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In 1863 there was a fire in the Pritchards' Berkeley Terrace house in Glasgow, which killed a young servant girl. The fire started in her room but she made no attempt to escape, suggesting that she may have been unconscious, drugged or already dead. No charges were brought, but the [[procurator fiscal]] looked into the case.<ref name=Scotsman/>
In 1863 there was a fire in the Pritchards' Berkeley Terrace house in Glasgow, which killed a young servant girl. The fire started in her room but she made no attempt to escape, suggesting that she may have been unconscious, drugged or already dead. No charges were brought, but the [[procurator fiscal]] looked into the case.<ref name=Scotsman/>


In 1865 Pritchard poisoned his [[mother-in-law]], Jane Cowan, 70, who died on 28 February. His wife Mary Jane, 38, died a month later on 18 March. Both were living at the family's new home in [[Sauchiehall Street]], Glasgow. He was caught after an anonymous letter was sent to the authorities.<ref name=TCL>[http://www.truecrimelibrary.com/crime_series_show.php?id=370&series_number=3 True Crime Library]</ref> When the bodies were [[exhume]]d, the poison [[antimony]] was found in their system.
In 1865 Pritchard poisoned his [[mother-in-law]], Jane Cowan, 70, who died on 28 February. His wife, who he was treating for an illness (with the help of a Dr Paterson), died a month later on 18 March at the age of 38. Both were living at the family's new home in [[Sauchiehall Street]], Glasgow. He was caught after an anonymous letter was sent to the authorities.<ref name=TCL>[http://www.truecrimelibrary.com/crime_series_show.php?id=370&series_number=3 True Crime Library]</ref> When the bodies were [[exhume]]d, the poison [[antimony]] was found in their system.


==Trial==
==Trial==

Revision as of 20:55, 29 November 2008

Dr Edward William Pritchard (1825 – 28 June 1865) was a Scottish doctor who was convicted of the poisoning of two family members. He is also suspected of the murder of a third person, though he was never tried for it. He was the last person to be publicly executed in Glasgow.[1][2]

Early years

Pritchard was born in Southsea,[3] Hampshire, into a naval family. He claimed to have studied at Kings College Hospital in London and to have graduated from there in 1846. He then served in the Royal Navy as an assistant surgeon with HMS Victory. For another four years he served on various other ships travelling around the world, before coming back to Portsmouth where he met his future wife Mary Jane Taylor, the daughter of a prosperous silk merchant in Edinburgh.[4]

The couple married in 1851, but after a period apart, Dr Pritchard resigned from the Navy. He first took a job as a general practitioner in Yorkshire, living for a time in Hunmanby. There he became a prominent freemason in the lodge in nearby Scarborough, where he was Master of the Royal Lodge in 1857 and Master of Old Globe Lodge in 1858 and 1859.[5] In 1859, however, he left under a cloud and in debt, moving to Glasgow.[4]

Murders

In 1863 there was a fire in the Pritchards' Berkeley Terrace house in Glasgow, which killed a young servant girl. The fire started in her room but she made no attempt to escape, suggesting that she may have been unconscious, drugged or already dead. No charges were brought, but the procurator fiscal looked into the case.[2]

In 1865 Pritchard poisoned his mother-in-law, Jane Cowan, 70, who died on 28 February. His wife, who he was treating for an illness (with the help of a Dr Paterson), died a month later on 18 March at the age of 38. Both were living at the family's new home in Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow. He was caught after an anonymous letter was sent to the authorities.[6] When the bodies were exhumed, the poison antimony was found in their system.

Trial

Pritchard was convicted after a five-day hearing in Edinburgh in July 1865[6] presided over by judge Lord Inglis.[4] He was executed in front of thousands at the Saltmarket end of Glasgow Green in an 8am execution.[2]

Pritchard was played by Joseph Cotten in an episode of the television series "On Trial" (episode name: The Trial of Edward Pritchard) in 1956.[7]

References

  1. ^ Hallworth, Rodney and Mark Williams, Where there's a will... The sensational life of Dr John Bodkin Adams, Capstan Press, Jersey, 1983. ISBN 0946797005
  2. ^ a b c Scotsman.com
  3. ^ "Edward+Pritchard"+antimony&lr=&ei=E6ExSZDAOoyuyATq1IHfCQ#PPA231,M1 John Emsley, The Elements of Murder: A History of Poison - 2006
  4. ^ a b c The Grange Association
  5. ^ Scarborough.co.uk
  6. ^ a b True Crime Library
  7. ^ IMDB