User:Britmax/RVJ Butt Project A and Burke and Hare murders: Difference between pages

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{{Infobox Serial Killer
| name=William Burke and William Hare
| image=Hare and Burke drawing.jpg
| caption=Hare and Burke
| birthname=
| alias=
| birth=
| location=[[Ireland]]
| death={{Dda|1829|01|28|1792|00|00|df=yes}} (Burke)
| cause=
| victims=17
| country=[[Scotland]]
| states=
| beginyear=
| endyear=
| apprehended=
| penalty=[[Capital punishment|Death]] (Burke)
}}


<!-- As a courtesy to the original author(s), please maintain British spelling and date format. -->
The object of this project is to ensure that every station in the Uk and Ireland has an article. They will be done alphabetically to monitor progress and so the latest station on the blocks will be a running check on that.
The '''Burke and Hare murders''' (also known as the '''West Port murders''') were [[Serial killer|serial murders]] perpetrated in [[Edinburgh]], [[Scotland]], [[United Kingdom]] in 1827 and 1828. The killings are attributed to [[Northern Ireland|Irish]] immigrants William Burke and William Hare, who sold the [[Cadaver|corpse]]s of their 17 victims to the [[Edinburgh Medical College]] for [[dissection]]. Their principal customer was Doctor [[Robert Knox]], and their accomplices included Burke's mistress, Helen MacDougal, and Hare's wife, Margaret.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.crimelibrary.com/serial_killers/weird/burke/foursome_2.html |title=William Burke & William Hare}}</ref>


==Historical background==


{{Main|History of anatomy in the 19th century}}


Before 1832, an insufficient supply of legitimate [[cadaver]]s was available for the study and teaching of [[anatomy]] in [[United Kingdom|British]] medical schools. As medical science began to flourish in the early [[1800s|19th century]], demand rose sharply, but at the same time, the only legal supply of cadavers—the bodies of executed criminals—was falling due to a sharp reduction in the execution rate in the early 19th century, as compared with the 18th century, brought about by the repeal of the [[Bloody Code]]. This situation attracted criminal elements who were willing to obtain specimens by any means. The activities of [[body-snatching|body-snatchers]] (also called resurrectionists) gave rise to particular public fear and revulsion.
==Ab==


== Burke and Hare==
[[Abbey Town railway station|Abbey railway station]] see [[Abbey Town railway station]]


Burke (1792 – 28 January 1829) was born in Urney, [[County Tyrone]], Northern Ireland. After trying his hand at a variety of trades there and serving as an officer's servant in the [[County Donegal|Donegal]] Militia, he left his wife and two children in Ireland and emigrated to Scotland about 1817, working as a [[navvy]] for the [[Union Canal (Scotland)|Union Canal]]. He acquired a mistress, Helen MacDougal, and afterwards worked as a labourer, weaver, baker and a cobbler.
[[Abbey and West Dereham railway station]]


Hare's (born 1792 or 1804) birthplace is variously given as [[Newry]] or [[Derry]], Northern Ireland. Similar to Burke, he emigrated to Scotland and worked as a Union Canal labourer. He then moved to Edinburgh where he met a man named Logue. When Logue died in 1826, he took Margaret Laird, Logue's widow, as his [[common-law marriage#United Kingdom|common-law wife]] and the two ran a lodging house.
[[Abbeydore railway station]]


==Murders==
[[Abbeyfeale railway station]]


In autumn 1927, Burke and MacDougal moved into Hare's lodging house in Tanner's Close, in the West Port area of Edinburgh. It is not known whether the two knew each other from their earlier common employment on the Union Canal; however, once Burke arrived in Tanner's Corner, they became good friends.<ref>Howard, p. 50</ref> According to Hare's later testimony, the first body they sold was that of a dead tenant, an old army [[pensioner]] who owed Hare [[GBP|£]]4 rent. In November 1827, they stole the body from its coffin and sold it to the Edinburgh Medical College for £7, their first meeting with Dr. Robert Knox, a leading Edinburgh [[anatomy|anatomist]].
[[Abbeydorney railway station]]


Burke and Hare's next victim was a sick tenant, Joseph the Miller, whom they plied with whisky and then [[suffocation|suffocated]]. When there were no other sickly tenants, they decided to lure a victim from the street. In February 1828, they invited pensioner Abigail Simpson to spend the night before her return to home. Using the same ''[[modus operandi]]'', they engineered her [[intoxication]]{{huh?}}<!-- Further explanation needed --> and then smothered her. Because the corpse was so fresh, they were paid £15.
[[Abbey Junction railway station|Abbey Holme (Carlisle & Silloth / Solway Junction railway station)]] see [[Abbey Junction railway station|Abbey Junction]]


Hare's wife, Margaret, invited a woman to the inn, plied her with drink, and then sent for her husband. Next, Burke brought in two [[prostitute]]s, Mary Patterson and Janet Brown, but Brown left when an argument broke out between MacDougal and Burke. When she returned, she was told that Patterson had left with Burke. The next morning, some of the medical students recognized the dead prostitute, possibly because they had used her services.
[[Beauchief railway station|Abbey Houses railway station]] see [[Beauchief railway station]]


The next victim was an acquaintance of Burke, a beggar woman called "Effie". They were paid £10 for her body. Then Burke "saved" a woman from police by claiming that he knew her. He delivered her body to the medical school just hours later.
[[Abbey Junction railway station]] Needs further work


The next two victims were an old woman and a deaf boy. Burke and Hare argued over the boy, but then Burke broke his{{huh?}}<!-- Burke's or the boy's back? --> back and sold both bodies for £8 each. The next two victims were Burke's acquaintance "Mrs. Ostler" and one of MacDougal's relatives, Ann MacDougal.
[[Abbeyleix railway station]]


Then Hare met elderly prostitute Mary Haldane. When her daughter Peggy inquired about her whereabouts, she ended up accompanying her mother on the medical school cutting table.{{huh?}}<!-- Needs rewording/further explanation for clarity --> However, this particular disappearance did not go unnoticed, since Haldane had been a well-known figure in the neighbourhood.
[[Abbey of Deer Platform railway station]]


Burke and Hare's next victim was an even better-known person, a [[Mental retardation|retarded]] young man with a limp called "Daft Jamie", who was 18 at the time of his murder. The boy resisted, and the pair had to kill him together. His mother began to ask for her boy. When Dr. Knox uncovered the body the next morning, several students recognized Jamie. His head and feet were cut off after Knox had shown his students the body. Knox denied that it was Jamie, but he apparently began to dissect his face first.
[[Abbey Town railway station]]


The last victim was Marjory Campbell Docherty. Burke lured her into the lodging house by claiming that his mother was also a Docherty, but he had to wait because of James and Ann Gray who were lodging with them. The Grays left for the night and neighbours<!--This spelling is correct in British English--> heard the noise of a struggle.
[[Abbey Wood railway station]]


==Detection==
[[Abbotsbury railway station]]
The next day, Ann Gray became suspicious when Burke would not let her approach a bed where she had left her stockings. When the Grays were left alone in the house in the early evening, they checked the bed and found Docherty's body under it. On their way to alert the police, they ran into MacDougal who tried to bribe them with an offer of £10 a week. They refused.


MacDougal and Margaret Hare alerted their spouses, and Burke and Hare took the body out of the house before the police arrived; however, under questioning, Burke claimed that Docherty had left at 7:00 am, but then MacDougal claimed that she had left in the evening. The police arrested them. An anonymous tip-off led them to Knox's classroom where they found Docherty's body. James Gray identified it. MacDougal and Margaret Hare were [[arrest]]ed soon thereafter. The murder spree had lasted eighteen months.
[[Abbotsford Ferry railway station]]


When an Edinburgh paper wrote about the disappearances on 6 November 1828<!--this date is correct in British English-->, Brown heard about it and went to the police. She identified Paterson's clothing.
[[Abbotsham Road railway station]]


[[Image:William Burke Execution.gif|thumb|left|The execution of William Burke on The Lawnmarket, 28 January 1829]]
[[Abbots Ripton railway station]] also Abbotts Ripton
The evidence against the pair was not overwhelming, so [[Lord Advocate]] Sir [[Sir William Rae, 3rd Baronet|William Rae]] offered Hare [[Prosecutorial immunity|immunity from prosecution]] if he confessed and agreed to testify against Burke. Hare's testimony led to Burke's [[Capital punishment|death sentence]] in December 1828. He was [[hanged]] on 28 January 1929, after which he was publicly dissected at the Edinburgh Medical College.<ref>Howard, p. 54</ref> His skeleton, death mask, and items made from his tanned skin are displayed at the college's museum.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.scotlandandmedicine.com/site/CMD=PICDETAIL/PICID=248/838/default.aspx|title=Burke's skin pocket book|publisher=Scotland Medicine|accessdate=2008-10-11|archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/5bUW8rrX2 |archivedate=2008-10-11}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.geo.ed.ac.uk/scotgaz/people/famousfirst354.html|title=William Burke|publisher=Gazetteer for Scotland|accessdate=2008-10-11|archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/5bUWKr0cS |archivedate=2008-10-11}}</ref>


MacDougal was released, since her complicity to the murders was [[not proven|not provable]]. Knox was not prosecuted, despite a public uproar, since no [[Evidence (law)|evidence]] existed that he had known of the origin of the corpses.
[[Abbot's Wood Junction railway station]] Open 3 years near Worcester - may do later


== Aftermath ==
[[Abdie railway station]] Open 5 years Edinburgh & Northern railway - may do later
MacDougal returned to her house but was almost [[lynching|lynched]] by an [[angry mob]]. She fled to [[England]], but her reputation preceded her. She was rumoured to have left for [[Australia]] where she died around 1868. Margaret Hare also escaped lynching and reputedly returned to Ireland. Nothing more is known about her.


Hare was released in February 1829, and many popular tales tell of him as a blind beggar on the streets of [[London]] having been mobbed and thrown in a [[Lime (mineral)|lime]] pit. However, none of these reports were ever confirmed. The last known sighting of him was in the English town of [[Carlisle]].
[[Aber (L & NW) railway station]]


Knox kept silent about his dealings with Burke and Hare, but his popularity among students decreased. His applications for other positions in the Edinburgh Medical School were rejected. He moved to the Cancer Hospital in London and died in 1862.
[[Aber railway station]] Article good enough already


==Political consequences==
[[Aberaman railway station]]


The murders highlighted the crisis in medical education and led to the subsequent passing of the [[Anatomy Act 1832]], which expanded the legal supply of medical cadavers to eliminate the incentive for such behaviour. About the law, the Lancet editorial stated:
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<blockquote>"Burke and Hare ... it is said, are the real authors of the measure, and that which would never have been sanctioned by the deliberate wisdom of parliament, is about to be extorted from its fears ... It would have been well if this fear had been manifested and acted upon before sixteen human beings had fallen victims to the supineness of the Government and the Legislature. It required no extraordinary sagacity to foresee, that the worst consequences must inevitably result from the system of traffic between resurrectionists and anatomists, which the executive government has so long suffered to exist. Government is already in a great degree, responsible for the crime which it has fostered by its negligence, and even encouraged by a system of forbearance." <ref>''Lancet'' editorial, 1828-9 (1), pp 818-21, 28.3.1829.</ref></blockquote>
[[Aberavon and Port Talbot (R&SB) railway station]]


==Burke and Hare in popular culture ==
[[Aberavon Seaside railway station]]


The murders were adapted into a 1948 [[film]] with the working title ''Crimes of Burke and Hare''; however, the [[British Board of Film Censors]] deemed its topic too disturbing and insisted that references to Burke and Hare be excised. The film was [[dubbing (filmmaking)|redubbed]] with alternative dialogue and characters, and was released as ''[[The Greed of William Hart]]''.<ref>{{imdb title|title=The Greed of William Hart (1948)|id=0040401}}</ref>
[[Aberavon Town railway station]]


The 1960 film ''[[The Flesh and The Fiends]]'' starred [[Peter Cushing]] as Knox, [[Donald Pleasence]] as Hare and [[George Rose]] as Burke.<ref>{{imdb title|title=The Flesh and the Fiends (1960)|id=0052811}}</ref> The following year, ''[[The Anatomist]]'' featured [[Alastair Sim]] as Knox.<ref>{{imdb title|title=The Anatomist (1961)|id=0054626}}</ref>
[[Aberayron railway station]]


In the 1964 Jack Lemmon comedy film ''[[Good Neighbor Sam]]'' Lemmon's character works for the advertising firm of Burke & Hare.
[[Aber Bargoed railway station]]


The 1971 film ''[[Burke and Hare (film)|Burke and Hare]]'' starred [[Derren Nesbitt]]. Burke and Hare also made an appearance in the [[Hammer Horror]] film ''[[Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde]]''.
[[Aberbeeg railway station]]


In 1985, [[Freddie Francis]] directed a film version of the events entitled ''[[The Doctor and the Devils]]''.<ref>{{imdb title|title=The Doctor and the Devils (1985)|id=0089034}}</ref>
[[Aberbran railway station]]


A 1963 episode of ''[[The Twilight Zone (1959 TV series)|The Twilight Zone]]'', "[[The New Exhibit]]", featured wax museum statues of Burke and Hare as part of a collection of notorious [[serial killers]].
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[[Aberderfyn Halt railway station]] Halt open 1905 - 1915. May do later.

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[[Acton Crossing railway station]] GN(I) Op c. 1935 No closing date do later

[[Acton Green railway station]] RN Chiswick Park and Acton Green then [[Chiswick Park tube station]] Redirected

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==Ad==

(I)[[Adams Crossing GN(I) railway station]] No dates do later

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[[Admiralty Platform railway station]] GW Redirect to Keyham Admiralty Platform railway station?

[[Admiralty Platform railway station]] L & NE Redirect to Killingholme Admiralty Platform railway station?

(I)[[Adoon railway station]] Section on Cavan and Leitrim?

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[[Agecroft Bridge railway station]] as above

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==Ai==

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[[Aintree L&Y 2 railway station]] Redirected to Aintree railway station

[[Aintree Central railway station]] Leave title as it is

[[Aintree Cinder Lane railway station]] Redirected to Aintree Racecourse railway station

[[Aintree Racecourse railway station]] Leave title as it is

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==Ala-Ald==

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[[Alderminster railway station]] only open 4 years (Section or disused sta OW&W?)

[[Aldersgate railway station]] (Met) Redirected to Barbican station

[[Aldersgate and Barbican railway station]] (Met) Redirected to Barbican station

[[Aldersgate Street railway station]] (Met) Redirected to Barbican station

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[[Aldershot North railway station]] Redirected to Ash Vale

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[[Aldershot North Camp and North Farnborough railway station]] Redirected to Ash Vale

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==Ale-All==
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[[Allerton for Garston and Woolton railway station]] redirected to Allerton railway station

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[[Allhallows Colliery]] Maryport & Carlisle 15 month life halt may do later

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[[Alloa Ferry railway station]] open 1 year

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[[Alton Park railway station]] Redirect to Treloar Hospital Platform

[[Alton Towers railway station]] Redirected to Alton railway station, Staffordshire

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[[Altrincham railway station]] Redirected to [[Altrincham station]]

[[Altrincham MSJ & A railway station]] Redirected to [[Altrincham railway station]]

[[Altrincham W & S railway station]] Redirect to [[Broadheath railway station]]

[[Altrincham and Bowden railway station]] Redirected to [[Altrincham railway station]]
[[Alt-y-Craig railway station]] Open 1 year renamed [[Alt-y-Graig railway station]] TOTAL life 2 yrs may do later

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==Am==

[[Amber Gate railway station]] Red to Ambergate railway station

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[[Amberswood railway station]] open January to March 1872 May Do Later

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[[Ampress railway station]] Redirected to Ampress Works Halt railway station

[[Ampress Works Halt railway station]]

[[Ampthill (L&NW) railway station]] Redirected to Millbrook (Bedfordshire) railway station (Same station)

[[Ampthill railway station]]

[[Ampthill (Marston) railway station]] Redirected to Millbrook (Bedfordshire) railway station (same station)

==An==

[[Ancaster railway station]]

[[Anderston railway station]]

[[Anderston Cross railway station]] Redirected to Anderston railway station

[[Andover railway station]]

[[Andover Junction railway station]] Redirected to Andover railway station (same station)

[[Andover Road railway station]] Redirect to Micheldever railway station (same station)

[[Andoversford railway station]]

[[Andoversford and Dowdeswell railway station]]

[[Andoversford Junction railway station]] Redirected to Andoversford railway station

[[Andover Town railway station]]

[[Anerley railway station]]

[[Angarrack railway station]] Linked to section on article Disused railway stations (Plymouth to Penzance Line)

[[Angel tube station]]

[[Angel Road railway station]]

[[Angerton railway station]]

[[Angmering railway station]]

[[Angram Dam railway station]] 15 year life [[Nidd Valley Railway]]

[[Anlaby Road railway station]] redirect to Hull Anlaby Road railway station

==Ann==

[[Annacotty railway station]]

[[Annadale railway station]] Section on Cavan and Leitrim?

[[Annagh No 2 Halt railway station]] Nine year life may do later

[[Annaghilla railway station]] Clogher Valley Tramway may do later

[[Annaghmore railway station]]

[[Annakeera Crossing railway station]]

[[Annaghloughlan railway station]]

[[Annan (Caledonian) railway station]] Redirect to Annan Shawhill railway station

[[Annan railway station]]

[[Annan Shawhill railway station]]

[[Annascaul railway station]] Tralee and Dingle Light Railway station may do later

[[Annbank railway station]]
[[Annerley railway station]] redirected to Anerley railway station

[[Annesley railway station]]

[[Annesley Colliery Sidings railway station]] opened 1882 closure unknown MDL

[[Annesley Sidings railway station]] 1923 - 1956 sidings halt

[[Annesley South Junction Halt railway station]]

[[Annfield Plain railway station]]

[[Anniesland railway station]]

[[Annitsford railway station]]

[[Ann Street Halt railway station]]

==Ans-Ap ==

[[Ansdell railway station]] already redirected to Ansdell and Fairhaven railway station

[[Ansdell and Fairhaven railway station]]

[[Anston railway station]]

[[Anstruther railway station]]

[[Antrim GN (I) railway station]]

[[Antrim railway station]]

[[Antrim Junction railway station]] Redirected to Antrim railway station

[[Apedale Colliery railway station]] Small halt no closure date MDL

[[Apperley railway station]] Redirected to Apperley Bridge railway station

[[Apperley and Rawdon railway station]] Redirected to Apperley Bridge railway station

[[Apperley Bridge railway station]]

[[Apperley Bridge and Rawdon railway station]] Redirected to Apperley Bridge railway station

[[Appin railway station]]

[[Appleby railway station]] Leads to disambig page

[[Appleby railway station (Lincolnshire)]]

[[Appleby railway station (Cumbria)]]

[[Appleby East railway station]]

[[Appleby West railway station]] redirected to Appleby railway station (Cumbria)

[[Appledore (Devon) railway station]] Redirected to section of BWH&A line article.

[[Appledore (Kent) railway station]]

[[Appleford railway station]]

[[Appleton railway station]]

[[Appley Bridge railway station]]

[[Apsley railway station]]

==Ar- ==

[[Arbirlot railway station]]

[[Arbourthorne Road tram station]] Supertram Station

[[Arbroath railway station]]

[[Arbroath Catherine Street railway station]] Redirected to Arbroath railway station

[[Arbroath Lady Loan railway station]] Redirected to Arbroath railway station

[[Arbuckle railway station]]

[[Archway tube station]]

[[Archway (Highgate) tube station]] Redirect to Archway tube station

[[Ardagh railway station]]

[[Ardara Road railway station]] Redirected to Ardara Road Halt railway station

[[Ardara Road Halt railway station]]

[[Ardbraccan Halt railway station]]

[[Arddleen railway station]]

[[Arddleen Halt railway station]] Redirect to Arddleen railway station

[[Ardee railway station]]

[[Ardeer Platform railway station]]

[[Ardeer Works Platform railway station]] Redirect to Ardeer Platform railway station

[[Ardfert railway station]]

[[Ardgay railway station]]

[[Ardgillan railway station]] No dates in Butt. Small private station MDL

[[Ardglass railway station]]

[[Ardingly railway station]]

[[Ardleigh railway station]]

[[Ardler railway station]]

[[Ardley railway station]]

[[Ardley Halt railway station]]

Next work

Expand Appledore (Devon) section and Appledore (Kent) article.

<br clear=all />

==WORKSHOP==

==Ardley railway station==

{{Infobox UK disused station
|name = Ardley
|caption =
|manager = [[Great Western Railway]]
|locale = [[Bicester]]
|borough = [[Oxfordshire]]
|line =
|manager =
|owner = [[Great Western Railway]]
|platforms =
|latitude =
|longitude =
|gridref =
|years = 1 July [[1910]]
|events = Station opens as Ardlay
|years1 = 1 August [[1955]]
|events1 = Station renamed Ardley Halt
|years2 = 7 January [[1963]]
|events2 = Station closes
}}


The November 23, 1964 episode of ''[[The Alfred Hitchcock Hour]]'', "[[List_of_Alfred_Hitchcock_Presents_episodes#Season_3|The McGregor Affair]]" featured Burke and Hare as characters. [[Andrew Duggan]] starred as McGregor,{{huh?}}<!-- Who is McGregor? --> Burke was played by [[Arthur Malet]], and Hare by [[Michael Pate]].
'''Ardley railway station''' was a [[railway station]] serving the village of [[Ardley]] in [[Oxfordshire]], [[England]]. It was located on what is now known as the [[Chiltern Line]], south of [[Ardley Tunnel]].
==History==


In the 1989 children Series ''[[TUGS]]'', there are two characters parodied off of Burke and Hare named Burke and Blair who are scrap dealers, a clear equivalent to selling bodies for [[tugboat]]s.{{fact|date=October 2008}}
Opened on a [[Chiltern Line#The Bicester cut-off| cut off line]], the station was part of the [[Great Western Railway]] from the outset. Passing on to the [[Western Region of British Railways]] on [[nationalisation]] in 1948, it was then closed by the [[British Railways Board]].


The murders, particularly those of Mary Patterson and Daft Jamie, are the main plot point in the ''[[Doctor Who]]'' audio drama ''[[Medicinal Purposes]]'', starring [[Colin Baker]], [[Leslie Phillips]] and [[David Tennant]].
==The site today==


The Edinburgh-based [[Australian Rules Football|football]] club [[Edinburgh Body Snatchers|the Body Snatchers]] is named after Burke and Hare.
Trains of the [[Chiltern Line]] still pass the site.


==See also==
*[[Robert Knox]]
*[[Dr. Thomas Sewall]]
*[[London Burkers]]


==Bibliography==
*{{cite book |last=Adams |first=Norman |title=Scottish Bodysnatchers |publisher=Goblinshead| date=2002 |isbn=1899874402}}
*{{cite book |last=Bailey |first=Brian |title=Burke and Hare: The Year of the Ghouls |publisher=[[Mainstream Publishing|Mainstream]] |date=2002 |isbn=1840185759}}
*{{cite book |last=Douglas |first=Hugh |title=Burke and Hare |publisher=Hale |date=1973 |isbn=070913777X}}
*{{cite book |last=Edwards |first=Owen Dudley |title=Burke and Hare |publisher=[[Mercat Press]] |date=1993 |isbn=1873644256}}
*{{cite book|last=Howard|first=Amanda|coauthors=Martin Smith|title=River of Blood: Serial Killers and Their Victims|publisher=[[Universal Publishers|Universal]]|date=2004|chapter=William Burke and William Hare|isbn=1581125186|accessdate=2008-10-11}}
*{{cite book |last=MacDonald |first=Helen |title=Human Remains: Episodes in Human Dissection |publisher=[[Melbourne University Publishing|Melbourne University Press]] |date=2005 |isbn=0522851576}}
*{{cite book|last=MacGregor|first=George|title=The History of Burke and Hare and of the Resurrectionist Times: A Fragment from the Criminal Annals of Scotland|publisher=T.D. Morison|date=1884|accessdate=2008-10-11}}
*{{cite book|last=Menefee|first=Samuel Pyeatt|coauthors=Simpson, Allen D.C.|title=Book of the Old Edinburgh Club|publisher=The Old Edinburgh Club|date=1994|volume=3|pages=ns 63–81|chapter=The West Port Murders and the Miniature Coffins from Arthur's Seat}}
*{{cite book |last=Richardson |first=Ruth |title=Death, Dissection and the Destitute: The Politics of the Corpse in Pre-Victorian Britain |publisher=[[University of Chicago Press|Chicago University Press]] |date=2001 |isbn=0226712400}}
*{{cite book |last=Roughead |first=William |coauthors=Sante, Luc |title=Classic Crimes: A Selection from the Works of William Roughead |publisher=[[New York Review of Books]] |date=2000 |chapter=The West Port Murders |isbn=0940322463}}


==References==
{{rail start}}
{{reflist}}
{{rail line|previous=[[Bicester North railway station|Bicester North]]|next=[[Aynho Park railway station|Aynho Park]]|route=[[Great Western Railway]]<br><small> Line Open Station Closed|col=010385}}
{{end box}}


== References ==
==External links==
{{Wikisource1911Enc|Burke, William}}
{{ref-list}}
*[http://heritage.scotsman.com/topics.cfm?tid=1267&id=2340362005 Buried secrets of the city murder dolls]
* {{Butt-Stations}}
*[http://archive.scotsman.com/article.cfm?id=TSC/1829/01/31/Ar00601 Newspaper clipping of the notice of execution of Burke]
* {{Jowett-Nationalised}}
*[http://nyam.org/library/pages/historical_collections_resurrectionists Searchable collection of printed materials from the New York Academy of Medicine, related to the murders, trial, and execution of Burke]


[[Category:1827 crimes]]
[[Category:1827 in Scotland]]
[[Category:1828 in Scotland]]
[[Category:Murder in Scotland]]
[[Category:History of anatomy]]
[[Category:History of Edinburgh]]
[[Category:Old Town, Edinburgh]]
[[Category:1792 births]]
[[Category:1829 deaths]]
[[Category:People from County Tyrone]]
[[Category:Scottish serial killers]]
[[Category:Irish murderers]]
[[Category:Highwaymen]]
[[Category:People executed by hanging]]
[[Category:19th century executions by the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Executed serial killers]]
[[Category:Irish people executed abroad]]
[[Category:People executed by Scotland]][[Category:Year of birth missing]]
[[Category:1859 deaths]]
[[Category:Irish murderers]]


[[de:West-Port-Morde]]
[[:Category:Disused railway stations in Oxfordshire]]
[[eo:Murdoj de Burke kaj Hare]]
[[:Category:Railway stations in Oxfordshire]]
[[ga:Dúnmharuithe West Port]]
[[:Category:Railway stations opened in 1910]]
[[ja:バークとヘア連続殺人事件]]
[[:Category:Railway stations closed in 1963]]
[[de:William Burke]]
{{:SouthWestEngland-railstation-stub}}
[[de:William Hare (Serienmörder)]]

Revision as of 14:22, 11 October 2008

William Burke and William Hare
Hare and Burke
Criminal penaltyDeath (Burke)
Details
Victims17
CountryScotland

The Burke and Hare murders (also known as the West Port murders) were serial murders perpetrated in Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom in 1827 and 1828. The killings are attributed to Irish immigrants William Burke and William Hare, who sold the corpses of their 17 victims to the Edinburgh Medical College for dissection. Their principal customer was Doctor Robert Knox, and their accomplices included Burke's mistress, Helen MacDougal, and Hare's wife, Margaret.[1]

Historical background

Before 1832, an insufficient supply of legitimate cadavers was available for the study and teaching of anatomy in British medical schools. As medical science began to flourish in the early 19th century, demand rose sharply, but at the same time, the only legal supply of cadavers—the bodies of executed criminals—was falling due to a sharp reduction in the execution rate in the early 19th century, as compared with the 18th century, brought about by the repeal of the Bloody Code. This situation attracted criminal elements who were willing to obtain specimens by any means. The activities of body-snatchers (also called resurrectionists) gave rise to particular public fear and revulsion.

Burke and Hare

Burke (1792 – 28 January 1829) was born in Urney, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland. After trying his hand at a variety of trades there and serving as an officer's servant in the Donegal Militia, he left his wife and two children in Ireland and emigrated to Scotland about 1817, working as a navvy for the Union Canal. He acquired a mistress, Helen MacDougal, and afterwards worked as a labourer, weaver, baker and a cobbler.

Hare's (born 1792 or 1804) birthplace is variously given as Newry or Derry, Northern Ireland. Similar to Burke, he emigrated to Scotland and worked as a Union Canal labourer. He then moved to Edinburgh where he met a man named Logue. When Logue died in 1826, he took Margaret Laird, Logue's widow, as his common-law wife and the two ran a lodging house.

Murders

In autumn 1927, Burke and MacDougal moved into Hare's lodging house in Tanner's Close, in the West Port area of Edinburgh. It is not known whether the two knew each other from their earlier common employment on the Union Canal; however, once Burke arrived in Tanner's Corner, they became good friends.[2] According to Hare's later testimony, the first body they sold was that of a dead tenant, an old army pensioner who owed Hare £4 rent. In November 1827, they stole the body from its coffin and sold it to the Edinburgh Medical College for £7, their first meeting with Dr. Robert Knox, a leading Edinburgh anatomist.

Burke and Hare's next victim was a sick tenant, Joseph the Miller, whom they plied with whisky and then suffocated. When there were no other sickly tenants, they decided to lure a victim from the street. In February 1828, they invited pensioner Abigail Simpson to spend the night before her return to home. Using the same modus operandi, they engineered her intoxication[clarification needed] and then smothered her. Because the corpse was so fresh, they were paid £15.

Hare's wife, Margaret, invited a woman to the inn, plied her with drink, and then sent for her husband. Next, Burke brought in two prostitutes, Mary Patterson and Janet Brown, but Brown left when an argument broke out between MacDougal and Burke. When she returned, she was told that Patterson had left with Burke. The next morning, some of the medical students recognized the dead prostitute, possibly because they had used her services.

The next victim was an acquaintance of Burke, a beggar woman called "Effie". They were paid £10 for her body. Then Burke "saved" a woman from police by claiming that he knew her. He delivered her body to the medical school just hours later.

The next two victims were an old woman and a deaf boy. Burke and Hare argued over the boy, but then Burke broke his[clarification needed] back and sold both bodies for £8 each. The next two victims were Burke's acquaintance "Mrs. Ostler" and one of MacDougal's relatives, Ann MacDougal.

Then Hare met elderly prostitute Mary Haldane. When her daughter Peggy inquired about her whereabouts, she ended up accompanying her mother on the medical school cutting table.[clarification needed] However, this particular disappearance did not go unnoticed, since Haldane had been a well-known figure in the neighbourhood.

Burke and Hare's next victim was an even better-known person, a retarded young man with a limp called "Daft Jamie", who was 18 at the time of his murder. The boy resisted, and the pair had to kill him together. His mother began to ask for her boy. When Dr. Knox uncovered the body the next morning, several students recognized Jamie. His head and feet were cut off after Knox had shown his students the body. Knox denied that it was Jamie, but he apparently began to dissect his face first.

The last victim was Marjory Campbell Docherty. Burke lured her into the lodging house by claiming that his mother was also a Docherty, but he had to wait because of James and Ann Gray who were lodging with them. The Grays left for the night and neighbours heard the noise of a struggle.

Detection

The next day, Ann Gray became suspicious when Burke would not let her approach a bed where she had left her stockings. When the Grays were left alone in the house in the early evening, they checked the bed and found Docherty's body under it. On their way to alert the police, they ran into MacDougal who tried to bribe them with an offer of £10 a week. They refused.

MacDougal and Margaret Hare alerted their spouses, and Burke and Hare took the body out of the house before the police arrived; however, under questioning, Burke claimed that Docherty had left at 7:00 am, but then MacDougal claimed that she had left in the evening. The police arrested them. An anonymous tip-off led them to Knox's classroom where they found Docherty's body. James Gray identified it. MacDougal and Margaret Hare were arrested soon thereafter. The murder spree had lasted eighteen months.

When an Edinburgh paper wrote about the disappearances on 6 November 1828, Brown heard about it and went to the police. She identified Paterson's clothing.

The execution of William Burke on The Lawnmarket, 28 January 1829

The evidence against the pair was not overwhelming, so Lord Advocate Sir William Rae offered Hare immunity from prosecution if he confessed and agreed to testify against Burke. Hare's testimony led to Burke's death sentence in December 1828. He was hanged on 28 January 1929, after which he was publicly dissected at the Edinburgh Medical College.[3] His skeleton, death mask, and items made from his tanned skin are displayed at the college's museum.[4][5]

MacDougal was released, since her complicity to the murders was not provable. Knox was not prosecuted, despite a public uproar, since no evidence existed that he had known of the origin of the corpses.

Aftermath

MacDougal returned to her house but was almost lynched by an angry mob. She fled to England, but her reputation preceded her. She was rumoured to have left for Australia where she died around 1868. Margaret Hare also escaped lynching and reputedly returned to Ireland. Nothing more is known about her.

Hare was released in February 1829, and many popular tales tell of him as a blind beggar on the streets of London having been mobbed and thrown in a lime pit. However, none of these reports were ever confirmed. The last known sighting of him was in the English town of Carlisle.

Knox kept silent about his dealings with Burke and Hare, but his popularity among students decreased. His applications for other positions in the Edinburgh Medical School were rejected. He moved to the Cancer Hospital in London and died in 1862.

Political consequences

The murders highlighted the crisis in medical education and led to the subsequent passing of the Anatomy Act 1832, which expanded the legal supply of medical cadavers to eliminate the incentive for such behaviour. About the law, the Lancet editorial stated:

"Burke and Hare ... it is said, are the real authors of the measure, and that which would never have been sanctioned by the deliberate wisdom of parliament, is about to be extorted from its fears ... It would have been well if this fear had been manifested and acted upon before sixteen human beings had fallen victims to the supineness of the Government and the Legislature. It required no extraordinary sagacity to foresee, that the worst consequences must inevitably result from the system of traffic between resurrectionists and anatomists, which the executive government has so long suffered to exist. Government is already in a great degree, responsible for the crime which it has fostered by its negligence, and even encouraged by a system of forbearance." [6]

Burke and Hare in popular culture

The murders were adapted into a 1948 film with the working title Crimes of Burke and Hare; however, the British Board of Film Censors deemed its topic too disturbing and insisted that references to Burke and Hare be excised. The film was redubbed with alternative dialogue and characters, and was released as The Greed of William Hart.[7]

The 1960 film The Flesh and The Fiends starred Peter Cushing as Knox, Donald Pleasence as Hare and George Rose as Burke.[8] The following year, The Anatomist featured Alastair Sim as Knox.[9]

In the 1964 Jack Lemmon comedy film Good Neighbor Sam Lemmon's character works for the advertising firm of Burke & Hare.

The 1971 film Burke and Hare starred Derren Nesbitt. Burke and Hare also made an appearance in the Hammer Horror film Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde.

In 1985, Freddie Francis directed a film version of the events entitled The Doctor and the Devils.[10]

A 1963 episode of The Twilight Zone, "The New Exhibit", featured wax museum statues of Burke and Hare as part of a collection of notorious serial killers.

The November 23, 1964 episode of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, "The McGregor Affair" featured Burke and Hare as characters. Andrew Duggan starred as McGregor,[clarification needed] Burke was played by Arthur Malet, and Hare by Michael Pate.

In the 1989 children Series TUGS, there are two characters parodied off of Burke and Hare named Burke and Blair who are scrap dealers, a clear equivalent to selling bodies for tugboats.[citation needed]

The murders, particularly those of Mary Patterson and Daft Jamie, are the main plot point in the Doctor Who audio drama Medicinal Purposes, starring Colin Baker, Leslie Phillips and David Tennant.

The Edinburgh-based football club the Body Snatchers is named after Burke and Hare.

See also

Bibliography

  • Adams, Norman (2002). Scottish Bodysnatchers. Goblinshead. ISBN 1899874402.
  • Bailey, Brian (2002). Burke and Hare: The Year of the Ghouls. Mainstream. ISBN 1840185759.
  • Douglas, Hugh (1973). Burke and Hare. Hale. ISBN 070913777X.
  • Edwards, Owen Dudley (1993). Burke and Hare. Mercat Press. ISBN 1873644256.
  • Howard, Amanda (2004). "William Burke and William Hare". River of Blood: Serial Killers and Their Victims. Universal. ISBN 1581125186. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  • MacDonald, Helen (2005). Human Remains: Episodes in Human Dissection. Melbourne University Press. ISBN 0522851576.
  • MacGregor, George (1884). The History of Burke and Hare and of the Resurrectionist Times: A Fragment from the Criminal Annals of Scotland. T.D. Morison. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  • Menefee, Samuel Pyeatt (1994). "The West Port Murders and the Miniature Coffins from Arthur's Seat". Book of the Old Edinburgh Club. Vol. 3. The Old Edinburgh Club. pp. ns 63–81. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  • Richardson, Ruth (2001). Death, Dissection and the Destitute: The Politics of the Corpse in Pre-Victorian Britain. Chicago University Press. ISBN 0226712400.
  • Roughead, William (2000). "The West Port Murders". Classic Crimes: A Selection from the Works of William Roughead. New York Review of Books. ISBN 0940322463. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)

References

  1. ^ "William Burke & William Hare".
  2. ^ Howard, p. 50
  3. ^ Howard, p. 54
  4. ^ "Burke's skin pocket book". Scotland Medicine. Archived from the original on 2008-10-11. Retrieved 2008-10-11.
  5. ^ "William Burke". Gazetteer for Scotland. Archived from the original on 2008-10-11. Retrieved 2008-10-11.
  6. ^ Lancet editorial, 1828-9 (1), pp 818-21, 28.3.1829.
  7. ^ The Greed of William Hart (1948) at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  8. ^ The Flesh and the Fiends (1960) at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  9. ^ The Anatomist (1961) at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  10. ^ The Doctor and the Devils (1985) at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata

External links