Murderous Stories from Suffolk – Frightful Fridays
News of the Times Episode 198 | 1851 & 1920
***DISTURBING CONTENT***
In today’s episode, we are in Suffolk investigating two grisly murders that took place there.
In our first story, it is 1851 and pretty milk maid Mary Baker has been stabbed openly at a county fair, by her master, well to do farmer John Mickleburgh. We take a look at the antecedents to the crime and the reason why she was so violently murdered.
Our second story from 1920 is both disturbing and shocking, even by today’s more jaded standards. Some young boys who have collected at the local pond to go fishing are horrified to see a hand sticking out of the water which the press dubbed “the beckoning hand”. Thirteen-year-old Edith Howes has been murdered with her body dumped in the local pond. The identity of the murderer shocked the public.
Two grisly murder cases from the beautiful county of Suffolk is today’s episode of Frightful Fridays.
Hosted by Robin Coles.
#NewsofTheTimes #VictorianCrimeStories #HistoricalCrimeStories #VictorianMurders #Historicalcrimedocumentary #historicaltruecrime #suffolk #murderplan
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Email: newsofthetimespodcast@gmail.com
EPISODE
If you like this, here are links to some other recommended videos:
1738 – 1895: Stories of When Children Kill | Ep158
1760 + 1825: Aristocracy: Murder and Scandal | Ep162
1886 – 1946: Lancashire Murder Stories | Ep166
1924: The Crumbles Murder – Part 1 | Ep170
1920: Crumbles Murders – Part 2 | Ep174
1850 – 1897: Salacious Stories From the Stage | Ep178
1874 – 1878: Infamous Murders in Wales | Ep182
1900 – 1912: Murders at Yarmouth | Ep186
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News of the Times Frightful Fridays – Murderous Stories from Suffolk Welcome to News of the Times In today’s episode, we are following up on a request for murderous stories from Suffolk. Our first story takes place in the village of Thrandeston in 1851. Pretty Mary Baker is
Openly stabbed at a fair on the village green. The culprit is her employer, John Mickleburgh, who seems upset to see her enjoying herself with her sweetheart. Our second story from 1920 is the highly disturbing case of 13 year old Edith
Elisabeth Howes whose body was discovered in a pond from her hand sticking out of the water. Her killer is discovered but makes this case even more disturbing. Two horrific crimes set in the beautiful backdrop of Suffolk is today’s episode of Frightful Fridays. We hope you enjoy the show!
*** THRANDESTON MURDER of MARY BAKER, 1851 Our first Suffolk story takes place in the small village of Thrandeston in July, 1851. It is the annual fair on the village green of Thrandeston, of the hundreds attending are: John Mickleburgh – property owner, Mary Baker – milkmaid and
Servant to John Mickleburgh , John Bootman, Mary Baker’s sweetheart Clara French, Mary Baker’s sister And John French, Mary Baker’s brother-in-law. *** All seem to be having a jolly time. Some wine and brandy and water is bought, and much chatting at what
Appears to be a convivial meetup at the fair. On the outskirts of the village green is a beer house where Mary and her sweetheart repair to after having had some drinks with the others and seen some of the stalls at the fair. It is here that the murder of Mary Baker
Takes place in plain view of the 40 or so people within the beer house. *** From THE SUFFOLK CHRONICLE, 09 August 1851 ATROCIOUS MURDER AT THRANDESTON A young woman, named Mary Baker had been stabbed
By one John Mickleburgh at Thrandeston fair on the evening of Thursday the 31st of July 1851. The unfortunate woman died from the effects of the wound on Friday afternoon and the charge against Mickleburgh, who was arrested soon after the occurrence, and remanded for the next morning
To Ipswich gaol to await the result, consequently assumed the most serious complexion. *** Mickleburgh, it appears, is a small farmer, residing on the green at Thrandeston, a village between three or four miles from Eye. His occupation consists of about 40 acres of land, of which about 2/3 are his own property
And he possesses besides certain rights of common land, and is the owner of various cottages in Thrandeston, and Shelfanger, Norfolk from whence he originally came. *** He is upwards of 40 years of age, is married, and has a family of three daughters. The victim of this brutality is a young woman,
Named Mary Baker, the daughter of a respectable labouring man at Shelfanger. She was about 21 years of age, and at the time of the murder was, for the second time, in the prisoner’s service, her present period of servitude having commenced at Michaelmas 1850. *** She is described as a young
Person of considerable personal attractions, and, it is rumoured, in the neighbourhood, that Mickleburgh was much attached to her. Indeed, he has not scrupled to boast of an intimacy with her of a positively immoral character. It is only an act of justice to her,
The unfortunate deceased Mary Baker, to state that she has denied to her friends the existence of any grounds for his boast. *** In Thrandeston, a very large stock and pleasure fair is annually held on the green,
On the last day of July and the first day of August. It is usually attended by numbers of the peasantry of the district for miles around. On the present occasion it commenced on Thursday week and is currently reported that Mary Baker, having obtained permission from her mistress
To attend the fair, announced her attention to Mickleburgh of going there with her sweetheart. “If you do,” exclaimed the fellow with an oath, “you shall not sleep tonight.” *** Heedless of this threat, the girl went in the afternoon, accompanied by a young man named William Bootman, a brickmaker
Living in the parish of Thrandeston. Mickleburgh also went to the fair, and in the early part of the evening was seen in a booth sitting beside Bootman and Baker. *** Singularly enough, he appeared then on friendly terms with both and actually treated them to wine and brandy and
Water. Among the parties in the booth at the time were Clara French, the sister of the deceased, and her husband John French. There is no evidence forthcoming to show that anything passed to arouse Mickleburgh’s anger, but we believe he has himself stated that the girl made a gesture with her
Hand indicative of her preference for Bootman. Between 7:00 and 8:00 the deceased, Mary Baker and Bootman left the booth and repaired to a cottage close against the railway bridge about 100 yards distant from the green kept by Charles Barrett and opened as a beer house during the fair time.
The prisoner, with John French and his wife, shortly afterwards left the booth and walked towards the outskirts of the green. *** Mickleburgh, a man of unbridled temper from all accounts, partly excited by drink and partly maddened by the indifference of the girl towards him seems, at this moment, to have determined upon
Her destruction. Calling Clara French aside, he declared he would be revenged, without specifying the object of his vengeance, and asked her to tell her sister to be home at 9 instead of 9:30 and he would meet her in the Meadow. Parting from John French and his wife,
There seems little doubt that he proceeded straight to the stall of William Sayer, a Hawker, and purchased a spring back knife with a stiletto blade 4 1/2 inches in length for which he gave two shillings. *** With this weapon in his possession, he followed his intended victim to Barrett’s house,
Near the railway bridge, resolving to put his diabolical purpose into immediate execution. *** THE MURDER The prisoner walked across the room with a knife in his hand, towards where Mary Baker was sitting. Upon seeing him she said “Ah master, here am I.”
He made some reply and then passed through into the back house and was absent about a minute. No one but the deceased seems to have seen him return but a sudden heart-rending shriek from her “I’m dead! I’m dead” silenced the noise and directed the attention of everyone present to the spot.
The prisoner, Mickleburgh, was then seen drawing back from the girl holding the knife before him. She herself was not aware he had stabbed her until she felt the wound which it seems he accompanied with a brutish exclamation “Ah you have it now!”. *** John French who was sitting near instantly seized
Him by the arms and held them from behind whilst the company shouted to take the knife from him. Using a filthy expression in allusion to his alleged connection with the deceased he added “But if she will go with Dickie, I must give her cold steel.” *** Mary Baker’s Death
In the meantime, a messenger had been dispatched for medical assistance, and then in the course of an hour or so Mr W Miller, surgeon of Eye, was in attendance. At his directions the young woman was undressed and placed in bed. The knife was found to have
Penetrated through her shawl dress stays and under clothing and entered the body between the 8th and 9th ribs on the left side of the chest leaving an incision about half an inch in length. *** The poor creature suffered
The most acute agony and throughout the night gave utterances to her sufferings in the most pitiful terms. Mr. Miller remained with her sometime and saw her again on the following morning rendering all the assistance his skill could suggest. The poor creature gradually sank and expired
Between 4:00 and 5:00 in the afternoon. It was found upon a postmortem examination being made that the knife had penetrated the body to the depth of between four and five inches passing through the diaphragm and spleen. ***
That Mickleburgh had with forethought gone to purchase a knife at one of the fair stalls, then followed Mary Baker to the beer house on the outskirts of the green is beyond question. What everyone wanted to know was why. The answer seems to have come directly from Mickleburgh himself. ***
From THE SUFFOLK CHRONICLE, 27 March 1852 MURDER AT THRANDESTON Whilst I had hold of Mickleburgh, I said, “Mickleburgh, whatever do you mean by what you have done?” He said, “I meant to do it. I went and bought the knife on purpose.’
He said to the policeman, “You may take me, and do what you like with me. I have done what I intended do, and I hope to have done it effectually.” He said, “I wish my arm had been a little stronger and I would have given her four more inches of it.”
I cautioned him that anything he said could be used in evidence. He then said, “I have done what I intended to do.” He continued, “I have always done what I liked with her, ever since she had been living at mine.” ***
At the police station he said, “I went to a stall in the fair and purchased the knife. I gave two shillings for it. When I went into Charles Barrett’s, Mary Baker was sitting there. She said, “Ha, master, her am I.” I said, “Ha Mor, you shan’t be long before you
Have this piece of steel.” *** I afterwards went into the backhouse and opened the knife, and when it was opened, it was like a dagger. If she gets well, and doesn’t come to my proposals, I have the best
Brace of pistols the world can produce.” He then stated, “On Wednesday my wife went to Diss, and Mary Baker slept with me that night.” When he said he went into the backhouse and that the knife looked like a dagger, he added, “I hope she will die”.
*** On the following morning his wife came to see him. He said to her, “You have suspected me before – Now you know all about it. If you had died a year or two ago, this would not have occurred.” ***
The motive for the murder seems to have been one of unbridled jealousy, although Mary Baker had always told friends that there were no illicit relations between herself and Mickleburgh. Appearing at the fair in public with her sweetheart – they had been courting for some 6
Months – seems to have pushed Mickleburgh over the edge. And, in blind jealousy, he killed her. *** THE TRIAL The trial was open and shut in terms of the murder and the identity of the murderer.
The real question was whether Mickleburgh knew what he was doing at the time of the murder. *** Much evidence was produced of his history of insanity within the trial. From all accounts, he would most likely have been diagnosed
With bi-polar disorder as his history described a cycle of manic fits followed by deep depression that had gone on throughout his lifetime. The Judge, in his summation, stressed that the letter of the law was based on whether Mickleburgh understood at the time of purchasing the knife
And then following Mary Baker and his subsequent stabbing of her whether he was aware of what he was doing and if he realised that it was wrong. *** The Jury took a few minutes to consider and concluded that Mickleburgh was guilty.
Mickleburgh then asked to say a few words. What follows is a rambling speech stating that he knew his defence of insanity would not work because he was clearly sane. He goes on to say that if the jury and learned judge had known the whole truth, they would have found him innocent. ***
Mickleburgh does not relay what the whole truth that he refers to is. The Judge pronounced the death sentence. As expected, pleas for clemency are submitted to the Home Secretary and actually succeed. He is admitted to having a “diseased intellect” and his death sentence is commuted to life in prison. ***
He is released with time served 20 years after sentencing. But, John Mickleburgh himself is murdered in 1888 – 35 years after his killing of Mary Baker. *** From THE NORTHAMPTON MERCURY, 10 March, 1888 TRAGIC END OF A MURDERER
Kenninghall Workhouse, Suffolk, where an inmate was killed about 12 months ago, has again been the scene of a fatal quarrel, the victim in this case being a man named John Mickleburgh, who was himself 35 years ago sentenced to death for the murder of a girl at Thrandeston Fair.
Mickleburgh was an inmate of the sick ward, and among the attendants was a pauper named John Revell Burrows. A quarrel took place between them about a week ago, and Mickleburgh, who was severely beaten, died on Thursday week. ***
The Thrandeston murder, for which he was sentenced to death, happened so long ago that the circumstances are almost forgotten, but they were brought to remembrance a few months back by some proceedings in the Ipswich Bankruptcy Court. At that time, it was reported that Mickleburgh was
Obtaining an honest living, and in deference to the man’s own position, as well as to the feelings of the family, no public notice was taken of the old story. It appears that Mickleburgh, after his sentence, was reprieved, and released twenty years later on a ticket-of-leave. *** THE CORTON POND MYSTERY, 1920
Our second episode of murderous Stories from Suffolk is the disturbing case of the death of 13 year old Edith Elizabeth Howes. From THE DAILY HERALD, 01 July 1920 THE BECKONING HAND YOUNG GIRL’S BODY FOUND FLOATING IN POND SUFFOLK MYSTERY Some schoolboys who had gone to fish on Saturday
In a lonely tree-shadowed pond, near Corton, a village just north of Lowestoft, were startled to see a hand protruding from the water. Seized with horror, they rushed from the scene to the neighbouring village. There they found the constable named Bickers who,
On hearing the story, hastened to the spot with the boys following timidly behind. *** When he reached the pond, the policeman saw that the boys had been telling the truth and that a hand was indeed apparent above the placid and desolate waters in an attitude of ghastly beckoning.
Summoning up his courage, he caught hold of the ice-cold fingers and brought to light the body of a young girl that apparently had been floating a little below the surface of the water. *** BODY IDENTIFIED Inquiries that were quickly set on foot, soon resulted in the body being identified as that
Of Edith Elisabeth Howes, an attractive girl of 13, who had been living with her parents at 2, Factory-street, Lowestoft. It soon became evident that death was due to violence, and the report by the police surgeon stated that the girl had been
Outraged previous to death. At the inquest on the girl, which was opened here this afternoon, a girl named Emma Ellen Tuttle gave evidence of identification, and said that she last saw Edith Howes at 9.20 on Saturday morning walking along the Corton road with her father, about 1 ½ miles
From the scene of the tragedy. *** CORONOR AND FATHER The father was present at the inquest and on the advice of the coroner, he reserved his cross examination of the witness. The only other evidence was that given by the police who described the recovery of the body
And the inquest was adjourned until June 21 in order to allow the police to compete their investigations. *** The pond where the body was found is in a field almost opposite Corton pleasure gardens, which once belonged to Colman, the mustard king – a thickly wooded garden of great extent. The pond
Is almost entirely screened from observation from the main road and has steeply sloping banks. *** This brutal attack shocked the public and made national headlines. It was not just the murder; it was the outrage / violation itself which
Added to the highly grim nature of the crime. This shock was heightened to disbelief when the girl’s own father became the primary suspect. *** From THE YARMOUTH INDEPENDEN T, 05 June 1920 There was a sensational development in connection with the girl’s death when on Wednesday, William Howes, (aged 40),
Her father, was charged at Lowestoft Police Court with murdering his daughter. Evidence, which was only formal, was given by Superintendent Newson that the prisoner, when asked to account for his movements, could not do so satisfactorily. *** A post-mortem
On the girl’s body revealed the fact that she had been outraged, probably stunned, and put into the water alive, the cause of death being drowning. Prisoner was seen to part from his daughter at Duke Head’s Street, Lowestoft, on the morning of the tragedy, and evidence had been obtained
That he was seen near the spot on Corton Road with the girl on the morning when this affair took place. *** ABOUT WILLIAM JOHN HOWES Howes was a decorated soldier who had served in the Boer War and had seen action in Loos and Ypres during the great
War. Howes had been blown up in Ypres and was known to suffer from trembling of his limbs, insomnia and weakness. He had been given a medical discharge on the 30th August 1918. Investigations by police discovered some disturbing stories of the Howes household.
*** In February 1920, 13 year old Edith was sent on a bus to Kessingland on a Saturday night. She was found there alone and crying and returned to her family by police. Before she was found, Howes had reported her missing to the local police,
Although he had placed her on the bus. In hindsight, this begged the question of whether Howes had been pre-staging the scene of the murder to come. *** Howes had been married three times and
Had two daughters aged 13 and 11 whom lived with him. His third wife left him on the 7th of May, 1920 and reported being afraid of him. Howes had complained that she was trying to poison him and that she had given him syphilis. Both accusations were medically proven to be untrue.
The history and family background of Howes, as well as the physical and mental frailty which was very apparent to all, played a part in the decision that was to come. *** From THE DAILY NEWS London, 03 June, 1920
At the brief hearing at the Police Court today, Howes gave the appearance of a neurotic. He was trembling from head to foot, and this was explained by the fact that he had sustained shell-shock at the front.. He clearly declared that he was not guilty.
Superintendent Newson said that although the prisoner had declared to them that he parted with the girl in the main street at 10:00, he was seen with her near then pond at a later hour. *** BURIAL There was a pathetic scene at the local cemetery this afternoon when the funeral
Of the dead girl took place. It was attended by a large number of school children. *** Howes was remanded as investigations proceeded. When asked to give his movements on the critical day, Howes stated he was at the market when the
Crime took place. No corroborating evidence could be found to support his statement. Instead, the police managed to collect 20 witnesses placing Howes at the scene of the crime during the murder window. His trousers also were seen to be wet when he arrived back
Home and there were scratches upon his face which he had no explanation of. *** From THE DAILY HERALD, 09 July, 1920 GIRL DEAD IN POND VERDICT AGAINST FATHER A coroner’s jury at Lowestoft today returned a verdict of “wilful murder” against William
John Howes, aged 40, fisherman, the body of whose daughter, aged 13 was recovered from a pond in Corton on May 29. A post mortem examination, it was stated, showed that the girl had been violated, stunned and thrown into the pond. Howes was seen in the
Vicinity of the pond in the girl’s company, and later it was noticed that his face was scratched and bleeding. *** Asked if he would like to give evidence, Howes replied, “I have nothing to say except what I told Detectives White and Macraw.”
8 Comments
THX Robin!!
Thank you, NotT! Enjoyed, as always.
I enjoyed this show about these two murder cases from Suffolk, they were both very heinous. First case, of this young woman who was murdered by her employer. Mary, I believe didn't have any interest in her married employer but somehow he fantasized that she did. I really thought he was going to receive the death penalty instead of the final sentencing. Second case, this was truly heartbreaking because this horrific murder involved Edith a young thirteen year girl who was killed by her father. Again, I thought he was going to receive the death penalty but because he had PTSD from the war he was spared. I realize that people who have mental health issues aren't responsible for their actions but sometimes I wonder if it's a hoax to get out of receiving the death penalty, period! Great investigation, presentation, backstories, illustrations and photos, as always. Take care 🦋
Thanks for another great show. 🌻🦋
Thank you!!! This was my request and I enjoyed this very much,
I wouldn't be surprised that Harrison had General Paralysis of The Insane. Not showing symtoms, until he killed his daughter.
As always another excellent episode of criminal activity in the past, thank you News Team!!!🙏😢⚖️🤔❣️
I enjoyed this video very much. Thank you for sharing.