of a man unknown was frightfully smashed in Stoke’s Tunnel near Ponton, Grantham. The guard of the train which arrives at Grantham shortly after eight o’clock from London, heard the sound of a crash when passing through the tunnel and on arriving at Grantham found a third class compartment door open and in the carriage, placed on the rack, a man’s hat and umbrella. He told the authorities at Grantham Station who at once checked the tunnel and found the mutilated body of a man. It is supposed that he committed suicide by leaping off the train and had taken great precaution to conceal his identity, as the name was torn off the collar and his pocket-book was also torn up. He is approximately 35-40 years of age, five feet six inches tall, dark brown hair and moustache. He had around £4 in money and another ticket dated the 19th September, from London to York.

The body is thought to be that the Plymouth swindler, Mr Curteis, who is said to have absconded after misappropriating a large sum of money from certain funds.

152/ Grantham Train Mystery, October 2nd,1886

The body of Mr Algernon Swaine Kingsford was on Saturday removed from Grantham to London for interment. Mr Parish, chief of the G.N.R. Company’s Police, Kings Cross, came to Grantham by the 11-28 on Saturday morning at the request of the relatives, to superintend the removal. It appears that Mr Kingsford, sen. holds the position of magistrates clerk at Canterbury and that the deceased was a stockbroker carrying on business at 2, Angel Court, Throgmorton Street, London.E.C.  The cause assigned for the rash act was a love affair.

153/ Hungate, Lincoln, (Invalid Burnt to Death) April 1887

154/ No.58 High Street Suicide, Grantham, February 1885

155/ Brayford Pool, Lincoln, (Unknown Corpse) November 1886

Elizabeth Ogden, the wife of John Ogden an Inland Revenue Officer from Derby, was found drowned in Brayford. Her husband had separated from her in 1874, due to her constant drinking and she went to live in Potterhanworth. When she received £2 from her trustee, she headed straight for the pubs of Lincoln and started on the brandy. However, when she left the pub, she was sober and she was seen walking on the Brayford side when she fell in accidentally. The water was only six feet where she went in and a boatman got a hook and got her out within a few minutes. He didn’t bother with resuscitation for some reason and got a policeman instead, it was this inaction that caused her death. Elizabeth was pronounced dead shortly after and found to have £10 and a gold watch and chain on her. So it was just a case of accidentally drowned then! Nope!  Turns out it was a case of mistaken identity and that Mrs Ogden was in fact in Nottingham, but the two aunts of Mrs Ogden had identified the corpse as that of their niece. Mr Ogden stayed in Lincoln and had his wife interred, then going back to Nottingham to have a word with her trustee, Mr Cleveland, to sort out matters. No sooner had he stepped out of his office, then his wife Mrs Ogden turned up to get her allowance. Mr Cleveland then told authorities in Lincoln, that Mrs Ogden was alive and well.

The only identity clue that police have to the body is the name of a milliner in Retford, on a tag inside her bonnet and a watch-key with the name “J.Saltby, Alford” on it.

156/ Deeping St James Wife Murder, December 1888

Ellen Bennett, the wife of a cottager aged fifty, was the victim of wife murder in Deeping St James. A neighbour, Mrs Perrin, had popped in and asked Bennett how his wife was, to which he gave a rather evasive answer. She was suspicious and went upstairs to check on her, where she found the body of Ellen lying on the bed fully clothed, drenched in blood. Mrs Perrin ran to the husband, shouting that his wife had been killed, to which he replied “Serve her right! I gave her more this time than last time. She won’t want to go to Stamford anymore in the cart”. Perrin went the police and when they called on him he was calmly digging his garden. He told them that he had tried to strangle her, but in the end, he kicked her to death. It is believed that he became sick of her drinking habits. She went to Stamford a month ago to sell some produce but stayed and got drunk in the pubs and had to be brought back home. Again this week, she had done exactly the same and when she got home they both started on each other and he lost it and began to attack her. The husband, Thomas Bennett was found guilty of manslaughter, due to the fact that she had a weak heart and his ill-treatment, brought on syncope (loss of consciousness from fall in blood pressure) causing her death.

157/ Lincoln/Washingborough Child Murder, September 1879

Lincoln, child murder,

158/ Spread Eagle Tap Fatality, Lincoln, June 1883

An inquest into the death of 25-year-old Thomas Heywood who lived with his Mum at No.1, East Court, Christ’s Hospital Terrace, Lincoln, and died under the strangest of circumstances. He left home at seven a.m., and at three p.m. seemed to be in rude health. He was next seen at 10-30 that evening in the bar of Spread Eagle tap, where he walked through to the tap room which was unlit, then at eleven p.m, he was found lying on the floor unconscious. The landlord thought he was drunk and had laid him down there. A woman named Wadsworth stayed with him as she thought he looked poorly and then told Inspector Briggs, who then went for help. He tried a little brandy to revive him, but he couldn’t swallow. Then the doctor arrived and gave orders that he wasn’t to be moved. He lingered on through the night and was dead as a dodo the next morning. His temple had a swelling on it and he had a graze on his cheek, with a slight blackening of his right eyelid. He couldn’t move his limbs on the left side. (Stroke?) The post-mortem revealed a huge clot between the skull and covering of the brain and a fracture of the skull itself. It was deemed “Accidental Death”, with the coroner suggesting the injuries were more likely from a fall than being hit by somebody.

159/ Stamford Murder/Manslaughter, November 1878

Martin Cummings aged nineteen was charged with the murder of Thomas Cecil Chaplin Toon at Stamford on the 5th of August. Some people from the outlying villages of Stamford had gathered to watch some athletic sports and 47-year-old Toon was on the bridge at Stamford with a speaker calling out “Ladies and Gentlemen, something you have never seen before”, with the sole purpose of calling to attention to somebody diving off the bridge and into the water. Cummings arrived and demanded “Have you got the one shilling and ninepence you owe me?”, then say “It’ll be your turn next. It should be you go over and not the other”. He grabbed hold of him and threw him over the parapet, then he legged it. He was arrested by police a little while later and Toon was meanwhile pulled out of the river. He said he ran off because he didn’t want the crowd of people to mob him. Toon fell twenty feet, into seven feet of water. The case was treated as one of manslaughter not murder, with Cummings meaning to hold him over the edge and scare him, not to throw him in and kill him. He was sentenced to penal servitude for the rest of his natural life.

160/ Langtoft Child Murder, November 1879

Langtoft, child murder,

Langtoft Child Murder (Reprieve) November 22nd, 1879

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