Murder Houses of Greater London
234 pages
English

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234 pages
English

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Description

Which of Greater London's most gruesome murders happened in your street? And were they committed by Graham Frederick Young (the poisoner of the North Circular Road), by the murderous Donald Hume, or by that monster Dennis Nilsen? Sometimes quiet suburban terraces hide the most terrible secrets... Read about the 'Hampstead Triangle' - home to a surprising number of celebrated murders - as well as another triangle of violent deaths in KensalRise and ponder some very mysterious unsolved murders. Armed with this book and a good London map, you will be able to do some murder house detection work of your own.

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Publié par
Date de parution 29 novembre 2018
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781784629748
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0100€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

PRAISE FOR JAN BONDESON S MURDER HOUSES OF LONDON
A gripping tour of London s bloodiest buildings, the particulars of which have been meticulously researched and entertainingly presented.
Adam Wood, Editor of Ripperologist
I cannot recommend this book highly enough. It is a definite must-have.
Stewart P. Evans
Jan Bondeson conducts us on a masterly mystery tour of London s black plaque houses, where murder has left a bloodstained visiting card Wherever Dr Bondeson shines his torch into dark places, he sheds new light with the application of his powerful logic.
Richard Whittington-Egan
Jan Bondeson can be guaranteed to tell bizarre and quirky real-life tales and to find stories that were thought to be unfindable.
Paul Begg
Jan Bondeson delves into the clandestine corners of city life to reveal stories that would probably have preferred to have been left undiscovered. You ll never look at the closed doors of London the same way again. A catalogue of crime covering more than two centuries, Murder Houses of London combined relentless research with splendid story-telling to produce a book of unrivalled interestingness.
James Harkin, Head Researcher at QI
Houses of Death: Chilling tales from behind the doors of homes that were the scene of gruesome murders over the last 200 years.
Daily Mail
This magnificent volume is a treasure-house of information on the murders and murderers of London.
Books Monthly
The chilling details are revealed in a new book identifying London s so-called murder houses - homes which have witnessed terrible crimes and still stand today - and telling their grisly stories. Crime history writer Jan Bondeson - a consultant doctor in his day job - spent 15 years researching and writing his book, Murder Houses of London .
Hampstead and Highgate Gazette
If you were choosing a city to star as a crime story character, London would be front and centre. Bondeson delves into the many dark corners of the city s history to catalogue the crimes that have occurred everywhere from its narrowest and darkest streets to the stateliest mansions, providing a peek behind its bloodiest closed doors for over two centuries.
All About History
Everyone is acquainted with the grisly facts of Jack the Ripper but there are so many other stories to tell of murder and mystery in London. Jan Bondeson delves into these chilling tales, illustrating that you can never really know what goes on behind closed doors.
Discover Your History
Every house has a history of some kind but few are as bloodthirsty as these dwellings where behind fresh paint, clean windows and grand entrances lie grisly tales of murder.
True Detective
There is more, much more, and although the East End can lay its claim to be a starting point for lurid Victorian murders, Bondeson exhaustively details the grisly history of the rest of London too. So grab the book, grab an A-Z (or actually just tap Googlemaps into your smartphone) and go hunting for London s gruesome past.
East End Life
Jan Bondeson is a curious author and I must confess that I approached this book with a mix of apprehension and excitement there is a fascinating discussion to be had here about murders and dark tourism .
London Journal
I once said that Jan Bondeson is incapable of writing a bad book. Murder Houses of London once again proves that statement correct it packs a lot of information into 350 densely printed and liberally illustrated pages. If only walls could talk, what tales they would have to tell. Fortunately we have Jan Bondeson to tell the tales for them. An excellent book, highly readable.
Ripperologist
The work contains compelling details not only of famous crimes, but also of homicides ranging from the obscure to the long-forgotten.
Ripperana

Copyright 2015 Jan Bondeson
The moral right of the author has been asserted.
Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, this publication may only be reproduced, stored or transmitted, in any form or by any means, with the prior permission in writing of the publishers, or in the case of reprographic reproduction in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside those terms should be sent to the publishers.
Matador 9 Priory Business Park, Wistow Road, Kibworth Beauchamp, Leicestershire LE8 0RX Tel: (+44) 116 279 2299 Email: books@troubador.co.uk Web: www.troubador.co.uk/matador
ISBN 978 1784629 748
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data. A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Matador is an imprint of Troubador Publishing Ltd
CONTENTS
Introduction
1 Camden
2 Hackney, Stoke Newington and Tottenham
3 Kensal Rise, Willesden, Brondesbury, Kilburn and Cricklewood
4 Hammersmith and Barnes
5 West London
6 North London
7 East London
8 Discussion
Bibliography
Notes
INTRODUCTION
Ah! how unlike the man of times to come!
Of half that live the butcher and the tomb;
Who, foe to nature, hears the general groan,
Murders their species, and betrays his own.
But just disease to luxury succeeds,
And every death its own avenger breeds;
The fury-passions from that blood began,
And turned on man a fiercer savage, man.
Pope, Essay on Man.
This book is the third volume of my comprehensive account of London s topography of capital crime: houses inside which celebrated murders have been committed. 1 Since there is no shortage of London murder houses, this volume will deal with all Eastern suburbs; also Hammersmith and Barnes, the northern part of Camden, Hackney and Stoke Newington, and all Northern and Western suburbs. For a crime to qualify as a murder , it has to have been classified as such at some stage of its investigation or prosecution, although it does not matter what the ultimate verdict was, or whether the crime was solved or not. For a house to qualify as a murder house , the murder must have been committed inside its walls, not out in the street or in the garden. Moreover, the building in question must survive relatively intact. A Victorian or Edwardian murder house keeps its status after being subdivided into flats, but no murder flats in tower blocks and other ungainly modern developments are included in this book.
Deaths after botched illegal abortions were formerly classed as murders, but they have no business to be in this book. Nor will there be any sad tales of desperate families turning on the taps and gassing themselves. Interesting or unsolved murders have been preferred to simple slayings, and I have not felt it worthwhile to include a profusion of cases of insane women murdering their babies there are many , or similar-sounding instances of drunken husbands murdering their wives there are very many . Only a few modern murders have been included, and I have avoided the activities of the present-day gangsters and mindless hoodlums, to concentrate on older murders that are of interest from a social history point of view. Moreover, I have tended to follow what the distinguished crime historian Jonathan Goodman used to call his forty-year rule: after that period of time, a murder lost its horror and squalidity, and instead gained some degree of historical interest. There are a few notable exceptions, however: for example, a book on London murder houses would have lost much of its credibility if the dwellings of that monstrous serial killer, Dennis Nilsen, had not been included. An unsolved Victorian murder in a location relatively close to central London is quite likely to be covered by this book; a recent case of a young suburban thug killing another in a drunken brawl is not.
There does not appear to be any London murder houses that are relics to crimes perpetrated prior to 1800. 2 But the late Georgian and Victorian builders knew their trade: they were able to produce quality houses that would stand for centuries to come. Even the houses intended for the poor were built to last, as evidenced by many of the humble Victorian terraces surviving to this day, in good order. The historic murder houses of London have faced a trinity of enemies: Decay, the Luftwaffe and the Developer. Clearances of low-quality slum tenements have deprived London of a fair few murder houses. Mr Hitler s concerted effort to rearrange London s architecture meant that his Luftwaffe destroyed many a murder house, not only in the East End, but all over the Metropolis. The Developer has accounted for even more of them, with hideous modern blocks of flats replacing much of the traditional fabric of old London.
Armed with this book and a good London map, you will be able to do some murder house detection work of your own. Read about the Hampstead Triangle , home to a surprising number of celebrated murders, and another unexplained triangle of violent death in Kensal Rise. Sometimes, quiet suburban terraced houses hide terrible secrets from the past, as evidenced by the tales of the Kensal Rise Bluebeard, the Demon Barber of Earlsmead Road, the Walthamstow Tragedy and the Acton Atrocity.
CHAPTER 1
CAMDEN
And when, at last, the closing hour of life
Arrives (for Pigs must die as well as Man),
When in your throat you feel the long sharp knife,
And the blood trickles to the pudding-pan;
And when, at last, the death wound yawning wide,
Fainter and fainter grows the expiring cry,
Is there no grateful joy, no loyal pride,
To think that for your master s good you die?
Robert Southey, Ode to a Pig.
The central part of the huge monstrosity that is today s London Borough of Camden have been covered in the first part of this book, leaving Regent s Park, Hampstead, Holloway and the other northern regions for the present volume.
Many of the celebrated Camden murder houses still stand, but a good few have been lost, notably the house of h

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