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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume V

JOHN BISHOP AND THOMAS WILLIAMS

Notorious Body-Snatchers, who murdered People and
sold their Bodies to Hospitals, and were executed at
Newgate, 5th of December, 1831

IT was on Saturday, the 5th of November, 1831, that
these two men were apprehended for the crime of which
they were subsequently found guilty, and for which they
were executed. They were immediately conveyed to the
station-house of the F division of police, in Covent Garden,
and on the same night were taken into custody before Mr
Minshull, the sitting magistrate at Bow Street police office.
Bishop and Williams, however, were not the only persons
then charged: James May and James Shields were also

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taken into custody, an allegation of suspicion of murder
having been made against them all generally. At this period
little more than a mere declaration that they were suspected
to have been concerned in the murder of a boy about four-
teen years of age, whose body they had offered for sale at
King's College, was made, and the prisoners were remanded
to await the result of the inquest, which was directed to be
held upon the body of the deceased.
   On Tuesday, the 8th of November, a coroner's jury sat
upon the remains of the unfortunate boy, the prisoners
being in attendance to hear the evidence adduced.
   The first witness called was William Hill, the porter at
the dissecting-room of King's College. He stated that at
about a quarter before twelve on the previous Saturday,
the 5th of November, the bell of the dissecting-room having
been rung, he went to the door, and found the prisoners
Bishop and May there. He had known them both before,
from their having supplied the College with subjects for
dissection. May asked him whether he " wanted anything,"
which, in the language of such persons, was intended to
convey an inquiry as to whether he wanted to buy a subject.
He answered that he did not want anything particularly,
but inquired what they had. The reply was: "A male
subject." He asked of what size he was ; and the prisoner
said he was a boy, about fourteen years old, and he wanted
twelve guineas. He told them he was sure that that
price would not be given, for the school did not want a
subject; but he added that if they would wait he would
acquaint Mr Partridge, the anatomical demonstrator, with
their business. He accordingly informed Mr Partridge
that the prisoners were there, and that gentleman said
he would see them; he, in consequence, directed them
to proceed to a particular part of the building, which was
appropriated to the use of such persons. He met them there,
and they were soon joined by Mr Partridge, who refused
to give them the price they demanded. May then said
that he should have the body for ten guineas ; but this was
still declared to be too much, and Mr Partridge went away.

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The prisoners again pressed the witness to purchase the
subject; and he, at their request, went after Mr Partridge
to ascertain the greatest amount he would pay. Nine guineas
was the sum fixed, and he returned and acquainted the
prisoners with the determination which had been expressed
to give no more than that amount. May said that he would
be d----d if it should come in at less than ten guineas ; but,
as he was going out at the door, Bishop took witness aside
and said: " Never mind May, he is drunk; it shall come
in at nine guineas in the course of half-an-hour."
   They then went away; but at about a quarter past two
in the afternoon they returned with Williams and Shields,
the latter carrying a hamper. May and Bishop carried the
hamper into an inner room. When it was opened a sack
was found inside, which contained the body. May, who
was even more tipsy than he had  been before, now took out
the sack, turned it up and threw the body carelessly on the
ground. He remarked that it was " a good one " ; to which
witness assented; but he observed that the body was par-
ticularly fresh, and, in consequence of some other appear-
ances which presented themselves, he went to Mr Partridge.
Before he went he asked the prisoners what the boy had
died of; May answered that that was no business of
theirs, or his either. He directed them to wait in the ad-
joining room until his return. He acquainted Mr Partridge
with his suspicions, and that gentleman, in consequence,
accompanied him to the room to look at the body. He
thought that the body was more rigid than was usual, and it
appeared to him as if it had not been buried. The left hand
was turned towards the head, and the fingers were firmly
clenched; there was also a cut on the forehead, from which
blood appeared to have issued upon the chest. Mr Partridge
concurred with him in thinking that there were some sus-
picious appearances about the body, and went away. Other
gentlemen, students at the college, came, soon after, and were
of the same opinion. Witness inquired of the prisoners how
the cut came in the forehead of the deceased ; and Bishop
answered that May had done it, when he had thrown the

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body on the ground. When Mr Partridge returned he
showed the prisoners a fifty-pound note, which he said he
would have to get changed before he could pay them. Bishop
suggested that he should give them what money he had,
and they would call again on the following Monday for the
remainder of the price; but this was objected to, and Mr
Partridge again went away. In about a quarter of an hour
Mr Mayo, the professor of anatomy at the college, came
into the room with Mr Rogers, the inspector of police, and
some constables, and the prisoners were immediately given
into custody. The body was then delivered to the police,
together with the hamper and sack; and they, with the
prisoners, were taken to the station-house.
   Mr Richard Partridge was called, and he stated that he
was demonstrator of anatomy at King's College. It was his
opinion that the marks of internal violence which he had
found were sufficient to produce death. He believed that
the appearances of internal violence to the spinal marrow
had been caused by a blow, or some other species of violence
inflicted on the back of the neck.
   Mr George Beaman, the surgeon to the parish of St Paul,
Covent Garden, had also examined the body, and his opinion
corresponded with that expressed by Mr Partridge. His
belief was that the deceased had died within thirty-six hours
of the time when he first saw it on the Saturday; and he
was also of opinion that the deceased had not died a natural
death.
   Other evidence having been given, the jury returned a
verdict of  "Wilful murder against some person or persons
unknown";  but expressed their strong belief that the
prisoners, Bishop, Williams and May, had been concerned
in the transaction.
   It was impossible that an inquiry which had hitherto
terminated so unsatisfactorily should cease here, and Mr
Minshull, with that determination by which his conduct as
a magistrate was always characterised, immediately took
upon himself the arduous task of conducting the in-
vestigation to its close. The prisoners were then remanded,

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and on Friday, the 18th of the month, they were again
brought up.
   Witnesses were then examined whose testimony traced
the prisoners Bishop, Williams and May to a noted house-
of-call for body-snatchers -- the Fortune of War public-
house, in Smithfield -- on the 4th of November, where
they appeared to be in earnest conversation. They went
in and out repeatedly all that day; and at night May
was seen with a number of human teeth in a hand-
kerchief, to which some portion of the flesh of the gum
still adhered, upon which he poured water, in order
to clean them. The next morning Shields joined them,
and Bishop was heard endeavouring to induce him to
go to St Bartholomew's Hospital for a hamper, which he
refused to do, in consequence of which Bishop went and
fetched it himself. They then went away, and were not
again seen.
   Upon the delivery of this evidence the examination
concluded, and the prisoners were again remanded.
   On the following day the police proceeded to Nova
Scotia Gardens, and a new and more searching investigation
of the prisoners' house and premises took place. There,
after a minute investigation, they made discoveries which
filled them with horror, and confirmed, by the most positive
evidence, the suspicions which had been excited of the
murderous traffic which had been carried on. About five
yards from Bishop's back door they found a blue jacket,
black trousers and little shirt. About a yard farther on 
they found a blue short coat, a pair of grey trousers with
braces on and a piece of a comb in the pocket, a striped
waistcoat, the back of the collar of which was blood-stained,
and a shirt torn down the centre.
   Afterwards articles of a woman's clothing were found
buried in the garden, which were eventually proved to have
belonged to a woman named Frances Pigburn, another
victim to the designs of these atrocious conspirators.
   Mr Minshull said no doubt could exist that the clothes
were the same which had been worn by Frances Pigburn,

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and he feared there was little doubt that the poor woman
had been murdered. It was inferred that the body had been
sold for the purposes of dissection, and the clothes buried
to avoid detection. In all probability the poor creature had
been searching for lodgings, was met by some of the infernal
gang, and was lured into their den and there destroyed.
To what extent these horrors had been committed it was
impossible to imagine.
   A further warrant for the detention of Bishop, May and
Williams upon this fresh charge was then made out, and
Mr Thomas, police superintendent, was requested to make
every possible inquiry among the hospitals and dissecting-
rooms in the metropolis, to ascertain, if possible, whether
any body answering the description of Mrs Pigburn had
been offered for sale by any of the prisoners within the last
six weeks.
   On Friday, the 2nd of December, 1831, the prisoners
Bishop, May and Williams were placed at the bar of the
Old Bailey to take their trial upon the charge of murder
preferred against them. At ten o'clock Chief Justice Tindal,
Mr Justice Littledale and Mr Baron Vaughan took their
seats upon the bench, the remaining portion of which was
instantly occupied by members of the nobility and persons
of distinction, amongst whom was his Royal Highness the
Duke of Sussex.
   Evidence having been given, the Chief justice summed
up, and the jury returned as their verdict that John Bishop
Thomas Williams and James May were severally guilty of
murder.
   The verdict was received in court with becoming silence;
but the moment it was conveyed to the immense multitude
assembled outside they evinced their satisfaction at the
result by loud and long-continued cheering and clapping
of hands. To such an extent was this expression of the
popular feeling carried that the windows of the court were
obliged to be closed, in order that the voice of the recorder
might be heard passing sentence of death.
   On Sunday the usual sermon was preached in the jail

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chapel, and after that the prisoners Bishop and Williams
were placed in the same cell, where they were visited by
the ordinary and under-sheriffs, to whom they made the
following confessions :--
NEWGATEDecember 4, 1831. 
   I, John Bishop, do hereby declare and confess that the
boy supposed to be the Italian boy was a Lincolnshire boy.
I and Williams took him to my house about half-past ten
o'clock on Thursday night, the 3rd of November, from
the Bell, in Smithfield. We lighted a candle, and gave
the boy some bread and cheese; and after he had eaten, we
gave him a cup full of rum, with about half a small phial of
laudanum in it. I had bought the rum the same evening
in Smithfield, and the laudanum also in small quantities at
different shops. There was no water or other liquid put
into the cup with the rum and laudanum. The boy drank
the contents of the cup directly, in two draughts, and after-
wards a little beer. In about ten minutes he fell asleep in
the chair on which he sat, and I removed him from the
chair to the floor and laid him on his side. We then went
out and left him there. We had a quartern of gin and a
pint of beer at the Feathers, near Shoreditch church, and
then went home again,. having been away from the boy
about twenty minutes. We found him asleep as we had
left him. We took him directly, asleep and insensible, into
the garden, and tied a cord to his feet, to enable us to pull
him up by; and I then took him in my arms and let him
slide from them headlong into the well in the garden;
whilst Williams held the cord to prevent the boy going
altogether too low in the well. He was nearly wholly in
the water, his feet being just above the surface. Williams
fastened the other end of the cord round the paling, to pre-
vent the body getting beyond our reach. The boy struggled
a little with his arms and legs in the water, and the water
bubbled a minute. We waited till these symptoms were
passed, and then went indoors, and afterwards I think we
went out and walked down Shoreditch to occupy the time;
and in three-quarters of an hour we returned, and took him

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out of the well, by pulling him by the cord attached to his
feet. We undressed him in the paved yard, rolled his clothes
up, and buried them where they were found by the witness
who produced them. We carried the boy into the wash-
house, laid him on the floor, and covered him over with
a bag.

   The statement then detailed their subsequent movements
and the attempts they made to sell the body for dissecting
purposes. May, however, knew nothing of the murder.
   In another confession Bishop wrote :
   " I also confess that I and Williams were concerned in
the murder of a female, whom I believe to have been since
discovered to be Frances Pigburn, on or about the 9th of
October last. I and Williams saw her sitting about eleven
or twelve o'clock at night on the step of a door in Shore-
ditch, near the church. She had a child, four or five years
old, with her on her lap. I asked why she was sitting there.
She said she had no home to go to, for her landlord had
turned her out into the street. I told her she might go home
with us and sit by the fire all night. She said she would
go with us, and walked with us to my house, in Nova Scotia
Gardens, carrying her child with her. When we got there
we found the family in bed, and we took the woman in, and
lighted a fire, by which we all sat down together. I went
out for beer, and we all partook of beer and rum (I had
brought the rum from Smithfield in my pocket). The
woman and her child lay down on some dirty linen on the
floor, and I and Williams went to bed. About six o'clock
next morning I and Williams told her to go away, and to
meet us at the London Apprentice, in Old Street Road, at
one o'clock; this was before our families were up. She met
us again at one o'clock at the London Apprentice without
her child; we gave her some halfpence and beer, and
desired her to meet us again at ten o'clock at night at the
same place. After this we bought rum and laudanum at
different places, and at ten o'clock we met the woman again
at the London Apprentice; she had no child with her. We

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drank three pints of beer between us, and stayed there about
an hour. We then walked to Nova Scotia Gardens, and
Williams and I led her into No. 2, an empty house, adjoin-
ing my house. We had no light. Williams stepped out into
the garden with the rum and laudanum, which I had handed
to him; he there mixed them together in a half-pint bottle,
and came into the house to me and the woman, and we gave
her the bottle to drink. She drank the whole in two or three
draughts. There was a quartern of rum and about half a
phial of laudanum. She sat down on the step between the
two rooms in the house, and went off to sleep in about ten
minutes. She was falling back, when I caught her to save
her fall, and laid her back on the floor. Then Williams and
I went to a public-house, got something to drink, and in
about half-an-hour came back to the woman. We took off
her cloak, tied a cord to her feet, carried her to the well in
the garden, and thrust her into it headlong. She struggled
very little afterwards, and the water bubbled a little at the
top. We fastened the cord to the palings, to prevent her
going down beyond our reach, and left her, and took a walk
to Shoreditch and back in about half-an-hour. We left
the woman in the well this length of time that the rum and
laudanum might run out of the body at the mouth. On our
return we took her out of the well, cut off her clothes, carried
the body into the wash-house of my own house, where we
doubled it up and put it into a hair-box, which we corded,
and left it there. Later we took it to St Thomas's Hospital,
where I saw Mr South's footman, and sent him upstairs to
Mr South to ask if he wanted a subject. The servant brought
me word that his master wanted one, but could not give an
answer until the next day, as he had not time to look at it.
I then went to Mr Appleton, at Mr Grainger's, and agreed
to sell it to him for eight guineas; and afterwards I fetched
it from St Thomas's Hospital and took it to Mr Appleton,
who paid me five pounds then, and the rest on the following
Monday 
   "I also confess the murder of a boy, who told us his name
was Cunningham. It was a fortnight after the murder of

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the woman. I and Williams found him sleeping, about
eleven or twelve o'clock at night, on Friday, the 21st of
October, as I think, under some rubbish in the pig-market
at Smithfield. Williams woke him and asked him to come
along with him (Williams)) and the boy walked with
Williams and me to my house in Nova Scotia Gardens. We
took him into my house and gave him some warm beer
sweetened with sugar, with rum and laudanum in it. He
drank two or three cups full, and then fell asleep in a little
chair belonging to one of my children. We laid him on the
floor and then went out for a little while and got something
to drink, and then returned, carried the boy to the well, and
threw him into it in the same way as we had served the other
boy and the woman. He died instantly in the well, and we
left him there a little while to give time for the mixture we
had given him to run out of his body. We then took the
body from the well, tore off the clothes in the garden, and
buried them there. The body we carried into the wash-
house and put it into the same box, and left it there till the
next evening, when we got a porter to carry it with us to
St Bartholomew's Hospital, where I sold it to Mr Smith
for eight guineas. This boy was about ten or eleven years
old ; he said his mother lived in Kent Street, and that he had
not been home for a twelvemonth and better. I solemnly
declare that these are all the murders in which I have been
engaged, or that I know anything of; that I and Williams
were alone concerned in these, and that no other person
whatever knew anything about either of them ; and that
I do not know whether there are others who practise the
same mode of getting bodies for sale. I know nothing of
any Italian boy, and was never concerned in or knew of
the murder of such a boy. I have followed the course
of obtaining a livelihood as a body-snatcher for twelve
years, and have obtained and sold, I think, from five hun-
dred to a thousand bodies; but I declare before God that
they were all obtained after death, and that, with the above
exceptions, I am ignorant of any murder for that or any
other purpose."

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   It was not until subsequent to the delivery of these
statements that May was acquainted with the fact that
the execution of his sentence had been respited during his
Majesty's pleasure.
   Bishop and Williams were executed outside Newgate in
the presence of thirty thousand spectators, who set up a
shout of exultation that was prolonged for several minutes.
The bodies were removed the same night, Bishop to the
King's College, and Williams to the Theatre of Anatomy,
in Windmill Street, Haymarket, to be dissected. They
were publicly exhibited on Tuesday and Wednesday, at both
places, when immense crowds of persons were admitted to
see their remains.

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Newgate Calendar Vol. V Table of Contents / The Complete Newgate Calendar