Murderous Manchester: The Executed of the Twentieth Century
Murderous Manchester: The Executed of the Twentieth Century
The book includes absorbing real life accounts of nearly every reported murder that took place around Manchester during the twentieth century. It features well-known and lesser known cases but all are fascinating tales of jealousy, revenge and tragedy.
The people whose stories are told in this volume all had one thing in common. All of them were accused of taking the life of at least one other person, faced a trial for that crime, and were sentenced to hang by the neck until they were dead.
Some cases are well-known, such as those of George Rice, William Burtoft and Walter Graham Rowland - who was reprieved for a murder he did commit but was later hanged for one which he may not have committed.
The killers in this book have claimed the lives of spouses, parents, friends and strangers, for motives ranging from anger to jealousy, and old-fashioned greed.
Read their stories for yourself and decide if those who died at the end of a rope all deserved that fate, and equally, if all those who escaped that terrible fate, should have done so.
About the Author
John Eddlestone was born in Lancaster in 1952. He now lives on the South Coast. He has been a banker and salesman but is now a full time author.
Eddlestone is one of the foremost writers on crime in the UK. His interest int he executed came about when he was a child and was handed a penny by a kindly stranger.
It turned out the stranger was Norman William Green, hanged the following year for the murder of two small boys.