Sunday, 29 January 2012

Body in Suitcase: New Shock (Brighton Trunk Murder)

Daily Mirror dated Tuesday June 19th 1934
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On 17th June 1934 a worker at the left-luggage office of Brighton Railway Station complained about the smell coming from a large suitcase or trunk that had been deposited there a while before.  The police were called and, when opened, the trunk was found to contain the dismembered torso of a woman. Two days later, further searches at other Railway termini turned up the trunk at King’s Cross Station in London. This contained a woman’s legs.  Sir Bernard Spilsbury, England’s most senior and most famous criminal anthropologist (and 1930's answer to Dr. Temperance "Bones" Brennan), established that the torso and legs were from the same person, but little else.  


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As can be seen from this clipping form the next day’s Mirror the story took a bizarre turn with the revelations of a Psychic, even so the rest of the victim was never found, her identity never established and the murderer never charged.

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During house-to-house investigations around Brighton Railway station the police found another trunk and another body.  It was soon decided that this had no connection to the previous discoveries and was treated as a separate case.  This time the victim was identified, as Violette Kaye, and her ex-boyfriend Tony Mancini stood trial for murder but he was acquitted due to lack of evidence.  38 years later Mancini apparently confessed to a ‘News of the World’ journalist (remember them?) that he had killed Violette.


Incidentally, for crime fiction fans I can thoroughly recommend Peter Guttridge's Brighton Trilogy - 'City of Dreadful Night', 'The Last King of Brighton' and 'The Thing Itself' - the latter out in April 2012.


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Piracy in the China Seas was quite common in the 1930’s. According to a statement in Hansard in 1936, 17 British adults and 70 British schoolchildren had been victims of Chinese pirates between 1933 and 1935. Of these only 3 were killed.  On the 17th June 1934 SS Shuntein, a passenger and cargo vessel on only its second voyage was taken over by Chinese pirates. 5 Brits, 1 Japanese and about 20 Chinese passengers were taken onto 8 or 9 Junks.  6 Royal Navy vessels led by the aircraft carrier HMS Eagle immediately set out to intercept the pirates and, having dropped warning notices demanding the release of the hostages, proceeded to bomb and machine gun the boats.  The British and Japanese hostages were released unharmed. 
“By Gad, Sir, that’ll show the yellow devils they can’t mess with the British Empire. Pass me another Singapore Sling.”

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George Fratson was subsequently released from prison.  Lucky really that he hadn’t been hung (or is it hanged?).  I hope Messrs Avory, Swift, Branson and Finlay read this and had a moment's pause for thought. 

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Enough of crime for now.  The play turned out to be J M (Peter Pan) Barrie’s last – ‘The Boy David’ and indeed Elizabeth Bergner did play the title role!  It was premiered in Edinburgh in 1936 and, despite scenery by Augustus John and music by William Walton, received a less than favourable review from the Glasgow Herald. (search Google News for “‘Elizabeth Bergner’ Barrie”)


Ironic and sad. And 78 years later it still happens, but fortunately only rarely.

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Latymer Court still stands today and if you want a 1 bedroom flat there you’ll need about £300,000, which, I note, is almost as much as it cost to build the whole place in 1934.

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Is there nothing new under the sun?  Miss-behaving footballer in road-rage attack.


Some things have changed, though.


















Sunday, 22 January 2012

No Post Today (Again)

Sorry but still recovering from an eye operation and virtually blind in my left eye.  Will try again in 2 weeks - 5th February 2012.

Sunday, 8 January 2012

No Post Today

Sorry, but no newspaper today because I have a detached retina.  Hopefully normal service will be resumed in a fortnight on Sunday 22nd January.

Sunday, 1 January 2012

Let's Party like it's 2000

Millennium Daily Mail dated Saturday January 1st 2000
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There were many an hour wasted round the coffee machines of the nation discussing whether or not the new millennium started on 1st January 2000 or 2001. Who cares – there goes another £10000 worth of fireworks, oooh, aaah.

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The Y2K Bug or Year 2000 Bug was the big media-driven scare of 1999. They predicted that at the stroke of midnight when the century changed from 19 to 20 computers controlling everything from your trusty video recorder to in-flight jumbo jets would crash.  The problem went back to the early days of commercial programming when computer memory and storage space was at a premium.  To save space most date fields in records were given just 2 bytes instead of 4 – i.e. yy instead off ccyy – i.e just the year without the century – i.e. 99 instead of 1999.
The news media decided that this meant that at the vital moment the computers would think it was 1900, and because the Wright Brothers hadn’t flown yet, all the planes would just drop from the sky.

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Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin became the first President of the Russian Federation (which replaced the old communist USSR) in 1991 and tried to convert the Russian state into a ‘free-market’ economy. The result was widespread corruption and inflation, not to mention personal unpopularity.  He finally resigned and his Prime Minister Vladimir Putin took over.

Yeltsin was an eccentric figure who enjoyed a drink of five – a sort of political Oliver Reed.

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Born when Rutherford B. Hayes was US President, Queen Victoria was on the English throne and Gladstone was Prime Minister, she was already 23 years old when the Wright Brothers pioneered powered flight. She lived through two World Wars, the proliferation of the motor car, the Stock market crash of 1929 and the ensuing depression, the start of both radio and TV broadcasting, the rise and fall of Communism, the Cold War, the assassination of John F Kennedy, the coming and/or going of 24 Presidents and saw the first man walk on the Moon. Now that's what you call a life.

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Ex-Beatle George Harrison was stabbed in the chest by and intruder in the early hours of Thursday 30th December.  The attacker, Mike Abram, was found to be insane and committed to a secure hospital but was released in 2002!

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As it says, predictions are pointless and a Happy New Year to one and all.














Sunday, 25 December 2011

IRA try to assassinate Margaret Thatcher

Daily Mirror dated Saturday October 13th 1984
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An unusual wrap-around front/back cover in portrait orientation for this 1984 edition of the Daily Mirror.

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Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and her cabinet were staying at the Grand Hotel in Brighton for the 1984 Conservative Party conference when a bomb, planted by IRA member Patrick Magee, exploded.  It killed 5 people including Anthony Berry M P and badly damaged the front of the hotel.
Patrick Magee was found guilty on eight counts including the five murders and was sentenced to a minimum of 35 years in prison. Controversially he was released in 1999 as part of the Good Friday Agreement.

There is little or no other ‘hard’ news, except for sport, in this edition.

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‘Good Morning Britain’ was presented by Anne, Nick Owen and puppet Roland Rat. Far more interesting is that I too had a kidney stone removed in Bournemouth Hospital.

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Home computers really came to the notice of the general public in the UK in 1981 with the release of the Sinclair ZX81 and the BBC Micro, so this advert is from the early days.  And what days – software input from cassette tape, 32 x 1024 bytes of memory and 80-column text-only visual display output. And no internet.  It’s a wonder the things caught on at all.

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Saturday night TV and, with the exception of the contestants on 3-2-1, not a single member of the public being humiliated, fed false promises of stardom or being used to make money from phone-in voting.  Just plenty of professionals - comedians, presenters, actors and Noel Edmonds - doing their jobs.


One of the oddest headlines I have encountered and not a pun in sight.  What I can't believe is that he 'booted her into the air'.


Probably invented in the early 1970’s in Japan, karaoke didn’t become popular in the West until the 1990’s. 

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So this is where the makers of the recent ‘innovation’ slankets got their inspiration.


Knowing nothing about football I thought Gary Lineker was just that jug-eared clown who advertised crisps, but it seems he played for England 80 times scoring 48 goals in the process, as well as scoring 281 goals in other matches for various clubs and all without once being shown a yellow or red card.  You live and learn - and at my age, forget.


A Merry Christmas to one and all.
















Sunday, 18 December 2011

Mussolini 5th Assassination Attempt

Daily Mirror dated Monday November 1st 1926
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Benito Mussolini was the leader of the Italian National Fascist Party and became Italy’s Prime Minister in 1922.  His administration started out as a right-wing coalition but by the beginning of 1926 had become a dictatorship with him as supreme commander or Il Duce.
In this, the 5th attempted assassination, 15 year old Anteo Zamboni tried to shoot Mussolini but paid for it with his own life when he was lynched.  (Trivia note – the man who identified Zamboni as the culprit was the father of film director Pier Paolo Pasolini.)
Despite his prediction (mentioned in the article) that he would not die a violent death, Mussolini was himself lynched and hung from a street lamp in April 1945. 

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Note also the picture of Houdini on the front page. Harry Houdini was born in Hungary as Erik Weisz in 1874, moving to America with his family at the age of 4.  He started in show business as a slight-of-hand magician but then concentrated on escapology. His act became World famous and he toured America and Europe. From 1918 to 1923 he had a second career as a film star. In the 1920s he used his experience in performing magic to expose as fraudsters psychics and mediums. I guess that the lack of space devoted to his death was due to the news coming in late the previous evening, and that more appeared in the next day's issue.

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Of all the people in all the bars in all the World to try to con why pick on the ex-welterweight champion of France and Europe; middleweight, light-heavyweight and heavyweight champion of Europe; not to mention "White Heavyweight Champion of the World"?

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Cheaper petrol - there's a novelty.  1s and 6d a gallon (7.5p) is the equivalent of 4d a litre – that’s less than 2p a litre!  Using the National Archive currency converter 4d in 1926 is roughly the equivalent of 50p now, so, taking into account wages, RPI and the colour of magic, petrol has gone up by about 270%.

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The F8 camera first entered service in 1919 and was later adopted as the standard RAF camera.  At first the camera was driven by a propeller connected to a flexible drive system, later this was replaced by an electric motor. Designed to use 9" wide film but to have a 7" X 7" image format, this allowed for instrument recording to be exposed along the side of the film.  The 100 exposures were on a 65-foot long roll of celluloid film.

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I thought this was just an odd name for ‘sleeping sickness’ but according to Wikipedia -
Encephalitis lethargica or von Economo disease is an atypical form of encephalitis. Also known as "sleepy sickness" (different from the sleeping sickness transmitted by the tsetse fly), it was first described by the neurologist Constantin von Economo in 1917. The disease attacks the brain, leaving some victims in a statue-like condition, speechless and motionless. Between 1915 and 1926 an epidemic of encephalitis lethargica spread around the world; no recurrence of the epidemic has since been reported, though isolated cases continue to occur.

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I wonder what Medicus would make of McDonalds?
A lot of interesting advice here but what pops out at me is the mention of ‘canary pudding’.  Surely not.  They wouldn’t would they?

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“By gad, Sir, never did me any harm being beaten at school.  In fact quite enjoyed it, doncha know. Still go to a young lady round the back of Charring Cross Road… well.. hurrumph… that’s enough of that.  More brandy, Jeeves.”














Sunday, 11 December 2011

Grace Kelly Weds

Daily Mirror dated Friday April 20th 1956



The elegant and beautiful actress Grace Kelly had a short but memorable film career from 1951 to 1956 that included such classics as High Noon, Dial M For Murder, Rear Window, To Catch a Thief and High Society. In her penultimate film The Swan she played a Princess and in 1956 she became a real one when she married Prince Rainier of Monaco.  They were married for 26 years until 1982 when she died in a car crash.



Nikolai Bulganin, the Premier of the USSR, and Nikita Khrushchev, the First Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, visited England for 10 days in April 1956 , spending most of their time in London meeting with Prime Minister Anthony Eden and Labour Leader Hugh Gaitskill.  They had just completed triumphant tours of India and Burma, but they didn’t get the same enthusiastic welcome from the British public.
They had arrived by Soviet warships and it was revealed later that  
the CIA, MI6 and the Naval Intelligence were all involved in a mission to send divers under the warships at Portsmouth. One of the frogmen, Commander Crabb, vanished during the operation on the 19th April , forcing the British authorities to cobble together a hasty cover story. 


Exempting old age pensioners from the duty increase – could this be a plot to kill off the old folk and save on pensions?


The body of Ms Helen O'Reilly was found by a milkman at 6 a.m. on April 18th, 1956. She was lying outside number 15 Hume Street, Dublin, a silk stocking tied loosely around her neck. She was five months pregnant.
The woman the reporter spoke to turned out to be Mary Anne (Mamie) Cadden, a nurse who provided back-street abortion services. She had already served 5 years for a previous offence.  This time she was found guilty of murder and sentenced to hang, but this was commuted to life imprisonment. Shortly after she was declared insane and died in custody in 1959.


Driving with your left arm around your floozy is all well and good, but how are you going to text your wife to tell her you’ll be late home?


Press speculation in the run-up to the Cup Final between Manchester City and Birmingham City discussed which of Don Revie and Bobby Johnstone would be selected.  In the end both of them played. The match is remembered (by those interested in such things) as the one in which goal-keeper Bert Trautmann played the last 17 minutes with a broken bone in his neck.
Revie went on to manage Leeds and England.


If only I knew what a ‘liquid pencil’ was I’d be a rich man – or in prison.