From Juvenile Delinquent to Boy Murderer: Understanding Children Who Killed, 1816-1908

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

From Juvenile Delinquent to Boy Murderer: Understanding Children Who Killed, 1816-1908 From Juvenile Delinquent to Boy Murderer: Understanding Children Who Killed, 1816-1908. Betts, Eleanor Frances Winifred The copyright of this thesis rests with the author and no quotation from it or information derived from it may be published without the prior written consent of the author. For additional information about this publication click this link. http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/11902 Information about this research object was correct at the time of download; we occasionally make corrections to records, please therefore check the published record when citing. For more information contact [email protected] From Juvenile Delinquent to Boy Murderer: Understanding Children Who Killed, 1816-1908. Eleanor Frances Winifred Betts Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy 1 Statement of Originality I, Eleanor F. W. Betts, confirm that the research included within this thesis is my own work or that where it has been carried out in collaboration with, or supported by others, that this is duly acknowledged below and my contribution indicated. Previously published material is also acknowledged below. I attest that I have exercised reasonable care to ensure that the work is original, and does not to the best of my knowledge break any UK law, infringe any third party’s copyright or other Intellectual Property Right, or contain any confidential material. I accept that the College has the right to use plagiarism detection software to check the electronic version of the thesis. I confirm that this thesis has not been previously submitted for the award of a degree by this or any other university. The copyright of this thesis rests with the author and no quotation from it or information derived from it may be published without the prior written consent of the author. Signature: Eleanor Betts Date: 24/07/2015 2 Abstract In 1993 the murder trial of two ten-year-old boys sparked an unparalleled wave of media attention, inspiring historians and media scholars to trace similar events that had occurred in the past. What they found, however, was surprising. Very few murders committed by children were uncovered and the newspaper coverage surrounding these cases was scant. Scholars therefore concluded that the sensation and horror associated with children who kill is part of a modern phenomenon. My thesis questions this assumption. Murders were committed by children in the past and these crimes were reported in the press. I have been able to locate 230 children who were charged with felonious killing offences in England and Wales between 1816 and 1908. My thesis introduces these criminal children to the histories of childhood and crime. When children killed in the nineteenth century, contrary to previous historical opinion, their crimes were widely reported in the press and were considered to be sensational. Idealistic notions of the innocence of childhood were popular in the nineteenth century and, as a result, murders committed by children questioned core beliefs concerning the nature of childhood rooted in the popular imagination. Throughout my thesis I consider how members of Victorian society attempted to understand the existence of children who were capable of wilfully killing another human being. Could a child reason enough to be considered criminally responsible for such a serious offence? If so, how should those children be punished and why did those children turn to murder in the first place? Through an analysis of theological, legal, and medical texts and journals, published social investigations into the cause and extent of criminality, and reports covering murders committed by children printed in the press I consider the attempts that were made to answer these questions. 3 Contents Figures p. 5 Tables p. 6 List of Abbreviations p. 7 Acknowledgements p. 8 Introduction p. 10 Chapter One: Introducing Children Who Kill to the History of Crime p. 43 Chapter Two: Press Treatment of Murders Committed By Children p. 84 Chapter Three: The Legal Responsibility of Children Who Killed p. 130 Chapter Four: Punishing Children Who Killed p. 170 Chapter Five: Explaining Why Children Killed p. 206 Chapter Six: Finding a Place for Children Who Killed p. 242 Conclusion: The Emergence of a Stereotype p. 277 Appendices p. 294 Bibliography p. 296 4 Figures 1. ‘Fatal Accident to a Child’ (1874) p. 48 2. ‘A London Plague That Must Be Swept Away’ (1897) p. 61 3. ‘Boys Murder Their Mother: Revolting Crime at Plaistow’ (1895) p. 68 4. Charles Booth’s Poverty Map (1889) p. 79 5. ‘The Havant Murder’ (1888) p. 89 6. A Page from the Hertford Mercury (1848) p. 101 7. A Page from the Blackburn Standard (1893) p. 103 8. ‘Full Particulars of the Cruel and Horrid Murder’ (1848) p. 106 9. Illustrated Police News (1874) p. 114 10. ‘Murder of a Boy at Havant’ (1888) p. 116 11. Dartmoor Convict Prison p. 180 12. Treadwheel at Pentonville Prison p. 186 13. Illustrated Police News (1890) p. 204 14. ‘Useful Sunday Literature for the Masses’ (1849) p. 224 15. George Galletly – a Boy Murderer (1888) p. 252 16. ‘Oliver Introduced to the Respectable Old Gentleman’ (1837) p. 253 17. Patrick Knowles – a Boy Murderer (1903) p. 254 18. The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (1880) p. 256 19. ‘Robert Allen Coombes Murders His Mother’ (1895) p. 256 5 Tables 1. Number of Children Who Killed in England and Wales, 1816-1908 p. 51 2. Methods of Killing by Children Charged with Manslaughter p. 55 3. Ages of Children Charged with Felonious Killing Offences p. 76 4. The Insanity Plea Applied in Murder Trials of Children p. 160 6 List of Abbreviations ASSI – Assize Returns CRIM – Criminal Registers HO – Home Office LMA – London Metropolitan Archives MEPO – Metropolitan Police Papers OBP – Old Bailey Proceedings PCOM – Police Commission Papers PP – Parliamentary Papers NA – National Archives 7 Acknowledgements The research for this thesis was funded by the Wellcome Trust. As a result of the generous studentship I received I was able to expand my horizons – utilising archives I could only dream of visiting as well as sharing my research with universities and other academic communities throughout the world. My greatest thanks goes to my supervisor Dr Thomas Dixon. It was as an undergraduate student listening to his lectures on ‘Victorian Values’ that my interest in all things Victorian was first ignited. He encouraged me to consider how the people of the past thought, behaved, and understood the world in which they lived. He supported me through my undergraduate dissertation, got me through my MA with kind words and an ever-listening ear, and then provided me with all the encouragement and advice I could need as my PhD supervisor. I cannot be more thankful for all that he has done in fostering and furthering my academic career. The breadth of research and vibrant atmosphere found at the School of History at Queen Mary University of London provided me with the drive and ambition to engage in this, somewhat, challenging research subject. A number of people, who have proved particularly supportive throughout my four years as a post-graduate researcher, deserve especial acknowledgement. If Dr Rhodri Hayward had not asked the questions he did when he supervised my MA dissertation on the existence and treatment of children in Colney Hatch Lunatic Asylum I would never have considered researching cases of Victorian children who killed. I am also extremely grateful to Professor Miri Rubin whose belief in me has spurred me on during hard times. There is nothing quite so encouraging than achieving a degree of respect from a person you hold in the highest regard. Jen Wallis, a great friend and colleague, very kindly agreed to read each chapter draft as I churned them out, and then the full version 8 of the thesis. Her comments and advice made the editing process more bearable and progress towards submission all the more possible. I owe her many G&Ts in thanks. I am also grateful to all my friends and family. Thank you to Chris Millard and Rebecca O’Neal who also agreed to read through the completed draft of my thesis – a second and third pair of eyes did much to calm my nerves about missing silly errors and typos – and to Charlotte Faucher and Craig Griffiths who all supported me through tough times. A thesis is a massive hurdle to navigate, made all the more complicated when battling with health problems. I could not have done it without my friends: their love, support, and general ability to make me laugh no matter what was a great boost. Finally, my family deserve all the thanks in the world – for without them I would not have had the strength to complete my thesis. So, thank you Mum, for your unerring trust in my abilities as a researcher and writer, thank you Dad, for always being there at the end of the phone to listen and guide me through my woes, and thank you Isobel for being a better sister than I deserve. 9 Introduction Murders committed by children shock and horrify societies in the modern world. Names such as Mary Bell, Jon Venables, and Robert Thompson have proved infamous, their crimes remembered across generations. When the news that a child has been suspected of, or charged with, committing a felonious killing offence members of the public are whipped into a sensation. The press, and other forms of media, jostle with one another to publicise the story. Detail is gone into on the lives of the unfortunate victims and the characters of the children capable of committing such a heinous crime. When two ten-year-old boys abducted, tortured and murdered two-year-old James Bulger in 1993 the degree of press and media attention the trial received has been described by legal scholar Samantha Pegg as amounting to a moral panic.1 The news that Jon Venables and Robert Thompson had wilfully killed a young toddler was widely reported in the media both nationally and abroad.
Recommended publications
  • 00 Muncie 4E BAB1408B0166
    00_Muncie_4e_BAB1408B0166_Prelims.indd 3 18-Nov-14 9:13:10 PM 1 Youth Crime: Representations, Discourses and Data Chapter 1 examines: • the concepts of ‘crime’, ‘youth’, ‘criminalization’ and ‘social construction’; • how young people have come to be regarded as a threat; • how the ‘problem of youth’ is frequently collapsed into the problem of crime and disorder; • how young people are represented in media and political discourses; • the reliability of statistical measures of youth offending; • the gendered nature of offending; • the relationship between gangs and violent crime; • the relationship between drug use and criminality. Key terms corporate crime; crime; criminalization; delinquency; demonization; deviance; discourse; folk devil; gang; hidden crime; moral panic; official statistics; protective factors; recording of crime; reporting of crime; representation; risk factors; self-report studies; social con- structionism; status offence; youth This introductory chapter is designed to promote a critical understanding of the relationship between youth and crime. The equation of these two terms is widely employed and for many is accepted as common sense. Stories about youth and crime are a mainstay of most forms of media. Official crime statistics are readily and uncritically recited to substantiate a view that youth crime and disorder are now ‘out of control’. But how far do the media reflect social reality and how much are they able to define it? How valid and reliable is statistical evidence? By asking these questions, the chapter draws attention to how the state of youth and the 01_Muncie_4e_BAB1408B0166_Ch-01.indd 1 11/18/2014 8:40:00 PM problem of crime come to be defined in particular circumscribed ways.
    [Show full text]
  • Piteous Massacre’: Violence, Language, and the Off-Stage in Richard III
    Journal of the British Academy, 8(s3), 91–109 DOI https://doi.org/10.5871/jba/008s3.091 Posted 15 June 2020 ‘Piteous massacre’: violence, language, and the off-stage in Richard III Georgina Lucas Abstract: Shakespeare regularly stages extreme violence. In Titus Andronicus, Chiron and Demetrius are baked in a pie and eaten by their mother. Gloucester’s eyes are plucked out in King Lear. In contradistinction to this graphic excess are moments when violence is relegated off-stage: Macbeth kills King Duncan in private; when Richard III suborns the assassination of his nephews—the notorious ‘Princes in the Tower’—the boys are killed away from the audience. In such instances, the spectator must imagine the scope and formation of the violence described. Focussing on Richard III, this article asks why Shakespeare uses the word ‘massacre’ to express the murder of the two princes. Determining the varied, and competing, meanings of the term in the 16th and 17th centuries, the article uncovers a range of ways an early audience might have interpreted the killings—as mass murder, assassination, and butchery—and demonstrates their thematic connections to child-killing across the cycle of plays that Richard III concludes. Keywords: Shakespeare, massacre, Richard III, off-stage violence, child-killing. Notes on the author: Georgina Lucas is Lecturer in Shakespeare and Renaissance Literature in the School of Arts, English and Languages at Queen’s University, Belfast. Her research focusses upon the representation of mass and sexual violence on the early modern stage, and the performance and reception of Shakespeare during and after acts of atrocity.
    [Show full text]
  • Crucibles of Virtue and Vice: the Acculturation of Transatlantic Army Officers, 1815-1945
    CRUCIBLES OF VIRTUE AND VICE: THE ACCULTURATION OF TRANSATLANTIC ARMY OFFICERS, 1815-1945 John F. Morris Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy under the Executive Committee of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2020 © 2020 John F. Morris All Rights Reserved ABSTRACT Crucibles of Virtue and Vice: The Acculturation of Transatlantic Army Officers, 1815-1945 John F. Morris Throughout the long nineteenth century, the European Great Powers and, after 1865, the United States competed for global dominance, and they regularly used their armies to do so. While many historians have commented on the culture of these armies’ officer corps, few have looked to the acculturation process itself that occurred at secondary schools and academies for future officers, and even fewer have compared different formative systems. In this study, I home in on three distinct models of officer acculturation—the British public schools, the monarchical cadet schools in Imperial Germany, Austria, and Russia, and the US Military Academy—which instilled the shared and recursive sets of values and behaviors that constituted European and American officer cultures. Specifically, I examine not the curricula, policies, and structures of the schools but the subterranean practices, rituals, and codes therein. What were they, how and why did they develop and change over time, which values did they transmit and which behaviors did they perpetuate, how do these relate to nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century social and cultural phenomena, and what sort of ethos did they produce among transatlantic army officers? Drawing on a wide array of sources in three languages, including archival material, official publications, letters and memoirs, and contemporary nonfiction and fiction, I have painted a highly detailed picture of subterranean life at the institutions in this study.
    [Show full text]
  • New Labour, Old Morality
    New Labour, Old Morality. In The IdeasThat Shaped Post-War Britain (1996), David Marquand suggests that a useful way of mapping the „ebbs and flows in the struggle for moral and intellectual hegemony in post-war Britain‟ is to see them as a dialectic not between Left and Right, nor between individualism and collectivism, but between hedonism and moralism which cuts across party boundaries. As Jeffrey Weeks puts it in his contribution to Blairism and the War of Persuasion (2004): „Whatever its progressive pretensions, the Labour Party has rarely been in the vanguard of sexual reform throughout its hundred-year history. Since its formation at the beginning of the twentieth century the Labour Party has always been an uneasy amalgam of the progressive intelligentsia and a largely morally conservative working class, especially as represented through the trade union movement‟ (68-9). In The Future of Socialism (1956) Anthony Crosland wrote that: 'in the blood of the socialist there should always run a trace of the anarchist and the libertarian, and not to much of the prig or the prude‟. And in 1959 Roy Jenkins, in his book The Labour Case, argued that 'there is a need for the state to do less to restrict personal freedom'. And indeed when Jenkins became Home Secretary in 1965 he put in a train a series of reforms which damned him in they eyes of Labour and Tory traditionalists as one of the chief architects of the 'permissive society': the partial decriminalisation of homosexuality, reform of the abortion and obscenity laws, the abolition of theatre censorship, making it slightly easier to get divorced.
    [Show full text]
  • TRINITY COLLEGE Cambridge Trinity College Cambridge College Trinity Annual Record Annual
    2016 TRINITY COLLEGE cambridge trinity college cambridge annual record annual record 2016 Trinity College Cambridge Annual Record 2015–2016 Trinity College Cambridge CB2 1TQ Telephone: 01223 338400 e-mail: [email protected] website: www.trin.cam.ac.uk Contents 5 Editorial 11 Commemoration 12 Chapel Address 15 The Health of the College 18 The Master’s Response on Behalf of the College 25 Alumni Relations & Development 26 Alumni Relations and Associations 37 Dining Privileges 38 Annual Gatherings 39 Alumni Achievements CONTENTS 44 Donations to the College Library 47 College Activities 48 First & Third Trinity Boat Club 53 Field Clubs 71 Students’ Union and Societies 80 College Choir 83 Features 84 Hermes 86 Inside a Pirate’s Cookbook 93 “… Through a Glass Darkly…” 102 Robert Smith, John Harrison, and a College Clock 109 ‘We need to talk about Erskine’ 117 My time as advisor to the BBC’s War and Peace TRINITY ANNUAL RECORD 2016 | 3 123 Fellows, Staff, and Students 124 The Master and Fellows 139 Appointments and Distinctions 141 In Memoriam 155 A Ninetieth Birthday Speech 158 An Eightieth Birthday Speech 167 College Notes 181 The Register 182 In Memoriam 186 Addresses wanted CONTENTS TRINITY ANNUAL RECORD 2016 | 4 Editorial It is with some trepidation that I step into Boyd Hilton’s shoes and take on the editorship of this journal. He managed the transition to ‘glossy’ with flair and panache. As historian of the College and sometime holder of many of its working offices, he also brought a knowledge of its past and an understanding of its mysteries that I am unable to match.
    [Show full text]
  • South Ella Part 7 Thomas Burns Moyes
    South Ella Part 7 Thomas Burns Moyes Introduction Thomas Burns Moyes lived at South Ella Hall for only six years and he and his family were its final residents before the house, sadly, fell into neglect and eventual ruin. However, his story, which begins in the late nineteenth century, takes us on a worldwide journey. It begins in India and, then, to Scotland and to Turkey, before Thomas Moyes finally arrived in Hull in the early 1920s. His parents, James and Margaret Moyes, were from Scotland and his mother came from an established trading family, dealing in textiles, tea and other commodities in Bengal, India. Thomas Moyes, who trained as a doctor, lived through times of seismic change, not only in Great Britain but also in the world as a whole. His life spanned the final years of Queen Victoria’s reign, the Edwardian period, the drama and upheaval of the First World War and the economic difficulties that came as its result. Nevertheless, he came through it all and prospered, eventually purchasing South Ella Hall in 1927. However, in 1933, he died at the age of 40, and it was his death that precipitated the decline of South Ella Hall. Bengal, India Our story begins in 1891 in the sombre surroundings of Kurseong Cemetery in Bengal, India. There, on 10th May, James and Margaret Moyes were grieving the loss of their infant son, Blake, whose brief life had lasted a mere six months. At the time of their son’s death, James Moyes had been in India for only a few years.
    [Show full text]
  • Secretary of State for the Home Department Ex Parte Venables and Thompson, R V
    Secretary of State for the Home Department ex parte Venables and Thompson, R v. [1997] UKHL 25; [1998] AC 407; [1997] 3 All ER 97; [1997] 3 WLR 23; [1997] 2 FLR 471; [1997] Fam Law 786 (12th June, 1997) HOUSE OF LORDS Lord Goff of Chieveley Lord Browne- Wilkinson Lord Lloyd of Berwick Lord Steyn Lord Hope of Craighead OPINIONS OF THE LORDS OF APPEAL FOR JUDGEMENT IN THE CAUSE REGINA v. SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT (ORIGINAL APPELLANT AND CROSS-RESPONDENT), EX PARTE V. (ORIGINAL RESPONDENT AND CROSS-APPELLANT REGINA v. SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT (ORIGINAL APPELLANT AND CROSS-REPONDENT), EX PARTE T. (ORIGINAL RESPONDENT AND CROSS-APPELLANT (CONJOINED APPEALS) ON 12 JUNE 1997 LORD GOFF OF CHIEVELEY My Lords, The Sentence of the Judge On 24 November 1993 two young boys, Robert Thompson and Jon Venables, were convicted of the murder of a two year old boy, James Bulger. The murder had taken place on 12 February 1993, when Thompson and Venables were 10½ years old. Since a child under 10 cannot be guilty of a criminal offence in English law, they were only just over the age of criminal responsibility. They were 11 years old at the time of their trial, which took place before Morland J. and a jury. After conviction, the judge sentenced each of them to be detained during Her Majesty's pleasure, such a sentence being mandatory in the case of young offenders convicted of murder: see section 53(1) of the Children and Young Persons Act 1933.
    [Show full text]
  • Hereditary Genius Francis Galton
    Hereditary Genius Francis Galton Sir William Sydney, John Dudley, Earl of Warwick Soldier and knight and Duke of Northumberland; Earl of renown Marshal. “The minion of his time.” _________|_________ ___________|___ | | | | Lucy, marr. Sir Henry Sydney = Mary Sir Robt. Dudley, William Herbert Sir James three times Lord | the great Earl of 1st E. Pembroke Harrington Deputy of Ireland.| Leicester. Statesman and __________________________|____________ soldier. | | | | Sir Philip Sydney, Sir Robert, Mary = 2d Earl of Pembroke. Scholar, soldier, 1st Earl Leicester, Epitaph | courtier. Soldier & courtier. by Ben | | Johnson | | | Sir Robert, 2d Earl. 3d Earl Pembroke, “Learning, observation, Patron of letters. and veracity.” ____________|_____________________ | | | Philip Sydney, Algernon Sydney, Dorothy, 3d Earl, Patriot. Waller's one of Cromwell's Beheaded, 1683. “Saccharissa.” Council. First published in 1869. Second Edition, with an additional preface, 1892. Fifith corrected proof of the first electronic edition, 2019. Based on the text of the second edition. The page numbering and layout of the second edition have been preserved, as far as possible, to simplify cross-referencing. This is a corrected proof. This document forms part of the archive of Galton material available at http://galton.org. Original electronic conversion by Michal Kulczycki, based on a facsimile prepared by Gavan Tredoux. Many errata were detected by Diane L. Ritter. This edition was edited, cross-checked and reformatted by Gavan Tredoux. HEREDITARY GENIUS AN INQUIRY INTO ITS LAWS AND CONSEQUENCES BY FRANCIS GALTON, F.R.S., ETC. London MACMILLAN AND CO. AND NEW YORK 1892 The Right of Translation and Reproduction is Reserved CONTENTS PREFATORY CHAPTER TO THE EDITION OF 1892.__________ VII PREFACE ______________________________________________ V CONTENTS __________________________________________ VII ERRATA _____________________________________________ VIII INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER.
    [Show full text]
  • Garcilasso De La Vega, Etc
    THE WORKS OF GARCILASSO DE LA VEGA, ETC. ETC. LONDON: PRINTED BY JAMES MOYES, GREVILLE STREET. Louis Parez ddin.Rob t. Cooper Sculp Garcilasso de la Vega. Nat. 1503.Ob. 1536. Published March 1 st . 1823. by Mess rs . Hurst & Robinson. THE WORKS OF GARCILASSO DE LA VEGA, SURNAMED THE PRINCE OF CASTILIAN POETS, Translated into English Verse; WITH A CRITICAL AND HISTORICAL ESSAY ON SPANISH POETRY, AND A LIFE OF THE AUTHOR. By J. H. WIFFEN. "Sometimes he turned to gaze upon his book,Boscán or GARCILASSO ; by the windEven as the page is rustled whilst we look,So by the poesy of his own mindOver the mystic leaf his soul was shook."LORD BYRON . LONDON: PRINTED FOR HURST, ROBINSON, AND CO. 90, CHEAPSIDE, AND 8, PALL MALL. 1823. TO JOHN, DUKE OF BEDFORD, IN PUBLIC LIFE THE STEADY FRIEND AND ASSERTOR OF OUR LIBERTIES; IN PRIVATE LIFE ALL THAT IS GENEROUS, DIGNIFIED, AND GOOD; This Translation, IN GRATEFUL ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF THE LITERARY EASE THAT HAS LED TO ITS PRODUCTION, IS, WITH DEEP RESPECT AND ADMIRATION, Inscribed BY THE AUTHOR. [Pg vii] PREFACE. Till within the last few years but little attention appears to have been paid in England to Castilian verse. Our earliest poets of eminence, Chaucer and Lord Surrey, struck at once into the rich field of Italian song, and by their imitations of Petrarch and Boccaccio, most probably set the fashion to their successors, of the exclusive study which they gave to the same models, to the neglect of the cotemporary writers of other nations, to those at least of Spain.
    [Show full text]
  • Staging Executions: the Theater of Punishment in Early Modern England Sarah N
    Florida State University Libraries Electronic Theses, Treatises and Dissertations The Graduate School 2007 Staging Executions: The Theater of Punishment in Early Modern England Sarah N. Redmond Follow this and additional works at the FSU Digital Library. For more information, please contact [email protected] FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY THE COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES “STAGING EXECUTIONS: THE THEATER OF PUNISHMENT IN EARLY MODERN ENGLAND” By SARAH N. REDMOND This thesis submitted to the Department of English in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Degree Awarded: Spring Semester, 2007 The members of the Committee approve the thesis of Sarah N. Redmond, Defended on the 2nd of April, 2007 _______________________ Daniel Vitkus Professor Directing Thesis _______________________ Gary Taylor Committee Member _______________________ Celia Daileader Committee Member Approved: _______________________ Nancy Warren Director of Graduate Studies The Office of Graduate Studies has verified and approved the above named committee members. ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to thank my major professor, Dr. Daniel Vitkus, for his wonderful and invaluable ideas concerning this project, and Dr. Gary Taylor and Dr. Celia Daileader for serving on my thesis committee. I would also like to thank Drs. Daileader and Vitkus for their courses in the Fall 2006, which inspired elements of this thesis. iii TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Figures . v Abstract . vi INTRODUCTION: Executions in Early Modern England: Practices, Conventions, Experiences, and Interpretations . .1 CHAPTER ONE: “Blood is an Incessant Crier”: Sensationalist Accounts of Crime and Punishment in Early Modern Print Culture . .11 CHAPTER TWO “Violence Prevails”: Death on the Stage in Kyd’s The Spanish Tragedy and Middleton’s The Revenger’s Tragedy .
    [Show full text]
  • Murder in Families
    U.S. Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs Bureau of Justice Statistics Bureau of Justice Statistics Special Report Murder in Families By John M. Dawson • When a son killed a parent, his victim and Patrick A. Langan, Ph.D. July 1994 was about as likely to be the mother as the BJS Statisticians father: 47% mothers versus 53% fathers. The United States has over 3,000 But when a daughter killed a parent, her A survey of murder cases disposed counties, but more than half of all victim was more likely to be the father than in 1988 in the courts of large urban murders occur in just 75 of them, the the mother: 81% fathers versus 19% counties indicated that 16% of murder Nation’s mort populous jurisdictions. mothers. victims were members of the defendant's This report taps a rich source of murder family. The remainder were murdered by data — prosecutors’ files in a sample of • In murders of persons under age 12, the friends or acquaintances (64%) or by these large urban places — for detailed victims' parents accounted for 57% of the strangers (20%). These findings are drawn information on the nature and extent of murderers. from a representative sample survey of a particular type of murder: those that State and county prosecutors' records. occur within families. In addition, the • Eleven percent of all victims age The survey covered disposed charges report uses these files justice systems 60 or older were killed by a son or against nearly 10,000 murder defendants, respond to family murder.
    [Show full text]
  • Free PDF of the Book
    Children and violence Report of the Gulbenkian Foundation Commission The UK branch of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation has taken the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, ‘protecting the dignity, equality and human rights’ of children, as a broad framework within which to initiate and support specific projects of benefit to children and young people. Particular attention is given to strategic national and regional proposals which reflect the values contained in the Convention. Published by Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation London 1995 Distribution by Turnaround Distribution Ltd, 27 Horsell Road, London N5 1XL. 0171 609 7836 © 1995 Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Published by Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation 98 Portland Place, London W1N 4ET. Telephone 0171 636 5313 Designed by Susan Clarke for Expression Printers Ltd Cover design by Chris Hyde Printed by Expression Printers Ltd, London N5 1JT ISBN 0–903319–75–6 British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. Contents Introduction page 1 The Commission’s aims and working definitions 4 Acknowledgements 5 The Commission: members’ biographies 6 Executive summary 10 Priority recommendations 18 Section 1 Why children become violent 29 Introduction 31 Genetic factors 38 Biological factors 41 Gender 41 Conditions affecting brain function 42 Environmental or acquired biological factors 44 Brain Injury 44 Nutrition 45 Influence of the family and parenting 46 Family structure and break-up 47 Parenting styles 48 Monitoring/supervision
    [Show full text]