Elizabeth Camp was murdered on 11 February 1897 on a train travelling from Hounslow to Waterloo. A useful account of the murder and investigation by William Owen Gay, formerly chief constable of the British Transport Police, is available online:
No one was ever charged with the murder, though a recently discovered article by Frederick Cunliffe-Owen (as "Ex-Attache"), published in the Butte Weekly Miner on 2 December 1897, claimed that the killer had been identified as a barrister, had also murdered Emma Matilda Johnson near Windsor in September the same year, and was likely to be discreetly committed to Broadmoor. As late as 1906 a soldier in South Africa confessed to the murder and was brought back to England, but it was said that he did so only to draw attention to a sentence of imprisonment that he had received for a military offence [Daily Mail, 6 April 1906].
No one was ever charged with the murder, though a recently discovered article by Frederick Cunliffe-Owen (as "Ex-Attache"), published in the Butte Weekly Miner on 2 December 1897, claimed that the killer had been identified as a barrister, had also murdered Emma Matilda Johnson near Windsor in September the same year, and was likely to be discreetly committed to Broadmoor. As late as 1906 a soldier in South Africa confessed to the murder and was brought back to England, but it was said that he did so only to draw attention to a sentence of imprisonment that he had received for a military offence [Daily Mail, 6 April 1906].
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