Sarah Dazley - a Victorian poisoner. |
Sarah was born in 1819 as Sarah Reynolds in
the
Sarah grew up to be a tall, attractive girl
with long auburn hair and large brown eyes.
However she too was promiscuous and by the age of nineteen had met and
married a local man called Simeon Mead. They lived in Potton
for two years before moving to the
William became ill with vomiting and stomach pains a few days later and was attended by the local doctor, Dr. Sandell, who prescribed pills which initially seemed to work, with William being looked after by Ann Mead and showing signs of a steady recovery. Whilst William was still bed ridden, Ann not entirely realising what she was seeing at the time, observed Sarah making up pills in the kitchen.
Sarah told a friend of hers in the village, Mrs Carver, that she was concerned about William’s health and that she was going to get a further prescription from Dr. Sandell. Mrs Carver was surprised to see Sarah throw out some pills from the pillbox and replace them with others. When she remarked on it, Sarah told her that she wasn’t satisfied with the medication that Dr. Sandell had provided and instead was using a remedy from the village healer. In fact the replacement pills were those that Sarah had made herself. She gave these to William who immediately noticed that they were different and refused to take them. Ann who had been nursing him and had still not made any connection with the pills she had seen Sarah making, persuaded William to swallow a pill by taking one too. Inevitably they both quickly became ill with the familiar symptoms of vomiting and stomach pains. William vomited in the yard and one of the family pigs later lapped up the mess and died in the night. Apparently Sarah was able to persuade William to continue taking the pills, assuring him that they were what the doctor had prescribed. He began to decline rapidly and died on the 30th of October, his death being certified as natural by the doctor. He was buried in Wrestlingworth churchyard. Post mortems were not normal at this time, even when a previously healthy young man died quite suddenly.
As usual Sarah did not grieve for long before taking up a new relationship. She soon started seeing William Waldock openly and they became engaged at her insistence in February 1843. William was talked out of marriage by his friends who pointed to Sarah’s promiscuous behaviour and the mysterious deaths of her previous two husbands and her son. William wisely broke off the engagement and decided not to continue to see Sarah.
Suspicion and gossip was now running high
in the village and it was decided to inform the Bedfordshire coroner, Mr.
Eagles, of the deaths. He ordered the
exhumation of William’s body and an inquest was held on
The bodies of Simeon Mead and Jonah had also now been exhumed and Jonah’s was found to contain arsenic, although Simeon’s was too decomposed to yield positive results.
On
She came to trial at the Bedfordshire Summer Assizes on Saturday the 22nd of July before Baron Alderson, charged with William’s murder, as this was the stronger of the two cases against her. The charge of murdering Jonah was not proceeded with but held in reserve should the first case fail.
Evidence was given against her by two local chemists who identified her as having purchased arsenic from them shortly before William’s death. Mrs Carver and Ann Mead told the court about the incidents with the pills that they had witnessed.
William Waldock testified that Sarah had said she would kill any man that ever hit her after the violent row that she and William had. Forensic evidence was presented to show that William had indeed died from arsenic poisoning, it being noted that his internal organs were well preserved. The Marsh test, a definitive test for arsenic trioxide had been only available for a few years at the time of Sarah’s trial. Arsenic trioxide is a white odourless powder that can easily pass undetected by the victim when mixed into food and drink.
Since 1836 all defendants had been legally entitled to counsel and Sarah’s defence was put forward by a Mr. O'Malley, based upon Sarah’s inventions. He claimed that Sarah had poisoned William by accident. Against all the other evidence this looked decidedly weak and contradicted the stories Sarah had told the police. It took the jury took just thirty minutes to convict her. Before passing sentence Baron Alderson commented that it was bad enough to kill her husband but it showed total heartlessness to kill her infant child as well. He recommended her to ask for the mercy of her Redeemer. He then donned the black cap and sentenced her to hang. It is interesting to note that Baron Alderson had, at least in his own mind found her guilty of the murder of Jonah, even though she had not been tried for it.
During her time in prison, Sarah learnt to read and write and began reading the Bible. She avoided contact with other prisoners whilst on remand, preferring her own company and accepting the ministrations of the chaplain. In the condemned cell she continued to maintain her innocence and as far as one can tell never made a confession to either the matrons looking after her or to the chaplain.
There was no recommendation to mercy and
the Home Secretary, Sir James Graham, saw no reason to offer a reprieve. The provision of the Murder Act of 1752,
requiring execution to take place within two working days had been abolished in
1836 and a period of not less than fourteen days substituted. Sarah’s execution was therefore set for
The New Drop gallows was erected on the
flat roof over the main gate of the prison in the early hours of the Saturday
morning and the area around the gatehouse was protected by a troop of javelin
men. William Calcraft had arrived from
Sarah was taken from the condemned cell to
the prison chapel at around
It was reported by the local newspapers that the crowd had behaved well and remained silent until Sarah was actually hanged. Once she was suspended they carried on eating, drinking, smoking, laughing and making ribald and lewd remarks. Copies of broadsides claiming to contain Sarah’s confession and her last dying speech were being sold among the crowd, which amazingly people bought even though she had made neither. You can see a broadside about her hanging here. Note the stylised woodcut picture that was modified to show a man or a woman as appropriate.
The 1840’s were a time of great hardship nationally and yet Sarah, whilst hardly wealthy, did not seem to suffer from this and it was never alleged that she was unable to feed her child or that she was destitute. Extreme poverty in rural areas did appear to be the motive in some murders at this time, especially of infants. Sarah’s motive seems to be a much more evil one, the elimination of anyone who got in the way of her next relationship.
Sarah’s was the first execution at Bedford since 1833 and she was the only woman to be publicly hanged there. In fact Bedfordshire executions were rare events and there were to be only two more in public, Joseph Castle on the 31st of March 1860 for the murder of his wife and William Worsley on the 31st of March 1868 for the murder of William Bradbury.
Notes on the period.
Queen Victoria ascended to the throne in 1837, at the age of eighteen and her reign saw a great deal of change in the penal system. For the first thirty one years of it executions were a very public event enjoyed by the masses. People would come from far and wide to witness the spectacle, in some cases special trains were even laid on! Broadsides were sold at many executions giving the purported confessions of the prisoner and there was considerable press interest, particularly where the criminal was female.
Thirty women and two teenage girls were to
be executed in England and Scotland in the thirty one year period from May 1838
to the abolition of public hanging in May 1868.
Of these twenty one had been convicted of poisoning (two thirds of the
total). Sarah Chesham was actually executed for the attempted murder of her
husband but was thought to be guilty of several fatal poisonings as well. Attempted murder ceased to be a capital crime
in 1861 under the provisions of the Criminal Law Consolidation Act of that year. Mary Ann Milner would have made the total
thirty three had she not hanged herself in
Sarah Chesham’s case prompted a House of Commons committee to be set up to investigate poisoning. This found that between 1840 and 1850, ninety seven women and eighty two men had been tried for it. A total of twenty two women were hanged in the decade 1843 – 1852 of whom seventeen had been convicted of murder by poisoning, representing 77% of the total. There were no female executions in the years 1840 – 1842 in England. This rash of poisonings led to a Bill being introduced whereby only adult males could purchase arsenic. Poisoning was considered a particularly evil crime as it is totally premeditated and thus it was extremely rare for a poisoner to be reprieved whereas it was not unusual for females to be reprieved for other types of murder, such as infanticide. One of the few poisoners to be reprieved was Charlotte Harris in 1849 who had murdered her husband but who pregnant at the time of her trial.