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BIZARRE LONDON
BIZARRE LONDON
David Long
Constable • London
Constable & Robinson Ltd
55-56 Russell Square
London WC1B 4HP
www.constablerobinson.com
First published in the UK by Constable,
an imprint of Constable & Robinson Ltd., 2013
Copyright © David Long 2013
The right of David Long to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs & Patents Act 1988
All rights reserved. This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser
A copy of the British Library Cataloguing in Publication
Data is available from the British Library
ISBN 978-1-4721-0931-6 (hardback)
ISBN 978-1-4721-0933-0 (ebook)
Printed and bound in the UK
1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
Cover design and illustration by Sara Mulvanny
Contents
Introduction
1 Gruesome London
2 Ghostly London
3 Building London
4 Spy’s London
5 Under London
6 Monumental London
7 Dead London
8 Royal London
9 Shopping London
10 Green London
11 Eccentrics’ London
12 Eating London
13 Working London
14 Boozy London
15 Private London
16 Military London
17 Illegal London
18 Sporting London
19 Driving London
20 Parliamentary London
21 Ceremonial London
22 Esoteric London
BIZARRE LONDON
Introduction
As a sprawling world city covering some 600 square miles, with 300 different languages spoken and more than 8 million people sharing a history stretching back 2,000 years, it’s hardly surprising that London throws up so much that is strange, unexplained or just plain odd.
From a highwayman dressed as a bishop to a duke so shy he surrounded his garden with frosted glass walls nearly 80 ft tall, it’s always had more than its fair share of eccentrics. Londoners have similarly been subject to some of the weirdest laws, requiring golfers to wear red, MPs not to wear armour, and the rest of us to abstain from carrying planks along pavements or playing cards within a mile of an arsenal or explosives store.
And, of course, London has also been able to lay claim to some of the most extraordinary buildings anywhere in Britain. From an underground café converted from a council loo to an authentic Tudor palace moved brick by brick to a more attractive riverside setting, they include Britain’s tallest family home – spread over eleven floors of a genuine Wren church spire – as well as its smallest listed building and a museum of anaesthetics.
But even so, in a place like London – not that anywhere is remotely like London – this sort of thing is only the start. Britain’s shortest canal, its least secret ‘secret’ bunker and most private public house, its biggest bang, the only part of the National Cycle Network on which bikes are banned, and the most outrageously expensive takeaway meal ever ordered – you’ll find them all in the following pages.
From Boudicca to Boris and beyond, the list of curiosities is as long as it is varied. Skating on lard? The Victorians were doing it in London. Sixty days of rioting after theatre prices went up by sixpence? That happened here, too, in 1809. And the world’s first ever female urinal? Well, that made its debut in London in the 1920s, but had to be removed almost immediately when women started using it in ‘an uncleanly manner’. How could anyone be tired of London?
David Long, May 2013
www.davidlong.info
I
Gruesome London
‘And in any case, I have only a little neck.’
Anne Boleyn
Exceptional Executions
1531 – Richard Rouse
Rouse met an appropriate end for a cook. Found guilty of attempting to poison his master, he was boiled alive on a spot between Bart’s Hospital and Smithfield’s meat market. The meal he had prepared made the Bishop of Rochester deeply unwell, and sixteen of his attendants died. After being briefly displayed on a spike, Rouse’s head was chucked into the river.
1541 – Countess of Salisbury
The last direct descendant of the Plantagenet line, the Countess was doomed after appearing to side with Catherine of Aragon against Henry VIII. On the day – small, frail, ill and sixty-eight years old – she refused to submit to the block and had to be forced down on to it. As she struggled, the axe struck her a glancing blow on the shoulder but somehow she leapt up and attempted to run for it. Once subdued, it took another ten blows to finish the old lady off.
1666 – Robert Hubert
The French watchmaker was hanged after admitting he started the Great Fire of London. In reality, he had been framed for the crime by anti-Catholics, but burning down a house carried the death penalty at the time. Londoners wanted revenge for the more than 13,000 properties that had been lost to the flames, and Hubert – Catholic, foreign, apparently stealing highly paid work from English craftsmen – was in the wrong place at the wrong time, and must have fitted the bill perfectly.
1685 – The Duke of Monmouth
The illegitimate son of Charles II, when the Duke of Monmouth was found guilty of treason in 1685, the inept executioner, Jack Ketch, took five blows with an axe. Even then, as he was almost certainly drunk, his work had to be finished off by a man with a knife.
1689 – Patrick O’Bryan
Primitive technology has enabled the odd villain to escape the drop, but it’s a myth that if the mechanism failed they were declared free men. O’Bryan was a convicted footpad – a thief who preyed on pedestrians – who somehow survived a hanging. But when he was re-caught, re-convicted and re-hanged, his body was then boiled in tar to make absolutely sure he wouldn’t escape justice again.
THE ETIQUETTE OF EXECUTION
Until 1753, women found guilty of murdering their husbands could expect to be burned at the stake, although kindly attempts were sometimes made to strangle them before the flames really began to hurt. For centuries, beheading was similarly considered more honourable than hanging, and the really privileged – such as Anne Boleyn, as queen – might be dispatched with a sword rather than the more mundane and brutal axe.
Hanging was always thought good enough for the masses, however, and traditionally condemned men (and not a few women) were taken from Newgate Gaol in the walled city – where the Old Bailey is today – to the so-called Tyburn Tree north of Hyde Park. On the way, each would be presented with scented nosegays by crowds that could number into the tens of thousands. Convicts could also enjoy a last drink free of charge along the way.
The pub of choice was the Mason’s Arms, which is still open for business today in Seymour Place, W1. There is nothing left of the gallows, however, which stood in what is now the south-west corner of Connaught Square. The structure was large enough to hang twenty-one at a time and, bizarrely, there was an order in which the executions were to be carried out. Traditionally, the public liked to see highwaymen dispatched first – as the so-called ‘aristocrats of crime’ (see Chapter 17) – then common thieves, and finally anyone convicted of treason.
1701 – ‘Captain’ William Kidd
The Scots sailor-turned-pirate was probably no worse than any other b
ut he has somehow become legend. As befits his trade, he was hanged on the Thames at Wapping Stairs, for long enough for three tides to wash over his body, and then again at Tilbury where his rotting corpse was left swinging in the wind for more than twenty years.
1811 – John Williams
Accused of the hideous Ratcliffe Highway Murders – when members of two families had their throats cut – Williams was, in all likelihood, innocent, but hanged himself in his cell before a jury could decide. With suicide illegal, and (more significantly) bloodthirsty Londoners feeling cheated of the gruesome spectacle they felt they deserved, his corpse was paraded through East London and a stake driven through his heart before the burial at the crossroads of New Road and Cannon Street Road, E1.
1817 – John Cashman
After robbing a gunsmith’s on Snow Hill, and injuring one of the shop assistants, Cashman was convicted and, unsurprisingly, sentenced to death. He was then taken back to the shop and hanged outside it, the last time in London a criminal was sentenced to die at the scene of his crime.
1824 – Henry Fauntleroy
Estimated to have been the largest crowd ever assembled anywhere in Britain for a public execution, at least 100,000 Londoners are thought to have gathered outside Newgate Gaol to see banker Henry Fauntleroy hang. His crime was defrauding the Bank of England of £250,000 and wasting nearly the whole lot.
1868 – Michael Barrett
A member of the Fenians – the Irish brotherhood dedicated to freedom from British rule – Barrett was the last man to be publicly hanged in England after putting a bomb in a wheelbarrow against the outer wall of Clerkenwell’s House of Detention (see Chapter 16). His intention had been to help prisoners to escape, but instead the blast killed twelve and injured more than a hundred others.
For what became known as the Clerkenwell Outrage, he was hanged outside Newgate Gaol. The occasion proved to be one of those strange meeting places of old and new, with crowds arriving at Farringdon on the newfangled Underground railway to witness an event that was positively medieval. Barrett’s body was interred within the prison walls and then, in 1903, taken to the City of London Cemetery in Newham and reburied.
1961 – Edwin Bush
The twenty-one-year-old murderer – the first to be caught using Identikit pictures – was also the last person to be hanged at Pentonville Prison. This had become Britain’s own ‘death row’ in 1902 when the dreaded Newgate Gaol closed, and more people were hanged here during the twentieth century than at any other British prison. The total included 109 murderers, 6 spies and 2 traitors.
THE GREAT WEN’S WICKEDEST WOMEN
According to the radical pamphleteer William Cobbett in his 1830 work Rural Rides, London’s rapid growth as a major city was more like a pathological swelling on the face of the nation. In other words, it was a ‘wen’, or a pus-filled boil. And there have been a number of notably wicked women over the years who are now inextricably linked with the Great Wen’s darker moments:
Elizabeth Brownrigg (1720–67)
A midwife in the City of London, Brownrigg employed young girls to help her in her work and was hanged at Tyburn when the extent of the sadistic treatment meted out to her innocent charges became known. One in particular, sixteen-year-old Mary Clifford, was reportedly chained, naked, to an outhouse door. Sleeping on straw in a coal-hole, Clifford had earlier been suspended from a beam, stripped and horsewhipped until covered in blood or her tormentor became too tired to continue. She died of her injuries.
Following a public hanging and dissection, Brownrigg’s skeleton was put on display in a specially constructed niche in the wall of the Royal College of Surgeons.
Amelia Dyer (1838–96)
The most prolific baby-murderer of the Victorian age, Dyer trained as a nurse and, for more than twenty years, plied her trade as a so-called baby farmer. Taking newborns from those who didn’t want them, she would charge a fee for bringing them up herself or finding them new homes.
Dyer quickly realised that killing them was quicker, easier and more profitable, and while the precise number of her victims will never be known, it is thought to run as high as 300. When the body of one washed up in the Thames, she was sent for trial and was hanged at Newgate Gaol.
Isabella of France (1295–1358)
The reviled ‘She-wolf of France’, Isabella was the Queen Consort of Edward II of England and mother to Edward III. She was also the lover of Roger de Mortimer, Earl of March, and conspired with him to steal the throne and rule the country through her young, weak son.
Imprisoning her husband at Berkeley Castle in 1327, Isabella had him murdered with a ‘horn or funnel . . . thrust into his fundament through which a red-hot spit was run up his bowels’. Buried in Grey Friar’s Monastery, Newgate, her beautiful ghost is said still to flit through the churchyard clutching her husband’s heart to her breast.
Bloody Mary (1516–58)
The only surviving child of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon, during her five-year reign Mary I sought violently to return the English to Catholicism. To this end, she ordered or allowed the torture and execution of prominent Protestants, hundreds of whom were burned at the stake.
As many as 800 fled the country to escape the ferocity of the so-called Marian Persecutions, but an estimated 284 died. Mary was subsequently vilified in (John) Foxe’s Book of Martyrs although, in reality, dying without issue, she was no worse than her successor, Elizabeth I, who showed no mercy to Catholic dissenters.
Marguerite Fahmy (1890–1971)
Despite confessing to having shot her husband at the Savoy Hotel in 1923, the wife of the late Prince Ali Kamel Fahmy Bey escaped conviction even for manslaughter. She did so after a bravura performance by her barrister, who quite openly appealed to the all-white jury’s solidly racist instincts.
‘I ask you,’ said Sir Edward Marshall Hall KC, addressing the jury, ‘to open the gate and let this western woman go back into the light of God’s great western sun.’ To the fury of the Egyptian Embassy, they did so, acquitting Sir Edward’s client and allowing Madame Fahmy to walk free.
Toffs with Blood on Their Hands
Lord Lucan
Dead or alive, and still very much Britain’s most famous fugitive, Richard John Bingham, 7th Earl of Lucan, went on the run in November 1974 and cannot reliably be said to have been seen since. The peer fled after murdering the nanny at his Belgravia home, perhaps mistaking her for his wife.
After a bloodstained car was found at Newhaven, it seemed most likely that the Earl had fled across the Channel – or possibly thrown himself into it, although the evidence of a body to confirm this theory has never been found. Rumours persist that he was helped to escape by rich and influential friends, and sightings continue to be reported in the tabloids with predictable regularity.
Laurence Shirly, 4th Earl Ferrers
Even in death, peers are traditionally said to enjoy special privileges, the best known being the right to be hanged with a silken cord. The last member of the House of Lords to be hanged was dispatched in 1760, but there is alas no evidence to suggest Lord Ferrers dangled at the end of anything but an ordinary rope of common hemp.
Earlier that year, his lordship had been visited by a servant to discuss rents on the family estate at Staunton Harold, Leicestershire. Lord Ferrers shot him dead and, reflecting on the huge crowds at Tyburn, his prophetic last words were: ‘I suppose they never saw a lord hanged, and perhaps they will never see another.’
Sir Ralph de Standish
In June 1341, when revolting peasants marched on London from Essex and Kent, talks were arranged at Smithfield between Richard II and the peasant’s leader, Wat Tyler. Things went quickly awry, however, with the Lord Mayor, William Walworth, drawing his dagger and wounding Tyler in the neck.
Seeking to defend the King – Richard was still a boy of fourteen – de Standish, one of his squires, quickly moved in. He stabbed Tyler to death with a short sword, hence it is said the event is represented in the
red of a blade in the City arms today. He was shortly afterwards knighted for his prompt action.
Baron Dacre
Thomas Fiennes, 9th Lord Dacre, inherited his grandfather’s title and Herstmonceux Castle in Sussex and was a member of the jury at the trial of Anne Boleyn. In 1541, in the company of friends, he went poaching and was arrested after an affray that left John Busbrig fatally wounded.
Dacre and his pals were charged with murder, his Lordship being persuaded to plead guilty and throw himself on the mercy of the King. He did so, but the sovereign’s mercy only went so far. While his co-accused were beheaded, he was taken to Tyburn and, according to a witness, ‘strangled as common murderers are’.
HRH Albert Victor Christian Edward
George V’s older brother (known as ‘Eddy’) was certainly a bit of a royal wrong’un, but his guilt is far from proven. Since the 1960s, however, his name has frequently been mentioned as a possible candidate for Jack the Ripper, the suggestion being that he was driven to kill after going mad as a consequence of contracting syphilis.
More recently it has been suggested that Eddy killed in order to conceal an illegal marriage to a Catholic commoner with whom he’d had a son. In truth, HRH had some very robust alibis, and the story is nonsense, but this has not prevented the sputtering flames of suspicion being kept alive by enthusiastic if ill-informed Ripperologists and the occasional republican.