Haunting images of UK criminals from bygone age – including a Derbyshire woman convicted of plotting to kill PM – saved from skip
and live on Freeview channel 276
The book, which covers 1890-1920, was rescued from a skip 40 years ago.
It has 500 pages and every one features crimes and mug shots - some resembling characters from TV’s Peaky Blinders.
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Hide AdMany are from Derbyshire but forlorn faces of men and women in police custody emerge from all over the country including Southampton, Hull, Birmingham, Leicester and Nottinghamshire.
While several were arrested for theft, burglary, shoplifting, housebreaking or assault, lesser crimes include petty theft such as stealing a bag of soot, bad language or even being an ‘incorrigible rogue’.
The book will be auctioned in Derbyshire by Hansons Auctioneers’ on October 19 with a guide price of £2,000-£3,000.
Its most notable pages relate to the Wheeldon family. In 1917, Alice Wheeldon, her daughter Winnie and son-in-law Alfred Mason were convicted of conspiracy to murder former British Prime Minister David Lloyd George (1863-1945).
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Hide AdAll feature in grainy black and white mug shots which capture the moment. Alice is described as 51 years old, pale with dark brown hair.
A note dated February 27, 1917 states, ‘Conspiracy to murder – 10 years’. Underneath in red ink a note dated December 30, 1917 states ‘Discharged’ – an instruction from Lloyd George himself.
Added on February 21, 1919 is ‘Died’. Weakened by her ordeal, Alice lost her life to influenza during the pandemic.
It is believed she was targeted for her political beliefs and as recently as 2019 efforts were made to have all convictions quashed because ‘the defendants’ right to a fair trial was sacrificed in the name of political interests’. Some evidence in the case appears to have been fabricated on behalf of a government keen to disgrace the anti-war movement.
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Hide AdAlice (nee Marshall, 1866-1919) was a supporter of women’s suffrage and an anti-war campaigner. It was known the Wheeldons were sheltering young men on the run from conscription during the First World War.
In December 1916 ‘Alex Gordon’, an undercover agent, arrived at the Wheeldon home claiming to be a conscientious objector. Alice took him in.
He told her work camps for conscientious objectors were guarded by dogs. A package containing two vials of curare and two of strychnine was sent to her. The package was intercepted and it was claimed they were intended to kill guard dogs at a work camp. This claim formed the basis of the case against the family.
The seller, a 53-year-old engineer from Staffordshire who lived in Derby for 47 years, said: "The book was rescued by my father, a police officer at the time, when he was working for Derby Borough Police more than 40 years ago.
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Hide Ad"The station was clearing out some garages and store rooms at an old police station on St Mary’s Gate in Derby. My father rescued it from being thrown into the skip. He thought it was too interesting to end up in landfill. Unfortunately, my dad is no longer with us, so I can’t ask him for more details. He passed it to me 30 years ago. It’s been sitting in a cupboard ever since and rarely sees the light of day.
"I looked at it in more detail 10 years ago and noticed the Wheeldon family. In Derby Alice Wheeldon is now viewed as a hero for her anti-war and suffragette stance and wrongful conviction. She’s been honoured with a Blue Plaque and a star in the city’s Walk of Fame.”
To find out more, email [email protected].