On 22 October 1910 Dr. Hawley Crippen was convicted at the Old Bailey of his wife’s murder. The police had found the gruesome remains of a body beneath the coal cellar of his house, wrapped in a male pyjama jacket and identified as his wife Cora, it had no head, no limbs, no bones and no genitals, but there were traces of a poison that Crippen was discovered to recently purchased. Recent analysis of the remains indicate that the corpse found in his house were not female.
On 22 October 1974 a bomb exploded in Brooks Club injuring three members of staff, one of the first on the scene was Conservative Party leader Edward Heath who was dining nearby
At Newgate 1789 Catherine Murphy was the last woman to executed by burning however all was not so as she had been hanged first for coining
The 5-star Lanesborough Hotel was built by James Lane, 2nd Viscount Lanesborough in 1719 before becoming St George’s Hospital in 1733
When Augusta of Saxe-Coburg married Frederick, Prince of Wales in 1736 she was sick down her dress, an ill omen he died before being crowned
Longest Budget speech ever: Gladstone, 1853 – 4hrs 45mins. Drank sherry and beaten egg, the budget only time any MP is allowed alcohol in the chamber)
Ray Davis originally wrote about Liverpool sunset in a nod to The Beatles but was persuaded to eulogise about the city that he loved
In the 80s Cynthia Payne was convicted of running a brothel at 32 Ambleside Avenue, Streatham, luncheon vouchers paid for personal services
The Wimbledon Championships held annually since 1877 at the All-England Club is the oldest tennis tournament in the world
Over 47 million litres water are pumped from the Tube each day, enough to fill a standard leisure centre swimming pool every quarter of an hour
A Billingsgate porter’s hat aka ‘bobbin’ is made of wood and leather to support heavy boxes of fish. The upturned brim captures the fish juice
The TARDIS, (Dr Who’s transport) can be found outside Earl’s Court station. Or at least an old police call box can
Trivial Matter: London in 140 characters is taken from the daily Twitter feed @cabbieblog.
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Very interesting as always. Do you know what the crime of “coining” was? I wonder if it gave rise to the British expression “coining it”?
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I’ve never thought of that. I’m pretty sure coining was when shavings were taken off the edge of coins (they were silver and gold then) to be sold. That is why coins had a milled edge. The penalty getting caught was pretty awful! Thanks for the comment.
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Yes, that was what they did, and it carried on for a long time before the content of precious metals in coins was reduced by half in 1920, and then completely removed in 1947.
I remember the Cynthia Payne case really well, and the film they made about her with Julie Walters. One of my colleagues in the ambulance service lived in Ambleside Avenue, and had signed a petition complaining about her running a brothel nearby. I told him I didn’t think she was doing any harm. 🙂
Cheers, Pete.
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