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This list is intended to give both an historic and a modern look at murder. With both new and old cases included it is hoped that a more complete picture will be available. This list only contains murders committed by men.   This section currently has information on 50 cases

 

Abbot, Burton W
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Abbott, Brian
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Abernerthy, William Henry
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Abramovich, Myer
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Absalom, Albert George
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Adams, Dr John Bodkin
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Adams, Harry Stanley
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Adams,  James
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Adams, Thomas Henry
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Adams, William Nelson
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Addington, Richard
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Agostini, Antonio
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Ahmed, Sami
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Airey, John
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Alam, Faiz
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Alcock, Kenneth John
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Alcott, John James
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Aldred, William Thomas
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Alison, Paul
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Allaway, Thomas Henry
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Allcock, Joseph
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Allen, John Edward
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Allen, George
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Allen, Thomas
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Alt, Henry
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Amos, John Vickers
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Anderson, George
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Anderson, James
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Anderson, John William
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Anderson, Percy Charles
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Andrews, Frederick James
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Angelo, Richard
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Appleton, John
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Apted  Harold
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Armstrong, Herbert Rowse
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Armstrong, John
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Arrowsmith, William
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Asfar, Khan
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Ashton, Charles William
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Ashworth, Samuel Leo Thomas
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Asser, Verney
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Atherley, Samuel
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Atkins, Percy James
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Atkinson, Clinton
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Atherton, Abel
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Atherton, Michael Francis
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Austin, Thomas
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Austin,  William George Charles
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Aves, Douglas
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Azad, Jhulam Sarwar
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Abbot, Burton, W

On the 28 April 1955 a young 14 year old girl, Stephanie Bryan did not come home from school. The police were alerted and a search was carried out but nothing was found except a school textbook which was found in a field.

On the 15 July 1955 the police received a phone call from a Mrs. Georgia Abbott to say that she had been in her basement looking for something when she had found some personal items belonging to Stephanie Bryan. She had found a purse and an identification card belonging to Stephanie. The police went to the house and conducted a search which revealed some school books and a pair of glasses and a brassiere. No other traces could be found in the house.

The Abbott's did have a weekend cabin about 300 miles away in the Trinity mountains. The police decided to search that. In a shallow grave close to the cabin they found the badly decomposed body of Stephanie Bryan. She had been bludgeoned to death. The main evidence which helped to convict him were hairs and fibres found on Abbott's car that matched those from the girls head and clothing. Burton Abbott was arrested and charged with kidnapping and murdering Stephanie Bryan.

Burton Abbott was a 27 year old student at the university of California in Berkley. He was put on trial in Oakland where the prosecution established he was a sexual deviant. The jury took seven days to return a verdict of guilty. He was executed for kidnapping and murdering the 14 year old schoolgirl.


Abbott,  Brian

 At Essex Assizes, on 28th June 1962, Abbott was found not guilty of capital murder but guilty of manslaughter. Abbott, a      16-year-old tea boy with a history of epilepsy, had beaten  unconscious with a hammer Albert Edward Crabb, a      46-year-old storekeeper. He had then robbed the victim of £15 and burned him alive. He then locked Crabb's body in      the store and set fire to it.

He later claimed to police that Crabb had made homosexual advances to him, but the defence did not put this motive      forward at his trial. He was ordered to be detained during Her Majesty's Pleasure.
 


 Adams, William Nelson

A strange case of 'murder by request'. Adams was 17-years-old in 1919 and had been befriended on a Thameside bench by 60-year-old George Jones. Jones had taken the young man in and had bought him meals and drinks. The pair were drinking in a pub in Tooting on the evening of 10th June 1919 with a third man, Charlie Smith. The three of them left together. On their way home Adams stabbed Jones with a shoemaker's awl, three times in the chest and three times in the throat. Jones was found wandering around covered in blood  and was taken to hospital. Before he died, three days later, he told police that he had no idea why Adams had attacked him.

Adams was arrested. His story was that Jones had told him that he was worried about a huge tax bill he had received and that he could not pay. According to Adams, Jones had asked the younger man to kill him. He had thought about the request for a week and had then agreed. As they walked home they passed through Sutton park and Jones had removed his hat and coat. He had laid down and given Adams the awl, telling him to stab in the left side of the neck. After he had stabbed the man several times he had taken the man's shirt and wrapped it around the wounds to try and staunch the flow of blood. He had then taken the man's money and left with Smith who had said and done nothing throughout. Despite extensive enquiries the police could find no trace of Charlie Smith to corroborate the story and Adams was charged with murder.

His trial took place at Guildford Assizes in July 1919. The jury disbelieved his story, found him guilty and he was duly sentenced to death. The sentence was later commuted by Home Secretary, Edward Shortt, to life imprisonment.
 


Addington,  Richard

On 29th May thirty eight year old Richard Addington, a Northampton shoemaker, and his wife attended a village festival where he indulged in an all day drinking session and had to be helped home in a drunken state. The next morning they quarreled about his conduct and to escape his temper, Margaret Addington went out into the garden. A neighbor heard Addington shout at his wife to come inside and when she refused, he stormed into the garden and dragged her back into the house where he cut her throat with a shoe knife. The neighbor, who had witnessed the incident from his own garden, summoned the police and Addington was arrested. His defense maintained he was insane, as a result of being kicked in the head by a horse twenty years earlier, but he was still found guilty and hanged by William Calcraft at Northampton on the 31st July 1871.

Agostini, Antonio

It was June 1944,  Antonio Agostini, was found guilty of manslaughter and sentenced to 6 years hard labour for the murder of his wife Linda Agostini.  She had been shot in the head but what had actually killed her were blows to the head. He was tried in Sydney, Australia.
 



 

Alcott, John James

Alcott was born in 1925. His early life was rather strange. His father left home to serve in the abroad army during World War II and young John would leave home and wander around the countryside for days. During his adolescence he managed to acquire a couple of convictions for petty offences including one which earned him a spell in an approved school.

He later joined the Grenadier Guards and was posted to Germany. He claimed to experience black-outs and, following one such attack, he wandered off into the German countryside. He was joined by a Czech who was trying to reach France. One evening during their travels they stopped at a small lodging-house. According to Alcott, the night watchman there, Peter
Helm, offered the pair coffee and then threw the boiling coffee over them. Alcott responded by attacking the man. The Czech then joined in and smashed Helm over the head with a fire extinguisher and and empty whisky bottle. The pair fled. They were picked up a couple of days later when they discovered that the watchman had died. Alcott was charged with murder and was tried by court martial. He was found guilty but, because his mother, as next-of-kin, had not been informed that he was being tried, he was given a pardon and freed. He was discharged from the army and returned to England.

He became a fireman and married, living in Hither Green. In August 1952 he was due to go on holiday to France with his wife. He told his wife that he was going to pick up his holiday pay, but went to Aldershot instead. He found lodgings and spent several days shopping for clothes in the town. He also visited Ash Vale railway station. Here he introduced himself to
the clerk, 28-year-old Geoffrey Charles 'Dixie' Dean, as a fellow railway worker. Alcott visited Dean on several days. One of Dean's duties was to count the money taken by the fares office before locking the money in the station's safe. It is likely that Alcott was present during one of these counting sessions. At 9pm on August 22nd a porter noticed that there was still a light on in the station office. When he looked in through the window he saw the bleeding body of Dean on the floor. Police broke down the office door and found that Dean had been stabbed over twenty times. About £168 was missing from the safe.

Police enquiries centred on boarding houses. At one of them they found a blood-stained jacket that had two bloody ten shilling notes in a pocket. In another pocket was a passport in the name of John James Alcott. The police kept watch on the house and arrested Alcott when he returned a couple of hours later. He soon showed officers where he had hidden the knife
in a chimney and turned over £109 that he had in his pockets.

Alcott's trial began at Kingston Assizes on 18th November. He claimed that he had experienced another black-out and had no idea why he had killed the man, or even why he was in Aldershot. His defense failed to convince the jury and they returned a guilty verdict. Alcott was sentenced to death. He was hanged at Wandsworth Prison on 2nd January 1953.
 


Alison, Paul

On the 24 October 1994 at the court in Newcastle Upon Tyne  Paul Allison was sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of Alison Stroud and Joan Douglas.   He strangled Alison Stroud with a pair of her own tights and stabbed Joan Douglas in the chest with a knife and then slashed her across the throat several times.   He was sent to Durham Prison to begin his sentence.

Allen, George

Hanged at Stafford Gaol in 1807 for the murder of three of his children, though he was subject to epileptic fits and would, today, be found insane.

At eight o'clock on the evening of 12th January 1807 George Allen retired to bed and was followed, an hour later, by his wife. She found him, as was his custom, sitting in bed smoking his pipe. When his wife got into bed, with their baby, he asked her what other man she had in the house. She protested her innocence while he continued to accuse her. He suddenly got out of bed and went downstairs. She followed him and met him on the stairs, asking him what he was doing in such a hurry. He told her to get back upstairs.

He went to where their three other children were asleep in the same bed and turned back the bedclothes. His wife tried to hold him and he immediately tried to cut her throat. She wore a scarf around her neck and head and this prevented the wound from being fatal. She managed to escape and fell down the stairs, still holding on to the infant. Before she could get up, the body of their six-year-old daughter fell at her feet, with its head almost severed.

She opened the front door and screamed to the neighbours that her husband was murdering their children. A neighbor soon arrived and George was found standing with a razor in his hand. When asked what he was doing he replied,

'Nothing yet, I have only killed three of them.' Upstairs, two of his sons were found mutilated with the head almost torn off one boy and the stomachs of both of them slashed with their bowels torn out completely.



Allaway, Thomas Henry

On 22 December 1921 an adverisement appeared in the 'Morning Post'. It was from a Miss Irene Wilkins who was looking for a position as a school cook. That very same day she received a telegram requesting that she come to Bournemouth at once, where she would be met. Pleased that she had got such an early response she immediately caught the afternoon train to Bournemouth. The very next day on the 23 December her body was discovered in a field on the outskirts of Bournemouth. Irene Wilkins was not the only one to receive a telegram that day at least three others were recieved. This would be a very important fact later in the case.

On a road nearby the body were tyre-tracks. The tyre-tracks were traced to Dunlop Magnums and all drivers and chauffeurs in the district were questioned. One of those questioned was Thomas Allaway, who was a 36 year old chauffeur and ex soldier and he drove a Mercedes fitted with three Dunlop Magnums and a Michelin.

Four months later he attempted to pass forged cheques. He disappeared from Bournemouth and was picked up by the police in Reading. He was arrested and, in his pockets were some betting slips with writing that matched the writing on the telegrams. Other samples of his handwriting fixed Alloway as the originator of the telegrams and finally he was identified by a Post Office employee as the writer of the telegrams.

Thomas Henry Allaway was convicted of murdering Irene Wilkins. He had killed her by striking her on the head several times with a blunt instrument. The case appeared to be missing a motive, robbery was ruled out and although the murder victim's clothes had been disturbed she had clearly not been raped. All the same it was still assumed that sex was the motivation.

Allaway was tried at Winchester in July 1922 and was soon found guilty of murder. The night before his execution he confessed his crime to the Prison Governor. Thomas Henry Allaway was hanged at Winchester Prison on 19 August 1922. 



 

Allen, John Edward

In 1937, Allen was a 25-year-old assistant chef working at the Lamb Hotel in Burford, Oxfordshire. He had been befriended by the Woodward family and often used to take their 17-month-old daughter, Kathleen Diana Lucy, for a walk. He took her for such a walk on 21st October but he strangled the child with a clothes line and dumped the body at the side of a road.
He was arrested a couple of days later when he surrendered to police.

On 6th November 1937 he was found guilty but insane and was sent to Broadmoor. Ten years later he escaped from Broadmoor dressed as a cleric. He stayed at large for two years and was dubbed by the press as 'The Mad Parson.' After his recpture he was returned to Braodmoor. He was released on 18th September 1951.


Anderson, John William

In August, John William Anderson, a young clerk, gave up work and took to drink. and as a result relations with his wife became strained. They argued constantly and she threatened to leave him unless he got a job. On 27th August they visited a neighbor and appeared on good terms. but later. when they returned home. another neighbor heard screams from their house. When the disturbance was investigated, Mrs Anderson was found lying in a pool of blood: she had been stabbed seven times. Anderson gave himself up immediately and freely confessed to the murder.  He was tried and convicted and sentenced to hang. The sentence was carried out on the 22nd December 1875 when he was hanged by William Marwood in Newcastle.

Anderson, Percy Charles

Edith Constance Drew-Bear was a 21-year-old cinema usher. Her body was discovered floating in a water tank on the East Brighton Golf Course on 25th November 1934. Her body had five .22 bullets in it but the cause of death was strangulation. Percy Anderson was arrested and charged with her murder. He was 21-years-old and, when picked up, was carrying zinc chloride and ammonia chloride. When his room was examined bullets, the same as those recovered from Edith's body, were found.

At his trial Anderson claimed that he could remember nothing of the killing, although he admitted quarelling with the girl, and put forward a defense of insanity. It failed and he was convicted. He was hanged at Wandsworth Prison on 16th April 1935.


Angelo, Richard

Richard Angelo wanted to be a hero. He was a former Eagle Scout, and a fireman volunteer. He wanted to be the one to save
someones life, even if he had to make the situation arise so he could do so. The first time he tried to do so, he injected
something into John Fishers IV tube that caused him to go into critical conditon. This opportunity failed, John Fisher died that
night. The number of times Angelo applied this procedure  at the Good Samaritan Hospital is not known. They do have an idea of how many times he failed at this. Between September and October of 1987 at least three patients died due to this. In all he may have killed over 10 people doing this. A man named Gerolamo Kucich was in the hospital recovering from heart problems when a bearded man in a white hospital coat came in and put some medicine in his IV. Minutes later Kucich would have difficulty breathing, and would be gasping for air. He fortuneatly was able to reach the button to summon the nurses. One of the people  to help rescue him was the bearded man with the hospital coat. Kucich told his story about the man with the beard and coat to  the other nurses, and Angelo was the only one on that shift that fit that description. When Kucich's urine sample came back it had pavulon in it. Angelo was arrested in November after vials of Pavulon and Anectine were found during a search of his apartment. He immediatly confessed to murder. A jury found him responsible for two counts of second degree murder, one
count of manslaughter, and one count of criminally negligent homicide. He recieved the maximum sentance allowed by law; a
prison term of sixty-one years to life.



 

Appleton, John

A peculiar case in which a man was found guilty of murder, condemned to death, reprieved and served a life sentence even though there was no evidence to convict him with. It was a drunken John Appleton who entered the police station on 28th March 1905 and confessed to murder. He told the officers that, along with a man named Joseph Earnshaw, he had robbed
and killed a man near Newcastle in July 1882. The man was later identified as William Ledger. In the meanwhile, Earnshaw had died. Although the only evidence was the drunken confession, which Appleton later withdrew, he was still found guilty at Durham Assizes in July 1905.



Armstrong, Herbert Rowse

Herbert Rowse Armstrong was a fifty two year old solicitor practising in the Welsh border town of Hay-on-Wye. A seemingly mild mannered man he was a retired army Major. His wife was well known as a hypochondriac and a nag. One way he had found to get away from her was to become involved in the Territorial Army once again rising to the rank of Major. When this did not give him the amount of freedom that he wanted he started to think of something more permanent.

Even though she was a hypochondriac she really had been ill and when she died it was believed to be from Gastritis. Had the doctor examined her more closely he may have realised that she had not died from Gastritus but from arsenical poisoning. She was buried and that might have been the end of it had it not been for the fact that having once got away with it Armstrong decided to use the same method again.

After a dispute with a rival solicitor named Oswald Martin, Armstrong invited him to tea on the pretence of finding a solution to the dispute. Martin was passed a scone which had been heavily laced with arsenic The effect of this was to make Martin violently ill on his return home. Martins father in law was the town's chemist and was aware of the purchases that Armstrong had made of arsenic. Tests were done and the authorities notified. Armstrong was arrested on suspicion and his wife's body exhumed.

Arsenic can remain in the body of a dead person for years and can even help to preserve the body. He was tried at Hereford Assizes and found guilty and held at Gloucester Prison until he was hanged at 8 am on 31 May 1922 by the official Hangman John Ellis. As to the reason for Armstrong to murder his wife it would seem that Armstrong saw murder as a way of getting out of an unhappy marriage and this was indeed his motive. 


Armstrong, Janet and John

Terence, the five-month-old son of John and Janet Armstrong, died at their home in Gosport on 22 July 1955. It was assumed that he had eaten some poisonous berries given innocently to him by his three-year-old sister.

When the post-mortem was carried out a number of red skins were found in his stomach and windpipe which were assumed to have come from the berries. Although the child was buried the police were not satisfied and the skins were examined more fully. They were found to be the gelatine capsules of Seconol. The babys body was exhumed and the presence of the drug was confirmed.

At an inquest into the child's death an open verdict was returned. Nothing further happened until July 1956 when Mrs Armstrong, who had since separated from her husband on the grounds of cruelty, made a statement to the police. In it she told them that Seconol had been in the house and that, John had been taking it to help him sleep, after the death of the baby, her husband had told her to dispose of the capsules, which she did.

Armstrong was a 25-year-old sick berth attendant in the Royal Navy and investigations showed that a drugs cupboard where Armstrong worked had been broken into and amongst the missing drugs were seconal capsules.

On 1st September 1956 John and Janet Armstrong were both arrested and charged with the murder of their son. At their trial at Winchester Janet recounted how her husband had been at home, and alone with the baby, from lunchtime on the fateful day. She also confirmed again that seconol had been in the house at that time.

John Armstrong was found guilty and sentenced to death but then later repreived. Janet then astounded everyone by admitting that she had given the seconal to the child to help him sleep. Was it in innocence or was it intentional, we will never know. 


Asfar, Khan

Asfar, a 30-year-old Pakistani, was an out-patient at a mental hospital when he stabbed his 25-year-old cousin, Mohammed Younis Khan. He claimed to police that Khan had been drugging him and causing him trouble.

On 13th December 1961, at Birmingham Assizes, he was found guilty but insane. He was ordered to be detained during Her Majesty's Pleasure.
 


Ashworth, Samuel Leo Thomas

Ashworth was a 38-year-old Warrant Officer in the Army, who had collected six children from his two previous marriages, and was due to move to Germany. His third wife, Lisbeth, wanted him to have the children adopted when they took up their new posting and this had caused a row. She told Ashworth that he had to choose between her and the children, so he hit her with a bottle and then strangled her.

On 21st January 1961, at Berkshire Assizes, he was found guilty of manslaughter and sentenced to four years in prison.
 


Atherton, Michael Francis

Unemployed Atherton, 45-years-old, had a history of drunkenness and had been separated from his wife from about a year. He went to her house one morning and, when he arrived, was set upon by his two step-sons, James and Patrick Gibbons. Atherton took a knife from his pocket and stabbed them, with 23-year-old James receiving a wound from which he later
died in hospital.

He was charged with non-capital murder and appeared at Liverpool Crown Court on 11th November 1959. His defense was one of diminished responsibility. He claimed that the  blows that he had received from the brothers had left him stunned and that he could not remember taking the knife out, or using it. He was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment.
 


Atkinson, Clinton

On the 25  June 1988  Clinton Atkinson  was found guilty at Oxford Crown Court of murdering Kenneth Smith and was sentenced to life imprisonment.



 

Austin, Thomas

Austin was executed in Exeter in August 1694. Born in Cullompton to good, honest parents, he had inherited their farm upon their deaths. The estate was quite substantial, being worth about £80 per year. Shortly afterwards he married a girl who brought with her a dowry of about £800. All this wealth seems to have unhinged Thomas and he started to neglect the farm. Within four years he had spent all his wife's fortune and had mortgaged the farm.

In dire need of money he now turned his hand to the criminal. He tried swindling his neighbours but, when caught, he was forgiven. He then tried highway robbery. He accosted Sir Zachary Wilmot on the road between Taunton Dean and Wellington and, when the man tried to protect his possessions, murdered him. The assault yielded fourty-six guineas and a
sword. This booty did not last him long.

One day he went to visit his uncle, who lived about a mile distant. When he got there he found that his uncle was out and that the house was occupied by his aunt and her five small children. Taking hold of an axe that lay to hand he battered his aunt to death. He then cut the throats of the five children and ransacked the house.

When he arrived home his wife pointed out that he had blood on his clothes. When she asked him how it had arrived on his person he took a razor from his pocket and cut her throat as well. Not content with the current body count he then disembowelled his two young children. Unfortunately for Thomas, his uncle arrived unexpectedly. The pile of corpses was rather obvious, though the uncle was not to know that a similar sight awaited him when he returned to his own home. He grabbed Thomas and immediately took him before the local magistrate who had him incarcerated in Exeter Gaol to await his fate.


Aves, Douglas

Having just been sacked from his job as a sheet metal worker, 17-year-old Aves went for a walk in the park. He was spoken to by 52-year-old Cecil William Pietersen who told him that he could get him a job. He then invited him home for a cup of tea. Pietersen and Aves came to blows after, allegedly, Pietersen showed him obscene photographs and made sexual advances towards Aves. During the fight, Aves hit Pietersen with a milk bottle and Pietersen died later in hospital.

At his trial at the Old Bailey, Aves pleaded self-defence and on 6th December 1960, after the jury had considered their verdict for three hours, was found guilty of manslaughter. He was sentenced to 12 months' imprisonment.
 


Azad, Jhulam Sarwar

Azad, a 27-year-old Pakistani railway worker, was found guilty of non-capital murder at Nottingham Assizes on 21st November 1960 and sentenced to life imprisonment.

There had been some bad feeling between Azad and Mohammed Aslam, his brother-in-law, and Azad suspected that his wife's relations were trying to kill him in a family feud. He virtually beheaded Mohammed with a butcher's knife and then left letters near the body, supposedly from 'John' and 'Albert', to divert suspicion.


Anderson, John William

In August, John William Anderson, a young clerk, gave up work and took to drink. and as a result relations with his wife became strained. They argued constantly and she threatened to leave him unless he got a job. On 27 August 1875 they visited a neighbor and appeared on good terms. but later. when they returned home. another neighbor heard screams from their house. When the disturbance was investigated, Mrs Anderson was found lying in a pool of blood: she had been stabbed seven times. Anderson made no attempt to deny the crime and gave himself up immediately. He was tried at Newcastle and hanged on the 22 December by William Marwood.


Abigail, William George

At 6am on Tuesday 25 April 1882, twenty two year old  Jane Plunkett was found shot dead in the room she shared with William George Abigail. At the time Abigail worked as a waiter at the Star Hotel, Norwich, and it was here where he had first met Plunkett who was employed there as a chambermaid. She didn't tell him she was already married, and later they went through a form of marriage and moved in with his half-brother at New Catton. It was his brother's son who reported hearing the shots, and Jane Plunkett was discovered blasted in the head and chest. Abigail confessed he had killed her when he found out she was already married. He was tried and convicted in Norwich and hanged by William Marwood on the 22 May 1882 at the age of nineteen..

Anderson, James

In Lincoln on the 19 February 1883 fifty year old Anderson, a Lincolnshire coal miner was sentenced to death by Mr Justice Cave at Lincoln Assizes for the murder of his wife at Gainsborough on 6 December 1882. Anderson had cut her throat, and then his own after a quarrel. He expressed deep regret for the crime and despite a petition signed by thousands of local people, he was hanged by William Marwood.

Alt, Henry

Henry Alt was a German baker who was convicted of the murder of Charles Howard, whom he stabbed to death in a jealous quarrel over a woman. Alt had been paying his attentions to a middle-aged woman and proposed marriage to her. She turned him down and later announced to Alt that she was going to marry Howard. As they were drinking in a pub, Alt stabbed Howard to death then wounded the woman and himself. He was convicted at the Old Bailey in June, and after a plea for a reprieve by the German Embassy failed, he was hanged by Berry at Newgate on the 13 July 1885 aged just thirty one.

Arrowsmith, William

On 11 November 1887, William Arrowsmith, a labourer from Denton, visited his elderly uncle George Pickerill who was eighty, who lived in a lonely cottage near Whitchurch. He brutally killed him by beating his brains out then cutting his throat, before stealing some property and a small sum of money he knew to be in the house. He was arrested when he was seen selling some of the stolen goods, and charged with murder when police matched his footprints with those found at the scene. He was hanged by James Berry on the 28 March 1888 at Shrewsbury.

Allen, Thomas

Twenty Five year old Thomas Allen was a Zulu who had arrived in Swansea on a Cuban ship on which he served as a steward. On 10 February he called into the Gloucester Hotel, a dockside pub frequented by sailors, the landlord of which was Frederick Kent who was thirty eight. At 4am the next morning, the landlord's wife heard someone strike a match in their bedroom and woke her husband. Kent climbed from his bed and began to struggle with the intruder, who attacked him with a knife. His wife reached under the pillow for their revolver but hesitated to use the gun for fear of shooting her husband. She finally got the stranger in sight and shot him in the leg. He fled from the building, leaving Kent mortally wounded on the bedroom floor. Detectives found a sailor's cap which had been lost in the fracas. They soon traced it to Allen who was arrested when found hiding in the nearby docks. He was taken into custody after nearly being lynched by an angry public. It was alleged that he had hidden on the premises after closing time, and police suspected that he may have been guilty of other recent unsolved crimes in the area. He was hanged by James Berry in Swansea on the 10th April 1889.

Allcock, Joseph

In September, twenty six year old Joseph Allcock, a collier's agent, was drinking in a Nottingham pub, when he told a friend that he was heartbroken and that his wife had wronged him. He returned home, and after a quarrel he cut his wife's throat then gave himself up to the police. There was no evidence that his wife had ever been unfaithful, and it seemed that he had wrongly imagined her adultery. He was hanged by Billington and Warbrick on the 23 December 1896 in Nottingham.

Andrews, Frederick James

Andrews was convicted of killing Mrs Francis Short who was a widow who lived with Andrews at Kensington. She was a hardworking woman who supported him by selling fruit and vegetables from a stall. Andrews frequently ill-treated her and after a quarrel in March, he cut her throat and then stabbed her over forty times with a pen knife. He then went out and pawned her clothes. On the 3 May 1899 he was hanged by James and Thomas Billington in Wandsworth at the age of forty five.


 

Apted  Harold

Harold Apted was convicted of the murder of Frances O'Rourke, who was found lying face down in a pond at Southborough, near Tonbridge, after being sent on an errand by her parents. She had been stabbed to death and a knife found near the body was identified as belonging to Apted. He had been seen in the area earlier in the day, and when questioned by the police they noticed blood stains on his clothing. He was hanged in Maidstone on the 18 March 1902 at the age of twenty


Ashton, Charles William

Charles Ashton was a nineteen year old farm labourer who was employed at Scrampton, near Malton, North Yorkshire, he was convicted of the murder of Annie Marshall, a young domestic servant employed at the same farm. On 20 September, her body was found floating in a river; she had been savagely raped and then shot before being thrown into the water. Ashton confessed to the police that he had killed her but added that he never intended to. He was convicted at York Assizes before Mr Justice Grantham and recommended to mercy on account of his youth. The reprieve was refused and he was hanged in Hull by William and John Billington on the 22 December 1903.


 

Austin,  William George Charles

Thirty one year old William George Charles Austin was convicted of the murder of Unity Anne Butler who was just thirteen, the daughter of the family with whom he lodged at Windsor. The young girl mysteriously disappeared in July. After a search, she was found strangled and suffocated beneath a mattress in Austin's room. She had been bound with two pieces of cord and a dirty grey handkerchief was stuffed in her mouth. He was convicted at Berkshire Assizes before Mr Justice Jelf and hanged by Henry and Thomas Pierrepoint in Reading on the 5 November 1907.


Atherton, Abel

Able Atherton was a twenty nine year old  miner who murdered Mrs Elizabeth Ann Patrick, the wife of his former landlord, at Chopwell near Gateshead. He lodged with Mr and Mrs Patrick until they told him to leave because he was paying too much attention to their fifteen year old daughter. Despite finding new lodgings, he was still a frequent visitor to his former residence, but his visits would usually end with a row. After one particularly fierce argument, he went home to collect a shotgun, then returned and fired two shots at Elizabeth Patrick, who fell dead in the doorway. Atherton said it was an accident but he was found guilty and hanged by Henry Pierrepoint and William Willis in Durham on the 8 December 1909. Right up until the trapdoor opened he continued to claim  that he was innocent.

Atherley, Samuel

Samuel Atherley was a former soldier who murdered his girlfriend, Mrs Matilda Lambert and her three children John, Annie, and Samuel, by cutting their throats at their home at Arnold, Nottingham, on 10 July. He had lived with the woman for seven years and killed her after she told him to leave. He struck her over the head with a hammer before he took out the razor. After he had cut their throats, he turned the razor on himself but survived after being treated in hospital. He was hanged by Henry Pierrepoint and Thomas Pierrepoint in Nottingham on the 14 December 1909.  He was thirty years old at the time of his execution.

Abramovich, Myer

Twenty two year old Myer Abramovich was a Polish costermonger who was convicted of murdering thirty six year old Soloman  and his wife Annie Millstein who was thirty seven at their restaurant in Spitalfields on 27 December, 1911. They were stabbed to death and robbed of money and jewellery. The restaurant was then burnt to the ground in an attempt to hide the killings. After being convicted, Abramovich confessed that he had committed the crime after losing all his money gambling and being heavily in debt. He was hanged in Pentonville by John Ellis and Albert Lumb on the 6 March 1912.


Amos, John Vickers

John Amos was convicted of a triple murder at Bedington in April. Amos was the landlord of the Sun Inn until he was given notice to quit. He refused and the owners called the police to assist in the eviction. During the ensuing fracas, fifty two year old PC George Mussell and Sergeant Andrew Burton who was forty, and the wife of the new landlord, Mrs Sarah Grice who was thirty three, were shot dead by Amos who had held a large crowd at bay. He was convicted and sentenced to death on 4 July, He was hanged by Thomas Pierrepoint and William Willis in Newcastle on the 22 July 1913 at the age of thirty five.

Anderson, George

George Anderson was a Cheshunt labourer sentenced to death by Mr Justice Lawrence at Hertford- shire Assizes on 21 November, for the murder of Mrs Harriet Emily Whybrow who was thirty one at Waltham Cross. Harriet's mother was Anderson's second wife. When her own marriage broke up, she moved in with her mother and step-father. After the mother died, Harriet and Anderson began some form of relationship. Anderson was of intemperate habits and on 30 June, while in a drunken stupor he cut her throat. No motive was clearly established at the trial and having been found guilty he was hanged by John Ellis and George Brown on the 23 December 1914 at St Albans.  He was fifty nine at the time of his execution.

Asser, Verney

Verney Asser was a thirty year old  Australian soldier who was sentenced to death by Mr Justice Avory at Wiltshire Assizes on 16 January for the murder of Corporal Joseph Harold Durkin. Both men were training instructors in the 2nd Training Battalion stationed at Sutton Veney camp on Salisbury Plain, and specialised in handling the new Lewis machine gun. On the night of 27 November 1917, Durkin was found shot dead in his bunk after Asser had raised the alarm in response to a weapon's discharge. At first it appeared that Durkin had committed suicide but investi- gation by Sir Bernard Spilsbury ruled out the possibility. As Asser was the only other occupant of the hut, suspicion fell on him and he was later charged with the murder. He was hanged by John Ellis and William Willis at Shepton Mallet on the 5 March 1918.


Adams,  James

Thirty one year old James Adams was sentenced to death at Glasgow High Court by Lord Salveson on 22 October for the murder of Mrs Mary Doyle, a soldier's wife, by cutting her throat with a razor. Adams, an engineer, with a young family had recently separated from his wife and had been having a relationship with Mary Doyle, who was also estranged from her partner. On 1 August, Adams visited her house on Cameron Street, Glasgow, where she informed him that their affair was over because she was going to attempt a reconciliation with her husband. Adams became angry and produced a razor, with the intention, he later claimed, of cutting his own throat. They started a scuffle, during which she received a fatal wound to her throat. Adams surrendered to the police on the following morning. He was hanged by John Ellis on the 11 November 1919 in Glasgow.

Aldred, William Thomas

William Thomas Aldred was a fifty four year old cotton worker from Pendlebury, Salford, sentenced to death at Manchester Assizes by Mr Justice McCardie on l3 May for the murder of Ida Prescott  who was forty four, a widow and workmate whom he had courted. Aldred was a frequent visitor to Ida's home and although they were good friends, she refused to take the relationship further. On 16 February, he called at her house and after failing to persuade her to to go out with him, he cut her throat with a razor. Ida's daughter fetched a policeman and Aldred was immediately arrested. He was hanged by John Ellis in Manchester on the 22 June 1920.

Atkins, Percy James

Percy Atkins was a railway guard who was charged with the murder of his wife, whose body was found buried on an allotment at Chaddesden, Derby. Percy and Maud Atkins had been married for eight years when, after a series of rows, she left home and returned to live with her parents in Huntingdonshire, leaving her children to be looked after by their father. While she was absent from the area, Percy Atkins entered into a bigamous marriage with a Miss Margaret Milton. In November 1921, Maud Atkins returned to Derby to discuss gaining custody of the eldest child. On the 21st of that month, Percy and Maud went for a walk and headed towards his allotment. What happened next was never made clear but according to Percy, they had a quarrel which ended when she threw her wedding ring at him and rushed away. Atkins claimed he spent a while looking for the ring before going off in search of his wife. When he found her, he said, she was lying dead on a pile of rocks, apparently having committed suicide. Fearful that he would be blamed for her death and charged with murder, he concealed her body in a pre-dug hole on the allotment into which he had planned to plant an apple tree. The body was discovered six weeks later, by which time doctors were unable to state for certain what had been the cause of death. It was thought that she had either been strangled, or knocked unconscious then buried alive. Convicted at Derby Assizes before Mr Justice Horridge on 17 February. Due to the closure of Derby prison, he was hanged at Bagthorpe prison, Nottingham, by John Ellis on the 7 April 1922.  He was twenty nine years old at the time of his execution.

Absalom, Albert George

Albert George Absalom was a twenty eight year old  fish and chip shop manager who was convicted of the murder of his sweetheart, Alice Reed who was twenty six, a factory worker, whom he stabbed to death in a fit of jealousy. He was tried and found guilty and sentenced to death by Mr Justice Talbot at Lancashire Assizes on 15 June, he was told to place no hope in the jury's recommendation of mercy. He was hanged by Thomas Pierrepoint and Henry Pollard in Liverpool on the 25 July 1928.

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Gregg Manning