Mary Ann Cotton: Difference between revisions
imported>Selfburner mNo edit summary |
imported>SW10048 Removing deleted categories. |
||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
[[Category:Execution]] | [[Category:Execution]] | ||
[[Category:Serial Killer]] | [[Category:Serial Killer]] | ||
[[Category:Article stubs]] | [[Category:Article stubs]] | ||
[[Category:Chaotic Evil]] | [[Category:Chaotic Evil]] |
Revision as of 12:43, 29 April 2020
Englishwoman Mary Ann Cotton is another for-profit serial killer, predating Belle Gunness by thirty years. Married at age twenty to William Mowbray, the newlyweds settled in Plymouth, Devon, to start their family. The couple had five children, four of whom died of ‘gastric fever and stomach pains’.
Moving back to the north-east, tragedy seemed to follow them; three more children born, three more children died. William soon followed his offspring, dying of an ‘intestinal disorder’ in January 1865. British Prudential promptly paid a 35-pound dividend, and a pattern was established. Her second husband, George Ward, died of intestinal problems as well as one of her two remaining children. The power of the press, always a force to be reckoned with, caught up with Mary Ann. The local newspapers discovered that as Mary Ann moved around northern England, she lost three husbands, a lover, a friend, her mother and a dozen children, all dying of stomach fever. She was hanged at Durham County Gaol, March 24, 1873, for murder by arsenic poisoning. She died slowly, the hangman using too short a drop for a ‘clean’ execution.