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Foul Deeds and Suspicious Deaths in Southampton




  TRUE CRIME FROM WHARNCLIFFE

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  First Published in Great Britain in 2009 by

  Wharncliffe Books

  an imprint of

  Pen and Sword Books Ltd.

  47 Church Street

  Barnsley

  South Yorkshire

  S70 2AS

  Copyright © John J Eddleston 2009

  ISBN: 978-1-84563-097-3

  eISBN: 978-1-78303-762-9

  The right of John J Eddleston to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission from the publisher in writing.

  Typeset in 11/13pt Plantin by Concept, Huddersfield.

  Printed and bound in England by

  CPI UK.

  Pen & Sword Books Ltd incorporates the Imprints of Pen

  & Sword Aviation, Pen & Sword Maritime, Pen & Sword

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  When, Seaforth Publishing and Frontline Publishing.

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  Contents

  Acknowledgements

  Chapter 1 The Navvy: James Caffyn, 1877

  Chapter 2 The Best of Friends: Albert Edward Brown, 1886

  Chapter 3 Circumstantial Evidence: Frederick Burden, 1896

  Chapter 4 Ruled by the Moon: Charles Maidment, 1899

  Chapter 5 The Demon Drink: Augustus John Penny, 1913

  Chapter 6 The Southampton Garage Murder: William Henry Podmore, 1930

  Chapter 7 The Murder Without a Body: James Camb, 1947

  Chapter 8 The Knobkerrie: Michael George Tatum, 1959

  Chapter 9 Cowboys and Indians: Keith Ridley, 1960

  Chapter 10 Jekyll and Hyde: Dorothy Bray, 1967

  Chapter 11 Easy Money: Kenneth Frank Vincent, William Warren and Peter John Daley, 1967

  Chapter 12 The Brothers: John Henry De Lara and Owen William De Lara, 1969

  Chapter 13 History Repeating Itself: Stephen Michael Marley, 1973

  Appendix Other Executions at Winchester Prison

  Acknowledgements

  I would like to offer my thanks to a number of people who greatly assisted in the preparation of this volume.

  First and foremost I would like to thank my wife, Yvonne. Not only did she help with the research, making copious notes for me, but also proof read every story.

  I would also like to thank the staff of The National Archives at Kew and the staff of the British Newspaper Library at Colindale in London.

  Finally I would like to thank the publishers, Pen and Sword books, and especially Mr Rupert Harding.

  Thank you one and all.

  Chapter 1

  The Navvy James Caffyn 1877

  John Barber, who lived at Elmfield, near Ryde, on the Isle of Wight, hadn’t seen his daughter Maria in something approaching thirteen years. Then, suddenly, in the autumn of 1877, she appeared on his doorstep with a man in tow. Maria introduced the man as her boyfriend and gave his name as James Caffyn.

  Jim, as everyone knew Caffyn, was working on the railway and on some reclamation works, at St Helens. He had actually been living with Maria for some eight or nine months, having first met her when they shared lodgings at Clifton Villas in Brighton. From there they had moved on to Hastings before Maria had expressed a desire to see some old friends and her family back on the Isle of Wight. It was for that reason that the couple, accompanied by their little black and white dog, had travelled to the island.

  The couple seemed to be quite happy in each other’s company and a somewhat understanding John invited the couple into his home and offered them the upstairs room where they could live together. Meanwhile, the lower rooms continued to be occupied by John Barber and his common-law wife, Caroline Brown. For some weeks, all was well.

  On Monday, 26 November, all four occupants of the house enjoyed breakfast together before John and Mrs Brown went off to their work, leaving Caffyn and Maria alone. At around 10.15am that same morning, Hugh Benjamin Grist, who ran a greengrocer’s shop from the house next door, was outside his premises when a rather excited Maria Barber ran up to him and cried: ‘For God’s sake come in, for he has pinched me, kicked me and tried to strangle me.’

  Mr Grist followed Maria back into John Barber’s house and there saw the man he recognised as Ji
m. The two men had not really spoken much to each other in the past but Jim had called into the shop once or twice. Now, Jim was swearing loudly and all of his profanities were directed towards Maria. Hugh asked him what the matter was but Jim did not reply and merely asked Maria for his clothes. She immediately went upstairs and returned a minute or so later with a pile of clothes which she handed over to Jim adding, for good measure: ‘I’ll give you all the money I’ve got if you’ll go.’

  Again, Jim did not reply but left the room and went upstairs himself. He too soon returned, carrying two short whips, a dog’s chain and an axe. He placed the axe on the floor and the other items on a wooden table in the centre of the room. Throughout all this, the little dog he and Maria had brought to the island, lay in its bed in the corner of the room. Jim glanced at the animal and said that it belonged to him and he would take it with him, Maria immediately replied that he should not have it. Jim, however, did not rise to this bait. The couple now appeared to be quiet again so Hugh Grist left them alone. After all, this domestic dispute was not really any of his business.

  At some time after 4.00pm, Caroline Brown and John Barber returned home. Whilst John put the pony and trap away, Caroline entered the house, only to run screaming from it moments later. Once again, it was Hugh Grist who was asked for assistance. He timed Caroline’s appeal for assistance at around 4.10pm or a little later.

  Going into Barber’s house again, Hugh Grist saw that Maria lay in the corner of the downstairs room, in a pool of blood. Her head had almost been hacked from her body and the axe Hugh had seen earlier lay a short distance from her feet. Even as Hugh Grist surveyed this terrible scene, John Barber entered, picked up the axe and laid it against the fender of the fireplace. Then, as he stayed to comfort Caroline Brown, Grist ran to fetch the local police officer, Sergeant Daniels.

  It was around 5.00pm when Sergeant James Daniels returned to the house with Hugh Grist. He noticed that Maria’s head and shoulders were resting on the dog’s bed, which was now heavily bloodstained. The dog itself was on its lead but had been unable to escape the room as the other end of the lead was trapped underneath Maria’s body. Sergeant Daniels also noted a severe wound on the left side of Maria’s forehead and another in her neck. Though it was obvious that Maria Barber was beyond all human aid, she would still have to be examined by a medical practitioner and, once again, it was Hugh Grist who was sent for help.

  Of Jim, or James Caffyn, there was no sign. It was surmised that, seeking to escape, he had almost certainly left the island and enquiries soon showed that a man matching his description had caught the 1.00pm boat to Southsea. A description of Caffyn was now circulated on the mainland and this led to the arrest of a man in the Victoria Tavern, in Queen Street, Portsea, by Constable James Thomas, on the following morning. The man was interviewed by Inspector Hood but denied that his name was James Caffyn. Later that same day, Sergeant Daniels travelled to Portsea from the Isle of Wight and made a positive identification. Caffyn was then escorted back to the island. Once there, another identification was made by John Barber and Caffyn was then charged with wilful murder.

  In due course, Caffyn appeared before the magistrates where he was remanded but after the hearing he made a full statement to the officer who had charge of him. In this, he freely admitted that he was responsible for Maria’s death. The statement began: ‘Last Monday morning we had a few words, not many; not so many as has been represented; and I was determined that she should deceive no more men as long as she lived.’

  ‘After I said that I deliberately took that axe off the table. I delivered one blow on the forehead with the face of the axe, and knocked her down to where she was lying. The first blow I hit her with the face of the axe. Then I hit her on the cheek.’

  ‘The next blow I delivered across the throat. That was all the blows she had; only three and there is one thing I did not state to you sir. We drinked [sic] a pint of beer between us before I committed the deed. That is the deed, sir.’

  ‘I done it with a good heart and now I am willing to die the same. If I had my will, no man and woman should be allowed to cohabit together, for that is the cause of all the murders and I hope you will make it public to the country.’

  Caffyn’s trial took place on 22 January 1878, before Mister Justice Mellor, with the case for his defence resting in the hands of Mr Charles Matthews. The case for the prosecution was led by Mr Werry who was assisted by Mr Temple Cooke.

  There could be no doubt that Caffyn was responsible for Maria’s death but could the charge be reduced to one of manslaughter? Much was made of Maria Barber’s past. Apparently, during the thirteen years since her father had last seen her, she had been married and left her husband once she had tired of him. There had followed a number of relationships during which Maria would find a new man, spend a few weeks with him and then leave him. Unfortunately for her, when she had tried to do the same with James Caffyn, he had retaliated and killed her. Surely his attack upon her had been caused by such a degree of aggravation that the charge should be reduced to one of manslaughter.

  In the event, the jury took just a few minutes to decide that this was a case of murder and Caffyn was guilty as charged. Caffyn was duly condemned to death and that sentence was carried out at Winchester, on Monday, 11 February 1878 by William Marwood. It was reported that Caffyn walked bravely to the scaffold. Once the trap had been sprung, he struggled for some two minutes at the end of the rope whilst his heart continued to beat for up to ten long minutes. Caffyn was the last man to be hanged for a crime committed on the Isle of Wight.

  Chapter 2

  The Best of Friends Albert Edward Brown 1886

  On Tuesday, 23 March 1886, Frederick Roberts, the master of the ship Nellie, welcomed aboard a young man who identified himself as Edward Brown. After some discussion, Roberts signed Brown on as an ordinary seaman and explained that the ship was due to leave harbour on the 28th, and head for Southampton.

  Two days after this, on 25 March, another man, eighteen-year-old James Stanley Parker, also joined the ship and, almost from the outset, he and Brown became firm friends.

  The Nellie did indeed leave Greenwich on 28 March and only arrived in Southampton at noon on Saturday, 3 April. It had been a very bad voyage for Parker who had suffered badly from sea-sickness. Fortunately for him, his new friend, Brown had done much of his work for him and this only served to cement the relationship between the two men.

  The ship’s cargo was unloaded the following Monday and Tuesday and it was on this final day, 6 April, that Frederick Roberts paid off both Brown and Parker. Parker was paid four shillings and Brown, by far the more experienced man, was paid seventeen shillings and six pence. There was, however, one final matter to sort out. Roberts knew that Brown had borrowed a shilling from Parker whilst they were still in London and another when they had landed at Southampton. This led to a minor disagreement, Brown claiming that he only owed his friend a shilling whilst Parker maintained that it was two. Frederick Roberts intervened and ordered Brown to pay over two shillings, which he did, without argument. The two men left the ship together, at noon the next day, Wednesday, 7 April and set off to walk back to London.

  Not long after this, the two men were seen entering the High Street by Constable Bernard Camerford who couldn’t help but notice Brown’s bright yellow oilskin. The constable noticed that both men were carrying bundles, the older man’s, Brown’s, being the larger of the two.

  Some minutes later, Edward Dudley Jeffries, a porter at Southampton railway station, took a bundle from James Parker who paid sixpence for carriage to London. It was now some time between 1.00pm and 2.00pm.

  The night of 7 April was an extremely wet one and the weather seemed to be unrelenting. No doubt it was with some relief that Brown and Parker sought refuge in the Hyde Tavern at around 6.30pm where Emily Sophia Mitchell served them both with a pint of three-penny beer. They left at around 6.45pm whilst it was still raining heavily.

  The next sighting o
f the friends was made at 7.00pm that same night. Edward Norris, a gardener, left Toll Gate Cottage, heading for Winchester when he passed two men close to the mile stone. The younger man asked Norris if they were on the right road for London and was pleased to be told that they were. Norris noticed that the other man, dressed in a yellow oilskin, carried a large bag over his shoulder.

  Moments after this, Jonathan Bedford also drove past the two men, heading up Barton Hill. He too remembered the yellow oilskin and the large bundle thrown over one shoulder.

  Henry Piper was a farm labourer and on Friday, 9 April, he was sent to fetch a horse-drill. He walked to a farm owned by Mr W R Simonds and was told that the drill was in a field. Going to the location, Piper found the drill but the shafts appeared to be missing. He noticed that there was a good deal of straw scattered around, possibly due to the awful weather they had had of late, and thought that the shafts might be hidden underneath. However, as Piper drew nearer to one of the hayricks, he could see that there was something underneath the straw, which certainly was not the missing shafts. Piper walked closer still and then, some two yards or so from one of the ricks, Piper saw a man’s arm and head poking out beneath the straw.

  Piper immediately reported his find to Alfred Taylor a farmer and blacksmith. He in turn passed the information on to Constable Joseph Gladwell but it was perhaps 5.30pm before the officer, in the company of Constable William Smith, arrived at the field, to find that there were several small boys standing by the gate, not wanting to miss anything that transpired in the field.

  The two policemen made a careful search of the body and the surrounding area. Constable Gladwell found two handkerchiefs, a scarf, a pair of gloves and a knife. Some five yards from the body lay a cap, also partly hidden beneath some straw. The young man, whoever he was, lay on his back and there was a good deal of blood around his head. It looked like he had been battered before his throat had been cut. When that search was widened somewhat, a razor and a hammer were found hidden underneath a hedge in the lane nearby.