<h2 class="vspace"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV</SPAN><br/> <span class="subhead">CATHERINE WILSON</span></h2>
<p class="drop-cap5"><span class="smcap1">Amongst</span> female poisoners Catherine Wilson
takes a leading place. She had an active
career as a professional murderess extending
to ten years, perhaps even longer than that, but we
do know that she committed murder in 1853, and she
was not brought to justice and executed until 1862.
A very long career, indeed, for a woman whose ignorance
was only equalled by her cunning, and whose gaunt
and unfavourable exterior was in keeping with a black
heart and a diseased brain.</p>
<p>The first time the public heard the name of this
poisoner was in the month of April, 1862, when she
stood in the dock in Marylebone Police Court, and
was charged with having attempted to murder a Mrs.
Connell by administering poison to her.</p>
<p>Mrs. Connell had been living apart from her husband,
and, having found a lonely and companionless life
irksome to her, she began to long for a reconciliation
with the man who had wooed and won her not so many
years previously. Of course, to effect this it was necessary
to find a sympathetic woman who would be able
to approach Mr. Connell and delicately and tactfully
sound him as to his views regarding a reunion with his
wife. For some unexplained reason Mrs. Connell asked
Catherine Wilson to act as intermediary, and to prepare
her for the task Mrs. Connell invited the widow to have
tea with her. She opened her heart to her guest, did<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">198</SPAN></span>
not conceal the fact that she had a little money of her
own, and volunteered other information, while the
hard-faced creature with the eyes of a tigress sat opposite
and planned her death.</p>
<p>The conversation was abruptly ended by a cry of
pain from Mrs. Connell. She had not noticed that
although Mrs. Wilson was only a guest she had poured
out the last cup of tea for her, and she thought that
her illness was the result of worry and overstrain.</p>
<p>Of course Mrs. Wilson instantly became sympathetically
attentive. The hard eyes even moistened as
she helped Mrs. Connell upstairs and laid her gently
and tenderly on her bed. Then she ran off to the nearest
chemist's shop and brought back a bottle of medicine,
but when Mrs. Connell took some of it her sufferings
became intensified. Catherine Wilson soothingly
offered some more of the "medicine" she had brought
from the chemist's, and Mrs. Connell, writhing in her
agony, again tried to drink it, but spilt a little of it
on the bed-clothes. The "medicine" was so strong
that it actually burnt holes in the linen!</p>
<p>Mrs. Connell did not die, though she suffered a great
deal, and at one time nearly succumbed.</p>
<p>The matter was too serious to be allowed to rest,
and, as she had been told by Mrs. Wilson that it was
the chemist's fault for giving her such medicine, she
called on him for an explanation. The chemist,
astounded and angered by the charge, quickly proved
that the medicine he had sold was perfectly harmless,
and when the police were sent for he demonstrated
conclusively that if anything noxious had been added
to the contents of the bottle the only person who could
have done it was the woman who had conveyed it from
his shop to Mrs. Connell.</p>
<p>After that there was only one thing to do, and that
was to arrest Catherine Wilson, who had disappeared
a few days previously. Her flight was in itself almost<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">199</SPAN></span>
a confession, and for six weeks she managed to evade
the detectives who were searching for her, but by chance
she was recognized by an officer when he was off duty,
and he took her into custody.</p>
<p>After several appearances at the Marylebone Police
Court she was committed for trial, and, under close
supervision, she calmly awaited the day of the great
ordeal.</p>
<p>And while she is in prison we can trace her history
up to the spring of 1862.</p>
<p>It was towards the close of the summer of 1853 that
a widower of the name of Mawer advertised for a housekeeper.
He lived in the pleasant town of Boston, in
Lincolnshire, was prosperous, and he would have been
quite happy but for gout, an enemy with which he was
daily fighting, using as his principal weapon a poison—colchicum—which,
taken in small doses, is often prescribed
by doctors. In large quantities it is, of course,
fatal.</p>
<p>Catherine Wilson was one of the applicants for the
post, and she was successful in obtaining it. She called
herself a widow, and, perhaps, there had been a husband
once who may have been her first victim. Mr.
Mawer, however, thought her a respectable, hardworking
woman, and she certainly proved unremitting in her
attentions to him.</p>
<p>Within a few months they were intimate friends,
and the housekeeper was so assiduous and helpful
that Mr. Mawer's gout became much better. He told
Catherine Wilson that it was entirely due to her, and
to prove his gratitude he informed her that he had
drawn up a will bequeathing everything to her. It
was a fatal disclosure, for had he not disclosed to her
his testamentary dispositions there can be little doubt
but that he would have lived much longer than he did.
The poisoner began her fell work at once, tempted by
the prospect of gain, and as she had the poison already<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">200</SPAN></span>
in the house there was no way of escape for the unfortunate
man.</p>
<p>In October, 1854, he died, poisoned with colchicum,
as the doctor discovered; but, as Mr. Mawer was known
to have used that poison to counteract the gout, no
suspicion was attached to the "heartbroken" housekeeper.</p>
<p>Mr. Mawer's fortune was not as large as the woman
had imagined it to be. Still, it amounted to a few
hundred pounds, and the murderess, who had good
reasons for not wishing to remain too long in Boston,
packed up and came to London.</p>
<p>She did not come alone, for when she took lodgings
at the house of a Mrs. Soames, at 27 Alfred Street,
Bedford Square, she was accompanied by a man of
the name of Dixon, whom she described as her husband.
And packed away in her trunk was a large packet of
colchicum, which had been left over after Mr. Mawer
had been disposed of. There was enough of the poison
to kill half a dozen persons. Perhaps if Mr. Dixon
had been aware of that he might not have been so
anxious to caress this human tigress.</p>
<p>But Catherine Wilson soon discovered that she had
very little use for Dixon. He did not make enough
money to please her, and when the last of Mr. Mawer's
legacy had been spent she began to look about her
for a fresh victim. Dixon was clearly in the way,
particularly so since that Saturday night when he had
returned home intoxicated and had struck her. The
wretched man had no money, and Wilson had grown
tired of him. Besides, their landlady, Mrs. Soames
was by now Wilson's intimate friend, and she had learned
that Mrs. Soames was by no means dependent on letting
lodgings and that she had moneyed relatives and friends.
Before she could attack Mrs. Soames it was necessary
Dixon should be removed.</p>
<p>One day Dixon was taken ill, a curious wasting illness<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">201</SPAN></span>
accompanied by terrible pains in the chest. Wilson
hastened to assure everybody she knew that her "husband"
had always suffered from consumption, although,
as she had to confess, outwardly he appeared to be
very strong and healthy. After administering a few
small doses of colchicum the monster finished off with
a strong dose, and then the "widow" tearfully implored
the doctor not to cut her "dear one" up because during
his lifetime he had expressed a horror of that "indignity."</p>
<p>But the doctor would not give a death certificate
without a post-mortem examination, for, Mrs. Wilson
having insisted that the cause of Dixon's death was
galloping consumption, the medical man was curious.
His curiosity deepened when on opening the body he
found the lungs absolutely perfect. Consumption then
was not the reason. But what was? The doctors were
puzzled, yet in some extraordinary manner Catherine
Wilson wriggled out of danger, and Dixon was buried.
No one accused her, and even if the doctor had his
suspicions he never gave a hint of them.</p>
<p>The "widow" went about in mourning, and as she
was quite alone in the world now Mrs. Soames was
sweeter and more sympathetic than ever, and night
after night the two women sat in the cosy little room
Mrs. Wilson rented, and there exchanged confidences.
The poisoner had a long series of skilful lies ready to
impress her friend, but Mrs. Soames, who had nothing
to conceal, disclosed the story of her life, and added
particulars of her friends and relations.</p>
<p>When she told Mrs. Wilson after breakfast one morning
that she was going out to receive from her step-brother
a legacy which had been left her by an aunt
the poisoner once again experienced that irresistible
desire to take human life. But here there seemed to
be no reason why she should run the risk of committing
a cold-blooded crime. By killing Mrs. Soames she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">202</SPAN></span>
could not become possessed of her property, for the
landlady had children, and she also had several male
relatives who would have interfered at once had Mrs.
Soames died and made a comparative stranger her
sole heir.</p>
<p>Mrs. Soames was paid the money and returned home,
where her married daughter had tea ready for her.
They drank it alone, but as they were finishing Mrs.
Wilson came to the door and asked the landlady to
come upstairs with her. The request was complied
with at once.</p>
<p>What happened at the interview we can only conjecture.
Probably Mrs. Wilson first congratulated Mrs.
Soames on the receipt of the legacy. Then she may
have invited her to join her in a drink to her continued
prosperity. Whatever did happen it is certain that
from the time of that secret interview Mrs. Soames
was never the same woman again.</p>
<p>The landlady could not get up next morning at her
usual time. This was remarkable, because she was
noted for her early rising, and she was not happy unless
superintending the work of her house. Mrs. Wilson
was, of course, deeply concerned for her friend, and
she asked the daughter to be permitted to look after
her mother.</p>
<p>Without waiting for permission the depraved creature
appointed herself the only nurse, and she would not
allow anyone else to give the patient her medicines.
All the special food, too, passed through her hands,
and when compelled by sheer exhaustion to take a little
rest Wilson did not return to her own bedroom, but
snatched a couple of hours sleep in an arm-chair in Mrs.
Soames's room.</p>
<p>On the fourth day of her illness Mrs. Soames had
ceased to vomit, and was not suffering any pain. Catherine
Wilson pretended to be delighted, though really
she was puzzled by the marvellous recovery the landlady<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">203</SPAN></span>
had made. By sheer luck she had managed to
resist the poison her "nurse" had been giving her.
Of course she did not suspect this, nor could she gather
from the concerned look on Wilson's face that the truth
was that the murderess of Mr. Mawer and Dixon was
going to give her a large dose of colchicum that very
day and kill her.</p>
<p>Bending over the patient, Wilson offered her another
dose of medicine, and the trusting woman took it with
gratitude, for she had told her "friend" that her recovery
was due to her nursing. But within a few minutes
the landlady was screaming in agony again, and an
hour later Catherine Wilson was silently weeping by
the window while the doctor, who had been summoned
in haste, announced that Mrs. Soames was dead.</p>
<p>The same doctor had attended Dixon, and although
the symptoms were similar in both cases he did not
suspect Catherine Wilson of murder. Mr. Whidburn—that
was his name—was studiously correct, and,
as in the case of Dixon, he refused to give a medical
certificate without a post-mortem examination. He
made the examination himself, and then certified that
death had occurred from natural causes. Mrs. Soames's
nearest relation received the certificate, and the murderess
was safe. She surprised the family, however,
by a demand for the payment of ten pounds which she
said her late landlady owed her, and when she adduced
proof in the shape of a signed promise to pay by Mrs.
Soames the money was handed over. Nothing was
said as to anything Mrs. Wilson may have owed Mrs.
Soames. Later it was known that she had borrowed
a fairly large sum from the kind-hearted landlady,
and it was suspected with good cause that the promissory
note for ten pounds was a forgery. But these
were of no importance when later the gravest of all
charges was made against the poisoner.</p>
<p>The death of Mrs. Soames resulted in another change<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">204</SPAN></span>
of address for Catherine Wilson, and she went some
distance away from Bedford Square, engaging rooms
in Loughborough Road, Brixton.</p>
<p>The poisoner was well off, and did not stint herself,
and it was assumed by her new acquaintance that the
late Mr. Wilson had dowered her with sufficient goods
to enable her to live independently of the world.</p>
<p>It may be noted here that a few weeks before the
death of Mrs. Soames, Wilson had spent nearly a fortnight
shopping with a friend from the North, Mrs.
Atkinson. One day Mrs. Atkinson had had the misfortune
to lose a purse containing fifty-one pounds.
It was a terrible blow, and Mrs. Wilson was so grieved
for her that she offered to lend her all the spare cash
she had. The offer was refused—as Wilson had known
it would be—and Mrs. Atkinson had returned home
without having breathed a word against her old friend.
But when Catherine Wilson came back after seeing
Mrs. Atkinson off from King's Cross she was in funds,
and the following day she made an extensive purchase
of clothes for herself. Picking the pocket of her best
friend was the smallest of sins to a woman who could
take human life without a moment's hesitation.</p>
<p>It was the custom of Mrs. Atkinson to come to London
once a year, and generally during the month of October.
She and her husband lived in Kirkby Lonsdale, in
Cumberland. Mr. Atkinson was a tailor, while his
wife ran a millinery and dressmaking establishment
on her own account. Strict attention to business and
frugal living were the sources of the prosperity of the
Atkinsons, and, on her annual visits to London Mrs.
Atkinson never came provided with less than a hundred
pounds with which to buy stock. She carried the
notes concealed about her person, and, of course, her
severe loss in 1859 made her more careful than ever
when she came to London in the October of 1860.</p>
<p>Mrs. Atkinson's visit to the Metropolis was exceedingly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">205</SPAN></span>
well-timed from Wilson's point of view. All
the money she had obtained during the previous twelve
months had vanished, and she was behind with her
rent. Her new landlady, fiercely practical, was demanding
payment every day, and her affairs were so
bad that, beyond the paltry breakfast she extracted
from the landlady, she often saw no food during a
whole day. It would not have done to have disclosed
the true state of affairs to her friend from the North.
That might have frightened her away. She invited
her to stay with her, and then she told her landlady
that her prosperous friend would lend her the money
to pay all her debts. In the circumstances the landlady
was only too pleased to see Mrs. Atkinson in her
house. Mrs. Atkinson left Kirkby Lonsdale in perfect
health, and looking forward with zest to her stay in
London. A keen business woman, she, nevertheless,
knew how to combine business with pleasure, and,
having said good-bye to her husband, she departed
in excellent spirits. Mrs. Wilson met her at the terminus,
and after a substantial tea—for which, of course,
the visitor paid—they went by omnibus to Loughborough
Road, Brixton, and, as the landlady afterwards
testified, Mrs. Atkinson arrived there in the best
of health, light-hearted and jolly. She must have
been a sharp contrast to Catherine Wilson, whose
countenance was repulsive, and whose manner was the
secretive one of the poisoner.</p>
<p>The women went about everywhere together, Mrs.
Atkinson paying all expenses. On this occasion the
visitor had brought a hundred and ten pounds in notes
with her, for business had been good and her customers
were increasing. The hungry eyes of Catherine Wilson
gleamed at the sight of the notes, and her bony fingers
longed to clutch them. Every day saw the number
of notes grow gradually less as Mrs. Atkinson was buying
stock, and the poisoner knew that unless she hurried<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">206</SPAN></span>
there would not be enough money left to make it worth
her while to add to her list of crimes.</p>
<p>On the fourth day Mr. Atkinson was busy in his shop
at Kirkby Lonsdale when a telegram was handed to
him. He read it anxiously—for telegrams were a
novelty—and nearly collapsed under the blow. The
message was from Loughborough Road, Brixton, London,
S.W., and it said that his wife was dangerously ill.
Flinging all business on one side the unhappy man
hastened to London, arriving only in time to watch her
die. She was unconscious when he entered the room,
and passed away without a word to him.</p>
<p>The broken-hearted husband was stunned by the
blow, and his poor wife's "friend" was prostrated.
Mrs. Wilson, he was informed, had taken to her bed
upon being informed of her dearest friend's death,
and her grief was so intense that she was with difficulty
induced to give a brief account of Mrs. Atkinson's
last day on earth.</p>
<p>The doctor assured Mr. Atkinson that no one could
be more surprised than he was at the fatal termination
of Mrs. Atkinson's illness. An extensive practice had
brought him into contact with death in many shapes,
but there was nothing like this in all his experience.
He advised a post-mortem examination to ascertain
the cause of death, and the husband of the murdered
woman seemed inclined to sanction that course when
Catherine Wilson came forward with a pathetic story
of a dying request from Mrs. Atkinson that she, her
best friend, would see to it that her body was not
"cut up."</p>
<p>In the most natural manner the poisoner told her
lie, and Mr. Atkinson, to whom every word of his wife
was sacred, withheld his approval, and no examination
took place.</p>
<p>Now, Mr. Atkinson was well aware that his wife had
brought a hundred and ten pounds to London with her,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">207</SPAN></span>
and he searched for the notes amongst her effects.
When he failed to discover a single one he turned to
Mrs. Wilson for an explanation. Had his wife paid
all the money away? It was most unlikely that she
had. But he was even more astounded when Mrs.
Wilson informed him that his wife had arrived in London
with only her return ticket and a few shillings.</p>
<p>"Didn't she write and tell you what happened?"
said the poisoner, who was dressed in black, and carried
a pocket handkerchief with which she dabbed her eyes
every other moment.</p>
<p>"No, I didn't get a single letter from her," said Mr.
Atkinson. "I was a bit surprised, but I thought she
was too busy to write."</p>
<p>Catherine Wilson knew this, for she had destroyed
two letters which Mrs. Atkinson had written to her
husband, the unfortunate woman having entrusted
them to her to post. She now pretended to fathom
the reason for Mrs. Atkinson's silence.</p>
<p>"She was so tender-hearted, Mr. Atkinson," she
said, with a catch in her voice, "that she wouldn't
tell you the bad news. I'm sorry to say that she was
robbed of all her money at Rugby."</p>
<p>"Rugby!" exclaimed Mr. Atkinson, in astonishment.
"What was she doing at Rugby? I don't
understand you."</p>
<p>"She was taken ill in the train," said the woman,
lying glibly, "and when it stopped at Rugby she got
out. Soon afterwards she became faint again, and
when she recovered she found she had been robbed.
Then she came on here and told me, and I've been
lending her money to get about. She was hoping the
money would be recovered before she had to tell you.
Oh, she was goodness itself, and I have lost my dearest
and only friend."</p>
<p>She sank into a chair, sobbing as though her heart
was breaking, and Mr. Atkinson, who had been seized<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208">208</SPAN></span>
with a suspicion, engendered by a memory of the loss
of the purse containing fifty-one pounds the year before,
dismissed his thoughts as unfair to the woman who
was mourning so whole-heartedly over the loss of the
wife he loved. He did not dwell any longer on the
disappearance of the notes. After all, his wife was
dead, and all the money in the world could not bring
her back to him.</p>
<p>He journeyed home again, and Catherine Wilson
waited only for a week to go by before she paid her
debts, added to her wardrobe, and proudly exhibited
a diamond ring which she said Mr. Atkinson had given
her as a small token of his gratitude for her care of
his wife. It had been the property of the late Mrs.
Atkinson, but the poisoner had stolen it before the
body of her victim was cold.</p>
<p>It may well be asked how Catherine Wilson could
commit so many cold-blooded murders unchecked.
It seems to us that it ought to have been impossible
for a healthy woman to die in agony and yet be buried
without a coroner's inquest. But that is what happened
sixty-one years ago, and we must be thankful
that nowadays a person of the Catherine Wilson type
would have an extremely brief career.</p>
<p>The cases described do not comprise all her crimes.
There were two other persons she attacked with her
poisons who happily escaped with their lives, and there
was an old lady in Boston who died in such circumstances
that it is practically certain Catherine Wilson poisoned her.
She had been friendly with her, and her sudden death
benefited Wilson to the extent of over a hundred pounds.</p>
<p>Such is the history of the woman who was arrested
for attempting to poison Mrs. Connell. The period
between committal for trial and the proceedings at
the Old Bailey was a protracted one, but the prisoner
maintained a sullen demeanour whilst under the care
of the prison authorities.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">209</SPAN></span>
Occasionally she protested her innocence, but she
was crafty enough not to say much, and when she
entered the dock at the Central Criminal Court she
was still a human enigma to all who had come in contact
with her.</p>
<p>That she appeared confident of a favourable verdict
was obvious, and it had to be admitted that whilst
the prosecution had plenty of surmise and suspicion
they had very little legal proof. The defence relied
almost entirely on the absence of motive and the fact
that no one had actually seen the prisoner place the
poison in Mrs. Connell's medicine. There were a great
many suspicious circumstances which the prosecution
rightly demanded an explanation of, but the prisoner's
counsel pointed out that his client must be assumed
to be innocent until her guilt was proved. It was no
part of his duty to incriminate her or assist the prosecution.
The judge summed up in a way which indicated
that in his opinion the prosecution had not established
beyond all doubt the guilt of the prisoner, and the jury,
realizing that if they made a mistake and sent an innocent
woman to the gallows they could not undo it,
decided to be on the safe side. They, therefore, returned
a verdict of "Not Guilty," and Catherine Wilson,
poisoner, forger and thief, left the dock with a smile
on her hard face and a glint of triumph in her eyes.</p>
<p>How she must have laughed in secret at her victory!
What fools she must have thought the twelve good
men and true were! Her character was vindicated,
and she was safe. She was to suffer a severe shock,
however.</p>
<p>A few days later an amiable-looking man stopped
her just as she was leaving her lodgings.</p>
<p>"Excuse me," he said politely, one hand in his pocket
wherein lay an important legal document, "but are
you Mrs. Catherine Wilson?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said the poisoner, who feared no one after<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">210</SPAN></span>
her Old Bailey triumph. "What do you want with
me?"</p>
<p>"I am a police officer," he answered, producing the
paper, "and I must ask you to accompany me to the
station. I have a warrant for your arrest on a charge
of murder."</p>
<p>"Murder?" she gasped, terrified for a moment.
Then she laughed. "Whose murder?" She might
well ask that question seeing that there were several
with which she could have been charged.</p>
<p>"That of Mrs. Soames, of 27 Alfred Street, Bedford
Square," he answered, glancing at the warrant.</p>
<p>The police had not been idle during that long remand
following the mysterious poisoning of Mrs. Connell.
They had delved completely into Catherine Wilson's
past, and when they had compiled a list of her crimes
the authorities decided that they would arrest her again
and charge her with Mrs. Soames's death. They could
have added others, but, knowing with whom they were
dealing, they thought it better to keep the cases of
Mr. Mawer and Mrs. Atkinson in reserve. Should her
first trial for murder result in acquittal they would
charge her with having caused the death of Mrs. Atkinson,
and so on, until they had removed this danger
to society.</p>
<p>But the prosecution made no mistake this time,
and Catherine Wilson was in the coils from the moment
she listened to the outline of the case against her at
the Police Court.</p>
<p>Further facts were brought forward at the Old Bailey,
and so skilfully did the authorities present their case
that when the jury returned their verdict of guilty, and
Mr. Justice Byles was passing sentence, he could say:
"The result upon my mind is that I have no more
doubt that you committed the crime than if I had seen
it committed with my own eyes."</p>
<p>With a smile of contempt the poisoner left the dock<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211">211</SPAN></span>
and when she was led forth to die in public, and twenty
thousand persons watched her last moments, she
presented the same cool, sneering manner, absolutely
indifferent to her fate, quite unafraid of death, and
without a word of sorrow or repentance for her terrible
crimes.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213">213</SPAN></span></p>
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