On this page
-
Text (1)
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
stone tied up in a handkerchief , Which he used as a sling , and , when Morgan endeavoured to arrest him , a shout was raised by the Irish of " Down with the police I Kallaher was rescued , stones were thrown , and it was found necessary to send to the station for a reinforcement . A sharp contest then ensued , which ended in the dispersion of the rioters and the apprehension of Kallaher and five others , including two women . Several of the police received very severe contusions and gashes ; but Morgan fared the worst . Besides other injuries , he had had a severe blow on the head from the sling wielded by Kallaher . This caused his death , after a week of lingering pain . On the rioters being brought before the
Thames magistrate the Monday following the Saturday in question , Kallaher was sentenced to two months' imprisonment , and the others were fined or bound over to keep the peace . Since the death of the constable , some other persons concerned in the riot have been arrested , and they , together with Kallaher , have been arraigned for the wilful murder of Morgan . Murder in Cumberland . —Robert Irwin , an old man residing in a cottage at the village of Fenton , which lies in a secluded part of Cumberland , has been murdered on the high road . He lived with his married daughter , her husband , one Jacob Skelton , their three children , and an old woman . On the morning of Christmas-day , the old
man rose about half-past five o ' clock , in order to attend a prayer meeting in the village . Skelton also got up , and would seem to have lighted a fire ; but there are contradictory statements as to whether be went out or not . However this might be , the old man was found about an hour afterwards on the roadside , -weltering in blood , and insensible . He was taken home , and died the next day . Skelton is said to have frequently ill used the old man , and expressed a desire for his death . He has therefore been taken into custody . Pauper Riot at Preston . —The pauper labourers at the relieving offices , Sanl-street , Preston , have created
some rather alarming disturbances on account of an attempt on the part of the guardians to make them work the entire day , on pain of receiving only sixpence pay instead of a shilling . The men resisted this endeavour to starve them to death , ' as they called it , and , flocking together in masses , made very inflammatory harangues . The police assembled , and tried to persuade the orators to keep silent ; but this request was not heeded , and at length matters looked so serious that it was determined by the guardians to concede the point until the end of the week , and in the meanwhile to make preparations for enforcing the new rule ^ on the following . Monday . This was accordingly done .
Conviction of a Burglar . —A well-known Shrewsbury burglar , who has been recently arrested in London , and who gave the name of Palmerston , though he is better known by the cognomen of Black Bill , has just been found Guilty at the Shrewsbury sessions of committing a burglary , and has been sentenced to four years ' penal servitude . He cross-examined the witnesses with great skill , and defended himself in a speech which the Hecorder characterized as evincing great ability . The State of the Haymarket , &c , at Night . — A meeting has been held at the Chambers of the Society for the Suppression of Vice , in order to consider the disgraceful state of the Haymarket , Coventry-street , Kegent - street , Portland - place , and the adjoining thoroughfares , which are thronged from an early hour in the evening to a late hour of the night by crowds of abandoned persons of both sexes . Resolutions were passed , affirming that the evil should be dealt with by
Government , and appointing a committee , witli power to add to their number , for the purpose of promoting and aiding the eftbrta of Ministers to suppress the scandal to our public morality . The meeting then adjourned . A further meeting was held on Wednesday , when great discussion took place as to the propriety of confining abandoned women to one quarter of the town , as in some of the continental cities ; but this was for the most part discouraged . One of the speakers stated that , although t lie parish of St . James ' s is only half a mile long and three quarters of a milo broad , there are no less than ouo hundred-and-flvc brothels in it . A . proposal was made to establish a Board of Moral Health ; but this was overruled . A resolution was finally agreed to , to the effect " that the meeting pledged themselves to uso their best efforts to strengthen the committee , by bringing to its support such influential persons as they can induce to join thorn in the object for which they arc u * sociated . "
Affray with Poachers . —A desperate encounter between the gamekeeper and watcher of Lord Bagot ' s preserves , and four poachers , has taken place on uomo grounds near Kuthin , Denbighshire . The keepers wore seriously hurt , und the poachers escaped ; but their identity ia well known , and they will probnbly bo appv « liondod «^^ Ooo-oCthfiJ ( iC 0 iioc ^ . VWJ 5 iiWSJliSii * ~ , .. Kohkkky oi- ' Bank-notns at Livkkpool . —Two men , who slopt a fow nights ngo at tho coffoo-ahop of a Mr . Anultugo , in Dalo-street , Liverpool , absconded i » the morning with 106 / . in Bunk of England notes and gold , together with two gold brooches . Owing tp ono of them having had a letter directed for him , . while staying ut the place , to a college man in Greenwich Hospital , it was presumed that tho thieves might bo hoard of hi that quarter ; eo Mr . ArmitagQ and a polico-oflicor immediately
started for the spot . As they were sitting together at a tavern in Greenwich , the band of the Royal Marines passed through the town playing . The attention of the officer and of Mr . Armitage " was attracted , and , while they were looking on , the latter caught sight of the two men of whom they were in search . Having obtained the assistance of other constables , the thieves were forced into a cab , and one of them threw something out of the window , which proved to be a 10 Z . note . Another man and two women have also been apprehended ; and 64 / . in gold and seven 5 / . notes have been taken possession of by the police from a man with whom they had been deposited , but who appeared to be innocent of all knowledge of the theft . A Drunken Mother . —Sarah Bennett , a middleaged woman , has been charged at Lambeth with causing such injuries to her daiighter , a girl of sixteen , that she now lies in a highly dangerous state in the infirmary of Camberwell workhouse . The girl ' s deposition was taken down by the magistrate last Saturday evening . It reveals a most shocking story , and runs thus : — "About Monday fortnight , my father and mother were quarrelling . My father wanted to beat her , and I tried to prevent it , and she gave me a push and threw me down stairs . My father hit her , and gave her a black eye and set it bleeding . I was suffering then with erysipelas , and was going to lie down on the bed , but she turned me out of it , got into bed herself , and compelled me to lie on the floor . My mother was very tipsy at the time , and my father on coming up-stairs found me on the floor , and this was the reason for his hitting my mother on the eye . I was following down stairs and begging of my father not to have any more words with my mother , when she pushed me down stairs , and I fell with the back part of my head on the edge of the stairs . The push she gave me was a violent one , and mother always spat her spite on me when she had a quarrel with father . Immediately after the fall , I felt great pain in my head , and I have been no better since . I had been ill a fortnight before this , and had not done anything to provoke her . "When mother gets drunk , which , she does at least once a-fortnight , she is like a mad woman . She has struck me many a time , but not so badly as this ; but I hope you will not punish her , for she has a young baby . " Assaults . —A man named James O'Neale has been charged at Guildhall with a murderous attack on another . man , named Richardson . There had been a dispute between the two men , and Richardson wanted to fight O'Neale , which the latter refused to do . Richardson then followed his adversary up into his room , but shortly afterwards exclaimed that O'Neale had got a poker . He then ran down stairs , bleeding from the head , and it appeared that his skull was fractured . He was taken to the hospital , where he remains in a precarious state . O'Neale has been remanded . —Captain Crauford Crossman has been charged at Marlborough-street with violently assaulting Major-General George Warren . The latter , who had returned from India about six months ago in company with the wife and children of Captain Crossman , was walking up the Haymarket , when , just as he was about to turn into Jermyn-street , he waa suddenly confronted by Crossman , who , stopping in front of him , exclaimed "Now I have met you . Shall I tell you what 1 think of you ? " Major Warren replied that he did not wish to have anything to say to his questioner , and was proceeding on his way , when Captain Crossman said that he would give Major Warren his opinion of him , ' and immediately app lied to him a very offensive epithet . Major Warren , however , took no notice of this insult , but still walked quietly on , hoping soon to get rid of hit ) companion , but Captain Crossman struck him a heavy blow on the head with a walking-stick , which cut tho brim of his hot completely through . For tho defence , it was urged that Major Warren had carried on a criminal acquaintance with Captain Crossman ' s wife . Tho Mujor denied this ; he bad only escorted her about London after their return from abroad , and had occasiqnally assisted her with money . Mr . Bingham ordered Captain Crosaman to find sureties to keep the peace towards Major Warren for tho next twelve months . —A young man , of tho namo of Richard Birch , has been charged before Mr . Broughton , at . tho Marylebone policeoflicu , with severely injuring a g ' ate porter at tho workhouso of that pariah . Me applied ono evening at tho workhouse gate for relief , and tho porter , b y order of tho relieving overseer , gave him a quartern loaf and a ticket for work in tho stonoyard . Ho refused to accept this relief , and struck tho porter a blow on the mouth which knocked him down , cutting his lip quite through ; ho then kicked and otherwise ill-used him to such an extent , that ho was taken to tho workhouse surgery . Tho relieving ovorsccr stated to tho magistrate that Hiroh was an associate of thieves , and had often beforo b * 6 ^ n ~ c ^ tTvl 5 to "( l " artKarcourt ofas 8 ault 8-nnd-otheroffenceH .-Ho waH committed for trial , and , having pleaded Guilty at tho Middlesex Sessions , was sentenced to six months ' hard labour . —A third oaso of this naturo was brought before tho Lambeth magistrate , tho accused in this inwtunce being a licensed hawker of tho name of Arthur Taylor , who waa charged with stabbing a man named Batcholor on tho head and faco in five places , in consequence of which him lifo is endangered and ho waa
entirely disabled from attending in court to give his evidence . A policeman stated that Batchelor ' s wife had left him and lived with Taylor , who some time afterwards met Batchelor at a public-house at Peckham , where , a quarrel having arisen between the two men , several blows were struck on either side , and , during the fight , Taylor pulled out a knife , with which he wounded his adversary five times on the head . Taylor said that the other man had very much injured him , and one of his hands was stained with blood . —He was remanded . The Case of . the Coloured Girls . —The black
man , father of the two coloured girls who recently excited some commiseration by their pretended story of being runaway slaves , died at Chelsea workhouse on the 30 th nit . The mother ( an Irishwoman ) called the following day , accompanied by one of the girls , to see the corpse , and acknowledged the deceitVhich had been practised , and which she said had been suggested by others . These facts have been communicated to the Southwark magistrate , by whom the girls were befriended until the fraud was discovered . The Robbery from the Corn Exchange , Manchksteb . — Charles Browness , a foreigner , pleaded Guilty on Tuesday at the Manchester city sessions to a charge of having stolen in the Corn Exchange , Manchester , on the 10 th ult ., a pocket-book containing 3111 Z . 18 s . in notes , bills , &c , the property of Messrs . William and Frederick Thompson , corn-millers at Wakefield . The pocket-book was taken off a desk at the Exchange . Browness was sentenced to a year ' s hard labour .
The late Murderous Assault at Torquay . — Jane Stone has given birth to a male child , the offspring of her seducer and assailant , Jonathan Roose , who was recently convicted . The deplorable condition of the poor girl has excited the sympathies of the inhabitants of Torquay , and a public meeting of sympathy was held there on Monday evening . Subscriptions have been opened at Torquay and at Exeter , her native city . Attempted Wife Murder . —James Murray , a labouring man living at Oldham , made a desperate attempt , on the night of New Year ' s-day , to cut his wife ' s throat with a table knife in a public-house . She had been assaulted outside by a man , and her husband afterwards accused her of improper conduct with him . He inflicted some slight wounds on her neck and hands , knocked her down , and kicked her . Previously to using the knife , he sharpened it on a stone . When brought before the magistrates , he said his wife was a drunkard . He was committed to prison for a month—surely , a too lenient
sentence . . The Military Disturbance in Westminster . — The two privates of the Coldstreani Guards , who so savagely assaulted the police in the Broadway , Westminster , on Thursday week , while ' one of them was being taken into custody on a charge of felony , have been committed for trial . Illegal Treatment of the Dead Bodies of Paupers . —Alfred Feist , taskmaster of the Newington Workhouse , is under remand at the Lambeth policecourt on a charge of taking away the dead body of a pauper , named Mary Whitehead , for sale for anatomical purposes . The relatives attended what they conceived to be the funeral of the dead woman ; but in fact the body had been removed . From the evidence of the undertaker to the parish , it appears that these sales of the dead bodies of paupers to the surgeons , and consequent imposition on the feelings of the relatives by the substitution of some other corpse or portion of a corpse , are very common in tho parish .
Card-sharpin g in the North . —About ten or eleven days ago , as a French gcntlemun waa walking about the environs of Edinburgh , he mot a respectably dressed man , with whom he entered into conversation , the latter discoursing on the beauties of the place . This after a time led to a proposal from tho stranger to visit an old castle in the neighbourhood , in which Queen Mary had formerly resided . The Frenchman having consented , he and his acquaintance wont together in a cab to tho place mentioned , and wore about to ascend on foot tho hill on
tho top of which tho castle stands , when they encountered two men playing at cards . The guide , on seeing this , immediately forgot all about the castle , and joined tho other men at their game , the Frenchman all tho time looking on quite unsuspectingly . When , however , his friend requested him to advance 11 . on his watch , ho discovered tho kind of company ho was in , and therefore took to his heels and returned to tho cab in which ho had ridden to the spot . Ho proceeded to Edinburgh , and on his way ho found that he hud been robbed of a valuable silver snuff-box .
Stealing a Child . —Eleanor Emmoraon , a young woman of nino-and-twenty , has boon tried at tho Middlesex Sessions on a singular uhurgo of stealing a child . The mother , a Mrs . Richardson , having to go out to work , ontruatcdJior _ iiRfHUt , J ^ jlcb ^ M ^ j ^ lor aj-ear old , to tho woman Einmerson . Ono day , It was ~ founai ? i'ffrKmnTerson and tho child had both vanished . Information waa givon to tho police , and tho woman wau upprohonded . Sho then said that tho child was dead and burled : it had died of measles ; and though , as she stated , medical advice was called in , tho case terminated fatally . Tho mother , however , conceives that tho child died for v . ant of tho breast . Emmorson was found Guilty , and aen-
Untitled Article
No . 407 , January 9 , 1858 . ] THE LEADER , 29
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), Jan. 9, 1858, page 29, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2225/page/5/
-