Walter Horsford
Walter Horsford was a murderer executed in June 1898 for poisoning his cousin Annie Holmes with strychnine.[1][2] He was the first person to be executed in Cambridge, England, following the end of public executions, and a dedicated building was constructed for his hanging.[3] His conviction was notable for relying solely on circumstantial evidence.[4] He was suspected of three other murders using the same method.
Walter Horsford | |
---|---|
Died | 28 June 1898 Cambridge Prison, England |
Cause of death | Execution by hanging |
Occupation | Farmer |
Conviction(s) | Murder |
Criminal penalty | Death |
Murder of Annie Holmes
In 1897 Horsford, aged 26, was a well-off farmer living in Spaldwick. He was in an intimate relationship with his cousin, Annie Holmes, a widow with three children. In October of that year, Horsford married another cousin of his, Bessie Mash. Shortly after this marriage, Holmes left Spaldwick and lodged in an inn in St Neots. In December she wrote to Horsford claiming she was pregnant.[4]
On 7 January 1898 Holmes received a postal packet from Horsford, and went to bed. An hour later her daughter heard Holmes screaming and found her in agony. Holmes died within a few minutes of a doctor arriving. At an inquest the following day Horsford stated he had not written to Holmes nor seen her since she left. When medical evidence pointed to strychnine poisoning, the police searched her bedroom and found two packets. One contained 30 grains of strychnine with the words "one dose, take as told" and the other was empty with "take in a little water, it is quite harmless" written on it. On 10 January Horsford was arrested for perjury at the inquest, and later that day further arrested for murder.[4][5]
The trial took place on 2 June 1898. At the trial it was stated that the impression of handwriting on the packages could be traced on a blotter on a desk in Horsford's home. Horsford had also purchased strychnine from a local chemist on 28 December 1897, claiming he was overrun with rats, and signed the register with his name.[6]
The jury did not retire but returned a guilty verdict immediately after the judge's summing up. Horsford was sentenced to death and executed on 28 June in Cambridge prison.[4]
Other murders
Horsford was suspected of three other murders. The first was his former fiancée Fanny James who died in 1890 after claiming she had become pregnant, and after receiving a letter from Horsford. According to her family her symptoms were consistent with strychnine poisoning. However the inquest at the time recorded a verdict of death through eating a hearty meal.[6][7] The second was a "girl from Peterborough" with whom he had been intimate, and who died after receiving a letter from him.[7] The third case involved a man with the surname James who was a relative of Fanny James. Horsford supplied the usual beer to a group of men after working a day threshing wheat. He took James aside and gave him an extra quart, and he died in agony later that night. The inquest verdict recorded death from sunstroke, apparently without seeing the body.[8][7]
See also
References
- Nicola Gwyer (13 January 2018). ""The 25 people executed in Cambridge since 1802". Cambridge News.
- "Walter Horsford and the case of the St Neots poisoning". St Neots Museum. 5 June 2017.
- "Sinners". The Little Book of Cambridgeshire. The History Press. 2018. ISBN 9780750990158.
- "The Great Trials of History - The Trial of Walter Horsford". The Butte Miner. 30 October 1914. p. 4.
- John Buckingham (2007). Bitter Nemesis: The Intimate History of Strychnine. CRC Press. p. 254. ISBN 9781420053159.
- "St Neots Tragedy". Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper. 30 January 1898. p. 13.
- "The St Neots Poisoner". The Ipswich Journal. 1 July 1898. p. 5.
- "The murders by Walter Horsford". The Guardian. 30 June 1898. p. 12.