Herbert John Bennett
Bennett was a 21-year-old who
would try his hand at any get-rich-quick scheme he could think of. He
was ably assisted by his young wife, Mary Jane, who he had married in
West Ham on 22nd July 1897. In 1900 he fell in love with a parlourmaid
named Alice Meadows. On 28th August 1900 he proposed marriage to the
girl, notwithstanding his wife and young child. By this time he was
living apart from his family who had taken lodgings in Glencoe Villas,
Bexleyheath.
On 14th September, as a peace
offering to his wife, Bennett offered to take his wife and child on a
holiday to Great Yarmouth. His wife agreed and the next day Mary Jane
and her baby took the train to Yarmouth with Herbert promising to
follow later.
On the night of 22nd September
1900 a man and a woman were seen on Yarmouth beach by a courting
couple, Alfred Mason and Blanche Smith. There were sounds of a woman
moaning and discretion stopped Alfred and Blanche investigating.
The next morning, the body of a
young woman, strangled with a bootlace, was found on the beach. The
police took a long time identifying the corpse as that of Mrs Bennett
as she had booked into a local boarding house, run by a Mrs Rudrum, as
a widow from York named Hood.
Bennett was back in London by this time. Once the police had identified
the body as Mrs Bennett it took no time to find her husband and he was
arrested in London on 6th November. Bennett had made a fatal error. He
had taken from the body a gold chain. A photograph of the woman, taken
the day before the murder, showed her wearing the chain and her Yarmouth
landlady identified it as having been worn by Mrs Bennett when she left
the house on the fateful night. A search of Bennett's London lodgings
quickly revealed the chain.
Once Bennett had been charged the
press had a field day, judging him guilty before any eveidence had
been heard and even paying some of the witnesses for their stories
before the trial began.
Bennett's trial opened on 24th
February 1901 at the Old Bailey and he was defended by Sir Edward
Marshall Hall. Hall, who tried to convince the jury that the chain
found in Bennett's lodgings was of a different design to the one in
the photograph. With the background of feeling running high against
the defendant, there was nothing Marshall Hall could do nothing to
save Bennett from the gallows. He made no confession and was hanged at
Norwich Gaol on 21st March 1901 by James Billington with his brother,
Thomas, assisting.
The body of Dora May Gray was
found on Yarmouth beach on 14th July 1912. She had been strangled by a
bootlace. Her killer was never found.
Murder-UK.com