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Trying Neighbours Marion Palmann

Trying Neighbours By Marion Palmann

Trying Neighbours by Marion Palmann


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Summary

A compendium of some of the criminal trials that have taken place in Huntingdonshire over the last two hundred years

Trying Neighbours Summary

Trying Neighbours: Some of the trials and misdeeds of Huntingdonshire folk, 1712-1889 by Marion Palmann

Nineteenth century Huntingdonshire had its fair share of mischief-makers and murderers, victims and villains, litigation and larceny, triumph and tragedy. Just as it is today, there have always been motives and circumstances strong enough to bring individuals to the wrong side of the law, and, likewise, the law has been ready to meet it. This is not to say that punishment has always matched the crime; whilst stealing a few sheep may gain you transportation for life, or worse, death, starving one's own child may net you at most a few months in prison. Drawing from local records, and supported by a deep contextual understanding, Trying Neighbours collects the stories of real people often caught in unreal situations. These are the stories of a gaoler, locked up in his own prison; a young woman, suing her fiance for breach of his marriage promise; a thief falling asleep in the house he was supposed to be robbing; a son's violent actions against his parents in the dead of night, and slick lawyers, wriggling through loopholes. This collection is a wealth of anecdote, but also a social history of criminality, the culture that allowed it, and the systems that punished it in the nineteenth century. Often heart-breaking, often ridiculous, always entertaining, Trying Neighbours brings together the most interesting cases Huntingdonshire has seen: arson, rioting, suicide, murder, theft, elopement, imposture, fraud and vote tampering, with the odd egg theft and neighbourly spat thrown in.

About Marion Palmann

Marion Palmann is a solicitor and native of Cambridgeshire with her roots in Bedford and Huntingdon. She has spent much of her working life sifting through historic property deeds and this has led to a deeper interest in the history of Cambridgeshire and its inhabitants during the last 300 years.

Table of Contents

Preface ix; Introduction xiii; Crimes and Misdeeds 1; John Pridmore, Winwick, July 1837 1; Disorderly bakers: Brington, April 1867 5; Murder of Elizabeth Pare, Great Gidding, January 1716 6; Getting away with murder: George Leeton, Stonely, 1868 9; The Catworth Riot: December 1885 12; The murder of Rev. Joshua Waterhouse: Lt. Stukeley, 1827 14; The starvation of Martha Crewe: Stilton, 1856 24; Not just any eggs: Huntingdon, 1839 27; Gaoling the gaoler: Henry Russell: Great Stukeley, March 1832 28; Incurring the wrath of the duchess: Mary Savage, Kimbolton 1897 35; Somersham alight: Thomas Savage, 1824 38; Bythorn alight: September 1864 39; The depths of despair: James Wallis, Kimbolton 1883 44; Mr Hart: 'a substantial - nay, an opulent - farmer': Huntingdon, 1853 48; A tip for a lead thief: William Hunt, Godmanchester, 1865 50; Missing the warning signs: Jane Haynes, Tilbrook 1881 51; The Duke steps in: Freeman, farmer of Spaldwick, 1734 52; Balancing the judicial with the extra-judicial: George Ward, October 1870, St. Neots 54; The Rev. George Tryon: Brington, 1857 55; Miss Maule and Mr Fowler: Breach of promise of marriage, 1874 56; Maiden Assizes 63; Making off with Mary: Frederick Barratt and Mary Ellis, Somersham, 1840 64; Church and Chapel 69; You cannot always trust a policeman: PC Jacques, Huntingdon, 1870 73; Concealing, or not concealing? Elizabeth Pickering, Swineshead, 1861 75; A short and unhappy life: Louisa Woodham, Stow Longa, 1870 75; Hospitality to die for: Thomas Mawby of the Crown Inn, Stilton, 1737 79; When it pays to look like your father: the strange case of Day-v-Day; Wornditch, 1822 81; Words from the grave: John Chapman, Huntingdon, 16 August 1787 86; The value of money: James Watkins, Huntingdon Races, 20 July 1870 87; When all else fails, just deny everything: Mr Crick of Houghton, 1888 88; Little witches: Huntingdon, 1827 89; Improving the quality 90; Killing by kindness: James Inglett, Houghton, 1841 91; Defeating the humane intentions of government: Norman Cross, 1801 93; A free holiday at The George Hotel: Gustave Henry Grace, Huntingdon, December 1880 95; Snapshot of quarter sessions cases for January 1869 101; Not all rabbits are equal: Kimbolton, June 1842 103; Proof that a good counsel is worth his weight in linen: Susannah Clark, Huntingdon, 1869 103; George Hailes carries it off: Catworth, December 1868 106; Regular reports on Huntingdon Gaol 109; The Parson's Horse and the Windmill: Inventive justice, Huntingdon 1807 110; Why young boys should not be left in charge of guns: Luke Parker, Folksworth, August 1811 112; Mrs Scarborough would like you to know that she is innocent: Buckden, 1818 114; A snapshot of the Huntingdon Summer Assizes, 1826 125; Symptoms of innocence: Lent Assizes, Huntingdon, 1827 125; The prisoners' conditions 125; The well-destroyer of Hilton: George Goodman Hewett, 1829 126; Taking a test drive too far: John Smith (aka John Wilks), October 1828 129; Bank robbery: St Neots, 9 July 1829 131; Political games: George Game Day, 1836 133; Mr James Hall: Bythorn, 1886 140; A lack of contrition: Edward Batch, Earith, 1880 142; A petty criminal's idea of a good day out: Huntingdon Races, 1870 144; Dick Turpin turns Robin Hood: June 1712 144; Citizens' arrest: Three highwaymen, Huntingdon, 1715 145; Gamekeeper turned Poacher turned Gamekeeper. Old Weston and Hamerton, 1819 146; Pay me, pay me again: Samuel Wilson and Philip Hustwaite, March 1828 147; One pigeon looks much like another: William Sewell and John Pepper, Great Staughton, 1827 149; Another burglary during divine service: George Bowd and John Mackness, Hemingford Abbotts, 1823 150; The price of some wearing apparel: Jemima Bolton, Southoe, 1809 151; When transportation fails as a deterrent: Jacob Bellamy, Brington, 1859 152; Educating the judiciary: Mrs Bird, Huntingdon Assizes, 1818 154; A bad apple: PC William Parmenter, Ramsey 1872 154; The value of a child's life: Eliza Haddon, Huntingdon 1855 156; Shoot first: Mr Ferrar, Little Gidding, 1715 156; The sadness of Charles Burton: Stilton 1848 156; A pleasant atmosphere: Huntingdon Gaol gets air conditioning, 1841 159; Fowl attraction: Edward Hodge, 1850 160; Begging and Vagrancy 161; The Royal Proclamation 165; Epilogue 168; Acknowledgements 171; References 172

Additional information

NLS9781789631210
9781789631210
1789631211
Trying Neighbours: Some of the trials and misdeeds of Huntingdonshire folk, 1712-1889 by Marion Palmann
New
Paperback
The Choir Press
2020-06-30
192
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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