Unsolved Female Murders 1891 - 1914

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Uncle Jack
    Sergeant
    • Aug 2008
    • 588

    #1

    Unsolved Female Murders 1891 - 1914

    Just been reading a book called Unsolved Murders In Victorian London by Jonathan Oates. At the end of the book it lists a number of unsolved murders which maybe of interest, not from a Ripper point of view, but from a generally unsolved case side. Anyone got any info on these murders?

    EMILY ADAMS, LIMEHOUSE - 4TH AUG 1891
    ANN DARBY - 24 FEB 1893
    FANNY SAUNDERS - 13 MAY 1893
    ELLEN BANCE, VICTORIA PARK - 2 MAY 1893
    FLORENCE RALPH, WEST HAM - 2 JULY 1895
    ELIZABETH QUICKFALL, GRAND JUNCION CANAL - 16 MARCH 1896
    UNKNOWN CHILD, LITTLE MARSHALSEA STREET - 9 APRIL 1897
    FLORENCE SAUNDERS, PECKHAM - 22 AUGUST 1897
    MARY MARSHALL, BETHNAL GREEN - 22 OCT 1897
    BERTHA RUSS, WEST HAM - 27 MARCH 1899
    MARY WAKENESS, BRIXTON - 13 MAY 1900
    MARY MANBRIDGE, WALTHAMSTOW - 3 AUGUST 1900
    MARY HOGG, CAMBERLEY - 1906
    ROSSETTA POOK, LEYTONSTOW - 27 AUGUST 1907
    FORTONATA MARCHESINA, CLERKENWELL - 14 OCTOBER 1907
    ELIZABETH CLARK, BRIXTON - 3 NOVEMBER 1909
    EMILY MILLARD, GRAND JUNCION CANAL - 21 JUNE 1914
    Best regards,
    Adam


    "They assumed Kelly was the last... they assumed wrong" - Me
  • sdreid
    Commissioner
    • Feb 2008
    • 4956

    #2
    Also connected to London, by train for instance, and unsolved to my knowledge:

    Elizabeth Camp - 1897 - beaten

    Sophia Mary Money - 1905 - beaten

    Elizabeth Bailes - 1908 - cut throat
    This my opinion and to the best of my knowledge, that is, if I'm not joking.

    Stan Reid

    Comment

    • Uncle Jack
      Sergeant
      • Aug 2008
      • 588

      #3
      Will look into those some more Stan. Sound interesting.
      Best regards,
      Adam


      "They assumed Kelly was the last... they assumed wrong" - Me

      Comment

      • The Station Cat
        Premium Member
        • Mar 2016
        • 641

        #4
        I'd be interested to learn more about...

        MARY MARSHALL, BETHNAL GREEN - 22 OCT 1897

        ...if anyone has any further information that they could share.


        Just out of further interest, I assume that there were solved murders in Bethnal Green at the same time, can anyone confirm this?

        Comment

        • Harry D
          *
          • May 2014
          • 3360

          #5
          Originally posted by Uncle Jack View Post
          ELIZABETH QUICKFALL
          At least she didn't suffer.

          Comment

          • Parker_Pyne79
            Cadet
            • Mar 2016
            • 34

            #6
            Mary Ann Hogg

            Mary Ann Hogg was with her sister when she had her throat cut by a burgler. Her sister was also injured but escaped. That's all I know, I'm afraid.

            Comment

            • miss marple
              Sergeant
              • Feb 2008
              • 788

              #7
              Station Cat. Its Margaret Marshall. Thats why you could not find anything.
              A brutal murder at 10 Peel Grove Bethnal Green Sept 1897. Margaret Marshall 71 was an elderly lady of means who owned several properties and shares in gas and water companies, lived alone and collected her rents and no friends visited her. On the thursday before her death she was seen in the company of a strange woman. On Friday morning police broke into her house and found her in a pool of blood. She had been stabbed eight times on the left side of her face, the right side battered with a blunt instrament. She was dresses in a skirt bodice and stockings with no clothes below her waist. Nothing was stolen. Two instruments were used one blunt ,one sharp but they were not found.

              There was a Mary Marshall murdered at Tynemouth in 1894, stabbed by a soldier.
              Last edited by miss marple; 08-15-2016, 12:24 PM.

              Comment

              • John Wheat
                Assistant Commissioner
                • Jul 2008
                • 3346

                #8
                Originally posted by Uncle Jack View Post
                Just been reading a book called Unsolved Murders In Victorian London by Jonathan Oates. At the end of the book it lists a number of unsolved murders which maybe of interest, not from a Ripper point of view, but from a generally unsolved case side. Anyone got any info on these murders?

                EMILY ADAMS, LIMEHOUSE - 4TH AUG 1891
                ANN DARBY - 24 FEB 1893
                FANNY SAUNDERS - 13 MAY 1893
                ELLEN BANCE, VICTORIA PARK - 2 MAY 1893
                FLORENCE RALPH, WEST HAM - 2 JULY 1895
                ELIZABETH QUICKFALL, GRAND JUNCION CANAL - 16 MARCH 1896
                UNKNOWN CHILD, LITTLE MARSHALSEA STREET - 9 APRIL 1897
                FLORENCE SAUNDERS, PECKHAM - 22 AUGUST 1897
                MARY MARSHALL, BETHNAL GREEN - 22 OCT 1897
                BERTHA RUSS, WEST HAM - 27 MARCH 1899
                MARY WAKENESS, BRIXTON - 13 MAY 1900
                MARY MANBRIDGE, WALTHAMSTOW - 3 AUGUST 1900
                MARY HOGG, CAMBERLEY - 1906
                ROSSETTA POOK, LEYTONSTOW - 27 AUGUST 1907
                FORTONATA MARCHESINA, CLERKENWELL - 14 OCTOBER 1907
                ELIZABETH CLARK, BRIXTON - 3 NOVEMBER 1909
                EMILY MILLARD, GRAND JUNCION CANAL - 21 JUNE 1914
                They were obviously all killed by Crossmere

                Comment

                • Mayerling
                  Superintendent
                  • Feb 2008
                  • 2762

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Parker_Pyne79 View Post
                  Mary Ann Hogg was with her sister when she had her throat cut by a burgler. Her sister was also injured but escaped. That's all I know, I'm afraid.
                  Odd, the last name "Hogg" is not uncommon (James Hogg was a governor of Texas in the early 20th Century, with a daughter notoriously named "Ima" ; and there was a Scotts author also named James Hogg). But Mary Hogg was also the name of an earlier murder victim - the victim (with her infant child) of her unsuccessful rival for her husband Frank Hogg, Mrs. Mary Eleanor Pearcy, in 1890.

                  Also curious that the name of the next female victim on that list at the start of this column has the last name "Pook", which was the last name of Edward Pook, suspected of the murder of Jane Clousen in 1871 in Eltham (but acquitted, due to a problem about a key piece of evidence being hearsay).

                  Jeff

                  Comment

                  • kjab3112
                    Detective
                    • May 2016
                    • 198

                    #10
                    Not read the book, but can anyone clarify whether Hogg was Camberley (as posted) which is Surrey or Camberwell which is most definitely London? Parker pyne?

                    Comment

                    Working...
                    X