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The Italian Boy

Page 40

by Sarah Wise


  prisons

  children in

  floating, or “hulks”

  religious reform and

  vagrants in

  prosecutors, private

  prostitutes

  pubs. See also specific pubs

  order of visits to

  as resurrectionist meeting places

  Pye Corner (meat market)

  Quadrant (County Fire Office)

  Quakers

  Queen Square magistrates office

  Radicals

  Randall, John

  Reform Act (1832)

  Reform Bill (1831), defeat of

  civil unrest following

  satirized as “burking”

  resurrectionist(s) (body snatchers)

  Anatomy Act and effort to end

  anatomy schools pay, not to supply rivals

  Bishop’s success and early arrests as

  Brookes’s dispute with, over prices

  convictions and punishments for

  demise of, as trade

  fiction on

  gangs and

  Holywell Mount feud among

  lack of historical information on

  May becomes

  meeting places and

  methods of

  number of

  panic over murders by

  payments to, by surgeons for legal costs

  piecing together criminal careers of

  prices for corpses and

  slang names for

  tools of

  Williams becomes

  Revelations of Prison Life (Chesterton)

  Rex v. Lynn (1788)

  Reynolds, George William MacArthur

  Richardson, Ruth

  Rippingille, Edward

  Rockingham Arms pub

  Roe, Mr.

  Ronchatti, Alexander

  Ross, Eliza

  Rotch, (magistrate)

  Rowan, Charles

  Royal College of Physicians

  Royal College of Surgeons of England

  Russell, Rev. Dr. Whitworth

  St. Albans, duchess of, Harriot Mellon

  St. Albans, duke of

  St. Andrew’s parish, Holborn

  St. Bartholomew’s Hospital

  St. Clement Danes Church burial ground (Green Ground)

  St. Clement Danes workhouse

  St. Giles parish

  St. Leonard’s Church

  St. Luke’s

  St. Martin’s-in-the-Fields watch house

  St. Mary’s parish

  St. Matthew’s parish

  St. Pancras parish

  St. Pancras workhouse graveyard

  St. Paul’s Church

  St. Paul’s parish

  St. Thomas’s Hospital. See also United Hospitals of St. Thomas’s and Guy’s

  Scharf, George

  Scotland Yard, Detective Branch

  Scott, Sir Walter

  Seagrave, James

  settlement system

  Sewell, Sir John

  Shearing, John

  Shearing, Thomas

  Shepherd, Thomas Hosmer

  Shields, Michael

  appearance of

  arrest of

  attitude of

  Bishop’s confession and

  Bow Street magistrates hearings and

  career of, in resurrection trade

  charges vs., dropped

  coroner’s inquest and

  meeting places and

  Pigburn murder and

  social ostracism of

  trial and

  Shoreditch

  workhouse

  Signs of Murder (Hunter)

  silk trade

  Simpson, Abigail

  Simpson, Constable

  Slaughtering of Horses Bill (1824), defeat of

  sledge beggars

  Smirke, Robert

  Smirke, Sydney

  Smith, George

  Smith, J. T.

  Smith, John Gordon

  Smith, (missing youth)

  Smith, Mr. (St. Bartholomew’s Hospital)

  “Smithfield bargain”

  Smithfield (Smoothe Field)

  changing attitudes toward

  markets and slaughter houses of

  passageways and criminality in

  “snotter-haulers”

  Soane, John

  Society for Foreigners in Distress

  Society for Relieving the Houseless Poor

  Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals

  Society for the Suppression of Juvenile Vagrancy

  Somerville, Dr. James Craig

  Soup Society

  South, Dr. John Flint

  Southey, Robert

  Spencer-Warren, Mary

  Spitalfields

  Spitalfields Gang (body snatchers)

  Spoor, James

  Starbuck, Charles

  Statute of Apprentices, repeal of (1814)

  Stow, John

  Strand

  streets

  entertainers

  who has right to be in

  Stringall (body snatcher)

  Stuart, Lord Dudley Coutts

  “Student of 1815, A”

  subpoenas

  Sue, Eugène

  Sullivan, William

  Sunday Times

  Sun (newspaper)

  surgeons. See also anatomists; medical profession

  allow public to view dissection

  attacked by Radicals

  Bow Street magistrates hearings and

  cost of corpses for

  education of

  fears of murder to supply

  Old Bailey trial and

  Pigburn case and

  resurrectionist’s legal expenses and

  secrecy of, about dissections

  urged not to accept fresh corpses

  Surgeons Hall

  Survey of London (Stow)

  Sussex, duke of, Augustus Frederick Hanover

  Tale of Two Cities, A (Dickens)

  Taunton, Samuel

  Tavernor, Thomas

  Taylor, Ann

  Taylor, Joseph

  Thames river

  Thames River Police

  Thomas, Joseph Sadler

  arrest and

  arrests of Sarah and Rhoda and

  background of

  Bishop children and

  Bow Street magistrates hearings and

  charge against Bishop and Williams and

  coroner’s jury praises

  on darkness of London streets

  evidence amassed by

  identification of Italian Boy and

  “information received” and

  life of, after executions

  May’s list and

  Old Bailey trial and

  Pigburn murder and

  Shields and

  vagrant children and

  witnesses and

  Thurtell, John

  Tighe (Tye), Robert (James Kettle or Cattle)

  Tilt, Charles

  Tim Buc Too (street-crossing sweeper)

  Times

  Tindal, Sir Nicholas Conyngham

  Tories

  Town Swamps and Social Bridges (Godwin)

  Trader, Thomas

  Trench, Sir Frederick

  Trial and Execution of the Burkers for Murdering a Poor Italian Boy, The (broadsheet)

  Trueby, John

  Trueby, Sarah

  Trueby family

  Turner, Elizabeth

  Tuson, Edward

  Twyford, Samuel

  typhus epidemic of 1837–38

  Tyrrell, Frederick

  unemployment

  Unicorn tavern

  unions

  United Hospitals of St. Thomas’s and Guy’s. See also Guy’s Hospital; St. Thomas’s Hospital

  University College

  urbanization

  Vagabondiana (Smith)

  vagrancy. See also poor and destitute

 
Vagrancy Act (1824)

  arrest of Italian boys under

  “vagrant collectors”

  Vaughan, Sir John (Baron)

  Vaughan, (resurrectionist)

  Vaux, James Hardy

  Victoria, Queen of England

  Vidocq, Eugène-François

  vivisection

  vote, expansion of

  Waddy, James

  Wade, John

  wages

  Waithman, Alderman

  Wakely, Thomas

  Walsh, Caroline

  Wandsworth policing

  Warburton, Henry

  Ward, Edward

  Ward, John

  Warner, Elizabeth

  Warren, Mrs., tomb of

  weaving trade

  Weekly Dispatch

  Weeks, James

  Welch, Catherine

  Wellington, duke of

  West, (tailor)

  West End

  Westminster Hospital

  Weston, Jane

  Whackett, (gravedigger)

  White, Charles (victim of attempted burking)

  White, (magistrate)

  White, (murdered Lincolnshire drover’s boy). See also drover’s boy from Lincolnshire

  Whitechapel

  Wigley, Thomas

  Wild, Jonathan

  Wilkinson, William

  William IV, King of England

  Williams, Morris Meredith

  Williams, (publican)

  Williams, Rev. Dr. Theodore (vicar of Hendon)

  background of

  confessions and

  newspaper reports and

  Williams, Rhoda Bishop (Rhoda Head, stepdaughter and half-sister of Bishop, wife of Williams)

  confessions and

  executions and

  life of, after execution

  marries Williams/Head

  Old Bailey trial and

  Pigburn murder and

  taken into custody

  Williams, (runaway boy)

  Williams, Thomas (East End body snatcher), name of, possibly borrowed by Head

  Williams, Thomas (of Eaton), name of, possibly borrowed by Head

  Williams, Thomas (originally Thomas Head, aliases William Jones, John Head)

  appearance of

  arrest of

  attempt of, to sell boy’s corpse

  background of

  Bishop’s confession and

  body of, after execution

  Bow Street magistrates hearings and

  charges vs.

  clothes of, exhibited by executioner

  confession of

  confession of, additional reported after death

  confession of, official

  coroner’s inquest and

  criminal career of

  Culkin and

  execution of

  exonerates May

  lack of evidence vs.

  language of

  likeness of, after death

  man waves goodbye to, at Old Bailey

  medical profession and

  name and aliases of

  note to Russell before execution

  Nova Scotia Gardens cottage of

  Old Bailey trial of

  phrenology of skull of

  physiognomy of skull of

  Pigburn murder and

  plaster casts of head sold

  in prison after trial and

  resurrection trade and

  Sarah Bishop on

  verdict vs.

  Wilson, “Daft Jamie”

  Wilson, John

  women

  abandoned

  missing

  sold by husbands

  Wontner, John

  Wood, Alderman (sheriff of City)

  Wood, Charles (blind beggar)

  Wood, Thomas (alias Buxton or Cox)

  Wood, Thomas (undersheriff)

  Woodcock, Hannah

  Woodcock, William, Jr.

  Woodcock, William, Sr.

  Wordsworth, William

  workhouse paupers, attempted burking of

  workhouses

  working classes. See also lower classes

  workingmen’s organizations

  About the Author

  SARAH WISE is a historian of Victorian England, with a special focus on poverty and class, criminal justice, urban architecture, and the city in literature. Also a journalist, she has written for The Guardian, The Observer, and The Independent on Sunday, as well as Marie Claire and other magazines. The Italian Boy is her first book. She lives in London.

  Metropolitan Books

  Henry Holt and Company, LLC

  Publishers since 1866

  115 West 18th Street

  New York, New York 10011

  Metropolitan Books™ is a registered trademark of Henry Holt and Company, LLC.

  Copyright © 2004 by Sarah Wise

  All rights reserved.

  Published simultaneously in the United Kingdom by Jonathan Cape, London.

  First Edition 2004

  eISBN 9781466867802

  First eBook edition: March 2014

  * “Stanch” or “staunch” meant trustworthy, loyal. It had a secondary meaning: close, private, tight-lipped, and it could be that Bishop was indicating Williams’s ability to be discreet—essential for successful body snatching.

  * There is a striking similarity between this passage and the paragraphs in chapter 52 of Oliver Twist that describe Fagin’s trial at the Old Bailey, and it may well be that Charles Dickens reported the Italian Boy case from the press benches.12

 

 

 


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