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{{Short description|English murder victim (c.1893–1919)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2020}}
{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| image =
| image = Mamie Stewart Brandy Cove 1919A.jpg
| caption = Stuart {{circa|1918}}
| name = Mamie Stuart
| name = Mamie Stuart
| birth_name = Amy Stuart
| birth_name = Amy Stuart
| birth_date = c. 24 November 1893<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.freebmd.org.uk/cgi/information.pl?r=90978730:7763&d=bmd_1644238129 |title=FreeBMD Births: September - December 1893|publisher=freebmd.org.uk |date=19 September 2001 |access-date=15 August 2021}}</ref>
| birth_date =
| birth_place = [[Sunderland]], England
| birth_place = [[Sunderland]], England
| disappeared_date = November - December 1919
| death_date =
| death_place = [[Caswell Bay]], Wales
| disappeared_place = [[Caswell Bay]], Wales
| death_date = 12 November - 6 December 1919 (aged 25-26)
| death_place = Caswell Bay, Wales
| death_cause = Murder. Precise [[cause of death|cause]] unknown. [[Head injury|Skull trauma]] discounted<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/bristol-news/secret-brutal-killing-lies-buried-3677982|title=The Secret of a Brutal Killing Lies Buried in a Bristol Grave for All Eternity|publisher=[[Bristol Post]]|access-date=15 August 2021|date=7 March 2021}}</ref>
| body_discovered = 5 November 1961. [[Brandy Cove]], Wales
| resting_place = [[Bishopwearmouth Cemetery]], Sunderland
| resting_place_coordinates = {{Coord|54.8999|N|1.4206|W|region:UK_type:landmark|display=inline}} (approximate) <!-- {{Coord|LAT|LONG|type:landmark|display=inline}} -->
| occupation = Former [[Chorus line|chorus girl]] <br /> Typist
| known_for = Victim of murder<br/>[[Murder conviction without a body#abolition of "no body, no murder"|No body, no murder principle]]
}}
}}


'''Mamie Stuart''' (c. 24 November 1893 - November or December 1919) was a 26-year-old English woman who disappeared from her home in [[Caswell Bay]], Wales, in 1919 and whose disappearance became known via the media as the '''Chorus Girl Mystery'''.<ref>{{cite news|title=ITV's Crime Files Reveals How Police Searched for Dismembered Body|date=6 September 2016 |url=https://www.itv.com/news/wales/2016-09-06/itvs-crime-files-reveals-how-police-searched-for-dismembered-body |work=[[ITV News]]|access-date=16 August 2021}}</ref> Her husband, George Everard Shotton—who had [[bigamy|bigamously]] married Stuart in 1918—was considered the prime suspect in her disappearance. Although investigators strongly suspected foul play, as no body could be found, Shotton could not be tried for Stuart's murder. He was instead convicted of bigamy and sentenced to eighteen months' imprisonment.<ref>{{cite news|title=Scotland Yard Believes That There Is No Perfect Crime|date=7 December 1961 |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1734&dat=19611207&id=g3ocAAAAIBAJ&sjid=W1EEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6995,2013748&hl=en |work=The Dispatch|access-date=16 August 2021}}</ref>
'''Mamie Stuart''' (1893-1919) was a 26-year-old English woman who disappeared in 1919, presumed the victim of foul play. Her dismembered body was found in 1961 in an abandoned lead mine in Wales. Her husband was suspected, and later found guilty by a coroner's court, of her murder.

Stuart's dismembered body was found by three [[Caving|potholers]] in 1961, stashed behind a slab of rock {{convert|50|ft}} inside a narrow, abandoned [[lead]] [[mining|mine]] on the [[Gower Peninsula]], just {{convert|200|yards}} from the home Stuart had resided in at the time of her disappearance. Shotton had died of [[Manner of death|natural causes]] in a [[Fishponds]] hospital in April 1958.<ref name="FoundConclusion">{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/31131021/mamie-stuarts-body-found-1961/|title=Old Mystery Finally Ends|publisher=[[The StarPhoenix]]|access-date=29 August 2021|date=16 December 1961}}</ref> A coroner's court found him guilty of Stuart's murder in December 1961.<ref name="Coroner">{{cite web|url=https://www.thefreelibrary.com/Grisly+find+solved+old+mystery%3B+Time+to+remember.-a080337666|title=Grisly Find Solved Old Mystery; Time to Remember|date=26 November 2001|access-date=16 August 2021|via=thefreelibrary.com}}</ref>

The disappearance and eventual discovery of Mamie Stuart was known as the '''Chorus Girl Mystery''' due to her background, the duration of time she remained missing, and the unanswered questions behind her ultimate fate.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/31086726/chorus-girl-mystery-new-south-wales/|title=Chorus Girl Mystery: Explorers' Grisly Find|publisher=[[The Sydney Morning Herald]]|access-date=15 August 2021|date=12 November 1961}}</ref>


==Early life==
==Early life==
Amy Stuart was born in [[Sunderland]] in November 1893 to James Stuart, a ship's captain, and his wife Jane (née McGregor). She had one sister, Edith, and a younger brother, James Smith Stuart.
Mamie Stuart (christened 'Amy') was born in 1893 in [[Sunderland]] to parents James, a ship's captain, and Jane. She also had a sister Edith. She was later described as being pretty with brown hair and grey-blue eyes, about 5ft 3in to 5ft 4in tall, with "very even teeth with one missing" and "of good carriage". She left home in her late teens to appear on stage, becoming a touring dancer and showgirl and starting a dance troupe – The Five Verona Girls.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/mamie-stuart-murder-swansea-crime-17229764 | title=The innocent newlywed whose bigamist husband dumped her sawn-up remains in a disused mine shaft | work=Wales Online | date=23 December 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.unsolved-murders.co.uk/murder-content.php?key=2878&termRef=Mamie%20Stuart | title=Unsolved Murders: Mamie Stuart}}</ref>

As an adolescent, Stuart developed a passion for dancing. She also developed aspirations to perform in [[music hall]]s and [[West End of London|West End]] theatres.<ref name="Find"/> With her parents' consent, at the age of fifteen Stuart performed as a [[Chorus line|chorus girl]] on provincial tours with a troupe named ''The Magnets''. She adopted the name "Mamie", and later left her family home to pursue her career. She later formed her own dance troupe, which she named ''The Five Verona Girls''. This troupe performed nationwide<ref name="Caswell">{{cite news|url=https://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/mamie-stuart-murder-swansea-crime-17229764|title=The Innocent Newlywed Whose Bigamist Husband Dumped Her Sawn-up Remains in a Disused Mine Shaft|publisher=Wales Online|access-date=17 August 2021|date=23 December 2019}}</ref><ref name="Verona">{{cite journal|url=http://www.unsolved-murders.co.uk/murder-content.php?key=2878&termRef=Mamie%20Stuart|title=Unsolved Murders: Mamie Stuart |journal=Unsolvedmurders.co.uk |date=23 April 2016|volume=2878 |issue=1919 |access-date=16 August 2021|last1=Murders |first1=Unsolved }}</ref> and became a popular attraction, with the dancers—in a [[prude|prudish]] era—sometimes daring to expose their legs to knee height.<ref name="Prudish">{{cite news|title=Perfect Crime Turned Out to be Only Almost Perfect|date=12 December 1961|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/47024734/redlands-daily-facts/|publisher=[[Redlands Daily Facts]]|access-date=22 August 2021}}</ref>

Stuart was later described by police as being an attractive young woman<ref name="DroitwichSpa">''Swansea Murders'' {{ISBN|978-0-752-49307-7}} ch. 21</ref> with brown, bobbed hair and grey-blue eyes, approximately {{cvt|5|ft|3|in}} to {{cvt|5|ft|4|in}} tall, with "very even teeth with one missing" and "of good carriage".<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://www.unsolved-murders.co.uk/murder-content.php?key=2878&termRef=Mamie%20Stuart|title=Unsolved Murders: Mamie Stuart, Age 25|journal=Unsolved-murders.co.uk|date=1 January 2010|volume=2878 |issue=1919 |access-date=24 August 2021|last1=Murders |first1=Unsolved }}</ref> As a result of an attack by a dog when she was a child, Stuart had four faint tooth marks on her right cheek, which she concealed with cosmetics.<ref name="Find">{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/31086726/chorus-girl-mystery-new-south-wales/|title=Explorers' Grisly Cave Find|publisher=[[The Sydney Morning Herald]]|access-date=23 August 2021|date=12 November 1961}}</ref>

By early 1917, one member of ''The Five Verona Girls'' had become pregnant, while another broke her ankle. Shortly thereafter, the troupe disbanded and Stuart returned to her family home.<ref name="DroitwichSpa"/>
[[File:Mamie Stuart George Shotton South Shields 1918 Wedding.jpg|210px|right|thumb|Mamie Stuart and George Shotton, pictured shortly after their March 1918 wedding.]]

===Marriage===
Shortly after the disbandment of ''The Five Verona Girls'', in July 1917, Stuart (then aged 23) became acquainted with a [[Marine engineering|marine engineer]] named George Shotton in their native Sunderland. Shotton introduced himself to Stuart as a widower, and the two soon began a relationship, with Shotton purchasing a diamond engagement ring for her within months of their acquaintance.<ref name="Prudish"/> Less than a year after their acquaintance, they had married in [[South Shields]].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/bristol-news/secret-brutal-killing-lies-buried-3677982|title=The Secret of a Brutal Killing Lies Buried in a Bristol Grave for All Eternity|publisher=Bristol Post|access-date=16 August 2021|date=7 March 2021}}</ref> The newlyweds then held their [[honeymoon]] in [[Droitwich Spa]].<ref name="DroitwichSpa"/> Shotton and Stuart initially lived in [[Bristol]] before relocating to [[Swansea]], residing in a property in Trafalgar Terrace for six months.<ref name="Gower1961">{{cite news|title=Gower Skeleton May be Mamie|work=South Wales Echo|date=6 November 1961}}</ref> The two then moved to live in [[Caswell Bay]] in the late summer of 1919, residing in a rented remote cottage overlooking [[Swansea Bay]] named Ty-Llanwydd. Stuart maintained regular correspondence with her family in Sunderland from this residence.<ref name="Caswell"/>


Unbeknownst to Stuart, Shotton's wife, Mary Shotton (née Leader), whom he had wed in September 1905, was still alive. The couple had a son named Arthur, although their relationship was fraught with violence, with Shotton frequently beating his wife. His wife and child lived in [[Penarth]], with Mary believing her husband's employment being the reason he was frequently absent from the family home for extended periods of time.
In July 1917, Stuart met a Welsh marine engineer called George Shotton (1880-1958) and married him in 1918. Unbeknown to Stuart, Shotton was already married (7 September 1905) to Mary Leader and had a son, Arthur. Shotton and Stuart lived in Bristol before moving to Swansea, eventually moving to live in [[Caswell Bay]]. The marriage was not a happy one.


==Disappearance==
==Disappearance==
Stuart was last seen in November 1919. In letters to her family she had hinted that her marriage was unhappy. In December 1919, a telegram was sent to her parents wishing them a Merry Christmas, but when they wrote back their letters were returned to them marked "house closed".
Stuart was last seen in November or early December 1919. In letters Stuart had posted in the months prior to her disappearance, she had hinted that her marriage was an unhappy one, increasingly fraught with violence, and of her increasing desire to leave Shotton, who refused to allow her to return to the stage.<ref name="Prudish"/> The final correspondence she is known to have penned to her parents from Ty-Llanwydd was dated 12 November. Shortly thereafter, her parents posted a reply, although this letter was returned to them marked 'House Closed'. Convinced an error had been made by the post office, the Stuarts posted a reply-paid telegram to their daughter, although this letter was also returned with the same marking.<ref name="WhoP.206">''The New Murderers' Who's Who'' {{ISBN|978-0-747-23270-4}} p. 206</ref>


Shortly before Christmas 1919, a telegram was sent to Stuart's parents—apparently from their daughter—wishing them "compliments of the season". No further correspondence from Stuart or her husband was received by her parents.<ref name="WhoP.206"/>
In March 1920, staff at the Grosvenor Hotel, Swansea, gave a chest left by a male guest in December 1919 to police. They discovered a woman's clothing and shoes. These were later confirmed to be Stuart's. There was also a scrap of paper with an address written on it which turned out to be that of Stuart's parents.


===Investigation===
William Draper of [[Scotland Yard]] took over the investigation. His chief suspect was Stuart's husband George Shotton. Draper quickly discovered he was living in Caswell Bay with his wife and small daughter. It was subsequently discovered he had bigamously married Stuart, although he denied doing so and said that when she walked out on him he had gone back to his wife. Police were told by Stuart's parents that she had complained Shotton had subjected her to domestic abuse. Stuart's parents confirmed that the trunk contained Mamie’s clothing, jewelry and belongings. Shotton admitted to leaving the trunk at the hotel after an argument with Stuart. In letters to her parents, Stuart said she was not going to live with Shotton anymore and that she knew there was something odd about him. An extensive search was carried out, but no trace could be found of Stuart.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/bristol-news/secret-brutal-killing-lies-buried-3677982 | title=The secret of a brutal killing lies buried in a Bristol grave for all eternity | work=Bristol Post | date=26 December 2019}}</ref>
In March 1920, staff at Swansea's Grosvenor Hotel noted a leather trunk left by a male guest the previous December had remained unclaimed for approximately three months. As no address tag existed upon the exterior of the trunk, the manager of the hotel contacted police, who opened the trunk to discover two women's dresses and a pair of shoes, all extensively cut and torn. Also discovered inside the trunk were items of jewellery, a [[Bible]], a [[Catholic rosary|rosary]], and a manicure set.{{sfn|Real-Life Crimes|1992|p=156}}


A scrap of paper was also discovered within the trunk. This bore the address of Stuart's parents, who informed investigators their daughter was missing, and that they had been attempting to locate her for several months. Both feared for her safety, and handed police several letters they had received from their daughter the previous year revealing her increasing unhappiness regarding her husband and her fear for her own wellbeing.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.thetvdb.com/series/murder-by-the-sea/episodes/7163751 |title=Mamie Stewart: Swansea|publisher=thetvdb.com|date=7 May 2019|access-date=16 August 2021}}</ref> The Stuarts had also recently obtained a letter their daughter had penned weeks before her disappearance in which she had written: "If you don't hear from me, please [[Wire recording|wire]] to Mrs. Hearn [a friend] and see if she knows anything about me. The man is not all there. I don't think I will live with him much longer. My life is not worth living."<ref name="CasebookP.129">''The Casebook of Forensic Detection: How Science Solved 100 of the World's Most Baffling Crimes'' {{ISBN|978-0-471-07650-6}} p. 129</ref> Investigators also discovered that in letters to her parents, Stuart had indicated her [[domestic abuse|abuse]] at Shotton's hands, of her desire to cease living with him, and of her knowledge there was something "odd" about him.
Police were not able to charge Shotton with murder, since the law at the time prevented a suspect being tried for murder if there was no body. However, he was charged and found guilty of bigamously marrying her in South Shields in March 1918 and sentenced to 18 months' hard labour. Leader divorced him shortly after he was release from jail.


Shortly thereafter, a [[maid]] cleaning the couple's deserted cottage in preparation for the accommodation of new tenants recovered Stuart's [[mildew]]ed brown leather handbag concealed behind a dresser in an upstairs bedroom. This handbag still contained two pounds in loose change and Stuart's sugar [[ration card]].<ref>''The New Murderers' Who's Who'' {{ISBN|978-0-747-23270-4}} p. 207</ref>
There were subsequently numerous alleged sightings of Stuart in Canada, South Africa, Australia and India. A notable one was by Thomas James, the chief officer of the Blythmoor, who was a friend of her father. He claimed to have seen Stuart in Karachi where she was part of a troop of travelling artists. Though the woman denied she was Stuart and quickly walked away.<ref>{{cite book | title=Is Missing Mamie Stuart Alive in India? | work=Daily Mirror | date=10 February 1923}}</ref>.


===Scotland Yard===
==Discovery of body and inquest==
By the spring of 1920, [[South Wales Police]] were convinced Stuart had been murdered, that she had died at the hands of Shotton, and that the most likely [[Motive (law)|motive]] for her murder had been either [[Rage (emotion)|rage]], [[Control (psychology)|control]], [[jealousy]], or a mixture of the three. [[Scotland Yard]] was contacted, and [[Chief Inspector]] William Draper dispatched to oversee the investigation. Draper ordered a thorough search of Ty-Llanwydd, the grounds of the property, and the surrounding terrain, although no trace of Stuart was found. A nationwide search for Stuart was ordered, with her description circulated throughout Britain. This tactic also yielded no successful leads.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/bristol-news/secret-brutal-killing-lies-buried-3677982|title=The Secret of a Brutal Killing Lies Buried in a Bristol Grave for All Eternity|work=[[Bristol Post]]|date=26 December 2019}}</ref>
42 years after she disappeared, on 5 November 1961, Stuart's remains were discovered in a sack hidden behind stones in an abandoned mine shaft at Brandy Cove in Caswell by potholers Graham Jones, John Gerke and Chris MacNamara.


===Prime suspect===
Forensic examination found the bones belonged to a woman aged between 20 and 30 years, between 5ft 3in and 5ft 4in tall, and with one tooth extracted from the upper jaw. This matched the contemporaneous description of Stuart. Also found near her body was a gold wedding ring and diamond engagement ring, which further aided identification of the remains. At the subsequent inquest, 20 witnesses, including her relatives, testified that the rings found in the mine belonged to Stuart.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.unsolved-murders.co.uk/murder-content.php?key=2878&termRef=Mamie%20Stuart | title=Unsolved Murders: Mamie Stuart}}</ref>
The chief suspect of both South Wales Police and Scotland Yard was Stuart's husband, George Shotton. Draper quickly located Shotton, who was living in Penarth with his wife and child, barely two miles from Ty-Llanwydd. Shotton admitted to knowing Stuart and to leaving the trunk at the Swansea hotel, which he claimed he had done shortly after she had left him following an argument early the previous December. This argument, he claimed, sourced from her [[infidelity]].{{sfn|Real-Life Crimes|1992|p=157}} He denied having married Stuart, or any knowledge of her current whereabouts.<ref name="CasebookP.130">''The Casebook of Forensic Detection: How Science Solved 100 of the World's Most Baffling Crimes'' {{ISBN|978-0-471-07650-6}} p. 130</ref>


Despite Shotton's claims to the contrary, investigations quickly revealed he had bigamously married Stuart almost two years earlier, although he denied doing so and said that when she walked out on him, he had simply chosen to go back to his wife. Scotland Yard also contacted Stuart's friend, Mrs. Hearn, who confirmed Stuart had suffered domestic abuse at Shotton's hands and had once begged her: "If I am ever missing, do your utmost to find me, won't you?"<ref>''Encyclopedia of World Crime: S-Z'' {{ISBN|978-0-923-58200-5}} p. 2872</ref>
Police set about tracing Shotton, who had remained the main suspect, but discovered he had died at the age of 78 in 1958 and was buried in Bristol.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/bristol-news/secret-brutal-killing-lies-buried-3677982 | title=The secret of a brutal killing lies buried in a Bristol grave for all eternity | work=Bristol Post | date=26 December 2019}}</ref>


As police could not find Stuart's body, they were unable to charge Shotton with her murder, as the law at the time prevented a suspect being tried for murder if there was [[Murder conviction without a body|no body]].<ref name="CasebookP.129"/> Convinced of—but unable to prove—Shotton's guilt, by the mid-1920s, investigators at Scotland Yard began referring to this case as the "perfect crime".<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/47027149/eureka-humboldt-standard/|title=Perfect Crime Bared 42 Years After Chorus Beauty Murdered|publisher=[[Eureka Humboldt Standard]]|access-date=27 August 2021|date=7 December 1961}}</ref>
At the inquest it was revealed that Stuart's body had been sawn into three parts so as to fit into several containers. Retired Mumbles postman William Symons (who by that time was 83) testified that in December 1919 he saw Shotton struggling to put a large sack into the back of a van outside the couple's Caswell cottage. He even offered to help the man with the heavy load, but did not inform police. Shotton was alleged to have looked shocked and said "oh god, for a minute I thought you were a policeman".<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/bristol-news/secret-brutal-killing-lies-buried-3677982 | title=The secret of a brutal killing lies buried in a Bristol grave for all eternity | work=Bristol Post | date=26 December 2019}}</ref>


===Bigamy charge===
During the 1961 inquest the skeleton of Stuart was laid out in the court. The forensic team used a photographic superimposition of
Investigators had discovered early in their investigation that Shotton had bigamously married Stuart in South Shields on 25 March 1918. This bigamy charge proved to be the only they could charge him with. He was arrested on 29 May 1920 for this offence and brought to trial two months later at Glamorgan Assizes, pleading not guilty and claiming that although he had known and lived with Stuart, someone had assumed his identity to marry her. He also denied mistreating her, and repeated his claim the two had parted company following a quarrel in early December.<ref name="Gower1961"/> Several individuals testified at trial the two were indeed married and that, initially, their matrimony had been harmonious. One individual to testify was Stuart's sister, Edith, who testified Shotton had frequently referred to Stuart as "my own little wife" and had typically signed his letters with the words "Your own loving husband".<ref name="DroitwichSpa"/>
the skull that had been discovered over a life-sized portrait of Stuart in order to aid the identification.


At this bigamy trial, the prosecuting counsel, [[Ellis Ellis-Griffith|Sir Ellis Griffith]] [[King's Counsel|KC]], openly accused Shotton of "doing away with" Stuart, but in the absence of her body, nothing could be proven.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://newspaperarchive.com/sydney-sun-sep-23-1920-p-4/|title=Missing Mamie: Victim of Bigotry|publisher=[[The Sun (Sydney)|The Sydney Sun]]|access-date=24 August 2021|date=23 September 1920}}</ref> On 13 July, Shotton was sentenced to serve eighteen months' imprisonment with hard labour for bigamously marrying Stuart. Shortly after he was released from jail, his legal wife divorced him.<ref name="CasebookP.130"/>
The inquest determined that:
[[File:Mamie_Stuart_Missing_Daily_Mirror_10_Februay_1923A.jpg|upright|right|thumb|The 10 February 1923 front page of the ''[[Daily Mirror]],'' describing the manhunt to locate Mamie Stuart.]]
* The remains were those of Mamie Stuart.
* She had been murdered.
* Cause of death could not be determined.
* She was murdered between the 12th November 1919 and 6 December 1919.
* George Shotton was the murderer.
* George Shotton had died in Bristol on the 30th April 1958.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C554690 | title=Murder of Mamie Stuart by George Shotton at Caswell Bay, Glam. in 1919 | work=National Archives}}</ref>


==Intervening years==
In 1961 a coroner's court could name a murderer, as in this case, although doing so was subsequently disallowed by the Criminal Law Act 1977.


==George Shotton==
===Sightings===
In the years following Shotton's bigamy conviction, numerous alleged sightings of Stuart were reported as far afield as Canada, South Africa, Australia and India. Many of these sightings received extensive press coverage. One early reported sighting of Stuart was made by the [[Chief mate#Cargo Officer|chief officer]] of the cargo ship ''Blythmoor'', Thomas James, who was a close friend of her father. He claimed to have seen Stuart in the portal town of [[Karachi]] in the early 1920s, and that she was part of a troupe of English travelling artists performing at a Karachi theatre. When approached by James, however, the woman had denied she was Stuart and quickly walked away. However, James was adamant the woman he had spoken to was Stuart.<ref>{{cite news|title=Is Missing Mamie Stuart Alive in India?|work=Daily Mirror|date=10 February 1923}}</ref>
Stuart had complained of mistreatment by Shotton, and was a victim of domestic abuse. Her parents told police during their investigation that Mamie had said that George was a violent and abusive husband and that she feared for her life.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.thetvdb.com/series/murder-by-the-sea/episodes/7163751 | title=Murder by the Sea. Mamie Stewart, Swansea}}</ref> This was substantiated by Mary Leader, Shotton's first wife, who had divorced him after he was imprisoned for bigamy - later remarrying. When police re-investigated the case in 1961 she told them that Shotton had had a violent temper.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/mamie-stuart-murder-swansea-crime-17229764 | title=The innocent newlywed whose bigamist husband dumped her sawn-up remains in a disused mine shaft | work=Wales Online | date=23 December 2019}}</ref>


===Drainage pit discovery===
In addition to being found responsible for the murder of Stuart by the 1961 coroner's court, Shotton was convicted of bigamy in 1920 and in 1938 was sentenced to 12 months in jail for assault occasioning actual bodily harm on a woman and possessing a firearm. He is buried in an unmarked grave in Arnos Vale Cemetery, Bristol (Grave Number 000405).<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/21407068/george-shotton | title=George Shotton | work=Find A Grave}}</ref>
In 1950, a dentist purchased the remote cottage Shotton and Stuart had resided in at the time of her disappearance. Performing drainage work around the property, this individual discovered a pit at the rear of the house, close to a hole in the foundation which reached beneath the floorboards of the dining room. This pit had been filled with [[quicklime]], although all that was recovered from the pit was one lady's shoe.{{sfn|Real-Life Crimes|1992|p=157}}


===George Shotton===
After he was released from prison in 1922, Shotton moved to Tintern where he ran a smallholding. The South Wales Echo reported that villagers remembered him "practically running the tennis club". He was remembered in the village as "a charming chap, a real dandy". He eventually moved to Bristol, where he lived for a time in a home for elderly people before suffering a stroke and dying on 30 April 1958 in Bristol's Southmead Hospital.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.thefreelibrary.com/Grisly+find+solved+old+mystery%3B+Time+to+remember.-a080337666 | title=Grisly find solved old mystery; Time to remember | work=South Wales Echo | date=26 November 2001}}</ref>
After Shotton was released from prison in early 1922, he moved to [[Tintern]], where he ran a [[smallholding]]. He was a regular churchgoer, and remembered in the village as "a charming chap" who "practically [ran] the tennis club". After several years living in his village, Shotton abruptly left, possibly due to a local newspaper having revived the story of Stuart's disappearance and his suspected culpability. He then relocated to [[Balham]], [[South London]], to live with his elderly mother, Louisa, taking a series of jobs including being an odd job man and a motor mechanic.{{sfn|Real-Life Crimes|1992|p=158}}

In May 1938, Shotton was arrested for threatening his sister, Gladys Austin, with a revolver at her [[Fareham]] home. He was also charged with causing [[Assault occasioning actual bodily harm|actual bodily harm]] to her. This incident sourced from resentment between the siblings regarding their respective bequeathments in their mother's will. He was sentenced to serve twelve months in jail with hard labour. Following his release, Shotton severed all contact with his family and friends and moved to [[Ledbury]], where he worked at an aircraft factory. He later relocated to Bristol.<ref name="DroitwichSpa"/>

==Discovery==
Forty-two years after Stuart's disappearance, on 5 November 1961, her remains were discovered in a rotting sack hidden behind a large stone slab 50 feet down a disused lead mine at Brandy Cove in Caswell by three young potholers named Graham Jones, John Gerke and Chris MacNamara. Her body had been concealed just 200 yards from the home she and Shotton had resided in at the time of her disappearance.<ref name="CasebookP.131"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/5lbKWT46J3btRzgCw4Qmfjb/reinvestigating-some-of-wales-most-shocking-murders|title=Re-investigating Some of Wales' Most Shocking Murders|work=BBC News|date=19 November 2020|access-date=21 August 2021}}</ref>

One of the potholers, John Gerke, would later state that he and his friends had chosen to explore this area as it had formerly been used by smugglers and that as the trio attempted to explore a [[ventilation shaft]], their route through a narrow tunnel approximately ten feet in length was blocked by a large stone slab. Pulling this slab aside, Gerke observed a skull, which he turned to face him, and realised was human. Nearby lay a black [[celluloid]] hair clasp still containing a tuft of mid-brown hair, items of jewellery including a seven-inch brass chain, and several scraps of clothing.<ref name="CasebookP.130"/>
[[File:Brandy cove hidden from view in the centre of the picture - geograph.org.uk - 1987317.jpg|thumb|[[Brandy Cove]], [[Gower Peninsula]]. Mamie Stewart's body was discovered in a mine shaft at this location in 1961.]]

===Forensic examination===
The remains were taken to the Forensic Science Laboratory in [[Cardiff]], where a [[Forensic science|forensic examination]] of the remains was conducted by two [[Home Office]] pathologists named William James and John Griffiths. The bones were reassembled into a complete skeleton—minus the [[rib cage]]—belonging to a female between 5&nbsp;ft 3in and 5&nbsp;ft 4in tall, and with one [[canine tooth]] extracted from the upper jaw.<ref name="DroitwichSpa"/> Three of her [[wisdom teeth]] were present, suggesting she was over twenty years of age. An [[X-ray]] study of the growth areas of her bones revealed the decedent was a fully mature woman, but that complete maturation had only recently occurred, suggesting she was aged in her mid-twenties. As two bones at the base of her skull had recently fused, the decedent was unlikely to have been over twenty-eight years of age.{{sfn|Real-Life Crimes|1992|p=155}}

Sections of the skeleton bore green staining due to [[copper]] contamination sourcing from the brass jewellery recovered with her remains. No precise [[cause of death]] could be determined, although the pathologists were unable to discount [[strangulation]] or [[stabbing]].<ref name="CasebookP.130"/>

The physical description of the remains and the location of their recovery matched the contemporaneous description of Stuart. Although the remains were completely [[Skeletonization|skeletonized]], the scraps of clothing and footwear and the jewellery found alongside the remains indicated when she had most likely died. The [[Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales|National Museum of Wales]] confirmed that the gilt-copper [[Shawl#Stole|stole]] [[tassel]]s worn by the decedent were most fashionable around the year 1920; the most recent year of manufacture of the gold wedding ring and diamond engagement ring also found had been 1912 and 1918, indicating that death had most likely occurred in the years immediately after [[World War I]].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.chroniclelive.co.uk/news/north-east-news/sunderland-woman-whose-dismembered-body-17925218|title=Sunderland Woman Whose Dismembered Body was Found in an Old Mine Has Finally Been Laid to Rest|publisher=[[Evening Chronicle|Chronicle Live]]|access-date=16 August 2021|date=15 March 2020}}</ref> An elderly lady who had been a close friend of Stuart's identified both rings as belonging to the missing woman.<ref name="CasebookP.131">''The Casebook of Forensic Detection: How Science Solved 100 of the World's Most Baffling Crimes'' {{ISBN|978-0-471-07650-6}} p. 131</ref>{{refn|group=n|At the subsequent inquest into Stuart's death, twenty witnesses, including her relatives, testified that the rings found in the mine had belonged to her.<ref name="Verona"/>}}

===Shotton===
With the assistance of [[Interpol]], police again began their efforts to locate George Shotton, with Scotland Yard assigning nine men full-time to this task.<ref name="Prudish"/> Three weeks later, he was located—in Bristol's Arnos Vale Cemetery, having died of natural causes just three years previously on April 30, 1958,<ref name="CasebookP.131"/> at the age of 77.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/bristol-news/secret-brutal-killing-lies-buried-3677982|title=The Secret of a Brutal Killing Lies Buried in a Bristol Grave for All Eternity|work=Bristol Post|date=26 December 2019}}</ref> He had died penniless, and had lived his final years in a home for elderly people before suffering a [[stroke]] and dying in Bristol's [[Southmead Hospital]]. Shortly after his death, Shotton had been buried in an unmarked pauper's grave simply bearing his welfare number.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.thefreelibrary.com/Grisly+find+solved+old+mystery%3B+Time+to+remember.-a080337666|title=Grisly Find Solved Old Mystery; Time to Remember|work=[[South Wales Echo]]|access-date=16 August 2021|date=26 November 2001}}</ref>

Shotton's first wife was still alive.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/mamie-stuart-murder-swansea-crime-17229764|title=The Innocent Newlywed Whose Bigamist Husband Dumped Her Sawn-up Remains in a Disused Mine Shaft|work=Wales Online|date=23 December 2019}}</ref> When questioned in 1961, she confirmed that her former husband possessed a violent temper, and that his violent temper, his adultery, and her conviction of his guilt in Stuart's murder while she had remained missing had been the reasons she had divorced him. She further stated she had seldom seen Shotton following their divorce, and that he had never confessed his guilt to her.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/local-news/dan-oneill-down-memory-lane-1793795|title=Dan O'Neill: Down Memory Lane|work=Wales Online| date=1 November 2011|access-date=20 August 2021}}</ref>

==Inquest==
The formal inquest into Stuart's death was held on 14 December 1961. Throughout the duration of the proceedings, her skeleton was laid on a table in the well of the courtroom.

Forensic testimony revealed the body had been severed at three equal lengths: one cut had been made at the lower [[femur]] just above the knees; a second horizontal cut had been made through both [[humerus]] bones at mid-section, with the instrument used to dissect her body also severing the lower shoulder blades and her spine. Evidently, Stuart's murderer had endured difficulty severing her body, as several bones bore striations and indentations indicating her murderer had made several unsuccessful efforts to dissect her before severing her bones. No bones from Stuart's rib cage were recovered at the scene of her discovery.{{refn|group=n|Pathologist [[Bernard Knight]], who had direct knowledge of the case and had extensively examined the remains, wrote in New Scientist in 1996 that her skeleton had in fact been sawn into 6 parts.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg15120465-100-review-dont-touch-anything/|title=Review: Don't Touch Anything |work=New Scientist |author=Bernard Knight|date=7 September 1996}}</ref>}}

To assist in the formal identification, forensic experts superimposed a photograph of the skull that had been discovered over a smiling, life-sized portrait of Stuart taken in her performing days in order to aid the identification. The coroner, D. R. James, testified that although he was able to discount any form of [[Head injury|skull trauma]] as being the cause of Stuart's death, as no [[soft tissue]] remained, he was unable to pinpoint the cause of her death. Stating his conviction Stuart's death was murder, James then asked the coroner's jury the question: "Can you imagine any reason for sawing up anyone if the person had committed suicide or if the death was accidental?"<ref name="Coroner"/>

Towards the end of the inquest, an 83-year-old retired postman named William Symons informed the coroner that in December 1919, as he had been delivering mail to Ty-Llanwydd, he had observed Shotton struggling to put a large sack into the back of a small yellow van parked outside the front gate of the couple's cottage. According to Symons, as he offered to help Shotton with the heavy load, he had looked up and observed his blue uniform before replying: "No! No! No! Oh god, you gave me a fright! For a minute I thought you were a policeman."<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/bristol-news/secret-brutal-killing-lies-buried-3677982 | title=The Secret of a Brutal Killing Lies Buried in a Bristol Grave for All Eternity | work=Bristol Post | date=26 December 2019}}</ref> He had then observed Shotton place the load into the van and drive in the direction of Brandy Cove.<ref name="CasebookP.131"/>{{refn|group=n|Symons had not informed investigators of this incident during their initial search for Stuart in 1920. He would testify at the inquest his reason for not doing so was that he had not seen any significance in the incident.<ref name="DroitwichSpa"/>}}

===Conclusions===
On 15 December,<ref name="FoundConclusion"/> the inquest into Mamie Stuart's death concluded that the remains were indeed hers, and that she had been murdered, although the precise cause of death could not be determined. Furthermore, the inquest concluded she had been murdered between 12 November and 6 December 1919, and that the now-deceased George Shotton was responsible for her murder.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C554690|title=Murder of Mamie Stuart by George Shotton at Caswell Bay, Glamorgan, in 1919|publisher=nationalarchives.gov.uk|date=1 January 2020|access-date=16 August 2021}}</ref>{{refn|group=n|In 1961, a coroner's court could publicly name a murderer, although doing so was subsequently disallowed by the [[Criminal Law Act 1977]].}}


==Burial==
==Burial==
After the inquest Stuart's bones were not returned to her family but were kept in Cardiff University, where eminent pathologist [[Bernard Knight]] is said to have used them to teach students. The bones later went missing.
At the conclusion of the 1961 inquest, Stuart's skeleton was retained at [[Cardiff University]], where eminent [[forensic pathologist]] [[Bernard Knight]] is believed to have occasionally used them to teach students. No efforts were made to locate surviving relatives and return her body to her family.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://headtopics.com/uk/family-burial-for-murder-victim-after-100-years-11850004|title=Family Burial for Murder Victim After 100 Years|publisher=headtopics.com|date=14 March 2020|access-date=27 August 2021}}</ref>


Ms Stuart's great niece Susie Oldnall only discovered the whereabouts of her great aunt's remains in 2019 when she was approached by researchers for a programme on the CBS Reality channel about unsolved murders. It was found they were being kept in a cupboard in a Cardiff forensic laboratory. The senior forensic pathologist at the laboratory, Dr Stephen Leadbeatter, had kept the remains - despite being urged to dispose of them - in the hope that her family might reclaim them. He personally took them to Oldnall so they might be interred by her family.
Stuart's great niece, Susan Oldnall, only discovered the whereabouts of her great aunt's remains in 2019 when she was approached by researchers for a programme on the [[CBS Reality]] channel focusing upon unsolved murders. Oldnall then discovered her great aunt's remains were being stored in a cupboard inside a Cardiff forensic laboratory. The senior forensic pathologist at the laboratory, Dr. Stephen Leadbeatter, had retained the remains—despite being urged to dispose of them—in the hope a surviving member of Stuart's family might reclaim them. Upon learning of Oldnall's whereabouts and wishes, Leadbeatter personally took Stuart's remains to Oldnall in order that they may be interred by her family.


Stuart's body was buried in an unmarked grave in Bishopwearmouth Cemetery in Sunderland next to her parents. At the time, Ms Oldnall commented to the BBC: "She's been treated with such lack of dignity, and now she's with her parents. I'm not religious, but I do feel much better about it now."<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-tyne-51386314 | title=Mamie Stuart: Sunderland burial for 1919 murder victim | work=BBC News | date=14 March 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.chroniclelive.co.uk/news/north-east-news/sunderland-woman-whose-dismembered-body-17925218 | title=Sunderland woman whose dismembered body was found in an old mine has finally been laid to rest | work=Chronicle Live | date=15 March 2020}}</ref>
Stuart's body was buried in [[Bishopwearmouth Cemetery]] in Sunderland in December 2019. She was buried in a grave alongside her parents. Four of Stuart's descendants attended the service. Shortly thereafter, Mrs Oldnall commented to the BBC: "She's been treated with such lack of dignity, and now she's with her parents. I'm not religious, but I do feel much better about it now ... I only did what a lot of people would have done and I hope, if there is a heaven, that the family are all finally having a good time together."<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-tyne-51386314 | title=Mamie Stuart: Sunderland Burial for 1919 Murder Victim|work=BBC News|date=14 March 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.chroniclelive.co.uk/news/north-east-news/sunderland-woman-whose-dismembered-body-17925218|title=Sunderland Woman Whose Dismembered Body was Found in an Old Mine Has Finally Been Laid to Rest|work=Chronicle Live|access-date=16 August 2021|date=15 March 2020}}</ref>


==Media coverage==
==Media==
<!---PLEASE DO NOT ADD SONG REFERENCES, REFERENCES TO INCIDENTAL DEPICTIONS UPON ALBUM COVERS OR OTHER DEPICTIONS UPON TV SHOWS OR OTHER IRRELEVANT TRIVIA HERE. IT DOES NOT BELONG HERE AND WILL REMOVED WITH NO FURTHER DISCUSSION. TRIVIA IS INAPPROPRIATE PER THE PROJECT GOVERNING THIS ARTICLE.--->
Mamie Stuart's disappearance and death have been the subject of media coverage for over 100 years. The disappearance of Stuart was extensively covered, and subsequent sightings of her were also documented by the press. The discovery of her remains in 1961 led to renewed interest in the case, as did the news in 2020 that she had finally been interred by her family.


===Television===
* 'Is Missing Mamie Stuart Alive in India?', Daily Mirror, 10 February 1923
* [[ITV Wales & West|ITV Cymru]] have broadcast a documentary focusing upon the murder of Mamie Stuart as part of their documentary series ''Crime Files''. Presented by [[Andrea Byrne]], this documentary was first broadcast in September 2016.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.itv.com/news/wales/2016-09-06/itvs-crime-files-reveals-how-police-searched-for-dismembered-body|title=ITV's Crime Files Reveals How Police Searched for Dismembered Body|work=[[ITV News]]|date=6 September 2016|access-date=17 August 2021}}</ref>
* 'Skeleton Found in a Gower Mine-shaft', South Wales Evening Post, 6 November 1961
* The [[BBC One]] [[documentary television series]] ''Dark Land: Hunting the Killers'' has broadcast a fifty-minute documentary focusing upon the murder of Mamie Stuart. Directed by David Howard, this documentary, titled ''Mamie Stuart and George Shotton'', was initially broadcast in November 2020.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p08wg6qf|title=Dark Land: Hunting the Killers: Mamie Stuart and George Shotton|work=[[BBC One]]|date=4 December 2020|access-date=17 August 2021}}</ref>
* 'Scotland Yard Believes There is No Perfect Crime,' The Dispatch, 7 December 1961
* [[CBS Reality]] have commissioned a sixty-minute documentary focusing upon the murder of Mamie Stuart as part of their documentary series ''Murder by the Sea''. Presented by Geoffrey Wansell, this episode was first broadcast on 7 May 2019.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.jarossi.com/television/murder-by-the-sea-mamie-stuart/|title=Murder by the Sea: Mamie Stuart|work=jarossi.com|access-date=17 August 2021|date=6 May 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.thetvdb.com/series/murder-by-the-sea/episodes/7163751|title=Murder by the Sea: Mamie Stewart, Swansea|work=thetvdb.com|date=10 October 2019|access-date=17 August 2021}}</ref>
* 1970 article in The Mumbles Gower News: The Mystery of Mamie Stuart by Haydn Griffiths.
* Infidelity, Paul Ferris, Harper Collins, 1999 - a novel based on the case.
* CrimeSolver - First shown 8 June 2005 on BBC ONE Wales.
* Dan O’Neill: Down Memory Lane - 2011 article on Wales Online<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/local-news/dan-oneill-down-memory-lane-1793795 | title=Down Memory Lane | work=Wales Online | date=1 November 2011}}</ref>
* Bodies of Evidence: The fascinating world of forensic science and how it helped solve more than 100 true crimes, Brian Innes, Amber Books (18 July 2012)
* South Wales Murders, Bob Hinton, History Press, 2012 - contains many missing police photographs which were presumed lost
* Swansea Murders, Geoff Brookes, History Press, 2013
* Crime Files, ITV Cymru Wales, 2015<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.itv.com/news/wales/2016-09-06/itvs-crime-files-reveals-how-police-searched-for-dismembered-body/ | title=ITV's Crime Files reveals how police searched for dismembered body | work=ITV News | date=6 September 2016}}</ref>
* 'Murder by the Sea', CBS Reality, first aired 7 May 2019.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.jarossi.com/television/murder-by-the-sea-mamie-stuart/ | title=Murder by the Sea: Mamie Stuart | date=6 May 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.thetvdb.com/series/murder-by-the-sea/episodes/7163751 | title=Murder by the Sea. Mamie Stewart, Swansea}}</ref>


==References==
===Literature===
* Hinton, Bob (2012), ''South Wales Murders'', Gloucestershire: History Press Limited {{ISBN|978-0-752-48389-4}}
* Evans, Colin (1996), ''The Casebook of Forensic Detection: How Science Solved 100 of the World's Most Baffling Crimes'', Canada: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. {{ISBN|978-0-471-07650-6}}
* Ubelaker, Douglas H.; Scamell, Henry (1992), ''Bones: A Forensic Detective's Casebook'', New York: M. Evans and Company Inc., {{ISBN|978-1-283-61515-0}}
* Wilson, Colin (1995), ''Written in Blood: A History of Forensic Detection'', Glasgow: HarperCollins, {{ISBN|978-0-58620-842-7}}
<!--PLEASE DO NOT ADD SONG REFERENCES, REFERENCES TO INCIDENTAL DEPICTIONS UPON ALBUM COVERS OR OTHER DEPICTIONS UPON TV SHOWS OR OTHER IRRELEVANT TRIVIA HERE. IT DOES NOT BELONG HERE, AND WILL REMOVED WITH NO FURTHER DISCUSSION. TRIVIA ARE INAPPROPRIATE PER THE PROJECT GOVERNING THIS ARTICLE. -->


==See also==
{{div col|colwidth=22em}}
* [[Capital punishment in the United Kingdom]]
* [[Domestic violence]]
* [[List of solved missing person cases: pre-1950|List of solved missing person cases]]
* [[Murder conviction without a body]]
{{div col end}}
{{Portal bar|Biography|Criminal Justice|Wales|United Kingdom}}

==Notes==
{{Reflist|group=n}}

==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


==Cited works and further reading==
[[Category:2020 controversies]]
* Brookes, Geoff (2013), ''Swansea Murders'', Gloucestershire: History Press Limited, {{ISBN|978-0-752-49307-7}}
[[Category:Female murder victims]]
* Gaute, J. H. H. (1991), ''The New Murderers' Who's Who'', New York: Dorset Press, {{ISBN|978-0-747-23270-4}}
* Hinton, Bob (2012), ''South Wales Murders'', Gloucestershire: History Press Limited, {{ISBN|978-0-752-48389-4}}
* Houck, Max M. (2016), ''Forensic Anthropology'', London: Elsevier Publishing, {{ISBN|978-0-128-02523-9}}
* Innes, Brian (2000), ''Bodies of Evidence'', London: Amber Books Ltd, {{ISBN|978-1-856-05623-6}}
* {{cite book|last=Lane|first=Bran|title=Real-Life Crimes|issue=7|year=1992|isbn=978-1-856-29736-3|publisher=Eaglemoss Publications Ltd|location=London, England|ref={{harvid|Real-Life Crimes|1992}}}}
* Latham, Krista E.; Bartelink, Eric J.; Finnegan, Michael (2017), ''New Perspectives in Forensic Human Skeletal Identification'', San Diego: Academic Press, {{ISBN|978-0-128-05429-1}}
* Morris, Jim (2015), ''The Who's Who of British Crime: In the Twentieth Century'', Stroud: Amberley Publishing, {{ISBN|978-1-445-63924-6}}
* Nash, Robert J. (1989), ''Encyclopedia of World Crime: S-Z'', Michigan: CrimeBooks, {{ISBN|978-0-923-58200-5}}
* Pickering, Robert B. (2009), ''The Use of Forensic Anthropology'', New York: Taylor & Francis Group, {{ISBN|978-1-420-06877-1}}
* Tilstone, William; Savage, Kathleen; Clark, Leigh (2006), ''Forensic Science: An Encyclopedia of History, Methods, and Techniques'', Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, {{ISBN|978-1-576-07194-6}}
* Tippings, Lisa, (2019), ''Secret Swansea'', Stroud, Amberley Publishing, {{ISBN|978-1-445-68867-1}}
* Ubelaker, Douglas H.; Scamell, Henry (1992), ''Bones: A Forensic Detective's Casebook'', New York: M. Evans and Company Inc., {{ISBN|978-1-283-61515-0}}
* Wilson, Colin (1995), ''Written in Blood: A History of Forensic Detection'', Glasgow: HarperCollins, {{ISBN|978-0-58620-842-7}}

==External links==
* 1923 ''[[Dayton Daily News]]'' [https://www.newspapers.com/image/?clipping_id=31131470&fcfToken=eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJmcmVlLXZpZXctaWQiOjQxMTc4ODY0NSwiaWF0IjoxNjMwMDk3Njk5LCJleHAiOjE2MzAxODQwOTl9.ab-x4yF6ovkk1u3UCY7LJUI59ZCM_goTVEj2hyLg53Y ''article''] focusing upon the manhunt to locate Mamie Stuart
* Contemporary [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/31090955/mamie-stuarts-remains-found-in-1961/ ''news article''] pertaining to the discovery of Stuart's body
* ''Mamie Stuart Murdered: Jury's Verdict:'' A [[The Guardian|Guardian]] [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/47028124/the-guardian/ ''article''] detailing the 1961 inquest into Stuart's death
* 2020 ''[[Sunderland Echo]]'' article focusing upon Stuart's [https://www.sunderlandecho.com/news/crime/sunderland-murder-victim-finally-buried-century-after-her-mystery-disappearance-2481890 March 2020 interment at Bishopwearmouth Cemetery]
* Stuart's [http://www.unsolved-murders.co.uk/murder-content.php?key=2878&termRef=Mamie%20Stuart ''case file''] at unsolved-murders.co.uk
* ''Dark Land: Hunting the Killers': Mamie Stewart and George Shotton': [[BBC One]] documentary [https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p08wg6qf focusing upon the murder of Mamie Stuart]
* ''Mamie Stewart: A Grave Conclusion'': [[ITV Wales & West|HTV Wales]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qX8neTEqv1U archive footage] pertaining to the discovery of Stuart's body and the subsequent inquest into her death

{{DEFAULTSORT:Stuart, Mamie}}
[[Category:1893 births]]
[[Category:1893 births]]
[[Category:1910s missing person cases]]
[[Category:1919 deaths]]
[[Category:1919 deaths]]
[[Category:Murdered actresses]]
[[Category:1958 deaths]]
[[Category:Murdered entertainers]]
[[Category:1961 in Wales]]
[[Category:Victims of domestic abuse]]
[[Category:English murder victims]]
[[Category:Female murder victims]]
[[Category:Formerly missing people]]
[[Category:Missing person cases in Wales]]
[[Category:Murder in Wales]]
[[Category:November 1919 events]]
[[Category:People from Sunderland]]

Latest revision as of 13:30, 5 September 2024

Mamie Stuart
Stuart c. 1918
Born
Amy Stuart

c. 24 November 1893[1]
Sunderland, England
DisappearedNovember - December 1919
Caswell Bay, Wales
Died12 November - 6 December 1919 (aged 25-26)
Caswell Bay, Wales
Cause of deathMurder. Precise cause unknown. Skull trauma discounted[2]
Body discovered5 November 1961. Brandy Cove, Wales
Resting placeBishopwearmouth Cemetery, Sunderland
54°54′00″N 1°25′14″W / 54.8999°N 1.4206°W / 54.8999; -1.4206 (approximate)
Occupation(s)Former chorus girl
Typist
Known forVictim of murder
No body, no murder principle

Mamie Stuart (c. 24 November 1893 - November or December 1919) was a 26-year-old English woman who disappeared from her home in Caswell Bay, Wales, in 1919 and whose disappearance became known via the media as the Chorus Girl Mystery.[3] Her husband, George Everard Shotton—who had bigamously married Stuart in 1918—was considered the prime suspect in her disappearance. Although investigators strongly suspected foul play, as no body could be found, Shotton could not be tried for Stuart's murder. He was instead convicted of bigamy and sentenced to eighteen months' imprisonment.[4]

Stuart's dismembered body was found by three potholers in 1961, stashed behind a slab of rock 50 feet (15 m) inside a narrow, abandoned lead mine on the Gower Peninsula, just 200 yards (180 m) from the home Stuart had resided in at the time of her disappearance. Shotton had died of natural causes in a Fishponds hospital in April 1958.[5] A coroner's court found him guilty of Stuart's murder in December 1961.[6]

The disappearance and eventual discovery of Mamie Stuart was known as the Chorus Girl Mystery due to her background, the duration of time she remained missing, and the unanswered questions behind her ultimate fate.[7]

Early life

[edit]

Amy Stuart was born in Sunderland in November 1893 to James Stuart, a ship's captain, and his wife Jane (née McGregor). She had one sister, Edith, and a younger brother, James Smith Stuart.

As an adolescent, Stuart developed a passion for dancing. She also developed aspirations to perform in music halls and West End theatres.[8] With her parents' consent, at the age of fifteen Stuart performed as a chorus girl on provincial tours with a troupe named The Magnets. She adopted the name "Mamie", and later left her family home to pursue her career. She later formed her own dance troupe, which she named The Five Verona Girls. This troupe performed nationwide[9][10] and became a popular attraction, with the dancers—in a prudish era—sometimes daring to expose their legs to knee height.[11]

Stuart was later described by police as being an attractive young woman[12] with brown, bobbed hair and grey-blue eyes, approximately 5 ft 3 in (1.60 m) to 5 ft 4 in (1.63 m) tall, with "very even teeth with one missing" and "of good carriage".[13] As a result of an attack by a dog when she was a child, Stuart had four faint tooth marks on her right cheek, which she concealed with cosmetics.[8]

By early 1917, one member of The Five Verona Girls had become pregnant, while another broke her ankle. Shortly thereafter, the troupe disbanded and Stuart returned to her family home.[12]

Mamie Stuart and George Shotton, pictured shortly after their March 1918 wedding.

Marriage

[edit]

Shortly after the disbandment of The Five Verona Girls, in July 1917, Stuart (then aged 23) became acquainted with a marine engineer named George Shotton in their native Sunderland. Shotton introduced himself to Stuart as a widower, and the two soon began a relationship, with Shotton purchasing a diamond engagement ring for her within months of their acquaintance.[11] Less than a year after their acquaintance, they had married in South Shields.[14] The newlyweds then held their honeymoon in Droitwich Spa.[12] Shotton and Stuart initially lived in Bristol before relocating to Swansea, residing in a property in Trafalgar Terrace for six months.[15] The two then moved to live in Caswell Bay in the late summer of 1919, residing in a rented remote cottage overlooking Swansea Bay named Ty-Llanwydd. Stuart maintained regular correspondence with her family in Sunderland from this residence.[9]

Unbeknownst to Stuart, Shotton's wife, Mary Shotton (née Leader), whom he had wed in September 1905, was still alive. The couple had a son named Arthur, although their relationship was fraught with violence, with Shotton frequently beating his wife. His wife and child lived in Penarth, with Mary believing her husband's employment being the reason he was frequently absent from the family home for extended periods of time.

Disappearance

[edit]

Stuart was last seen in November or early December 1919. In letters Stuart had posted in the months prior to her disappearance, she had hinted that her marriage was an unhappy one, increasingly fraught with violence, and of her increasing desire to leave Shotton, who refused to allow her to return to the stage.[11] The final correspondence she is known to have penned to her parents from Ty-Llanwydd was dated 12 November. Shortly thereafter, her parents posted a reply, although this letter was returned to them marked 'House Closed'. Convinced an error had been made by the post office, the Stuarts posted a reply-paid telegram to their daughter, although this letter was also returned with the same marking.[16]

Shortly before Christmas 1919, a telegram was sent to Stuart's parents—apparently from their daughter—wishing them "compliments of the season". No further correspondence from Stuart or her husband was received by her parents.[16]

Investigation

[edit]

In March 1920, staff at Swansea's Grosvenor Hotel noted a leather trunk left by a male guest the previous December had remained unclaimed for approximately three months. As no address tag existed upon the exterior of the trunk, the manager of the hotel contacted police, who opened the trunk to discover two women's dresses and a pair of shoes, all extensively cut and torn. Also discovered inside the trunk were items of jewellery, a Bible, a rosary, and a manicure set.[17]

A scrap of paper was also discovered within the trunk. This bore the address of Stuart's parents, who informed investigators their daughter was missing, and that they had been attempting to locate her for several months. Both feared for her safety, and handed police several letters they had received from their daughter the previous year revealing her increasing unhappiness regarding her husband and her fear for her own wellbeing.[18] The Stuarts had also recently obtained a letter their daughter had penned weeks before her disappearance in which she had written: "If you don't hear from me, please wire to Mrs. Hearn [a friend] and see if she knows anything about me. The man is not all there. I don't think I will live with him much longer. My life is not worth living."[19] Investigators also discovered that in letters to her parents, Stuart had indicated her abuse at Shotton's hands, of her desire to cease living with him, and of her knowledge there was something "odd" about him.

Shortly thereafter, a maid cleaning the couple's deserted cottage in preparation for the accommodation of new tenants recovered Stuart's mildewed brown leather handbag concealed behind a dresser in an upstairs bedroom. This handbag still contained two pounds in loose change and Stuart's sugar ration card.[20]

Scotland Yard

[edit]

By the spring of 1920, South Wales Police were convinced Stuart had been murdered, that she had died at the hands of Shotton, and that the most likely motive for her murder had been either rage, control, jealousy, or a mixture of the three. Scotland Yard was contacted, and Chief Inspector William Draper dispatched to oversee the investigation. Draper ordered a thorough search of Ty-Llanwydd, the grounds of the property, and the surrounding terrain, although no trace of Stuart was found. A nationwide search for Stuart was ordered, with her description circulated throughout Britain. This tactic also yielded no successful leads.[21]

Prime suspect

[edit]

The chief suspect of both South Wales Police and Scotland Yard was Stuart's husband, George Shotton. Draper quickly located Shotton, who was living in Penarth with his wife and child, barely two miles from Ty-Llanwydd. Shotton admitted to knowing Stuart and to leaving the trunk at the Swansea hotel, which he claimed he had done shortly after she had left him following an argument early the previous December. This argument, he claimed, sourced from her infidelity.[22] He denied having married Stuart, or any knowledge of her current whereabouts.[23]

Despite Shotton's claims to the contrary, investigations quickly revealed he had bigamously married Stuart almost two years earlier, although he denied doing so and said that when she walked out on him, he had simply chosen to go back to his wife. Scotland Yard also contacted Stuart's friend, Mrs. Hearn, who confirmed Stuart had suffered domestic abuse at Shotton's hands and had once begged her: "If I am ever missing, do your utmost to find me, won't you?"[24]

As police could not find Stuart's body, they were unable to charge Shotton with her murder, as the law at the time prevented a suspect being tried for murder if there was no body.[19] Convinced of—but unable to prove—Shotton's guilt, by the mid-1920s, investigators at Scotland Yard began referring to this case as the "perfect crime".[25]

Bigamy charge

[edit]

Investigators had discovered early in their investigation that Shotton had bigamously married Stuart in South Shields on 25 March 1918. This bigamy charge proved to be the only they could charge him with. He was arrested on 29 May 1920 for this offence and brought to trial two months later at Glamorgan Assizes, pleading not guilty and claiming that although he had known and lived with Stuart, someone had assumed his identity to marry her. He also denied mistreating her, and repeated his claim the two had parted company following a quarrel in early December.[15] Several individuals testified at trial the two were indeed married and that, initially, their matrimony had been harmonious. One individual to testify was Stuart's sister, Edith, who testified Shotton had frequently referred to Stuart as "my own little wife" and had typically signed his letters with the words "Your own loving husband".[12]

At this bigamy trial, the prosecuting counsel, Sir Ellis Griffith KC, openly accused Shotton of "doing away with" Stuart, but in the absence of her body, nothing could be proven.[26] On 13 July, Shotton was sentenced to serve eighteen months' imprisonment with hard labour for bigamously marrying Stuart. Shortly after he was released from jail, his legal wife divorced him.[23]

The 10 February 1923 front page of the Daily Mirror, describing the manhunt to locate Mamie Stuart.

Intervening years

[edit]

Sightings

[edit]

In the years following Shotton's bigamy conviction, numerous alleged sightings of Stuart were reported as far afield as Canada, South Africa, Australia and India. Many of these sightings received extensive press coverage. One early reported sighting of Stuart was made by the chief officer of the cargo ship Blythmoor, Thomas James, who was a close friend of her father. He claimed to have seen Stuart in the portal town of Karachi in the early 1920s, and that she was part of a troupe of English travelling artists performing at a Karachi theatre. When approached by James, however, the woman had denied she was Stuart and quickly walked away. However, James was adamant the woman he had spoken to was Stuart.[27]

Drainage pit discovery

[edit]

In 1950, a dentist purchased the remote cottage Shotton and Stuart had resided in at the time of her disappearance. Performing drainage work around the property, this individual discovered a pit at the rear of the house, close to a hole in the foundation which reached beneath the floorboards of the dining room. This pit had been filled with quicklime, although all that was recovered from the pit was one lady's shoe.[22]

George Shotton

[edit]

After Shotton was released from prison in early 1922, he moved to Tintern, where he ran a smallholding. He was a regular churchgoer, and remembered in the village as "a charming chap" who "practically [ran] the tennis club". After several years living in his village, Shotton abruptly left, possibly due to a local newspaper having revived the story of Stuart's disappearance and his suspected culpability. He then relocated to Balham, South London, to live with his elderly mother, Louisa, taking a series of jobs including being an odd job man and a motor mechanic.[28]

In May 1938, Shotton was arrested for threatening his sister, Gladys Austin, with a revolver at her Fareham home. He was also charged with causing actual bodily harm to her. This incident sourced from resentment between the siblings regarding their respective bequeathments in their mother's will. He was sentenced to serve twelve months in jail with hard labour. Following his release, Shotton severed all contact with his family and friends and moved to Ledbury, where he worked at an aircraft factory. He later relocated to Bristol.[12]

Discovery

[edit]

Forty-two years after Stuart's disappearance, on 5 November 1961, her remains were discovered in a rotting sack hidden behind a large stone slab 50 feet down a disused lead mine at Brandy Cove in Caswell by three young potholers named Graham Jones, John Gerke and Chris MacNamara. Her body had been concealed just 200 yards from the home she and Shotton had resided in at the time of her disappearance.[29][30]

One of the potholers, John Gerke, would later state that he and his friends had chosen to explore this area as it had formerly been used by smugglers and that as the trio attempted to explore a ventilation shaft, their route through a narrow tunnel approximately ten feet in length was blocked by a large stone slab. Pulling this slab aside, Gerke observed a skull, which he turned to face him, and realised was human. Nearby lay a black celluloid hair clasp still containing a tuft of mid-brown hair, items of jewellery including a seven-inch brass chain, and several scraps of clothing.[23]

Brandy Cove, Gower Peninsula. Mamie Stewart's body was discovered in a mine shaft at this location in 1961.

Forensic examination

[edit]

The remains were taken to the Forensic Science Laboratory in Cardiff, where a forensic examination of the remains was conducted by two Home Office pathologists named William James and John Griffiths. The bones were reassembled into a complete skeleton—minus the rib cage—belonging to a female between 5 ft 3in and 5 ft 4in tall, and with one canine tooth extracted from the upper jaw.[12] Three of her wisdom teeth were present, suggesting she was over twenty years of age. An X-ray study of the growth areas of her bones revealed the decedent was a fully mature woman, but that complete maturation had only recently occurred, suggesting she was aged in her mid-twenties. As two bones at the base of her skull had recently fused, the decedent was unlikely to have been over twenty-eight years of age.[31]

Sections of the skeleton bore green staining due to copper contamination sourcing from the brass jewellery recovered with her remains. No precise cause of death could be determined, although the pathologists were unable to discount strangulation or stabbing.[23]

The physical description of the remains and the location of their recovery matched the contemporaneous description of Stuart. Although the remains were completely skeletonized, the scraps of clothing and footwear and the jewellery found alongside the remains indicated when she had most likely died. The National Museum of Wales confirmed that the gilt-copper stole tassels worn by the decedent were most fashionable around the year 1920; the most recent year of manufacture of the gold wedding ring and diamond engagement ring also found had been 1912 and 1918, indicating that death had most likely occurred in the years immediately after World War I.[32] An elderly lady who had been a close friend of Stuart's identified both rings as belonging to the missing woman.[29][n 1]

Shotton

[edit]

With the assistance of Interpol, police again began their efforts to locate George Shotton, with Scotland Yard assigning nine men full-time to this task.[11] Three weeks later, he was located—in Bristol's Arnos Vale Cemetery, having died of natural causes just three years previously on April 30, 1958,[29] at the age of 77.[33] He had died penniless, and had lived his final years in a home for elderly people before suffering a stroke and dying in Bristol's Southmead Hospital. Shortly after his death, Shotton had been buried in an unmarked pauper's grave simply bearing his welfare number.[34]

Shotton's first wife was still alive.[35] When questioned in 1961, she confirmed that her former husband possessed a violent temper, and that his violent temper, his adultery, and her conviction of his guilt in Stuart's murder while she had remained missing had been the reasons she had divorced him. She further stated she had seldom seen Shotton following their divorce, and that he had never confessed his guilt to her.[36]

Inquest

[edit]

The formal inquest into Stuart's death was held on 14 December 1961. Throughout the duration of the proceedings, her skeleton was laid on a table in the well of the courtroom.

Forensic testimony revealed the body had been severed at three equal lengths: one cut had been made at the lower femur just above the knees; a second horizontal cut had been made through both humerus bones at mid-section, with the instrument used to dissect her body also severing the lower shoulder blades and her spine. Evidently, Stuart's murderer had endured difficulty severing her body, as several bones bore striations and indentations indicating her murderer had made several unsuccessful efforts to dissect her before severing her bones. No bones from Stuart's rib cage were recovered at the scene of her discovery.[n 2]

To assist in the formal identification, forensic experts superimposed a photograph of the skull that had been discovered over a smiling, life-sized portrait of Stuart taken in her performing days in order to aid the identification. The coroner, D. R. James, testified that although he was able to discount any form of skull trauma as being the cause of Stuart's death, as no soft tissue remained, he was unable to pinpoint the cause of her death. Stating his conviction Stuart's death was murder, James then asked the coroner's jury the question: "Can you imagine any reason for sawing up anyone if the person had committed suicide or if the death was accidental?"[6]

Towards the end of the inquest, an 83-year-old retired postman named William Symons informed the coroner that in December 1919, as he had been delivering mail to Ty-Llanwydd, he had observed Shotton struggling to put a large sack into the back of a small yellow van parked outside the front gate of the couple's cottage. According to Symons, as he offered to help Shotton with the heavy load, he had looked up and observed his blue uniform before replying: "No! No! No! Oh god, you gave me a fright! For a minute I thought you were a policeman."[38] He had then observed Shotton place the load into the van and drive in the direction of Brandy Cove.[29][n 3]

Conclusions

[edit]

On 15 December,[5] the inquest into Mamie Stuart's death concluded that the remains were indeed hers, and that she had been murdered, although the precise cause of death could not be determined. Furthermore, the inquest concluded she had been murdered between 12 November and 6 December 1919, and that the now-deceased George Shotton was responsible for her murder.[39][n 4]

Burial

[edit]

At the conclusion of the 1961 inquest, Stuart's skeleton was retained at Cardiff University, where eminent forensic pathologist Bernard Knight is believed to have occasionally used them to teach students. No efforts were made to locate surviving relatives and return her body to her family.[40]

Stuart's great niece, Susan Oldnall, only discovered the whereabouts of her great aunt's remains in 2019 when she was approached by researchers for a programme on the CBS Reality channel focusing upon unsolved murders. Oldnall then discovered her great aunt's remains were being stored in a cupboard inside a Cardiff forensic laboratory. The senior forensic pathologist at the laboratory, Dr. Stephen Leadbeatter, had retained the remains—despite being urged to dispose of them—in the hope a surviving member of Stuart's family might reclaim them. Upon learning of Oldnall's whereabouts and wishes, Leadbeatter personally took Stuart's remains to Oldnall in order that they may be interred by her family.

Stuart's body was buried in Bishopwearmouth Cemetery in Sunderland in December 2019. She was buried in a grave alongside her parents. Four of Stuart's descendants attended the service. Shortly thereafter, Mrs Oldnall commented to the BBC: "She's been treated with such lack of dignity, and now she's with her parents. I'm not religious, but I do feel much better about it now ... I only did what a lot of people would have done and I hope, if there is a heaven, that the family are all finally having a good time together."[41][42]

Media

[edit]

Television

[edit]
  • ITV Cymru have broadcast a documentary focusing upon the murder of Mamie Stuart as part of their documentary series Crime Files. Presented by Andrea Byrne, this documentary was first broadcast in September 2016.[43]
  • The BBC One documentary television series Dark Land: Hunting the Killers has broadcast a fifty-minute documentary focusing upon the murder of Mamie Stuart. Directed by David Howard, this documentary, titled Mamie Stuart and George Shotton, was initially broadcast in November 2020.[44]
  • CBS Reality have commissioned a sixty-minute documentary focusing upon the murder of Mamie Stuart as part of their documentary series Murder by the Sea. Presented by Geoffrey Wansell, this episode was first broadcast on 7 May 2019.[45][46]

Literature

[edit]
  • Hinton, Bob (2012), South Wales Murders, Gloucestershire: History Press Limited ISBN 978-0-752-48389-4
  • Evans, Colin (1996), The Casebook of Forensic Detection: How Science Solved 100 of the World's Most Baffling Crimes, Canada: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. ISBN 978-0-471-07650-6
  • Ubelaker, Douglas H.; Scamell, Henry (1992), Bones: A Forensic Detective's Casebook, New York: M. Evans and Company Inc., ISBN 978-1-283-61515-0
  • Wilson, Colin (1995), Written in Blood: A History of Forensic Detection, Glasgow: HarperCollins, ISBN 978-0-58620-842-7

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ At the subsequent inquest into Stuart's death, twenty witnesses, including her relatives, testified that the rings found in the mine had belonged to her.[10]
  2. ^ Pathologist Bernard Knight, who had direct knowledge of the case and had extensively examined the remains, wrote in New Scientist in 1996 that her skeleton had in fact been sawn into 6 parts.[37]
  3. ^ Symons had not informed investigators of this incident during their initial search for Stuart in 1920. He would testify at the inquest his reason for not doing so was that he had not seen any significance in the incident.[12]
  4. ^ In 1961, a coroner's court could publicly name a murderer, although doing so was subsequently disallowed by the Criminal Law Act 1977.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "FreeBMD Births: September - December 1893". freebmd.org.uk. 19 September 2001. Retrieved 15 August 2021.
  2. ^ "The Secret of a Brutal Killing Lies Buried in a Bristol Grave for All Eternity". Bristol Post. 7 March 2021. Retrieved 15 August 2021.
  3. ^ "ITV's Crime Files Reveals How Police Searched for Dismembered Body". ITV News. 6 September 2016. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
  4. ^ "Scotland Yard Believes That There Is No Perfect Crime". The Dispatch. 7 December 1961. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
  5. ^ a b "Old Mystery Finally Ends". The StarPhoenix. 16 December 1961. Retrieved 29 August 2021.
  6. ^ a b "Grisly Find Solved Old Mystery; Time to Remember". 26 November 2001. Retrieved 16 August 2021 – via thefreelibrary.com.
  7. ^ "Chorus Girl Mystery: Explorers' Grisly Find". The Sydney Morning Herald. 12 November 1961. Retrieved 15 August 2021.
  8. ^ a b "Explorers' Grisly Cave Find". The Sydney Morning Herald. 12 November 1961. Retrieved 23 August 2021.
  9. ^ a b "The Innocent Newlywed Whose Bigamist Husband Dumped Her Sawn-up Remains in a Disused Mine Shaft". Wales Online. 23 December 2019. Retrieved 17 August 2021.
  10. ^ a b Murders, Unsolved (23 April 2016). "Unsolved Murders: Mamie Stuart". Unsolvedmurders.co.uk. 2878 (1919). Retrieved 16 August 2021.
  11. ^ a b c d "Perfect Crime Turned Out to be Only Almost Perfect". Redlands Daily Facts. 12 December 1961. Retrieved 22 August 2021.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g Swansea Murders ISBN 978-0-752-49307-7 ch. 21
  13. ^ Murders, Unsolved (1 January 2010). "Unsolved Murders: Mamie Stuart, Age 25". Unsolved-murders.co.uk. 2878 (1919). Retrieved 24 August 2021.
  14. ^ "The Secret of a Brutal Killing Lies Buried in a Bristol Grave for All Eternity". Bristol Post. 7 March 2021. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
  15. ^ a b "Gower Skeleton May be Mamie". South Wales Echo. 6 November 1961.
  16. ^ a b The New Murderers' Who's Who ISBN 978-0-747-23270-4 p. 206
  17. ^ Real-Life Crimes 1992, p. 156.
  18. ^ "Mamie Stewart: Swansea". thetvdb.com. 7 May 2019. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
  19. ^ a b The Casebook of Forensic Detection: How Science Solved 100 of the World's Most Baffling Crimes ISBN 978-0-471-07650-6 p. 129
  20. ^ The New Murderers' Who's Who ISBN 978-0-747-23270-4 p. 207
  21. ^ "The Secret of a Brutal Killing Lies Buried in a Bristol Grave for All Eternity". Bristol Post. 26 December 2019.
  22. ^ a b Real-Life Crimes 1992, p. 157.
  23. ^ a b c d The Casebook of Forensic Detection: How Science Solved 100 of the World's Most Baffling Crimes ISBN 978-0-471-07650-6 p. 130
  24. ^ Encyclopedia of World Crime: S-Z ISBN 978-0-923-58200-5 p. 2872
  25. ^ "Perfect Crime Bared 42 Years After Chorus Beauty Murdered". Eureka Humboldt Standard. 7 December 1961. Retrieved 27 August 2021.
  26. ^ "Missing Mamie: Victim of Bigotry". The Sydney Sun. 23 September 1920. Retrieved 24 August 2021.
  27. ^ "Is Missing Mamie Stuart Alive in India?". Daily Mirror. 10 February 1923.
  28. ^ Real-Life Crimes 1992, p. 158.
  29. ^ a b c d The Casebook of Forensic Detection: How Science Solved 100 of the World's Most Baffling Crimes ISBN 978-0-471-07650-6 p. 131
  30. ^ "Re-investigating Some of Wales' Most Shocking Murders". BBC News. 19 November 2020. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  31. ^ Real-Life Crimes 1992, p. 155.
  32. ^ "Sunderland Woman Whose Dismembered Body was Found in an Old Mine Has Finally Been Laid to Rest". Chronicle Live. 15 March 2020. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
  33. ^ "The Secret of a Brutal Killing Lies Buried in a Bristol Grave for All Eternity". Bristol Post. 26 December 2019.
  34. ^ "Grisly Find Solved Old Mystery; Time to Remember". South Wales Echo. 26 November 2001. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
  35. ^ "The Innocent Newlywed Whose Bigamist Husband Dumped Her Sawn-up Remains in a Disused Mine Shaft". Wales Online. 23 December 2019.
  36. ^ "Dan O'Neill: Down Memory Lane". Wales Online. 1 November 2011. Retrieved 20 August 2021.
  37. ^ Bernard Knight (7 September 1996). "Review: Don't Touch Anything". New Scientist.
  38. ^ "The Secret of a Brutal Killing Lies Buried in a Bristol Grave for All Eternity". Bristol Post. 26 December 2019.
  39. ^ "Murder of Mamie Stuart by George Shotton at Caswell Bay, Glamorgan, in 1919". nationalarchives.gov.uk. 1 January 2020. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
  40. ^ "Family Burial for Murder Victim After 100 Years". headtopics.com. 14 March 2020. Retrieved 27 August 2021.
  41. ^ "Mamie Stuart: Sunderland Burial for 1919 Murder Victim". BBC News. 14 March 2020.
  42. ^ "Sunderland Woman Whose Dismembered Body was Found in an Old Mine Has Finally Been Laid to Rest". Chronicle Live. 15 March 2020. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
  43. ^ "ITV's Crime Files Reveals How Police Searched for Dismembered Body". ITV News. 6 September 2016. Retrieved 17 August 2021.
  44. ^ "Dark Land: Hunting the Killers: Mamie Stuart and George Shotton". BBC One. 4 December 2020. Retrieved 17 August 2021.
  45. ^ "Murder by the Sea: Mamie Stuart". jarossi.com. 6 May 2019. Retrieved 17 August 2021.
  46. ^ "Murder by the Sea: Mamie Stewart, Swansea". thetvdb.com. 10 October 2019. Retrieved 17 August 2021.

Cited works and further reading

[edit]
  • Brookes, Geoff (2013), Swansea Murders, Gloucestershire: History Press Limited, ISBN 978-0-752-49307-7
  • Gaute, J. H. H. (1991), The New Murderers' Who's Who, New York: Dorset Press, ISBN 978-0-747-23270-4
  • Hinton, Bob (2012), South Wales Murders, Gloucestershire: History Press Limited, ISBN 978-0-752-48389-4
  • Houck, Max M. (2016), Forensic Anthropology, London: Elsevier Publishing, ISBN 978-0-128-02523-9
  • Innes, Brian (2000), Bodies of Evidence, London: Amber Books Ltd, ISBN 978-1-856-05623-6
  • Lane, Bran (1992). Real-Life Crimes. London, England: Eaglemoss Publications Ltd. ISBN 978-1-856-29736-3.
  • Latham, Krista E.; Bartelink, Eric J.; Finnegan, Michael (2017), New Perspectives in Forensic Human Skeletal Identification, San Diego: Academic Press, ISBN 978-0-128-05429-1
  • Morris, Jim (2015), The Who's Who of British Crime: In the Twentieth Century, Stroud: Amberley Publishing, ISBN 978-1-445-63924-6
  • Nash, Robert J. (1989), Encyclopedia of World Crime: S-Z, Michigan: CrimeBooks, ISBN 978-0-923-58200-5
  • Pickering, Robert B. (2009), The Use of Forensic Anthropology, New York: Taylor & Francis Group, ISBN 978-1-420-06877-1
  • Tilstone, William; Savage, Kathleen; Clark, Leigh (2006), Forensic Science: An Encyclopedia of History, Methods, and Techniques, Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, ISBN 978-1-576-07194-6
  • Tippings, Lisa, (2019), Secret Swansea, Stroud, Amberley Publishing, ISBN 978-1-445-68867-1
  • Ubelaker, Douglas H.; Scamell, Henry (1992), Bones: A Forensic Detective's Casebook, New York: M. Evans and Company Inc., ISBN 978-1-283-61515-0
  • Wilson, Colin (1995), Written in Blood: A History of Forensic Detection, Glasgow: HarperCollins, ISBN 978-0-58620-842-7
[edit]