The Real Sherlock Holmes
- 176pages
- 7 heures de lecture
This will be the first full-length biography of Victorian detective Jerome Caminada, exploring his fascinating career fighting crime in 19th century Manchester's turbulent underworld.
Angela explore les crimes sombres et fascinants de l'époque victorienne, mettant au jour des récits issus des luttes souvent négligées de sa terre ancestrale. Son œuvre reconstruit méticuleusement les complexités de l'action policière et les motivations derrière les actes les plus glaçants de l'époque. À travers des récits captivants, Angela donne vie à ces périodes tumultueuses, offrant aux lecteurs un aperçu saisissant du crime et de son impact.
This will be the first full-length biography of Victorian detective Jerome Caminada, exploring his fascinating career fighting crime in 19th century Manchester's turbulent underworld.
The gripping narrative centers on the murder of PC Nicholas Cock in Manchester, shot while on patrol. Initially, Irish labourer William Habron is convicted for the crime. However, the case takes an unexpected turn when infamous burglar Charlie Peace confesses to the murder, casting doubt on Habron's guilt. This twist highlights themes of justice and the complexities of criminal investigations in the 19th century.
On 30 March 1896, a bargeman hooked a parcel from the river Thames at Caversham. Inside the brown paper package was the body of a baby girl - she had been strangled with tape. When two more tiny bodies were found in a carpet bag, the police launched a nationwide hunt for a serial killer. A faint name and address on the sodden wrapping provided Reading police with their first clue. Can Chief Constable George Tewsley and his colleagues catch this heartless baby farmer before more infants meet a similar fate? The first in a new historical true crime series, Victorian Supersleuth Investigates, Angela Buckley recounts the frantic race to stop Amelia Dyer - one of Britain's most prolific murderers.
When Patrick O'Connor went missing in August 1849, his friends were suspicious. The London dock worker was last seen in the company of Swiss-born Maria Manning and her husband in Bermondsey. By the time police officers discovered his remains under the kitchen floor, the couple had fled. This shocking crime sparked a race against time to bring these cold-blooded killers to justice. After almost a decade of unsolved murders in the capital, could Scotland Yard detectives find the murderous pair and restore public confidence in their sleuthing skills? The search for the Mannings spread beyond England and was closely followed by the Victorian public, including prominent writers such as Charles Dickens who was haunted by the case and later immortalised some of the key characters in Bleak House, which was published just four years later. To this day, the Bermondsey Murder remains a legendary crime in the history of Scotland Yard and mid-nineteenth century London. Using primary source material, this book delves into the background of the Mannings, including Maria's link with royalty and Frederick's previous criminal activities. It also offers a full biography of the victim, Patrick O'Connor, and his shady past, as well as presenting the original court documents which shed further light on the case and the Mannings' relationship.