There were plenty of unsolved or botched investigation in London:
1857 - Waterloo Bridge Mystery - cut up body of a man found in a large carpet bag (last seen carried by an elderly woman across the Bridge the evening before) that was deposited near one of the arches on the Thames. Never solved.
April 1866 - Murder of Mrs. Sarah Milsom in the house on Cannon Street in Whitechapel that she was one of two housekeepers in. A man was arrested and put on trial, but acquitted when nearly 20 people testified to his alibi on the night of the murder.
July 1872 - the killings of Mrs. Squires and her daughter by a young man who was seen tearing out of their shop in Hoxton. What is really killing about this case, aside from no good description of the young man was that a bottle near the strangled victims had a "fingerprint" clearly on it. Fingerprinting, of course, was not in use until 1905.
December 1872 - the aforementioned Coram Street mystery of Harriet Buswell. In this case a German ship doctor was arrested and tried - and like the defendant in the Milsom Murder able to cast doubt that he could have done it.
December 1878 - the Burton Crescent mystery. Miss Rachel Samuel, a recluse, disappeared from her rooms - some human remains were later identified as her. A maid, Mary Donovan, was arrested but released (January 10, 1879).
Between October 10, 1877 and May 9, 1879 - Ms Mathilda Hacker vanished in a rooming house run by the Bastendorff family at No. 4 Euston Square. Her body found beneath some coal in the basement. A maid named Hannah Dobbs and one of the owners, Severein Bastendorff, were tried - both got acquitted (due to lack of conclusive evidence) for murder, but Bastendorff's lying led to him getting seven years for perjury.
February 1881 - killing of Lt. Percy Roper at barracks at Chatham, when the company was having dinner (Roper was in his rooms). Suicide impossible, though suspected. Several suspects in the staff (one, a Sergeant died a suicide a week or so later). In November 1881, a day before his execution for the murder of Frederick Isaac Gold on the Brighton Railway Line, Percy Lefroy Mapleton confessed that he shot Lt. Roper, but he rescinded this confession within a day.
March 1884 - Mary Ann Yates suffocated (under singularly cruel circumstances) at No. 12 Burton Crescent. No suspect located.
January 1888 - Ms Lucy Clark, dressmaker, found killed in her shop on Baker Street (!!). Her two nephews were suspected and briefly arrested, but released. Nothing further on this case.
Of course we are only looking for unsolved murders in the London area and environs. There were plenty of unsolved murders in the years leading up to 1888 around the globe.
Jeff
1857 - Waterloo Bridge Mystery - cut up body of a man found in a large carpet bag (last seen carried by an elderly woman across the Bridge the evening before) that was deposited near one of the arches on the Thames. Never solved.
April 1866 - Murder of Mrs. Sarah Milsom in the house on Cannon Street in Whitechapel that she was one of two housekeepers in. A man was arrested and put on trial, but acquitted when nearly 20 people testified to his alibi on the night of the murder.
July 1872 - the killings of Mrs. Squires and her daughter by a young man who was seen tearing out of their shop in Hoxton. What is really killing about this case, aside from no good description of the young man was that a bottle near the strangled victims had a "fingerprint" clearly on it. Fingerprinting, of course, was not in use until 1905.
December 1872 - the aforementioned Coram Street mystery of Harriet Buswell. In this case a German ship doctor was arrested and tried - and like the defendant in the Milsom Murder able to cast doubt that he could have done it.
December 1878 - the Burton Crescent mystery. Miss Rachel Samuel, a recluse, disappeared from her rooms - some human remains were later identified as her. A maid, Mary Donovan, was arrested but released (January 10, 1879).
Between October 10, 1877 and May 9, 1879 - Ms Mathilda Hacker vanished in a rooming house run by the Bastendorff family at No. 4 Euston Square. Her body found beneath some coal in the basement. A maid named Hannah Dobbs and one of the owners, Severein Bastendorff, were tried - both got acquitted (due to lack of conclusive evidence) for murder, but Bastendorff's lying led to him getting seven years for perjury.
February 1881 - killing of Lt. Percy Roper at barracks at Chatham, when the company was having dinner (Roper was in his rooms). Suicide impossible, though suspected. Several suspects in the staff (one, a Sergeant died a suicide a week or so later). In November 1881, a day before his execution for the murder of Frederick Isaac Gold on the Brighton Railway Line, Percy Lefroy Mapleton confessed that he shot Lt. Roper, but he rescinded this confession within a day.
March 1884 - Mary Ann Yates suffocated (under singularly cruel circumstances) at No. 12 Burton Crescent. No suspect located.
January 1888 - Ms Lucy Clark, dressmaker, found killed in her shop on Baker Street (!!). Her two nephews were suspected and briefly arrested, but released. Nothing further on this case.
Of course we are only looking for unsolved murders in the London area and environs. There were plenty of unsolved murders in the years leading up to 1888 around the globe.
Jeff
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