Chapman, George
Chapman, whose real name was Severin Klosowski, was
38-years-old and the son of a Polish carpenter. After moving to England,
in 1888, he took up employment as a barber's assistant in the East End
of London.
In 1889 he got married and moved to America but it
didn't work out and he separated from his wife and moved back to London
in 1895 where he lived with a married woman named Isabella Spink. He
used her money to buy himself a pub in the City Road. Mrs Spink died in
December 1897 after an illness with symptoms that included abdominal
pains and vomiting.
In 1898 one of his barmaids, Bessie Taylor, became
his mistress. Everything was fine but then three years later in February
1901 she developed similar symptoms to Mrs Spink and died. Soon another
barmaid, Maud Marsh, was employed. She developed abdominal pains and
vomiting and she died on 22 October 1902.
Her mother was highly suspicious and told the doctors
that she thought poisoning might be involved. With this accusation the
doctor had no other choice but to refuse to issue a death certificate
and to order a post-mortem which when it was conducted revealed antimony
poisoning. The bodies of the other two women were exhumed and examined.
It was found that they, too, had died from antimony poisoning.
Chapman was tried at the Old Bailey and it took the
jury only 11 minutes to find him guilty after it was shown that he had
purchased tartar emetic from a local chemist. Although he seemed to
think nothing about causing the death of other people he was far from
calm when the death sentence was passed on him almost collapsing in
court. When his final moment arrived he had to be partly carried to the
gallows and held in place until the job was done. He was executed on 7
April 1903 by William Billington.