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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume V

WILLIAM CORDER

Executed 11th of August, 1828, for the Murder of Maria
Marten, in the Red Barn, the Crime being revealed
to the Victim's Mother in Three Dreams

THE murder for which this most diabolical criminal
merited and justly underwent condign punishment was
as foul and dark a crime as ever stained the annals of public
justice. Maria Marten, the victim of his offence, was born
in July, 1801, and was brought up by her father, who was
a mole-catcher, at Polstead, in Suffolk, where she received
an education far superior to her situation in life. Possessed
of more than ordinary personal advantages -- a pretty face
and a fine form and figure -- it is little to be wondered at
that she was beset by admirers, and that, artless and in-
experienced as she was, she should have imprudently fixed
her affections upon an unworthy object. An unfortunate
step ruined the character of the young woman, and a second
mishap with a gentleman of fortune, residing in the neigh-
bourhood of her father's house, left her with a child -- which
at the time of her death was three and a half years old.
About the year 1826 she formed a third liaison, with the man
who became her deliberate murderer, William Corder.
   William Corder was the son of an opulent farmer at
Polstead. Having become acquainted with the girl Marten,
the consequence of an illicit intercourse which took place
between them was a child. From that time he became
much attached to her, and was a frequent visitor at her
father's house. The child died within a short period of its
birth, and from the circumstance of its having died suddenly,
and of Corder having taken it away at night and disposed
of its body in a manner which he would never explain, an
idea was entertained that it had come unfairly by its death.
However strongly this notion may have taken possession
of the public mind, after the apprehension of Corder, it does
not appear that any real evidence was ever produced publicly
to support the impression which had got abroad; but certain
 

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it is that the unhappy girl made use of the circumstance as
a means of endeavouring to procure the father of the child
to fulfil a promise which he had made that he would make
her his wife. On the 18th of May, 1827, Corder called at
the house of old Marten, and expressed his willingness
that the ceremony should be performed; and he said that,
in order that no time should be lost, and that the marriage
might be as private as possible, he had made up his mind
to have it celebrated by licence instead of by banns. The
next day was appointed for the wedding, and he persuaded
the unhappy girl  to dress herself in a suit of his clothes, so
as to secure the greatest secrecy, and to accompany him to
a part of his premises called the Red Barn, where she could
exchange them for her own, and from whence he would
convey her in a gig, which he had in readiness, to a church
at Ipswich. The girl consented to this singular proposi-
tion, and Corder immediately quitted the house, and was
soon after followed by his unhappy victim, who carried
with her such part of her own clothes as would be necessary
to appear with in church. In the course of a conversation
which took place between Corder and the mother of the girl,
before their going away, the former repeatedly declared his
intention to make the girl his lawful wife, and he urged,
as a reason why she should go with him immediately, that
he knew a warrant had been issued against her for her
bastard children.
   Within a few minutes after Corder had quitted the house
he was seen by the brother of the girl to walk in the direc-
tion of the Red Barn, with a pickaxe over his shoulder; but
from that time nothing was ever heard of the unfortunate
girl, except through the fictitious communications received
from Corder, who still remained at his mother's house at
Polstead. The return of Maria Marten had been expected
to take place within a day or two after the time of her
quitting her father's house; but as she had before occa-
sionally exhibited considerable irregularity in the duration
of her visits to Corder, and as also there was an under-
standing that the latter should procure her a temporary

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lodging, little anxiety or alarm was at first felt at her prolonged
absence. A fortnight elapsed, however, and then her mother
proceeded to question Corder upon the subject, when he
declared that she was quite safe and well, and that he had
placed her at some distance, lest his friends might discover
the fact of his marriage, and exhibit displeasure at the cir-
cumstance. Thus from time to time he put off the inquiries
which were made of him; but in the month of September
he declared he was in ill-health, and quitted Suffolk with the
avowed object of proceeding to the Continent; and it is not
a little remarkable that before he left Polstead he expressed
great anxiety that the Red Barn should be well filled with
stock -- a desire which he personally saw fulfilled. He took
with him about four hundred pounds in money; and
several letters were subsequently received by his mother,
who was a widow, and also by the Martens, in which he
stated that he was living at the Isle of Wight with Maria.
It was remarked that, although he represented his residence
to be in the Isle of Wight, his letters always bore the
London postmark. At length strange surmises and suspicions
began to be entertained, in consequence of no personal
communication having yet been received from his supposed
wife. The parents of the unhappy girl became more and
more disturbed and dissatisfied ; and the circumstances
which eventually led to the discovery of this most atrocious
crime are of so extraordinary and romantic a nature as almost
to manifest an especial interposition of Providence in marking
out the offender.
   In the course of the month of March, 1828, Mrs Marten
dreamed on three successive nights that her daughter had
been murdered and buried in the Red Barn. Terrified at
the repetition of the vision, an undefined suspicion, which
she had always entertained, that her daughter had been
unfairly dealt with, appeared fully confirmed in her own
mind; and so lively were her feelings, and so convinced
was she of the truth of the augury, that on Saturday, the
19th of April, she persuaded her husband to apply for
permission to examine the Red Barn, with the professed

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object of looking for their daughter's clothes. The grain
which had been deposited in the barn had by this time
been removed, and, permission having been obtained, the
wretched father proceeded to the accomplishment of the
object he had in view. He applied himself to the spot
pointed out to his wife in her dream as the place in which
her daughter's remains were deposited; and there, upon
digging, he turned up a piece of the shawl which he knew
his daughter had worn at the time of her quitting her home.
Alarmed at the discovery, he prosecuted his search still
further, and when he had dug to the depth of eighteen
inches, with his rake he dragged out a part of a human
body. Horror-struck he staggered from the spot ; but
subsequent examination proved that his suspicions were well
founded, and that it was indeed his murdered daughter,
the place of deposit of whose remains had been so remark-
ably pointed out. The body, as may be supposed, was in
an advanced state of decomposition ; but the dress, which
was perfect, and certain marks in the teeth of the deceased,
afforded sufficient proofs of her identity.
   As may be imagined, the whole neighbourhood was in an
uproar of confusion at this most extraordinary circumstance,
and information was immediately conveyed to the coroner,
in order that an inquest might be held. By the time a coroner's
jury had assembled, a surgical examination of the body had
taken place; and Mr John Lawden, a surgeon, proved that
there were appearances yet remaining sufficient to indicate
that the deceased had come to her death by violent means.
He said that there was a visible appearance of blood on the
face and on the clothes of the deceased, and also on a hand-
kerchief which was round the neck ; that the handkerchief
appeared to have been tied extremely tight, and beneath the
folds a wound was visible in the throat, which had evidently
been inflicted by some sharp instrument. There was also
a wound in the orbit of the right eye ; and it seemed as
if something had been thrust in which had fractured the
small bones and penetrated the brain. When the body
was found it was partly enveloped in a sack, and was

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clothed only in a shift, flannel petticoat, stays, stockings
and shoes.
   No sooner had the body been discovered than all eyes
turned to Corder as the murderer. Information having been
dispatched to London, Lea, an officer of Lambeth Street,
was forthwith sent in pursuit of the supposed offender.
With a loose clue only, he traced him from place to place,
until at length he found him residing at Grove House,
Ealing Lane, near Brentford, where, in conjunction with his
wife, whom he had married only about five months before,
and to whom, it was said, he had introduced himself through
the medium of a matrimonial advertisement, he was carrying
on a school for young ladies. It was necessary to employ a
degree of stratagem to obtain admission to the house ; but
at length Lea represented that he had a daughter whom
he wished to put to school, and he was shown into a
parlour, where he found the object of his search sitting at
breakfast with four ladies. He was in his dressing-gown,
and had his watch before him, with which he was minuting
the boiling of some eggs. The officer called him on one
side, and informed him that he had a serious charge against
him; he also inquired whether he was not acquainted with
a person named Maria Marten, at Polstead, but he denied
that he had any knowledge of such a person even by name.
He was then secured. Upon his house being searched,
a brace of pistols, a powder-flask and some balls were
found in a velvet bag, which, on its being subsequently seen
by Mrs Marten, was immediately identified by her as having
been in the possession of her daughter at the time of her
quitting her house for the last time. A sharp-pointed dagger
was also found, and this was identified by a person named
Offord, a cutler, as being one which he had ground for the
prisoner a few days before the murder was committed. The
prisoner, immediately on his apprehension, was conducted
to Polstead, in order that he might undergo an examination
before the coroner ; and the most lively interest was exhibited
by the vast crowds of people who had assembled to catch
a glimpse of him on his being brought into the town. On his

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appearance before the coroner he was dreadfully agitated;
and the circumstances which we have described having been
deposed to by various witnesses, a verdict of wilful murder
was returned against William Corder.
   Thursday, 7th of August, in the same year, was appointed
for the trial of this malefactor, and the anxiety to witness
the proceedings in court, or to obtain early information in
reference to the case, which almost universally prevailed,
was strongly manifested by the assemblage of hundreds of
well-dressed persons of both sexes round the front and back
entrances to the shire hall, Bury St Edmunds, as early as
five o'clock in the morning of that day. The rain fell in
torrents, but many persons braved the weather and remained
without shelter until nine o'clock, when the Lord Chief
Baron (Alexander) arrived, to try the prisoner. At the
moment his Lordship gained admission to the court the
scene which presented itself beggars description. The
barristers who attended the circuit, amongst whom were to
be observed the counsel for the prosecution and the defence,
in vain struggled against the pressure of the opposing
crowd, and many of them, at the moment they had almost
attained their object, were carried back in an exhausted state
to the extremest verge of the assembled multitude. When
his Lordship had taken his seat on the bench the names of
the jury who had been summoned to try the prisoner were
called over; but the crowd was so great, and the sheriff's
force so ineffective, that it was almost impossible to make
way for them into the court. They were, after the lapse
of nearly an hour, brought over the heads of the crowd into
the passage leading into the hall, some with their coats
torn, their shoes off, and nearly fainting.
   Nor was the curiosity of the public confined to the court-
house. Hundreds had early assembled at the door of the
jail and along the road leading thence to the shire hall,
anxious to catch a glimpse of the accused. He left the jail
at a quarter before nine o'clock, having previously attired
himself with much care in a new suit of black, and combed
his hair over his forehead, which he had previously worn

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brushed up in front. On account of the number of challenges
made by the prisoner, it was some time before a jury was
empanelled. At length, however, the prisoner was arraigned
upon the indictment preferred against him. He pleaded
not guilty. The evidence adduced differed but slightly in
effect from the circumstances which we have detailed.
Proof was given that at the time of the discovery of the body
of the deceased marks were distinctly visible, which showed
that she had received a pistol-shot or gun-shot wound; and
it was also proved, by the brother of the deceased girl,
that the prisoner, at the time of his quitting the house
of old Marten on the day of the murder, carried a loaded
gun.
   The prisoner, when called upon for his defence, read
a manuscript paper in a low and tremulous tone of voice.
He declared that when he and the girl reached the barn,
words arose, and Maria flew into a passion. " I was highly
irritated, and asked her, if she was to go on in this way before
marriage, what was I to expect after. She again upbraided
me and, being in a passion, I told her I would not marry her,
and turned from the barn ; but I had scarcely reached the
gate when the report of a pistol reached my ear. I returned
to the barn, and with horror beheld the unfortunate girl
extended on the floor, apparently dead. I was for a short
time stupefied with horror, and knew not what to do. It
struck me to run for a surgeon -- and well would it have
been for me had I done so -- but I raised the unfortunate
girl, in order, if possible, to afford her some assistance, and
found her altogether lifeless; also, to my horror, I discovered
that the dreadful act had been committed by one of my own
pistols, and that I was the only person in existence who
could tell how the fatal act had taken place. The sudden
alarm which seized me suspended my faculties, and it was
some time before I could perceive the awful situation in
which I was placed, and the suspicions which must naturally
arise from my having delayed to make the circumstance
instantly known. I at length found that concealment was
the only means by which I could rescue myself from the

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horrid imputation, and I resolved to bury the body as well
as I was able."
   The Lord Chief Baron summed up, and a verdict
of guilty was returned. At this point the prisoner was
observed to raise his handkerchief to his eyes; and during
the subsequent passing of the sentence of death he seemed
to be dreadfully affected.
On his return to the jail, Mr Orridge, the governor,
made the strongest efforts to induce him to confess. He 
then exclaimed, "I am a guilty man," and immediately
afterwards made a written confession. He subsequently
appeared much easier in 'his mind, and attended service in
the chapel immediately before being carried out for execu-
tion. Just before he was turned off he said in a feeble
tone: " I am justly sentenced, and may God forgive me."
After the execution a spirited bidding took place for the
rope which was used by the hangman; and as much as a
guinea an inch was obtained for  it . Large sums were offered
for the pistols and dagger which were used in the murder,
but they became the property of the sheriff of the county,
who very properly refused to put them up to public com-
petition. A piece of the skin of the wretched malefactor,
which had been tanned, was exhibited for a long time
afterwards at the shop of a leather-seller in Oxford Street.

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