Records of Victorian Women Murderers and Thieves Placed Online
The Ancestry.co.uk website is publishing 4,400 parole records with 500 photographs of some of the prisoners sentenced in the mid-19th century. They sit demurely in their uniforms, with white pinafores, some wearing mob caps, hair parted in the middle, hands spread in front of their stomachs: murderers and thieves, some of the latter sentenced to savage prison terms for the most minor of crimes. There is Elizabeth Murphy, 19, sentenced at Salford sessions to five years’ penal servitude to be followed by seven years’ police supervision, apparently for stealing an umbrella; Elizabeth Burk, who got seven years’ hard labour for taking a piece of ribbon; and 45-year-old Dorcas Snell, who received five years with hard labour in 1883 for the theft of a piece of bacon. The youngest – an 11-year-old called Ann McQuillan – received four years for housebreaking; the oldest, Ann Dalton, 76, five years for stealing two sheets. »
Records of Victorian Women Murderers and Thieves Placed Online The Ancestry.co.uk website is publishing 4,400 parole...
I finally gave in and purchased an Ancestry.com subscription a few weeks ago. (I’d been using my free library access...
Hohó, megvan az új kedvenc weboldalam! Online elérhető anyagok Viktória-korabeli női gyilkosokról és tolvajokról....