John Haigh: The Acid Bath
Murderer
Crimeandinvestigation.co.uk
Biography
One of the most bizarre and
disturbing cases of mass murder is that committed by John Haigh, a
respectable, well dressed, middle-class man with a surfeit of charm but
who, in the late 1940s, disposed of at least six victims in a manner
that prompted his labelling as a vampire.
Haigh’s motivations for his crimes,
which involved luring his prey to a fate where their blood was consumed
before being dissolved in acid, have never been clearly corroborated.
His claim to have been disturbed in his childhood by his strict
religious parents, leading to a psychotic state of mind obsessed with
religious iconography and sacrificial fantasies, has been disputed.
Critics believe that instead of insanity fuelling Haigh’s vampire-like
activities, he was in fact a cold-hearted killer who arrogantly believed
that where there was no body, there was no crime to pin on him.
John George Haigh was born on 24
July 1909 in Stamford, Lincolnshire. The family moved to Outwood, West
Yorkshire, where Haigh spent the next 24 years of his life. He was
brought up in a fanatically religious household where references to ‘the
Lord’ were used frequently to remind the young Haigh that he was always
observed by a higher and disapproving deity. Haigh himself claimed that
his childhood was bleak and lonely. His only friends were his few pets
and caring for the neighbour’s dog. A tall fence around the house, put
up by his father, kept out prying eyes or any social contact with the
outside world.
Haigh’s parents belonged to a
religious sect known as the Plymouth Brethren, who were purist and
anticlerical. Bible stories were the only form of entertainment. Even
participating in sports of any kind was forbidden.
According to Haigh Snr the world
was ‘evil’ and the family needed to keep themselves separate. As his
father had also told him that the blue blemish on his own head had been
the result of him ‘sinning’ in his youth, it is perhaps not surprising
that the young Haigh became obsessed and terrified by developing a
similar ‘sign of the devil’ due to the slightest misdemeanour. He was
told that his mother had no ‘mark’ as she was an angel.
It is said that a turning point in
the boy’s developing psyche came when Haigh realised that no such
blemish would appear, despite having lied or committed some other
questionable behaviour. He then started to believe that he was
invincible and could get away with anything.
Claims of being afflicted by dreams
of Gothic, nightmarish proportions, where trees would turn into
crucifixes weeping blood, have to be viewed with caution. Haigh was
later known to be manipulative and a compulsive liar, prone to saying
anything to extricate himself from a compromising position. At the time
of his arrest for murder, his personal enquiries into what may befall
him if he was found to be insane, is an indication that Haigh was aware
that appearing ‘bonkers’ and damaged by his childhood would possibly
work in his favour when it came to court.
In 1934 Haigh stopped attending his
parents' church and married Beatrice Hammer, a 21-year-old woman he
barely knew. Despite having been impressed by Haigh’s manners and charm,
she was uncertain about his character but still went ahead with the
marriage on 6 July 1934.
Haigh's parents allowed the couple
to live with them although the marriage lasted only about four months,
ending when Haigh was arrested in October 1934 and sent to prison for
fraud. While he was incarcerated, Beatrice gave birth to a baby daughter,
whom she gave up for adoption. Haigh saw her only once more; briefly, to
lie by telling her that they were never officially wed because he
already had a wife at the time.
Despite his abilities Haigh spent a
considerable amount of time in prison for mainly fraudulent practices
that involved various illegal enterprises. During a brief period he
worked at an amusement park run by a Mr William ‘Mac’ Donald McSwan and
his parents Donald McSwan and wife Amy. The family liked Haigh, promoted
him in the business and were sorry to see him leave when he decided he
wanted glittering prizes elsewhere.
His next project, involving setting
up a false solicitor’s office, earned him four years in prison. It was
while he was incarcerated that he thought up a new scheme to become rich
quickly, instead of toiling for a living. His plan was simply to go
after rich, older women. Haigh had also convinced himself that if there
was no corpse, then there could be no conviction.
Such a belief no doubt prompted him
into working with sulphuric acid in the prison's tin shop where he
experimented on mice and made studies of the effects of acid on animal
tissue.
After Haigh was released from
prison, he set out to carry his heinous plan. In the interim he stayed
with the Stephen family, where he began a close friendship with one of
the daughters, Barbara, who despite the 20-year age gap believed that
she could become the next Mrs Haigh.
In 1944 Haigh was involved in a car
accident where he suffered a wound to the head, which bled into his
mouth. He later referred to this event as having been the catalyst that
reawakened his blood-filled nightmares. Shortly afterwards he rented a
basement space at 79 Gloucester Road, where he set up his ‘workshop’, a
grim death trap to lure unsuspecting victims
The Crimes
At a public house in Kensington,
Haigh chanced upon former employer 'Mac' McSwan again. Mac was happy to
see him and took Haigh to see his parents. During the friendly reunion
they told Haigh of their recent investments in property. This
information was to seal their fates. After socialising with Mac for
several weeks, Haigh carried out his plan on the 9 September 1944.
In Haigh's diary, he claimed that
he had a sudden need for blood so he hit McSwan over the head with a
blunt instrument. Then he slit his throat. He says, "I got a mug and
took some blood, from his neck, in the mug, and drank it."
Haigh later found a 40-gallon
barrel in which to put McSwan’s body and then filled it with sulphuric
acid. He described in his confession how, when the body was finally
submerged in liquid acid, the fumes overwhelmed him and he had to go
outside. Later he covered the drum and went home to sleep, leaving his
former employer and friend to dissolve into a liquid sludge. It was
during the night that he supposedly suffered from more surreal and blood-filled
nightmares.
The next day the remains of McSwan
were little more than cold liquid and lumps which Haigh disposed of down
a drain. Knowing that he had killed someone and removed all traces of
them gave Haigh a feeling of euphoria.
Haigh managed to convince McSwan’s
parents that their son had gone away to avoid conscription. He even sent
fake postcards to them from Scotland pretending to be their son. However,
Haigh’s main concern was to acquire the rest of the McSwan assets.
The next murder would be committed
with the addition of new equipment to deal with dissolving bodies. A
stirrup-pump, DIY tin face masks and even a bath tub made of steel,
painted to make it more resistant to corrosion, were all employed by
Haigh in his obscene workshop of death.
The McSwan Murders
According to a police statement,
before Haigh ventured on his plan to cruelly dispose of the remainder of
the McSwan family, he also murdered a middle-aged woman from Hammersmith.
The McSwans disappeared on 2 July
1945. They were killed in a similarly tragic way to their son. Haigh hit
them first, killing them and then claimed to have drunk their blood,
before dissolving them in acid baths.
After informing the McSwans'
landlady that the couple had gone to America, Haigh had all of their
mail forwarded to him, including Mr McSwan's pension. He then set about
forging their son’s signature on a Power of Attorney form. By forging a
deed on a property owned by Mrs McSwan and appropriating it into a false
name, Haigh managed to make nearly £2000 from selling the property. That,
along with securities and sales of possessions, totalled £6000.
For a while Haigh managed to
swindle people through a variety of scams, including posing as a liaison
officer dealing with patents and setting up fake branches in several
towns. It was also around this time that he later claimed in a police
confession that he had killed and disposed of a young man called Max
from Kensington.
Haigh’s spoils from the McSwans
were running out fast and the evil sociopath needed money from new
victims. This time he chose a more worldly couple, Dr Archibald
Henderson, 52, and his wife, Rose, 41, who were selling their home
Cultivating a relationship with the
couple, based on a shared passion for music, Haigh encouraged them to
reveal information about their properties.
Renting a storehouse on Leopold
Road in Crawley, London, Haigh moved his possessions from Gloucester
Street and began setting up his obscene workshop once again. This time
he ordered three carboys of sulphuric acid and two 40-gallon drums
without tops.
On 12 February 1946, he drove Dr
Henderson to Crawley and shot him in the head with Crawley’s own
revolver. He then left the body in a storeroom and set off to get Mrs
Henderson. After some reluctance she was driven to the storehouse. Haigh
shot her from behind and after trussing up both her and her husband’s
bodies, left them overnight. Haigh later claimed to the police that he
drank blood from both of them.
Haigh dissolved both bodies in acid
but this time the grisly act did not erase all traces, as Mr Henderson’s
foot was left intact. This did not seem to bother Haigh too much, as he
dumped all the remains including the foot in the corner of a yard. The
psychopath by now felt immune to being captured.
Efforts to maintain the impression
that the Henderson’s were still alive were methodical and time consuming.
Haigh even forged letters by Rose Henderson, writing a lengthy letter to
her brother. After selling their properties and possessions he acquired
around £8000 in total. Showing a sickening contempt for his victims he
even gave his girlfriend Barbara some of Mrs Henderson’s clothes to wear.
Unexpectedly, Rose Henderson’s
brother Burlin was prepared to go to the police. Haigh managed to
convince him that the couple had emigrated to South Africa on the
grounds that Dr Henderson had carried out an illegal abortion.
As an indication of Haigh’s
depravity and sociopathic tendencies, he even planned on visiting the
mother of a recently deceased school friend whom he had spotted in the
obituaries section of a local newspaper.
No doubt Haigh had intentions to
dispose of the grieving mother and misappropriate any possessions he
could. His plan was foiled when the frail woman unexpectedly died
herself.
Haigh’s money once again started to
run out, mainly due to gambling and expensive tastes which included
staying at an upmarket hotel. While there he had socialised with a
wealthy elderly woman, Mrs Olive Durand-Deacon, and thought up murderous
plans to dispose of her.
In June 1948 Haigh claimed that his
car was stolen but the Lagonda was found smashed at the foot of a cliff.
Less than a month later, an unidentified body was found nearby. However,
the police decided that the two incidents were unrelated. Haigh denied
having anything to do with the body, even after his arrest.
Haigh had told girlfriend Barbara
that he wanted to collect the car insurance and even took her to the
spot where the Lagonda had been written off. It was then that she began
to become suspicious of her soon-to-be husband.
In the meantime, despite having
killed Mrs Durand-Deacon, his money was running out again and he needed
to pay off loans. Even although he tried to invite other people out to
his Crawley den of death, no-one took him up on his offer.
Also, Rose Henderson’s brother was
once again causing problems for Haigh by insisting that the police
locate his sister due to a death in the family. Haigh realised that he
would have to silence him too.
Before Haigh could carry out his
callous intentions on both Mrs Durand-Deacon and Burlin Henderson, he
was arrested. His first comment to the reception officer when he first
arrived at Lewes prison was, "This is the result of doing six people,
but not for personal gain". Haigh then confessed to everything
The Arrest
Prison Visits
Beside his parents, the one person who was profoundly
affected by news of Haigh being a callous mass murderer was Barbara
Stephens, the woman he was supposed to love and marry. She visited him
regularly in prison trying to understand what kind of man she had been
involved with. Did he intend to kill her, she asked? He never
entertained the idea, was the seemingly genuine reply. However, Barbara
knew that at some point she may have succumbed to a similar fate when
Haigh saw her as an inconvenience.
There appeared to be no remorse on Haigh’s part and
he revelled in revealing his grisly escapades which were recounted in
the newspapers.
Forensics
Even although the acid had destroyed a great deal of
evidence, not everything had been eliminated. Ghoulish relics such small
bones, dentures, Mr Henderson’s foot and a gall bladder were all
discovered, as the forensic team sifted through tons of mud and sludge.
Technicians had to wear rubber gloves and cover their arms in Vaseline
to protect themselves from the acid. They found the following items.
1. 28 pounds of human body fat
2. 3 faceted gallstones
3. Part of a left foot, not quite eroded
4. 18 fragments of human bone
5. Upper and lower dentures, intact
6. The handle of a red plastic bag
7. A lipstick container
Despite the forensic evidence, it was Haigh’s very
own sense of invincibility and arrogance that was to be his greatest
undoing in finding him guilty.
Haigh was of the opinion that nothing could be found
from his human slaughterhouse and confidently recounted in great detail
his escapades of death. As far as he was concerned, it was a case of
corpus delicti. No bodies, no crime, no punishment.
Psychiatric Evaluation
On 1 April 1949, EG Robey opened the case for the
prosecution before ten Sussex magistrates. Haigh was in a confident mood
and even made light banter throughout the proceedings, as if he was
unaware of the magnitude of his crimes. If ever there was an
illustration of sociopathic tendencies, that is the inability to
empathise and recognise human feelings and emotions, Haigh was the
perfect embodiment of such dysfunction.
Haigh had during an early confession not only
admitted to many of the deaths but had also enquired as to what the
outcome would be with anyone who was declared insane. It seemed at this
stage Haigh had been mulling over the possibility of appearing mad in
order to escape the noose and had most likely invented the stories of
nightmarish dreams and claims to be a vampire in order to literally save
his neck.
During court proceedings EG Robey called thirty-three
witnesses to prove premeditation of murder for gain. He laid out his
case in the form of a basic chronology that showed how rational Haigh's
movements were and had not been the actions of someone with diminished
responsibility.
Haigh was also examined by several doctors and
psychologists who were interested in the defendant’s claim’s to have a
need to drink blood. Such a compulsion, if genuine, is part of a sexual
deviation and related to the act of violence itself. However, Haigh, who
it appeared had little interest in sex, gave no indication that he
suffered from such a disorder.
Most of the psychologists agreed that although Haigh
suffered from mental health issues he was not ‘insane’ and had been
perfectly aware of his murderous actions that had involved meticulous
planning. One eminent psychiatrist believed without any doubt that Haigh
had a 'paranoid constitution', the same mental disease as Hitler.
Haigh, they believed, had most likely developed a
paranoid personality to escape his parents’ suffocating universe, in
order to relieve himself from emotional pain. His upbringing had
contributed to a mental state where the dividing lines between reality
and fantasy had become blurred.
The result was that Haigh had an acute sense of
omnipotence and believed he was above the law. He was in effect an
‘egocentric paranoiac’ who, although aware that killing people was
against the law, still thought that it was part of fulfilling his
destiny.
Haigh tried to impress on the psychiatrists more
details of his abnormal dreams and obsession with blood drinking but
none of them bought his efforts to portray himself as a lunatic. However,
something of which they were not aware was that Haigh had years before
developed a friendship with an employee of Sussex psychiatric hospital
and had shown a great deal interest in mental illness. He possessed a
talent for deception, having over the years also posed as a lawyer,
engineer and a doctor.
The Trial
On 18 July 1949 four thousand
people crowded into the small town of Lewes hoping to get a seat in the
court. Mr Justice Humphries presided.
Haigh had no money to pay for his
defence so 'The News of the World' newspaper did a deal with him and
offered to pay for his counsel if he would provide them with an
exclusive. The 'Daily Mirror' newspaper was also found in contempt of
court for emphasising Haigh being a vampire. The editor, Silvester Bolam,
was sentenced to three months in prison. The paper also had to pay
£10,000 in court costs.
Haigh pleaded not guilty. The
prosecution rested its case of deliberate premeditated murder for gain.
Haigh’s defence counsel tried to rely on the issue of the defendant’s
insanity, describing for the court how his ‘mental illness’ would have
affected his ability to appreciate the morality of his acts.
It was clear that Haigh was aware
that what he was doing was wrong in the eyes of the law, as evidenced by
his attempt to cover up his crimes. With that admission the defence
collapsed.
There was only one issue to be
decided, the question of the prisoner's sanity. The defence's
psychiatrist failed to prove that Haigh’s judgment was impaired. Also,
because Haigh had initially enquired about getting released from
Broadmoor, it appeared as if he was thinking of using ‘insanity’ to get
him off the hook.
The prosecution declared it was he
was simply a man who believed he had discovered the perfect crime,
committed murder for gain and then pretended he was insane when he was
caught.
The jury were left to decide
whether paranoia could be considered a mental disease or defect. It took
them only fifteen minutes to come to a conclusion. Haigh was found
guilty.
The judge asked Haigh if he had
anything to say for himself. Haigh cocked his head and said, "Nothing
at all". Donning a black cap, the judge sentenced him to be hung until
dead
The Aftermath
Haigh finished his life story for
the newspaper that had paid for his trial. He also wrote letters to
Barbara Stephens and to his parents who did not see him before he died.
His mother sent greetings through a reporter. Haigh also told Barbara
that he believed in reincarnation and that he would be back to complete
his mission. Madame Tussaud’s requested a fitting for a death mask and
Haigh was happy to oblige.
On 6 August 1949, Haigh was hanged
at Wandsworth Prison.
Madam Tussaud’s erected a wax
figure of Haigh, complete with his very own clothes that he bequeathed
to the institution.