Read Mr Briggs' Hat: The True Story of a Victorian Railway Murder Online
Authors: Kate Colquhoun
Tags: #True Crime, #General
Adams, Charles | American Minister at the Court of St James’s, London |
Ames, Benjamin | Train guard, North London Railway |
Ballantine, Serjeant William | Prosecution Barrister |
Battiscombe, Reverend | Prison visitor |
Beard, Thomas | Solicitor to the German Legal Protection Society, London |
Blankman, Edmond | Co-Counsel for the Defence in the American extradition hearing |
Blyth, Ellen | Landlady, 16 Park Terrace, Old Ford, Bow |
Blyth, George | Husband of Ellen Blyth, City messenger |
Brereton, Dr Alfred | Bow Road doctor |
Briggs, Thomas | Chief Bank Clerk, Robarts, Curtis & Co., of Clapton Square, Hackney |
Briggs, Thomas James | Second son of the above |
Buchan, Caroline | Thomas Briggs’ niece, of Peckham |
Buchan, David | Husband of Caroline Buchan, warehouseman |
Calcraft, William | London’s public executioner |
Cappel, Dr Louis | Minister of the German Lutheran Church, Alie Street |
Clarke, George | Police sergeant, Metropolitan Police, Scotland Yard |
Collier, Sir Robert | Solicitor General |
Davis, Reverend | Newgate prison Ordinary |
Death, John | Jeweller, 55 Cheapside |
Death, Robert | Brother of the above, and his assistant |
Digance, Daniel | Briggs’ hatter, Royal Exchange |
Dougan, Edward | Police constable, Metropolitan Police, K Division |
Edwards, Pierrepont | Acting British consul, New York |
Ekin, Alfred | Engine driver, North London Railway |
Eldred, Mary Anne | Prostitute, Camberwell |
Fishbourne, Thomas | Ticket collector, Fenchurch Street Station |
Flowers, Mr | Magistrate, Bow Street Court |
Foreman, Charles | Omnibus conductor |
Giffard, Hardinge | Junior member of the prosecution team |
Gifford, James | Shipping agent, London docks |
Glass, John Henry | Journeyman tailor at Hodgkinson’s, City |
Greenwood, George | Superintendent, Chalk Farm Station |
Grey, Sir George | Home Secretary |
Henry, Thomas | Chief magistrate, Bow Street Police Court |
Hoffa, John | Journeyman tailor at Hodgkinson’s, City; friend of Müller |
Howie, Daniel | Superintendent, Metropolitan Police, K Division |
Humphreys, John | Coroner for East Middlesex |
Jones, Elizabeth | Brothel keeper |
Jones, Sydney | Bank clerk, Robarts, Curtis & Co., City |
Judd, Charles | Suspect in the Briggs case |
Kennedy, John | Chief of the New York Metropolitan Police |
Kerressey, Walter | Detective Inspector, Metropolitan Police, K Division |
Lambert, Lewis | Policeman K311, Metropolitan Police, K Division |
Lee, Thomas | Acquaintance of Thomas Briggs; key witness at trial |
Letheby, Dr Henry | Professor of Chemistry, London |
Marbury, Francis | Counsel to the British Consulate, New York |
Martin, Samuel | Trial judge |
Matthews, Eliza | Wife of Jonathan Matthews |
Matthews, Jonathan | London cab driver |
Mayne, Sir Richard | Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police |
Müller, Franz | German tailor |
Murray, Robert | US Marshal |
Newton, Chas | United States Commissioner, New York |
Parry, Serjeant John Humffreys | Defence Barrister |
Pearson, Sophia | Franz Müller’s sister in London |
Pollock, Frederick | Lord Chief Baron; trial judge |
Repsch, Elizabeth | Wife of Godfrey Repsch |
Repsch, Godfrey | Tailor, Old Jewry, City |
Shaffer, Chauncey | Counsel for the Defence, American extradition hearing |
Steer, Thomas | Detective Inspector, Metropolitan Police, D Division |
Tanner, Richard | Detective Inspector, Metropolitan Police, Scotland Yard |
Taylor, Professor Alfred | Professor of Chemistry, Guy’s Hospital, London |
Thorne, Frederick | Daniel Digance’s hatmaker |
Tiddey, William Ninnis | Superintendent, Metropolitan Police, D Division |
Tieman, John Charles | Officer, New York Police Department |
Timms, William | Train guard, North London Railway |
Toulmin, Dr Francis | Thomas Briggs’ doctor |
Vernez, Harry | Bank clerk, Robarts, Curtis & Co., City |
Weist, Jacob | Porter, London docks |
Williamson, Frederick | Detective Inspector, Metropolitan Police, Scotland Yard |
Woodward, Alfred | Clerk, Electric and International Telegraph Company |
ARCHIVES
The National Archives, Kew
CRIM 4/681
CRIM 5/4
CRIM 6/11
CRIM 10/53
HO 12/152/63401
HO 13/108
HO 14/24
HO 14/25
HO 45/681
HO 45/7078
HO 46/32
HO 46/33
HO 65/25
MEPO 3/75
MEPO 3/76
MEPO 7/25
PCOM 2/215
RAIL 529/113
London Metropolitan Archives
: 1862 Weekly Dispatch Map
London Transport Museum
: The Reinhohl Collection, Album 2
American National Archives, College Park, Maryland
: US extradition file. Record Group 59: General Records of the Department of State 1789–2002, American National Archives, Franz Müller 1864, Loc. 250/48/9/7, Box 2
The Metropolitan Police Historic Store
: Richard Tanner’s notebook, ‘Prisoners apprehended July 1856 to 1867’
WEBSITES
www.archive.org/details/trialoffranzmull025046mbp
http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/
http://archivemaps.com/mapco/london.htm
www.british-history.ac.uk
www.eh.net
http://newspapers.bl.uk/blcs/
NEWS PAPERS, MAGAZINES AND JOURNALS
Annual Register
, 1864
Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine
Cornhill Magazine
Daily Telegraph
The Era
Fraser’s Magazine
Illustrated London News
Lloyd’s Weekly Newspaper
New York Herald
New York Times
Phrenological Journal
Quarterly Review
Reynolds’s Weekly Newspaper
The Times
The Spectator
Other UK national and regional newspapers: British Library Newspaper Store, Colindale
PUBLISHED BOOKS AND ARTICLES
Execution broadside:
Müller’s Hanging
(London: Catnach Press, 1864)
Bradshaw’s Railway Guide
(1864)
The Post Office London Directory
(London: Kelly & Co., 1864)
The Queen’s London, A Pictorial and Descriptive Record of the Streets, Buildings, Parks and Scenery of the Great Metropolis
(London: Cassell, 1896)
Report of the Royal Commission on Capital Punishment, Together with the Minutes of Evidence and Appendix
(London: Her Majesty’s Stationery Office, 1866)
Abrahamsen, David,
The Murdering Mind
(London: HarperCollins, 1973)
Alderman, Geoffrey and Colin Holmes (ed.),
Outsiders and Outcasts: Essays in Honour of William J. Fishman
(London: Duckworth, 1993)
Altick, Richard D.,
Evil Encounters: Two Victorian Sensations
(London: John Murray, 1987)
—————,
Victorian Studies in Scarlet
(London: Dent, 1972)
Anonymous, ‘Our Female Sensation Novelists’,
Christian Remembrancer
, 46, 1864, 209–36
Ashton, Rosemary,
Little Germany: Exile and Asylum in Victorian Britain
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1986)
Aspland, Robert,
An Oration Delivered on Monday, October 16, on Laying the First Stone of the New Gravel-Pit Meeting-House in Paradise Field, Hackney
(Harlow: Longman, Hurst et al, 1809)
Ballantine, William,
Some Experiences of a Barrister’s Life
(London: R. Bentley & Son, 1882)
Bartlett, David W.,
London by Day and Night; or, Men and Things in the Great Metropolis
(London: n.p., 1852)
Begg, Paul and Keith Skinner,
The Scotland Yard Files: 150 Years of the CID
(London: Headline, 1992)
Bentley, David,
English Criminal Justice in the Nineteenth Century
(London: Hambledon, 1998)
Best, William Mawdesley,
A Treatise on Presumptions of Law and Fact
(London: Sweet, 1844)
Bleackley, Horace,
The Hangmen of England: How They Hanged and Whom They Hanged – The Life Story of ‘Jack Ketch’ Through Two Centuries
(London: Chapman & Hall, 1929)
Block, Brian P. and John Hostettler,
Hanging in the Balance: A History of the Abolition of Capital Punishment in Britain
(Winchester, Waterside Press, 1997)
Booth, Charles (ed.),
Life and Labour of the People
(London: Macmillan, 1889)
Boyle, Thomas,
Black Swine in the Sewers of Hampstead: Beneath the Surface of Victorian Sensationalism
(New York: Viking, 1988)
Braddon, Mary Elizabeth,
Aurora Floyd
(1863; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996)
—————,
Lady Audley’s Secret
(1862; London: Wordsworth Editions, 1995)
Brantlinger, Patrick, ‘What is “Sensational” about the “Sensation Novel”?’,
Nineteenth Century Fiction
, 37, 1982, 1–28.
Browne, Douglas G.,
The Rise of Scotland Yard: A History of the Metropolitan Police
(London: Harrap, 1956)
Cavanagh, Timothy,
Scotland Yard Past and Present
(London: Chatto, 1893)
Cobb, Belton,
Critical Years at the Yard: The Career of Frederick Williamson of the Detective Department and the CID
(London: Faber & Faber, 1956)
Collins, Philip,
Dickens and Crime
(London: Macmillan, 1962)
Collins, Wilkie,
The Woman in White
(1860; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996)
Cook, Tony and Andy Tattersall,
Blackstone’s Senior Investigating Officers’ Handbook
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008)
Costello, Augustine E.,
Our Police Protectors: History of the New York Police from the Earliest Period to the Present Time
(1885; Montclair: Patterson Smith, 1972)
Cunningham, Peter,
A Hand-book of London: Past and Present
(London: John Murray, 1849)
Cunnington, C. Willet and Phillis,
Handbook of English Costume in the Nineteenth Century
(London: Faber & Faber, third edition, 1970)
Dickens, Charles,
American Notes
(London: Chapman & Hall, 1842)
—————, ‘Cab’,
All the Year Round
, 25 February 1860, 414–16
—————,
David Copperfield
(1849–50; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000)
—————,
Dickens’ London: An Imaginative Vision
, ed. Peter Ackroyd (London: Headline, 1987)