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George Joseph Smith

English serial killer (1872–1915)

George Joseph Smith

Summary

English serial killer (1872–1915)

FieldValue
nameGeorge Joseph Smith
imageGeorgeJosephSmith.JPG
captionGeorge Joseph Smith
birthnameGeorge Joseph Smith
aliasBrides in the Bath Murderer
George Oliver Love
George Rose Smith
Charles Oliver James
Henry Williams
John Lloyd
birth_date
birth_placeBethnal Green, London, England
death_date
death_placeMaidstone, Kent, England
spouseCaroline Thornhill (1898–1915)
Florence Wilson (1908–15; bigamous)
Edith Peglar (1908–15; bigamous)
Sarah Freeman (1909–15; bigamous)
Bessie Mundy (1910–12; bigamous)
Alice Burnham (1913; bigamous)
Alice Reid (1914–15; bigamous)
Margaret Lofty (1914; bigamous)
causeExecution by hanging
victims3
countryEngland
beginyear1912
endyear1914
apprehended23 March 1915
penaltyDeath
convictionMurder

George Oliver Love George Rose Smith Charles Oliver James Henry Williams John Lloyd Florence Wilson (1908–15; bigamous) Edith Peglar (1908–15; bigamous) Sarah Freeman (1909–15; bigamous) Bessie Mundy (1910–12; bigamous) Alice Burnham (1913; bigamous) Alice Reid (1914–15; bigamous) Margaret Lofty (1914; bigamous) George Joseph Smith (11 January 1872 – 13 August 1915) was an English serial killer and bigamist who was convicted and subsequently hanged for the murders of three women in 1915. The case became known as the Brides in the Bath Murders. As well as being widely reported in the media, it was significant in the history of forensic pathology and detection. It was also one of the first cases in which striking similarities between connected crimes were used to prove guilt, a technique used in subsequent prosecutions.

Early life and marriages

George Joseph Smith was born in Bethnal Green, London, on 11 January 1872, the son of an insurance agent. At age 9, Smith was sent to a reformatory at Gravesend, Kent, and later was imprisoned for fraud and theft. In 1896 he was sentenced to 12 months' imprisonment for persuading a woman to steal from her employers. Smith used the proceeds to open a baker's shop in Leicester.

In 1898, under the alias George Oliver Love, Smith married Caroline Beatrice Thornhill in Leicester; it was his only legal marriage. They moved to London, where she worked as a maid for a number of employers, stealing from them for her husband. Thornhill was eventually caught in Worthing, Sussex, and sentenced to 12 months. On her release, she incriminated her husband and he was imprisoned in January 1901 for two years. On his release, Thornhill fled to Canada.

In June 1908, Smith married Florence Wilson, a widow from Worthing. On 3 July he left her, but not before taking £30 () drawn from her savings account and selling her belongings from their Camden Town residence in London. On 30 July in Bristol, Smith married Edith Peglar, who had replied to an advertisement for a housekeeper. Smith would disappear for months at a time, saying that he was going to another city to sell antiques. Between his other marriages, Smith would always come back to Peglar with money.

In October 1909, Smith married Sarah Freeman, under the name George Rose Smith. As with Wilson, he left Freeman after clearing out her savings and selling her war bonds, with a total take of £400. He then married Bessie Mundy and Alice Burnham. In September 1914, he married Alice Reid under the alias Charles Oliver James. In total, Smith entered into seven bigamous marriages between 1908 and 1914. In most of these cases, Smith stole and dissipated his wives' possessions before he disappeared.

Two similar deaths

In January 1915, the Metropolitan Police received a letter from Joseph Crossley, who owned a boarding house in Blackpool, Lancashire. Dated 3 January, it was written by Crossley on behalf of his wife and Mr Charles Burnham, who had spotted a newspaper article in the News of the World before Christmas 1914 on the death of Margaret Elizabeth Lloyd (née Lofty), aged 38. She had been found dead in her bathtub at her lodgings in 14 Bismarck Road, Highgate (later renamed Waterlow Road) by her husband, John Lloyd, and their landlady.

Burnham and Crossley enclosed a cutting of the article and another describing the report of a Blackpool coroner's inquest, dated 13 December 1913. The inquest had been into the sudden death of Burnham's daughter Alice Smith (née Burnham) in a boarding house while in her bathtub. She was found by her husband, George Smith. Alice was not an heiress but had worked hard and saved money. Additionally, Smith took out a life insurance policy on her worth £500 (). Burnham, Crossley and his wife found Alice and Margaret's deaths to be strikingly similar and urged the police to investigate the matter.

The hunt

The case was assigned to Divisional Detective Inspector Arthur Neil, despite his already being busy with enemy aliens and other wartime police duties. Neil visited 14 Bismarck Road, where the Lloyds had taken lodgings, and found it hard to believe that an adult like Mrs Lloyd could have drowned in such a small tub, especially since the tub was three-quarters full when she was found. He then interviewed the coroner, Dr Bates, and asked whether there were signs of violence on the woman; none were seen except for a tiny bruise above the left elbow. Upon further investigation, Neil learned that a will had been made on 18 December 1914, three hours before Mrs Lloyd died, which made her husband John the sole beneficiary; John had submitted the new will to a lawyer "for settlement". In addition, Mrs Lloyd had withdrawn all her savings on that same day.

On 12 January, Dr Bates called Neil with an enquiry from the Yorkshire Insurance Company regarding the death of Mrs Lloyd. Three days before she was married, she had taken out a life insurance policy for £700 (), with John as sole beneficiary. Neil promptly asked the doctor to delay his reply. At the same time, Neil requested more information on the Smith case from the Blackpool police. Similarly, the late Mrs Smith had earlier taken out a life insurance policy and made a will in her husband's favour, and she took the lodgings in Blackpool only after Mr Smith inspected the bathtub.

Neil asked Dr Bates to issue a favourable report to the insurance company. He was counting on the suspect to get in touch with his lawyer, and the office was watched day and night. On 1 February, a man fitting Lloyd/Smith's description appeared. Neil introduced himself and asked him whether he was John Lloyd. After Lloyd answered in the affirmative, Neil then asked him whether he was also George Smith. The man denied it vehemently. Neil, already sure that Lloyd and Smith were the same man, told him that he would take him for questioning on suspicion of bigamy. The man finally admitted that he was indeed Smith and was arrested.

Spilsbury enters the case

When Smith was arrested for the charge of bigamy and suspicion of murder, the pathologist Bernard Spilsbury was asked to determine how the women died. Although he was the Home Office pathologist and acted mainly in a consulting capacity, Spilsbury was also available for direct assistance to the police force.

Margaret Lloyd's body was exhumed, and Spilsbury's first task was to confirm drowning as the cause of death; and if so, whether by accident or by force. He confirmed the tiny bruise on the elbow as noted before, as well as two microscopic marks. Even the evidence of drowning was not extensive. There were no signs of heart or circulatory disease, but the evidence suggested that death was almost instantaneous, as if the victim died of a sudden stroke. Poison was also seen as a possibility, and Spilsbury ordered tests on its presence. Finally, he proposed to Neil that they run some experiments in the very same bathtub in which Mrs Lloyd died. Neil had it set up in the police station.

A third victim

George Joseph Smith and Bessie Mundy, pictured shortly before her murder

Newspaper reports about the "Brides in the Baths" began to appear. On 8 February, the chief police officer of Herne Bay, a small seaside resort in Kent, who had read the stories, sent Neil a report of another death which was strikingly similar to the other two. A year before Burnham's death in Blackpool, one Henry Williams had rented a house with no bath in 80 High Street, Herne Bay for himself and his wife, Beatrice "Bessie" Mundy, whom he had married in Weymouth, Dorset in 1910. After failing to access money she had held in trust he abandoned her for two years. When they met by accident on the seafront at Weston-super-Mare in 1912 he convinced her to take him back and go on holiday with him to Herne Bay.

Smith rented a bathtub seven weeks after meeting Mundy again and then took her to a local GP, Dr Frank French. She was complaining of headaches, for which the doctor prescribed some medication, but Smith argued these were epileptic seizures. On 12 July 1912, Williams woke French, saying that his wife was having another seizure. He checked on her, and promised to come back the following afternoon. However, he was surprised when, on the following morning, he was informed by Williams that his wife had died of drowning. The doctor found Bessie in the tub, her head under water, her legs stretched out straight and her feet protruding out of the water. There was no trace of violence, so French attributed the drowning to epilepsy. The inquest jury awarded Williams the amount of £2,579 13s 7d (£2,579.68p) (), as stipulated in Mrs Williams' will, made up five days before her death.

Neil then sent photographs of Smith to Herne Bay for possible identification, and then went to Blackpool, where Spilsbury was conducting an autopsy of Alice Smith. The results were the same as with Margaret Lloyd: the lack of violence, every suggestion of instantaneous death, and little evidence of drowning. Furthermore, there were no traces of poison on Margaret Lloyd. Baffled, Spilsbury routinely took measurements of the corpse and had the tub sent to London.

Back in London, Neil had received confirmation from Herne Bay. "Henry Williams" was also "John Lloyd" and "George Smith". This time, when Spilsbury examined Bessie Williams, he found one sure sign of drowning: the presence of goose pimples on the skin on her thigh. As with the other two deaths, the tub in which Mrs Williams had died was sent to London.

Solution

For weeks, Spilsbury pondered over the bathtubs and the victims' measurements. The first stage of an epileptic seizure consists of a stiffening and extension of the entire body. Considering Bessie Williams' height (5 feet 7 inches) and the length of the tub (5 feet), the upper part of her body would have been pushed up the sloping head of the tub, far above the level of the water. The second stage consists of violent spasms of the limbs, which were drawn up to the body and then flung outward. Therefore, no one of her size could possibly get under water, even when her muscles were relaxed: the tub was simply too small.

Using French's description of Bessie Williams when he found her in the bathtub, Spilsbury reasoned that Smith must have seized her by the feet and suddenly pulled them up toward himself, sliding the upper part of the body under water. The sudden flood of water into her nose and throat might cause shock and sudden loss of consciousness, explaining the absence of injuries and minimal signs of drowning.

Neil hired several experienced female divers of the same size and build as the victims. He tried to push them under water by force but there would be inevitable signs of struggle. Neil then unexpectedly pulled the feet of one of the divers, and her head glided underwater before she knew what happened. Suddenly Neil saw that the woman was no longer moving. He quickly pulled her out of the tub and it took him and a doctor over half an hour to revive her. When she came to, she related that the only thing she remembered was the rush of water before she lost consciousness. Thus was Spilsbury's theory confirmed.

George Joseph Smith was arrested on 15 February 1915 and formally charged on 23 March 1915 with the murders of Bessie Williams, Alice Smith, and Margaret Lloyd.

References

  • Jane Robins, The Magnificent Spilsbury and the Case of the Brides in the Bath (John Murray, 2010)
  • J.H.H. Gaute and Robin Odell, The New Murderer's Who's Who (London: Harrap Books, 1996)
  • Eric R. Watson (ed.), Trial of George Joseph Smith, Notable British Trials series (William Hodge & Co., 1922)
  • Herbert Arthur, All the Sinners (John Long, 1931)
  • Nigel Balchin, The Anatomy of Villainy (Collins, 1950)
  • Dudley Barker, Lord Darling's Famous Cases (Hutchinson, 1936)
  • Carl Eric Bechhofer Roberts, Sir Travers Humphreys: His Career and Cases (The Bodley Head, 1936)
  • William Bolitho, Murder for Profit (Jonathan Cape, 1926)
  • Ernest Bowen-Rowlands, In the Light of the Law (Grant Richards, 1931)
  • Douglas G. Browne and E. V. Tullett, Sir Bernard Spilsbury: His Life and Cases (George G. Harrap, 1951)
  • Albert Crew, The Old Bailey (Ivor Nicholson & Watson, 1933)
  • Harold Dearden, Death under the Microscope (Hutchinson, 1934)

References

  1. (8 June 2016). "Brides in the Bath". Fred Dinenage: Murder Casebook.
  2. Andrew Rose, ''Lethal Witness'', Sutton Publishing 2007, Kent State University Press 2009
  3. (2018). "Murder by Numbers - Fascinating Figures Behind The World's Worst Crimes". History Press.
  4. Wilson, Colin. (1984). "Encyclopedia of Murder". [[Pan Books]].
  5. (1922). "The Trial of George Joseph Smith". [[William Hodge]].
  6. (2002). "Famous cases: nine trials that changed the law". Waterside Press.
  7. Devlin, Patrick. Easing the passing: The trial of Doctor John Bodkin Adams, London, The Bodley Head, 1985.
  8. "Why Britain is at War" (1939) by Harold Nicolson, republished as {{ISBN. 978-0-14-104896-3
  9. Dorothy L. Sayers, ''[[Whose Body?]]'', Chapter 7.
  10. Dorothy L. Sayers, ''[[Unnatural Death (novel)]]'', Chapter 8.
  11. Dorothy L. Sayers, ''[Busman's Honeymoon]'', Chapter 5.
  12. "TRYST". wild-reality.net.
  13. Butler, Erica. (2023-11-30). "Mt A drama presents The Drowning Girls, a true crime tale that 'centres female voices' » CHMA 106.9 FM".
  14. ''[[List of Midsomer Murders episodes#Series 14 (2011–2012). Midsomer Murders: Echoes of the Dead]]'', Series 14 (2011-12), Episode 3.
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