Red Barn Murder

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The Red Barn, so called for the red clay-tiled roof to the left of its main door. The remaining roof was thatched. RedBarn.jpg
The Red Barn, so called for the red clay-tiled roof to the left of its main door. The remaining roof was thatched.

The Red Barn Murder was a 1827 murder in Polstead, Suffolk, England. A young woman, Maria Marten, was shot dead by her lover William Corder at the Red Barn, a local landmark. The two had arranged to meet before eloping to Ipswich. Corder sent letters to Marten's family claiming that she was well, but after her stepmother spoke of having dreamed that Maria had been murdered, her body was discovered in the barn the next year.

Contents

Corder was located in London, where he had married. He was returned to Suffolk and found guilty of murder in a well-publicised trial. In 1828, he was hanged at Bury St Edmunds in an execution witnessed by a huge crowd. The story provoked numerous newspaper articles, songs and plays. The village where the crime had taken place became a tourist attraction and the barn was stripped by souvenir hunters. Plays, ballads and songs about the murder remained popular throughout the next century and continue to be performed today. [1] [2]

Murder

Maria Marten; her sister Ann, who was said to be very similar to Maria, was the model for this sketch which appeared in Curtis's account of the case MariaMarten.jpg
Maria Marten; her sister Ann, who was said to be very similar to Maria, was the model for this sketch which appeared in Curtis's account of the case

Maria Marten (born 24 July 1801) was the daughter of Thomas Marten, a molecatcher from Polstead, Suffolk. [3] In March 1826, when she was 24, she formed a relationship with the 22-year-old William Corder. Marten was an attractive woman and relationships with men from the neighbourhood had already resulted in two children. One child belonging to Corder's older brother Thomas died as an infant, but the other, Thomas Henry, was still alive at the time when Corder met Marten. [4] Thomas Henry's father, Peter Matthews, did not marry Marten but regularly sent money to provide for the child. [4]

Corder (born 1803) was the son of a local farmer and had a reputation as something of a fraudster and a ladies' man. He was known as "Foxey" at school because of his sly manner. Corder had fraudulently sold his father's pigs, although his father had settled the matter without involving the law, but Corder had not changed his behaviour. He later obtained money by passing a forged cheque for £93 and he had helped local thief Samuel "Beauty" Smith steal a pig from a neighbouring village. When Smith was questioned by the local constable over the theft, he made a prophetic statement concerning Corder: "I'll be damned if he will not be hung some of these days." Corder had been sent to London in disgrace after his fraudulent sale of the pigs, but he was recalled to Polstead when his brother Thomas drowned attempting to cross a frozen pond. [5] Corder's father and three brothers all died within eighteen months of each other and only he remained to run the farm with his mother.

Corder wished to keep his relationship with Marten a secret, but she gave birth to their child in 1827 at the age of 25 and was apparently keen that she and Corder should marry. The child died (later reports suggested that he/she may have been murdered), but Corder apparently still intended to marry Marten. That summer, in the presence of her stepmother, Ann Marten, Corder suggested that she meet him at the Red Barn, from where he proposed that they elope to Ipswich. He claimed that he had heard rumours that the parish officers were going to prosecute Maria Marten for having bastard children. Corder initially suggested that they elope on the Wednesday evening, but later decided to delay until the Thursday evening. On Thursday, he was again delayed; his brother falling ill is mentioned as the reason in some sources, although most claim that all his brothers were dead by this time. On Friday, 18 May 1827, Corder appeared at the Martens' cottage during the day and, according to Ann, he told her stepdaughter that they had to leave at once, as he had heard that the local constable had obtained a warrant to prosecute her (no warrant had been obtained, but it is not known if Corder was lying or was mistaken). Marten was worried that she could not leave in broad daylight, but Corder told her that she should dress in men's clothing so as to avert suspicion, and he would carry her things to the Red Barn and change before they continued on to Ipswich. [3]

Maria's ghost points to her grave. Ann Marten's claim that she dreamed about the location of Maria's grave added to the appeal of the case for the public and press. Ghost of Maria Marten.jpg
Maria's ghost points to her grave. Ann Marten's claim that she dreamed about the location of Maria's grave added to the appeal of the case for the public and press.

Shortly after Corder left the house, Marten set out to meet him at the Red Barn, which was situated on Barnfield Hill, about half a mile from the Martens' cottage. This was the last time that she was seen alive. Corder also disappeared, but later turned up and claimed that Marten was in Ipswich, or some other place nearby, and that he could not yet bring her back as his wife for fear of provoking the anger of his friends and relatives. The pressure on Corder to produce his wife eventually forced him to leave the area. He wrote letters to Marten's family claiming that they were married and living on the Isle of Wight, and he gave various excuses for her lack of communication: she was unwell, she had hurt her hand, or the letter must have been lost. [4]

Suspicion continued to grow, and Marten's stepmother began talking of dreams that Maria had been murdered and buried in the Red Barn. On 19 April 1828, she persuaded her husband to go to the Red Barn and dig in one of the grain storage bins. He quickly uncovered the remains of his daughter buried in a sack. She was badly decomposed but still identifiable. An inquest was carried out at the Cock Inn at Polstead (which still stands today), where Marten was formally identified by her sister Ann from some physical characteristics. Her hair and some clothing were recognisable, and she was known to be missing a tooth which was also absent from the jawbone of the corpse. Evidence was uncovered to implicate Corder in the crime: his green handkerchief was discovered around the body's neck. [4]

Capture

This "penny dreadful" from 1833 shows Maria's burial and Ayres and Lea arresting Corder Corder-broadside.png
This "penny dreadful" from 1833 shows Maria's burial and Ayres and Lea arresting Corder

Corder was easily discovered, as Ayres, the constable in Polstead, was able to obtain his old address from a friend. Ayres was assisted by James Lea, an officer of the London police who later led the investigation into "Spring-heeled Jack". They tracked Corder to Everley Grove House, a boarding house for ladies in Brentford. [5] He was running the boarding house with his new wife Mary Moore, whom he had met through a lonely hearts advertisement that he had placed in The Times (which had received more than 100 replies). [6] [7] [a] Judith Flanders states in her 2011 book that Corder had also placed advertisements in the Morning Herald and The Sunday Times . [8] He received more than forty replies from the Morning Herald and 53 from The Sunday Times that he never picked up. [9] These letters were subsequently published by George Foster in 1828. [10]

Lea managed to gain entry under the pretext that he wished to board his daughter there, and he surprised Corder in the parlour. Thomas Hardy noted the Dorset County Chronicle's report of his capture:

…in parlour with 4 ladies at breakfast, in dressing gown & had a watch before him by which he was 'minuting' the boiling of some eggs. [11]

Lea took Corder to one side and informed him of the charges, but he denied all knowledge of both Marten and the crime. A search of the house uncovered a pair of pistols supposedly bought on the day of the murder; some letters from a Mr Gardener, which may have contained warnings about the discovery of the crime; and a passport from the French ambassador, evidence which suggested that Corder may have been preparing to flee. [4]

Trial

William Corder awaiting trial WilliamCorder-awaitingtrial.jpg
William Corder awaiting trial

Corder was taken back to Suffolk where he was tried at Shire Hall, Bury St Edmunds. The trial started on 7 August 1828, having been put back several days because of the interest which the case had generated. The hotels in Bury St Edmunds began to fill up from as early as 21 July, and admittance to the court was by ticket only because of the large numbers who wanted to view the trial. Despite this, the judge and court officials still had to push their way bodily through the crowds that had gathered around the door. The judge was the Chief Baron of the Exchequer, William Alexander, who was unhappy with the coverage given to the case by the press "to the manifest detriment of the prisoner at the bar". [12] The Times, nevertheless, congratulated the public for showing good sense in aligning themselves against Corder, who entered a plea of not guilty. [13]

Marten's exact cause of death could not be established. It was thought that a sharp instrument had been plunged into her eye socket, possibly Corder's short sword, but this wound could have been caused by her father's spade when he was exhuming the body. Strangulation could not be ruled out, as Corder's handkerchief had been discovered around her neck; to add to the confusion, the wounds to her body suggested that she had been shot. The indictment charged Corder with "murdering Maria Marten, by feloniously and wilfully shooting her with a pistol through the body, and likewise stabbing her with a dagger." [3] To avoid any chance of a mistrial, he was indicted on nine charges, including one of forgery.

Ann Marten was called to give evidence of the events of the day of Maria's disappearance and her later dreams. Thomas Marten then told the court how he had dug up his daughter, and Maria's 10-year-old brother George revealed that he had seen Corder with a loaded pistol before the alleged murder and later had seen him walking from the barn with a pickaxe. Lea gave evidence concerning Corder's arrest and the objects found during the search of his house. [14] The prosecution suggested that Corder had never wanted to marry Maria Marten, but that her knowledge of some of his criminal dealings had given her a hold over him, and that his theft of the money sent by her child's father had been a source of tension between them. [15]

Corder then gave his own version of the events. He admitted to being in the barn with Marten, but said that he had left after they argued. He claimed that he heard a pistol shot while he was walking away, and that he ran back to the barn to find her dead with one of his pistols beside her. Corder pleaded with the jury to give him the benefit of the doubt, but after they retired, it took them only thirty-five minutes to return with a guilty verdict. [14] Baron Alexander sentenced him to hang and afterwards be dissected:

That you be taken back to the prison from whence you came, and that you be taken from thence, on Monday next, to a place of Execution, and that you there be hanged by the Neck until you are Dead; and that your body shall afterwards be dissected and anatomized; and may the Lord God Almighty, of his infinite goodness, have mercy on your soul! [16]

Corder spent the next three days in prison agonising over whether to confess to the crime and make a clean breast of his sins before God. He finally confessed after entreaties from his wife, several meetings with the prison chaplain, and pleas from both his warder and John Orridge, the governor of the prison. [17] Corder strongly denied stabbing Marten, claiming that he had accidentally shot her in the eye after they argued while she was changing out of her disguise. [4] [ failed verification ]

Execution and dissection

The hangman adjusts the rope around Corder's neck Above, the execution of William Corder by hanging in 1828; b Wellcome V0041815.jpg
The hangman adjusts the rope around Corder's neck
The execution of William Corder WilliamCorder-hanging.jpg
The execution of William Corder
An Authentic and Faithful History of the Mysterious Murder of Maria Marten by James Curtis, reputedly bound in its perpetrator's skin An Authentic and Faithful History of the Mysterious Murder of Maria Marten by James Curtis bound in the skin of William Corde.JPG
An Authentic and Faithful History of the Mysterious Murder of Maria Marten by James Curtis, reputedly bound in its perpetrator's skin

On 11 August 1828, Corder was taken to the gallows in Bury St Edmunds, apparently too weak to stand without support. [18] He was hanged shortly before noon in front of a large crowd; one newspaper claimed that there were 7,000 spectators, another as many as 20,000. [19] At the prompting of the prison governor, just before the hood was drawn over his head, he said:

I am guilty; my sentence is just; I deserve my fate; and, may God have mercy on my soul. [20]

Corder's body was cut down after an hour by the hangman, John Foxton, who claimed his trousers and stockings according to his rights. The body was taken back to the courtroom at Shire Hall, where it was slit open along the abdomen to expose the muscles. The crowds were allowed to file past until six o'clock, when the doors were shut. According to the Norwich and Bury Post, over 5,000 people queued to see the body. [21]

The following day, the dissection and post-mortem were carried out in front of an audience of students from Cambridge University and physicians. Reports circulated around Bury St Edmunds that a "galvanic battery" had been brought from Cambridge, and it is likely that the group experimented with galvanism on the body; [22] a battery was attached to Corder's limbs to demonstrate the contraction of the muscles. The sternum was opened and the internal organs examined. There was some discussion as to whether the cause of death was suffocation; it was reported that Corder's chest was seen to rise and fall for several minutes after he had dropped, and it was thought probable that pressure on the spinal cord had killed him. The skeleton was to be reassembled after the dissection and it was not possible to examine the brain, so the surgeons contented themselves with a phrenological examination of Corder's skull. The skull was asserted to be profoundly developed in the areas of "secretiveness, acquisitiveness, destructiveness, philoprogenitiveness, and imitativeness" with little evidence of "benevolence or veneration". [23] The bust of Corder held by Moyse's Hall Museum in Bury St Edmunds is an original made by Child of Bungay as a tool for the study of Corder's phrenology.

Several copies of Corder's death mask were made and replicas are held at Moyse's Hall Museum and in the dungeons of Norwich Castle. His widow advertised for sale the glasses he purportedly wore at the trial and a snuff box with Maria's likeness. [24] Artefacts from the trial, some of which were in Corder's possession, are also held at the museum. [25] Corder's skin was tanned by surgeon George Creed and used to bind an account of the murder. [26] [b] This is also on display at Moyse's Hall Museum.

Corder's skeleton was reassembled, exhibited, and used as a teaching aid in the West Suffolk Hospital. [23] The skeleton was put on display in the Hunterian Museum in the Royal College of Surgeons of England, where it hung beside that of Jonathan Wild. In 2004, Corder's bones were removed and cremated. [27]

Rumours

After the trial, doubts were raised about both the story of Ann Marten's dreams and the fate of Corder and Maria Marten's child. Ann was only a year older than Maria, and it was suggested that she and Corder had been having an affair and that the two had planned the murder to dispose of Maria so that it could continue without hindrance. Ann's dreams had started only a few days after Corder married Moore, and it was suggested that jealousy was the motive for revealing the body's resting place and that the dreams were a simple subterfuge. [4]

Further rumours circulated about the death of Corder and Marten's child. Both claimed that they had taken their dead child to be buried in Sudbury, but no records of this could be discovered and no trace was found of the child's burial site. [4] In his written confession, Corder admitted that he and Marten had argued on the day of the murder over the possibility of the burial site being discovered.

In 1967, Donald McCormick wrote The Red Barn Mystery, which brought out a connection between Corder and forger and serial killer Thomas Griffiths Wainewright when the former was in London. According to McCormick, Caroline Palmer, an actress who was appearing frequently in a melodrama based on the Red Barn case and had been researching the murder, concluded that Corder may have not killed Marten, but that a local gypsy woman might have been the killer. However, McCormick's research has been brought into question on other police- and crime-related stories, and this information has not been generally accepted. [28]

The case had all the elements to ignite a fervent popular interest: the wicked squire and the poor girl, the proverbial murder scene, the supernatural element of the stepmother's prophetic dreams, the detective work by Ayres and Lea (who later became the single character "Pharos Lee" in stage versions of the events), and Corder's new life which was the result of a lonely hearts advertisement. As a consequence, the case created its own small industry.

James Catnach's broadside sold well over a million copies Corder-catnach.png
James Catnach's broadside sold well over a million copies
A broadside issued by T. Birt includes images and Corder's last letter to his wife Corder-broadside2.jpg
A broadside issued by T. Birt includes images and Corder's last letter to his wife

Plays were being performed while Corder was still awaiting trial, and an anonymous author published a melodramatic version of the murder after the execution, a precursor of the Newgate novels which quickly became best-sellers. The Red Barn Murder was a popular subject, along with the story of Jack Sheppard and other highwaymen, thieves and murderers, for penny gaffs, cheap plays performed in the back rooms of public houses. [29] James Catnach sold more than a million broadsides [30] [c] (sensationalist single sheet newspapers) which gave details of Corder's confession and execution, and included a sentimental ballad supposedly written by Corder himself (though more likely to have been the work of Catnach or somebody in his employ). [31] [32] [33] It was one of at least five ballads about the crime that appeared directly following the execution. [34]

Many different versions of the events were set down and distributed due to the excitement around the trial and the public demand for entertainments based on the murder, making it hard for modern readers to discern fact from melodramatic embellishment. Good official records exist from the trial, and the best record of the events surrounding the case is generally considered to be that of James Curtis, a journalist who spent time with Corder and two weeks in Polstead interviewing those concerned. [4] He was apparently so connected with the case that a newspaper artist who was asked to produce a picture of the accused man drew a likeness of Curtis instead of Corder. [35]

Memorial to Maria Marten in the churchyard of St Mary's, Polstead Memorial to Maria Marten - geograph.org.uk - 615930.jpg
Memorial to Maria Marten in the churchyard of St Mary's, Polstead
Red Barn Murder exhibit at Moyse's Hall, Bury St Edmunds Red Barn Murder exhibit (Moyse's Hall, Bury St Edmunds).jpg
Red Barn Murder exhibit at Moyse's Hall, Bury St Edmunds

Pieces of the rope which was used to hang Corder sold for a guinea each. Part of his scalp with an ear still attached was displayed in a shop on Oxford Street. [36] A lock of Marten's hair sold for two guineas. Polstead became a tourist venue, with visitors travelling from as far afield as Ireland; [37] Curtis estimated that 200,000 people visited Polstead in 1828 alone. [4] The Red Barn and the Martens' cottage excited particular interest. [37] The barn was stripped for souvenirs, down to the planks being removed from the sides, broken up, and sold as toothpicks. [38] It was slated to be demolished after the trial, but it was left standing and eventually burned down in 1842. [4] [d] Even Marten's gravestone in the churchyard of St Mary's, Polstead, was eventually chipped away to nothing by souvenir hunters; only a sign on the shed now marks the approximate place where it stood, [39] although her name is given to Marten's Lane in the village. Pottery models and sketches were sold and songs were composed, including one quoted in the Vaughan Williams opera Hugh the Drover and Five Variants of Dives and Lazarus .

Corder's skeleton was put on display in a glass case in the West Suffolk Hospital, and apparently was rigged with a mechanism that made its arm point to the collection box when approached. Eventually, the skull was removed by Dr John Kilner, who wanted to add it to his extensive collection of Red Barn memorabilia. After a series of unfortunate events, Kilner became convinced that the skull was cursed and handed it on to a friend named Hopkins. Further disasters plagued both men, and they finally paid for the skull to be given a Christian burial in an attempt to lift the supposed curse. [40]

Interest in the case did not quickly fade. The play Maria Marten, or The Murder in the Red Barn existed in various anonymous versions; it was a sensational hit throughout the mid-19th century and may have been the most performed play of the time. Victorian fairground peep shows were forced to add extra apertures for their viewers when exhibiting their shows of the murder. [5] The plays of the Victorian era tended to portray Corder as a cold-blooded monster and Marten as the innocent whom he preyed upon; her reputation and her children by other fathers were airbrushed out, [41] and Corder was made into an older man. [42] Charles Dickens published an account of the murder in his magazine All the Year Round after initially rejecting it because he felt the story to be too well known and the account of the stepmother's dreams rather far-fetched. [43]

Folk song

The folk song "Maria Martin" or "The Murder of Maria Martin" (Roud 215) tells the story of the murder. The Lincolnshire folk singer Joseph Taylor sang a fragment of the song to Percy Grainger in 1908. Grainger recorded the performance on a wax cylinder, which has been digitised and can be heard via the British Library Sound Archive website. [44] Taylor sings the following lyrics, to the tune of Dives and Lazarus:

'"If you'll meet me at the Red Barn as sure as I have life
I will take you to Ipswich Town and there make you my wife."
This lad went home and fetched his gun, his pick-axe and his spade.
He went unto the Red Barn and there he dug her grave.
With her heart so light she thought no harm, to meet her love did go
He murdered her all in the barn and he laid her body low

Several other versions of the song were recorded, including one from Billy List of Brundish, Suffolk, which can also be heard on the British Library Sound Archive website. [45] These recordings appear to be based on popular versions printed on broadsides in the mid-19th century. [46]

Twentieth century

The fascination continued into the 20th century with five film versions, including the 1935 Maria Marten, or The Murder in the Red Barn [42] starring Tod Slaughter, [e] and the 1980 BBC drama Maria Marten, with Pippa Guard in the title role. [47] The story has been dramatised for radio a number of times, including two radio dramas by Slaughter (one broadcast on the BBC Regional Programme in 1934, [48] and one broadcast on the BBC Home Service in 1939 [49] ), a fictionalised account of the murder produced in 1953 for the CBS radio series Crime Classics , entitled "The Killing Story of William Corder and the Farmer's Daughter" [50] [51] and "Hanging Fire", a BBC Monday Play broadcast in 1990 telling the story of the events leading up to the murder as seen through the eyes of Marten's sister Ann. [52] Christopher Bond wrote The Mysterie of Maria Marten and the Murder in the Red Barn in 1991, a melodramatic stage version with some political and folk-tale elements. [53] [54] The folk singer Shirley Collins and the Albion Country Band recorded a song in 1971 entitled "Murder of Maria Marten" on their album No Roses . A part of the song is performed by Florence Pugh in the 2018 television dramatisation of John le Carré's The Little Drummer Girl .

See also

Notes

a. ^ Moore's first name is occasionally reported as Maria but an inscription in Corder's journal and later reports make it clear she was called Mary. The initial newspaper reports said that she had seen Corder's advertisement in a pastry shop window. Whether this is true or not is unknown, but Corder had certainly received replies for his advertisement in The Times, a number of which can be found in Curtis' account of the case.

b. ^ The account of the case bound in Corder's tanned skin is held at Moyse's Hall Museum and contains a hand-written account of a witticism on the inside cover: on the night of the execution, during a performance of Macbeth at Drury Lane, when the line "Is execution done on Cawdor?" was spoken, a man shouted from the gallery "Yes! – He was hung this morning at Bury"

c. ^ Accounts of how many were sold vary but are consistently quoted as either 1,160,000 or 1,600,000. Catnach claimed it had sold over 1,650,000. [55]

d. ^ In November 2007 a report of a fire that nearly destroyed Marten's cottage was on the front page of the East Anglian Daily Times. Firefighters saved 80% of the thatched roof at Marten's former home after a chimney fire threatened the "iconic Suffolk cottage", now run as a bed and breakfast. [56]

e. ^ In Britain the script was submitted to the British Board of Film Censors who passed it on the condition that the execution scene was cut. The scene was filmed anyway, but the Board demanded it be removed before the film was passed. [42] In the U.S., scenes emphasising Maria's pregnancy, and featuring the words slut and wench were cut, and the scene of her burial shortened. Virginia and Ohio made further cuts to the versions they approved for distribution. [57]

Citations

  1. "Maria Marten". The Crushed Tragedian. 10 March 2010. Retrieved 11 August 2010.
  2. Haylock, Charlie (2006). A rum owd dew!. Newbury: Countryside books. pp. 46–49. ISBN   1-84674-010X.
  3. 1 2 3 Smith, John Hay (1847). Celebrated Trials of All Countries, and Remarkable Cases of Criminal Jurisprudence. J.Harding.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "The Red Barn Murder". St Edmundsbury Council. Retrieved 15 February 2007.
  5. 1 2 3 Brewers pp. 168–69
  6. Maclaren p. 250
  7. Urban, Sylvanus (1857). "Obituary". The Gentleman's Magazine. 3 (203).
  8. Flanders p. 47
  9. Flanders p. 48
  10. Anon published 1828 by George Foster
  11. Hardy p. 131 Note 85.b
  12. The Times 9 August 1828 p. 3 quoted in Wiener p. 138
  13. The Times 12 August 1828 p. 3 quoted in Wiener p. 138
  14. 1 2 Urban, Sylvanus (1828). "Domestic Occurrences". The Gentleman's Magazine. 98 (21).
  15. Cairns p. 40
  16. Curtis p. 248
  17. Langbein p. 270
  18. Gatrell p. 13
  19. Gatrell p. 32
  20. Cairns p. 18
  21. Curtis p. 210
  22. McCorristine p. 31
  23. 1 2 Gatrell pp. 256–57
  24. "The widow of William Corder". Durham Chronicle. 24 October 1834. p. 4.
  25. "Local History of Moyse's Hall". St. Edmundsbury Borough Council. Retrieved 4 July 2007.
  26. Rosenbloom, Megan (20 October 2020). "The Postmortem Travels of William Corder". Dark Archives: A Librarian's Investigation Into the Science and History of Books Bound in Human Skin. New York, New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. pp. 115–130. ISBN   978-0-374-13470-9.
  27. "Killer cremated after 180 years". BBC News. 17 August 2004. Retrieved 4 July 2007.
  28. McCorristine p. 17
  29. Picard p. 198
  30. Gatrell p. 159
  31. Neuberg p. 138
  32. Hindley p. 79
  33. "Broadside ballad entitled 'The Murder of Maria Marten'". The WORD on the STREET. National Library of Scotland . Retrieved 15 August 2016.
  34. Tom Pettitt (May 2005). "The Murdered Sweetheart: Child of Print and Panic?" (PDF). Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Retrieved 12 February 2007.
  35. Caulfield p. 55
  36. Gatrell p. 258
  37. 1 2 Mackay p. 700
  38. Gatrell p. 43
  39. "Polstead". BeautifulEngland.net. Archived from the original on 3 June 2012. Retrieved 15 August 2016. Maria's tombstone in St. Mary's Churchyard, was chipped away by souvenir hunters, so that only a sign on the shed wall now marks the approximate place where it stood.
  40. Storey p. 118
  41. Wiener pp. 138–39
  42. 1 2 3 Richards p. 136
  43. Letters of Charles Dickens p. 371
  44. "Murder of Maria Martin - Percy Grainger ethnographic wax cylinders - World and traditional music | British Library - Sounds". sounds.bl.uk. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  45. "Murder of Maria Marten/ - Keith Summers English Folk Music Collection - World and traditional music | British Library - Sounds". sounds.bl.uk. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  46. "RoudNumbers: 215, Ballads Online". ballads.bodleian.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  47. "Maria Marten; or, Murder in the Red Barn, Part 3 · British Universities Film & Video Council". bufvc.ac.uk.
  48. "Todd Slaughter and his famous company of barnstormers". Radio Times. BBC. 2 November 1934. p. 32: Regional Programme London, 5 November 1934 20.00.
  49. "Maria Marten". Radio Times. BBC. 15 September 1939. p. 32: BBC Home Service Basic, 22 September 1939 20.00.
  50. "Night Transmissions # 83". Program Information. Radio4all.net . Retrieved 15 August 2016.
  51. "Crime Classics #22 – The Killing Story of William Corder and the Farmer's Daughter". Comic Book Plus. Retrieved 15 August 2016.
  52. "The Monday Play". Radio Times. BBC. 21 June 1990. p. 73: BBC Radio 4 FM, 25 June 1990 19.45.
  53. "About: The Mysterie of Maria Marten and the Murder in the Red Barn". offwestend.com. 2010. Retrieved 15 August 2016.
  54. Lucy Dickinson (2 November 2010). "Murder mystery comes to Queen's Theatre stage". Romford Recorder . Retrieved 15 August 2016.
  55. "Broadside Ballads and the Oral Tradition". University of Glasgow. Archived from the original on 10 October 2006. Retrieved 16 February 2007.
  56. Claydon, Russell (27 November 2007). "Blaze at home of famous murder victim". East Anglian Daily Times. Retrieved 27 November 2007.
  57. Slide p. 103

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Thomas Griffiths Wainewright</span> 19th-century English and Australian artist

Thomas Griffiths Wainewright was an English artist, author and suspected serial killer. He gained a reputation as a profligate and a dandy, and in 1837, was transported to the penal colony of Van Diemen's Land for frauds on the Bank of England. As a convict he became a portraitist for Hobart's elite.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hall–Mills murder case</span> American murder case

The Hall–Mills murder case involved Edward Wheeler Hall, an Episcopal priest, and Eleanor Mills, a member of his choir with whom he was having an affair, both of whom were murdered on September 14, 1922, in Somerset, New Jersey, United States. Hall's wife and her brothers were accused of committing the murders, but were acquitted in a 1926 trial. In the history of journalism, the case is largely remembered for the vast extent of newspaper coverage it received nationwide; it has been regarded as an example of a media circus. It would take the Lindbergh kidnapping trial in the 1930s to eclipse the high profile of the Hall-Mills case.

Events from the year 1828 in the United Kingdom.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Greenbrier Ghost</span> Purported ghost of murdered American woman

The Greenbrier Ghost is the name popularly given to the ghost of Elva Zona Heaster Shue, a young woman in Greenbrier County, West Virginia, United States, who was murdered in 1897. Initially judged a death by natural causes, the court later declared that the woman had been murdered by her husband, following testimony by the victim's mother, Mary Jane Heaster, in which she claimed that her daughter's spirit revealed the true cause of death.

Ada Chard Williams was a baby farmer who was convicted of strangling to death 21-month-old Selina Ellen Jones in Barnes in London in September 1899.

<i>Maria Marten, or The Murder in the Red Barn</i> 1935 film by Milton Rosmer

Maria Marten, or The Murder in the Red Barn is a 1935 British film melodrama film directed by Milton Rosmer and starring Tod Slaughter and Eric Portman. It is based on the true story of the 1827 Red Barn Murder, in which a 25-year-old woman was killed by her lover and her stepmother claimed to have dreamt of the murder the night of the event.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bury St Edmunds witch trials</span> Witch trials

The Bury St Edmunds witch trials were a series of trials conducted intermittently between the years 1599 and 1694 in the town of Bury St Edmunds in Suffolk, England.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Polstead</span> Human settlement in England

Polstead is a village and civil parish in the Babergh district of Suffolk, England. The village lies 3 miles (4.8 km) northeast of Nayland, 5 miles (8 km) southwest of Hadleigh and 9 miles (14 km) north of Colchester. It is situated on a small tributary stream of the River Stour. In 2011 the parish had a population of 851.

James Curtis was a British journalist and eccentric. He is best known for his association with William Corder, hanged for the Red Barn Murder.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Hyatt (minister)</span>

John Hyatt was an English nonconformist pastor and missionary. He found Wesleyan theology as a young man and went on to become a much loved and revered driving force of early Methodism in London, becoming influential in continuing the First Great Awakening started by George Whitefield in the 1740s. Hyatt preached regularly in the slums of Hackney in London's East End. He gained a large following and was always in demand for his sermons, which were greatly influenced by those of John Wesley and George Whitefield.

Maria Marten, or the Mystery of the Red Barn is a 1913 British silent drama film directed by Maurice Elvey. It was based on the 1827 Red Barn Murder. The story of Maria Marten was a popular stage melodrama of the Victorian era, and five films based on the story were made between 1902 and 1935.

Maria Marten is a 1928 British silent drama film directed by Walter West starring Trilby Clark, Warwick Ward and Dora Barton. It is based on the real story of the Red Barn Murder in the 1820s, and is one of five film versions of the events. The film shifted the action to fifty years earlier to the height of the Georgian era. This was the last of the silent film adaptations of the Maria Marten story, and its success paved the way for the much better 1935 sound film remake starring Tod Slaughter. A 35mm print of the 1928 silent film exists in the British Film Institute's archives.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Julia Martha Thomas</span> Notorious murder from March 1879

The murder of Julia Martha Thomas, dubbed the "Barnes Mystery" or the "Richmond Murder" by the press, was one of the most notorious crimes in the Victorian period of the United Kingdom. Thomas, a widow in her 50s who lived in Richmond, London, was murdered on 2 March 1879 by her maid Kate Webster, a 30-year-old Irishwoman with a history of theft. Webster disposed of the body by dismembering it, boiling the flesh off the bones, and throwing most of the remains into the River Thames.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of the Romanov family</span> 1918 killing of Nicholas II of Russia and his family

The Russian Imperial Romanov family were shot and bayoneted to death by Bolshevik revolutionaries under Yakov Yurovsky on the orders of the Ural Regional Soviet in Yekaterinburg on the night of 16–17 July 1918. Also murdered that night were members of the imperial entourage who had accompanied them: court physician Eugene Botkin; lady-in-waiting Anna Demidova; footman Alexei Trupp; and head cook Ivan Kharitonov. The bodies were taken to the Koptyaki forest, where they were stripped, mutilated with grenades to prevent identification, and buried.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Burning of women in England</span> Punishment in England inflicted on women

In England, burning was a legal punishment inflicted on women found guilty of high treason, petty treason, and heresy. Over a period of several centuries, female convicts were publicly burnt at the stake, sometimes alive, for a range of activities including coining and mariticide.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Catherine Foster (murderer)</span>

Catherine Foster (1829–1847) was an English woman who murdered her husband after three weeks of marriage. She was not yet 18 when hanged and was one of the youngest females ever hanged in England.

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