In the summer of 1849, beneath the flagstones of a basement kitchen in Bermondsey, a terrible secret lay hidden. The house at 3 Miniver Place seemed respectable enough from the street, but within its walls, a dinner guest had vanished, and the circumstances of his disappearance would become one of Victorian London's most notorious cases.
The investigation that followed would employ the newly invented telegraph to track fugitives across Britain and the Continent. The trial at the Old Bailey would captivate the nation. And the execution at Horsemonger Lane Gaol would draw tens of thousands of spectators, including Charles Dickens himself, who would be so disturbed by what he witnessed that he would campaign for the abolition of public hangings. This is the story of the Bermondsey Horror, told gently, with care for the historical record and respect for those whose lives were forever altered by the events of that August evening.
Victorian murder, Bermondsey Horror, Patrick O'Connor, Marie Manning, Frederick Manning, 1849 London crime, historical true crime, Victorian criminals, Charles Dickens crime, Horsemonger Lane execution, Old Bailey trials, Scotland Yard history, telegraph investigation, Victorian London, 19th century murder
Victorian murder, Bermondsey Horror, Patrick O'Connor, Marie Manning, Frederick Manning, 1849 London crime, historical true crime, Victorian criminals, Charles Dickens crime, Horsemonger Lane execution, Old Bailey trials, Scotland Yard history, telegraph investigation, Victorian London, 19th century murder
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