Walter Rowland - for the murder of a prostitute. |
Walter Graham Rowland had been convicted on
the 16th of December 1946 of battering to death 40 year old Olive Balchin on a bomb site in
As officers searched the crime scene they discovered Olive’s wartime identity card together with a blood stained hammer of the type used in the leather trade. Olive was a prostitute and Rowland was one of her known clients. Several witnesses described seeing a man fitting his description in the area with a woman on that Sunday night. One was Edith Copley, a waitress at the Queen's Café who remembered seeing Olive in the cafe between 10.30 and 11 p.m. on the night of the murder. Olive was in the company of a man carrying an oblong brown paper parcel. Edward MacDonald who ran a hardware shop reported that he had sold a hammer to a man wearing a dark suit and fawn raincoat on Saturday the 20th of October and that he had wrapped it in brown paper for the customer.
The police checked local hostels and
interviewed a man who had loaned a fawn cotton raincoat to a man whom he named
as Rowland. Rowland was arrested on
October the 26th at the Services Transit Dormitory. During his interview he admitted knowing
Olive and told the police that he was being treated for venereal disease which
he could have got from her. In fact he
hadn't as Olive tested negative for V.D.
Rowland was picked out in an identity parade by Edith Copley, Edward
MacDonald and Norman Mercer who told police that he had seen Rowland and Olive
quarrelling.
However Rowland had a strong alibi for that evening. He had gone to visit his mother and later
went to a pub where he saw two policemen.
This was corroborated as being about 10.30 p.m. by one of them, Sgt.
Jones. Rowland caught the bus home and
arrived around 11 p.m., as corroborated by his landlord.
So the case against Rowland was far from
strong. But after a three day trial at
Whilst awaiting execution the governor of
The three eyewitnesses, who had identified
Rowland, failed to recognize Ware. The official inquiry reported that there had
been no miscarriage of justice in the Rowland conviction.
It was not Rowland’s first time in the condemned cell. He had been sentenced to death in 1935 for strangling his daughter, Mavis Agnes to death. He was reprieved and served just ten years of his life sentence.
Rowland’s appeal was dismissed and the 38
year old was duly hanged at Strangeways prison in
In July, 1951, four years after Rowland’s
execution, Ware was living in
So was Rowland reprieved for the crime he definitely committed and hanged for a
murder that he might not have committed?
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