Alice
Holt - hanged for matricide.
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On Monday the 28th of December 1863 Alice Holt became the last woman to be
executed at Chester.
27 year old widow, Alice Hewitt, was co-habiting with her boyfriend, George
Holt in a two up, two down slum house in Great Egerton Street
in Stockport in Cheshire.
She had adopted his surname and called herself Mrs. Holt. Also in the house was Alice’s mother, 51 year old Mary Bailey and four
lodgers, George Bailey (no relation to Mary), his wife, Ann and their two
children. In the winter of 1862/3 Mary
became ill with bronchitis and complained that “her daughter would not work and
did not use her well.” In early 1863 Alice
became pregnant by George Holt.
Mary was a financial burden on Alice who perhaps began thinking of a way of
making some quick money. She took out a
life insurance policy with the Wesleyan and General Insurance Company in the
sum of £25 on Mary’s life. To do so she
persuaded her friend, Mrs. Elizabeth Well (also given as Ward), to impersonate
Mary, as her mother was already in poor health and would not have passed the
medical examination needed to get the insurance. On the 24th of March and again on the
following day Alice purchased arsenic from Henley Davenport’s pharmacy in
Heaton Lane and this was known to Ann Bailey as she had accompanied Alice as a
witness who knew her was required to sign the poison register as well.
In the early hours of Friday the 27th of March 1863, Mrs. Bailey died. Doctor
Barker certified Mary’s death as being from gastro-enteritis, thus she was able
to claim the insurance. The symptoms of
gastro-enteritis are not dissimilar to arsenic poisoning.
One of the lodgers, most likely Ann Bailey, was suspicious of the death,
knowing that Alice
had purchased arsenic, purportedly to kill the fleas that infested the
home. She mentioned this to a neighbour, Maria Hadfield, who also found out that Alice had obtained the
life insurance by getting an impersonator for Mary. Maria reported her suspicions to the police
and as a result Mary’s body was exhumed on the 12th of June 1863 and found to
contain arsenic. Alice was arrested and charged with her
mother’s murder. However she was
pregnant and, as it was a capital case it was decided to delay her trial until
after she had given birth. The baby was
sent to live with Alice’s uncle,
who was the only person to visit Alice
while she was in prison.
Alice was tried at Chester on the 10th and 11th of
December. George Holt was called as a
prosecution witness, as he was not her husband.
He admitted that he and Alice had quarreled over her pawning his
clothes, but denied that he had incited her to poison her mother. Although this was believed to be the case by
some local people and she claimed it to be so and alleged that he beat her
regularly.
On the 26th of December 1863, Alice
made a confession to the prison chaplain, having been informed by the governor
that there would be no reprieve. She
still continued to put much of the blame for the murder on George Holt.
Alice was
hanged by William Calcraft in front of Chester City Gaol on Monday, December
28th, 1863, wearing a thin, print dress and chewing peppermints, which she had
specially requested. A crowd, estimated at between 1,000 and 2,000, a majority
of whom were women had come to watch her hang.
As she approached the gallows she partially collapsed and she had to be
dragged on to the trap-door. Calcraft
made the usual preparations but when he withdrew the bolt the trap doors
stuck. Alice was by now wailing piteously. It took two further attempts before the trap
doors finally opened. She dropped no more than two feet through them convulsing
for two to three minutes before becoming still. Calcraft blamed the weather and
the equipment.
This
broadside on the case was, as usual, written in advance and therefore makes
no mention of the problems at this execution.
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