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Constance Kent

Constance Emily Kent (1844–1944) was an English woman who confessed to the murder of her half-brother, Francis Saville Kent, in 1860, when she was aged 16 and he aged three. The case led to high-level pronouncements there was no longer any ancient priest-penitent privilege in England and Wales. In later life, Kent changed her name to Ruth Emilie Kaye and lived to 100; she served a twenty-year prison term.

Constance Kent
Contemporary portrait of Constance Kent
Born
Constance Emily Kent

(1844-02-05)5 February 1844
Sidmouth, England
Died10 April 1944(1944-04-10) (aged 100)
Other namesRuth Emilie Kaye

Early life

Constance Kent was born in Sidmouth, Devon, England, on 6 February 1844, the fifth daughter and ninth child of Samuel Saville (or Savill) Kent[1] (1801–1872), an Inspector of Factories for the Home Office, and his first wife Mary Ann (1808–1852), daughter of prosperous coachmaker and expert on the Portland Vase, Thomas Windus of Stamford Hill, London.[2][3]

Crime

Sometime during the night of 29—30 June 1860, Francis Saville Kent, who was almost four years old, disappeared from his father's residence, Road Hill House, in the village of Rode (spelt "Road" at the time), then in Wiltshire. Francis' body was later found in the vault of a privy-house on the property.[4] The child, still dressed in his nightshirt and wrapped in a blanket, had knife wounds on his chest and hands, and his throat was slashed so deeply that he was almost decapitated.[5]

Francis' nursemaid, Elizabeth Gough, was initially arrested.[6] However, Elizabeth was released when the suspicions of Detective Inspector Jack Whicher of Scotland Yard moved to the boy's 16-year-old half-sister, Constance. She was arrested on 16 July but released without trial owing to public opinion against the accusations of a working-class detective against a young lady of breeding.[7]

After the investigation collapsed, the Kent family moved to Wrexham and sent Constance to a finishing school in Dinan, France.[8]: 209 

Committal

Constance was prosecuted for the murder five years later, in 1865. She made a statement confessing her guilt to an Anglo-Catholic clergyman, the Rev. Arthur Wagner, and expressed to him her resolution to give herself up to justice. Wagner assisted her in carrying out the resolution, and he gave evidence of this statement before the magistrates but prefaced his evidence by a declaration that he must withhold any further information on the ground that it had been received under the seal of "sacramental confession". He was but lightly pressed by the magistrates, as the prisoner was not contesting the charge.[9]

The substance of Constance's confession was that, after waiting until the family and servants were asleep, she had opened the shutters and window in the drawing room, taken Francis from his room wrapped in a blanket that she had taken from between sheet and counterpane in his cot (leaving both these undisturbed or readjusted), left the residence and then killed him in the privy-house with a razor stolen from her father. It had been necessary to hide matches in the privy-house beforehand for a light to see by during the act of murder. The murder was not a spontaneous act, it seems, but one of revenge, and it was suggested that Constance had at certain times been mentally unbalanced.[10]

There was much speculation at the time that Constance's confession was false. Many supposed that her father, a known adulterer, was having an affair with Elizabeth Gough and murdered the child in a fit of rage after coitus interruptus.[11] The theory fitted a pattern with the senior Kent, who had romanced the family nanny, Mary Drewe Pratt, while his first wife Mary Ann Kent (Constance's mother) was dying, and subsequently married Pratt (Francis' mother). Many were suspicious of the senior Kent from the start, including the novelist Charles Dickens.[12]

However, in her book The Suspicions of Mr Whicher or The Murder at Road Hill House (2008),[8] author Kate Summerscale concludes that if Constance's confession was indeed false and merely an act to shield another person, it was for the benefit of not her father but her brother, William Saville-Kent, with whom she shared a very close sibling relationship, which was further deepened by her father turning his paternal attentions away from the children of his first marriage to the children he had with his second wife. William was indeed suspected during the investigations but was never charged. Summerscale suggests that if William was not the culprit solely responsible for Francis's death, he was at least an accomplice to Constance.

Constance never recanted her confession, even after her father's and her brother's deaths. She also kept her silence about the motive for the murder. In all of her statements, she emphasised and insisted that she bore no hatred nor jealousy toward her half-brother. As a result of her research, Summerscale comes to the conclusion that the murder of Francis was, no matter whether it were committed by Constance or William, either alone or by both of them, an act of revenge against their father for turning his attention to the children of his second marriage, of whom Francis was his reported favourite.[8]: 298–301 

Press excitement

At the Assizes, Constance Kent pleaded guilty, and her plea was accepted so that Wagner was not again called. The position that he assumed before the magistrates caused much public debate in the press. There was considerable expression of public indignation that it should have been suggested that he could have any right as against the state to withhold evidence on the ground that he had put forward. The indignation seems to have been largely directed against the assumption that sacramental confession was known to the Church of England.[9]

Parliamentary comment

Questions were asked in both Houses of Parliament. In the House of Lords, Lord Westbury, the Lord Chancellor, in reply to the Marquess of Westmeath, stated that:[9]

...there can be no doubt that in a suit or criminal proceeding a clergyman of the Church of England is not privileged so as to decline to answer a question which is put to him for the purposes of justice, on the ground that his answer would reveal something that he had known in confession. He is compelled to answer such a question, and the law of England does not even extend the privilege of refusing to answer to Roman Catholic clergymen in dealing with a person of their own persuasion.

Lord Westbury stated that it appeared that an order for committal for contempt of court had in fact been made against Wagner. If that is so, it was not enforced.[9]

On the same occasion, Lord Chelmsford, a previous Lord Chancellor, stated that the law was clear that Wagner had no privilege at all to withhold facts which came to his knowledge in confession. Lord Westmeath said that there had been two recent cases, one being the case of a priest in Scotland, who, on refusing to give evidence, had been committed to prison. As to this case, Lord Westmeath stated that, upon an application for the priest's release being made to the Home Secretary, Sir George Grey, the latter had replied that if he were to remit the sentence without an admission of error on the part of the Catholic priest and without an assurance on his part that he would not again in a similar case adopt the same course, he (the Home Secretary) would be giving a sanction to the assumption of a privilege by ministers of every denomination which, he was advised, they could not claim. The second case was R v Hay.[9]

Lord Westbury's statement in the House of Lords drew a protest from Henry Phillpotts, the Bishop of Exeter, who wrote to him a letter strongly maintaining the privilege which had been claimed by Wagner. The bishop argued that the canon law on the subject had been accepted without gainsaying or opposition from any temporal court, that it had been confirmed by the Book of Common Prayer in the service for the visitation of the sick, and, thus, sanctioned by the Act of Uniformity. Phillpotts was supported by Edward Lowth Badeley[13] who wrote a pamphlet on the question of priest–penitent privilege.[14] From the bishop's reply to Lord Westbury's answer to his letter, it is apparent that Lord Westbury had expressed the opinion that the 113th canon of 1603 simply meant that the "clergyman must not ex mero motu and voluntarily and without legal obligation reveal what is communicated to him in confession". He appears, also, to have expressed an opinion that the public was not at the time in a temper to bear any alteration of the rule compelling the disclosure of such evidence.[9]

Sentence

Constance Kent was sentenced to death, but this was commuted to life in prison owing to her youth at the time and her confession. She served twenty years in a number of gaols, including Millbank Prison, and was released in 1885, at the age of 41. During her time in prison, Constance may have produced mosaics for a number of churches, including work for the crypt of St. Paul's cathedral.[8]: 278  Noeline Kyle, in her book A Greater Guilt, discusses the work Constance was engaged in while incarcerated, including cooking, cleaning and laundry work, and what Kyle describes – in light of a lack of evidence of Kent's making of any mosaics and the fact that "none of the true crime writers on this topic ... say where this information is sourced from" – as the myth of the mosaics.[15]

Later life

Constance emigrated to Australia early in 1886 and joined her brother William in Tasmania, where he worked as a government adviser on fisheries.[8]: 288–9  She changed her name to Ruth Emilie Kaye and trained as a nurse[11] at The Alfred Hospital in Prahran, Melbourne, Victoria, before being appointed sister-in-charge of the Female Lazaret at the Coast Hospital, Little Bay, in Sydney, New South Wales. From 1898 to 1909, she worked at the Parramatta Industrial School for Girls. She lived in the New South Wales town of Mittagong for a year, and was then made matron of the Pierce Memorial Nurses' Home at East Maitland, serving there from 1911 until she retired in 1932.[15]

Death

Constance Kent died on 10 April 1944, aged 100, in a private hospital in the Sydney suburb of Strathfield. On 11 April 1944, The Sydney Morning Herald reported that she was to be cremated at the nearby Rookwood Cemetery Crematorium.[16][17]

In arts, media and entertainment

Film

  • The anthology horror film, Dead of Night (1945), included in its five separate stories a section called "Christmas Party" with Sally Ann Howes as Joanna. This story is loosely based on the Constance Kent case; "Christmas Party" was an original screenplay based on an original story by the screenplay author Angus MacPhail. While playing hide-and-seek in an old house, Joanna hears a child sobbing and comes into a bedroom where she meets a little boy named Francis Kent whose sister Constance is mean to him. Joanna comforts the child, and then leaves him when he is asleep. Then she finds the others from the party and learns that Francis was killed by Constance over 80 years before.[18]

Literature

Non-fiction studies

  • The Case of Constance Kent (1928) by John Rhode. Rhode later published a shorter piece on the case ("Constance Kent") in The Anatomy of Murder (1936)
  • Kate Summerscale's book The Suspicions of Mr Whicher (2008) about the case was read as BBC Radio 4's Book of the Week from 7 to 11 April 2008.[20] It won Britain's Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction in 2008.[21]
  • F. Tennyson Jesse included a chapter on the Constance Kent case in her 1924 study, Murder and Its Motives.

Television

  • The eight-part BBC series about three female murderers, titled A Question of Guilt (1980), features Prue Clarke as Constance Kent and Joss Ackland as Samuel Kent.
  • An episode of the Investigation Discovery channel series Deadly Women, "A Daughter's Revenge" (2010), features a segment on Constance Kent who is portrayed by Miranda Daisy Herman.
  • The television film The Suspicions of Mr Whicher: The Murder at Road Hill House (25 April 2011, ITV) is a dramatization of the case.
  • The Swedish crime TV series Veckans Brott (2012) had six special episodes about English murders, one of which was about the murder at Road Hill House.

References

  1. ^ Saville, variously spelt "Savill" or Savile", was the maiden name of Samuel's mother, but "Saville" was the version adopted for the baptismal names, but some surviving records record "Savill": Summerscale (2008: 72); Kyle (2009: 127)
  2. ^ A Greater Guilt: Constance Emilie Kent and the Road Murder, Noeline Kyle, Boolarong Press, 2009, pp. 29, 233
  3. ^ The Suspicions of Mr Whicher: or the murder at Road Hill House, Kate Summerscale, Bloomsbury, 2008, p. 71
  4. ^ "Jonathan Whicher and the Road Hill House Murder". History by the Yard. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  5. ^ Sweet, Matthew (3 May 2008). "The Suspicions of Mr Whicher: or, the Murder at Road Hill House, By Kate Summerscale". Independent. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  6. ^ "The Baker's Daughter from Isleworth". St Margarets Community. 19 March 2009. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  7. ^ Ross, Suzanne. "Road Hill House Murder" (PDF). Wiltshire Online Parish Clerks. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Summerscale, Kate (2008). The Suspicions of Mr Whicher, Or the murder at Road Hill House. Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-0-7475-8215-1.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Nolan (1913)
  10. ^ Glimpses into the 19th Century Broadside Ballad Trade No. 15: Constance Kent and the Road Murder
  11. ^ a b c d e f Davenport-Hines (2006)
  12. ^ Altick (1970: 131). Altick quotes from a letter Dickens wrote to Wilkie Collins at the time of the confession.
  13. ^ Courtney (2004)
  14. ^ Badeley (1865)
  15. ^ a b Kyle (2009)
  16. ^ "Centenarian Dead". Sydney Morning Herald. 11 April 1944. Retrieved 1 April 2021.
  17. ^ "Road Hill House Murder" (PDF). Wiltshire Online Parish Clerks (OPCs). Retrieved 24 August 2017.
  18. ^ Conolly, Jez; Bates, David Owain (2015). "'I'm Not Frightened… I'm Not Frightened….'". Dead of Night. Devil's Advocates. Liverpool University Press. pp. 59–70. doi:10.2307/j.ctv13842kk.7.
  19. ^ Wilkinson, Emily Colette. "A Murder Most Mysterious". VQR. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  20. ^ "Book of the Week: The Suspicions of Mr Whicher". BBC Radio 4 Programmes. Retrieved 19 October 2010.
  21. ^ "Kate Summerscale Wins U.K.'s 30,000-Pound Samuel Johnson Prize" – Bloomberg.com, 15 July 2008

Bibliography

  • Altick, Richard (1970). Victorian Studies in Scarlet: Murders and Manners in the Age of Victoria. New York: Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-33624-5.
  • [Anon.] (1984) Australian Gemmologist, 15(5): February, 155
  • [Anon.] (2002) Protist (Germany), 153(4): 413
  • Atlay, J. B. (1897). "Famous trials: the Road mystery". Cornhill Magazine. 2: [3rd] ser., 80–94.
  • Badeley, E. (1865). The Privilege of Religious Confessions in English Courts of Justice Considered, in a Letter to a Friend. London: Butterworths.
  • Bridges, Y. (1954). Saint – with Red Hands? The Chronicle of a Great Crime. London: Jarrolds.
  • Courtney, W. P. (2004) "Badeley, Edward Lowth (1803/4–1868)", rev. G. Martin Murphy, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, accessed 22 July 2007 (subscription required)
  • Davenport-Hines, R. (2006) "Kent, Constance Emilie (1844–1944)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, online edn, accessed 29 August 2007 (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  • Harrison, A. J. (1997). Savant of the Australian Seas: William Saville-Kent (1845–1908) and Australian Fisheries. Hobart: Tasmanian Historical Research Association.
  • — (2005) "Kent, Constance (1844–1944)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Supplementary Volume, Melbourne University Press, pp352–353
  • Hartman, M. (1977). Victorian Murderesses. London: Robson Books Ltd. pp. 94–101, 107–12, 118–29. ISBN 978-0-86051-343-8.
  • Jesse, F. T. (1924). Murder and its Motives. London: Harrap. pp. 74–116.
  • Kyle, N.J. (2009). A Greater Guilt: Constance Emilie Kent & the Road Murder. Brisbane: Boolarong Press. ISBN 978-1-921555-34-3.
  • Nolan, R. S. (1913) "The Law of the Seal of Confession", Catholic Encyclopaedia
  • Rhode, J. (1928). The Case of Constance Kent. London: Geoffrey Bles.
  • Roughead, W. (1966). Classic Crimes 1: Katharine Nairn, Deacon Brodie, The West Port Murders, Madeleine Smith, Constance Kent and The Sandyford Mystery. London: Panther. pp. 137–70.; originally in The Rebel Earl and Other Studies, (Edinburgh: W. Green & Son, Limited, 1926), as "Constance Kent's Conscience: A Mid-Victorian Mystery", p. 47–86
  • Stapleton, J. W. (1861). The Great Crime of 1860. E. Marlborough.
  • Summerscale, Kate (2008). The Suspicions of Mr Whicher, Or the murder at Road Hill House. Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-0-7475-8215-1.
  • Taylor, B. (1979). Cruelly Murdered: Constance Kent and the Killing at Road Hill House. London: Souvenir Press. ISBN 978-0-285-62387-3.
  • Wagner,A.R.& Dale,A. (1983). The Wagners of Brighton. Phillimore. pp. 105–118.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)

constance, kent, constance, emily, kent, 1844, 1944, english, woman, confessed, murder, half, brother, francis, saville, kent, 1860, when, aged, aged, three, case, high, level, pronouncements, there, longer, ancient, priest, penitent, privilege, england, wales. Constance Emily Kent 1844 1944 was an English woman who confessed to the murder of her half brother Francis Saville Kent in 1860 when she was aged 16 and he aged three The case led to high level pronouncements there was no longer any ancient priest penitent privilege in England and Wales In later life Kent changed her name to Ruth Emilie Kaye and lived to 100 she served a twenty year prison term Constance KentContemporary portrait of Constance KentBornConstance Emily Kent 1844 02 05 5 February 1844Sidmouth EnglandDied10 April 1944 1944 04 10 aged 100 Strathfield New South Wales AustraliaOther namesRuth Emilie Kaye Contents 1 Early life 2 Crime 3 Committal 4 Press excitement 5 Parliamentary comment 6 Sentence 7 Later life 8 Death 9 In arts media and entertainment 9 1 Film 9 2 Literature 9 3 Non fiction studies 9 4 Television 10 References 11 BibliographyEarly life EditConstance Kent was born in Sidmouth Devon England on 6 February 1844 the fifth daughter and ninth child of Samuel Saville or Savill Kent 1 1801 1872 an Inspector of Factories for the Home Office and his first wife Mary Ann 1808 1852 daughter of prosperous coachmaker and expert on the Portland Vase Thomas Windus of Stamford Hill London 2 3 Crime EditSometime during the night of 29 30 June 1860 Francis Saville Kent who was almost four years old disappeared from his father s residence Road Hill House in the village of Rode spelt Road at the time then in Wiltshire Francis body was later found in the vault of a privy house on the property 4 The child still dressed in his nightshirt and wrapped in a blanket had knife wounds on his chest and hands and his throat was slashed so deeply that he was almost decapitated 5 Francis nursemaid Elizabeth Gough was initially arrested 6 However Elizabeth was released when the suspicions of Detective Inspector Jack Whicher of Scotland Yard moved to the boy s 16 year old half sister Constance She was arrested on 16 July but released without trial owing to public opinion against the accusations of a working class detective against a young lady of breeding 7 After the investigation collapsed the Kent family moved to Wrexham and sent Constance to a finishing school in Dinan France 8 209 Committal EditConstance was prosecuted for the murder five years later in 1865 She made a statement confessing her guilt to an Anglo Catholic clergyman the Rev Arthur Wagner and expressed to him her resolution to give herself up to justice Wagner assisted her in carrying out the resolution and he gave evidence of this statement before the magistrates but prefaced his evidence by a declaration that he must withhold any further information on the ground that it had been received under the seal of sacramental confession He was but lightly pressed by the magistrates as the prisoner was not contesting the charge 9 The substance of Constance s confession was that after waiting until the family and servants were asleep she had opened the shutters and window in the drawing room taken Francis from his room wrapped in a blanket that she had taken from between sheet and counterpane in his cot leaving both these undisturbed or readjusted left the residence and then killed him in the privy house with a razor stolen from her father It had been necessary to hide matches in the privy house beforehand for a light to see by during the act of murder The murder was not a spontaneous act it seems but one of revenge and it was suggested that Constance had at certain times been mentally unbalanced 10 There was much speculation at the time that Constance s confession was false Many supposed that her father a known adulterer was having an affair with Elizabeth Gough and murdered the child in a fit of rage after coitus interruptus 11 The theory fitted a pattern with the senior Kent who had romanced the family nanny Mary Drewe Pratt while his first wife Mary Ann Kent Constance s mother was dying and subsequently married Pratt Francis mother Many were suspicious of the senior Kent from the start including the novelist Charles Dickens 12 However in her book The Suspicions of Mr Whicher or The Murder at Road Hill House 2008 8 author Kate Summerscale concludes that if Constance s confession was indeed false and merely an act to shield another person it was for the benefit of not her father but her brother William Saville Kent with whom she shared a very close sibling relationship which was further deepened by her father turning his paternal attentions away from the children of his first marriage to the children he had with his second wife William was indeed suspected during the investigations but was never charged Summerscale suggests that if William was not the culprit solely responsible for Francis s death he was at least an accomplice to Constance Constance never recanted her confession even after her father s and her brother s deaths She also kept her silence about the motive for the murder In all of her statements she emphasised and insisted that she bore no hatred nor jealousy toward her half brother As a result of her research Summerscale comes to the conclusion that the murder of Francis was no matter whether it were committed by Constance or William either alone or by both of them an act of revenge against their father for turning his attention to the children of his second marriage of whom Francis was his reported favourite 8 298 301 Press excitement EditAt the Assizes Constance Kent pleaded guilty and her plea was accepted so that Wagner was not again called The position that he assumed before the magistrates caused much public debate in the press There was considerable expression of public indignation that it should have been suggested that he could have any right as against the state to withhold evidence on the ground that he had put forward The indignation seems to have been largely directed against the assumption that sacramental confession was known to the Church of England 9 Parliamentary comment EditQuestions were asked in both Houses of Parliament In the House of Lords Lord Westbury the Lord Chancellor in reply to the Marquess of Westmeath stated that 9 there can be no doubt that in a suit or criminal proceeding a clergyman of the Church of England is not privileged so as to decline to answer a question which is put to him for the purposes of justice on the ground that his answer would reveal something that he had known in confession He is compelled to answer such a question and the law of England does not even extend the privilege of refusing to answer to Roman Catholic clergymen in dealing with a person of their own persuasion Lord Westbury stated that it appeared that an order for committal for contempt of court had in fact been made against Wagner If that is so it was not enforced 9 On the same occasion Lord Chelmsford a previous Lord Chancellor stated that the law was clear that Wagner had no privilege at all to withhold facts which came to his knowledge in confession Lord Westmeath said that there had been two recent cases one being the case of a priest in Scotland who on refusing to give evidence had been committed to prison As to this case Lord Westmeath stated that upon an application for the priest s release being made to the Home Secretary Sir George Grey the latter had replied that if he were to remit the sentence without an admission of error on the part of the Catholic priest and without an assurance on his part that he would not again in a similar case adopt the same course he the Home Secretary would be giving a sanction to the assumption of a privilege by ministers of every denomination which he was advised they could not claim The second case was R v Hay 9 Lord Westbury s statement in the House of Lords drew a protest from Henry Phillpotts the Bishop of Exeter who wrote to him a letter strongly maintaining the privilege which had been claimed by Wagner The bishop argued that the canon law on the subject had been accepted without gainsaying or opposition from any temporal court that it had been confirmed by the Book of Common Prayer in the service for the visitation of the sick and thus sanctioned by the Act of Uniformity Phillpotts was supported by Edward Lowth Badeley 13 who wrote a pamphlet on the question of priest penitent privilege 14 From the bishop s reply to Lord Westbury s answer to his letter it is apparent that Lord Westbury had expressed the opinion that the 113th canon of 1603 simply meant that the clergyman must not ex mero motu and voluntarily and without legal obligation reveal what is communicated to him in confession He appears also to have expressed an opinion that the public was not at the time in a temper to bear any alteration of the rule compelling the disclosure of such evidence 9 Sentence EditConstance Kent was sentenced to death but this was commuted to life in prison owing to her youth at the time and her confession She served twenty years in a number of gaols including Millbank Prison and was released in 1885 at the age of 41 During her time in prison Constance may have produced mosaics for a number of churches including work for the crypt of St Paul s cathedral 8 278 Noeline Kyle in her book A Greater Guilt discusses the work Constance was engaged in while incarcerated including cooking cleaning and laundry work and what Kyle describes in light of a lack of evidence of Kent s making of any mosaics and the fact that none of the true crime writers on this topic say where this information is sourced from as the myth of the mosaics 15 Later life EditConstance emigrated to Australia early in 1886 and joined her brother William in Tasmania where he worked as a government adviser on fisheries 8 288 9 She changed her name to Ruth Emilie Kaye and trained as a nurse 11 at The Alfred Hospital in Prahran Melbourne Victoria before being appointed sister in charge of the Female Lazaret at the Coast Hospital Little Bay in Sydney New South Wales From 1898 to 1909 she worked at the Parramatta Industrial School for Girls She lived in the New South Wales town of Mittagong for a year and was then made matron of the Pierce Memorial Nurses Home at East Maitland serving there from 1911 until she retired in 1932 15 Death EditConstance Kent died on 10 April 1944 aged 100 in a private hospital in the Sydney suburb of Strathfield On 11 April 1944 The Sydney Morning Herald reported that she was to be cremated at the nearby Rookwood Cemetery Crematorium 16 17 In arts media and entertainment EditThis article appears to contain trivial minor or unrelated references to popular culture Please reorganize this content to explain the subject s impact on popular culture providing citations to reliable secondary sources rather than simply listing appearances Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2022 Film Edit The anthology horror film Dead of Night 1945 included in its five separate stories a section called Christmas Party with Sally Ann Howes as Joanna This story is loosely based on the Constance Kent case Christmas Party was an original screenplay based on an original story by the screenplay author Angus MacPhail While playing hide and seek in an old house Joanna hears a child sobbing and comes into a bedroom where she meets a little boy named Francis Kent whose sister Constance is mean to him Joanna comforts the child and then leaves him when he is asleep Then she finds the others from the party and learns that Francis was killed by Constance over 80 years before 18 Literature Edit Mary Elizabeth Braddon used elements of the case in Lady Audley s Secret 1862 8 217 8 Wilkie Collins used elements of the case in his detective novel The Moonstone 1868 11 including using the difference in class between the detective and the suspect as a sub theme 19 Charles Dickens based the flight of Helena Landless in The Mystery of Edwin Drood 1870 on Kent s early life 11 James Friel s novel Taking the Veil 1989 is inspired by Kent s life 11 Sharyn McCrumb s novel Missing Susan 1991 refers to this case 11 Non fiction studies Edit The Case of Constance Kent 1928 by John Rhode Rhode later published a shorter piece on the case Constance Kent in The Anatomy of Murder 1936 Kate Summerscale s book The Suspicions of Mr Whicher 2008 about the case was read as BBC Radio 4 s Book of the Week from 7 to 11 April 2008 20 It won Britain s Samuel Johnson Prize for Non Fiction in 2008 21 F Tennyson Jesse included a chapter on the Constance Kent case in her 1924 study Murder and Its Motives Television Edit The eight part BBC series about three female murderers titled A Question of Guilt 1980 features Prue Clarke as Constance Kent and Joss Ackland as Samuel Kent An episode of the Investigation Discovery channel series Deadly Women A Daughter s Revenge 2010 features a segment on Constance Kent who is portrayed by Miranda Daisy Herman The television film The Suspicions of Mr Whicher The Murder at Road Hill House 25 April 2011 ITV is a dramatization of the case The Swedish crime TV series Veckans Brott 2012 had six special episodes about English murders one of which was about the murder at Road Hill House References Edit Saville variously spelt Savill or Savile was the maiden name of Samuel s mother but Saville was the version adopted for the baptismal names but some surviving records record Savill Summerscale 2008 72 Kyle 2009 127 A Greater Guilt Constance Emilie Kent and the Road Murder Noeline Kyle Boolarong Press 2009 pp 29 233 The Suspicions of Mr Whicher or the murder at Road Hill House Kate Summerscale Bloomsbury 2008 p 71 Jonathan Whicher and the Road Hill House Murder History by the Yard Retrieved 30 August 2017 Sweet Matthew 3 May 2008 The Suspicions of Mr Whicher or the Murder at Road Hill House By Kate Summerscale Independent Retrieved 30 August 2017 The Baker s Daughter from Isleworth St Margarets Community 19 March 2009 Retrieved 30 August 2017 Ross Suzanne Road Hill House Murder PDF Wiltshire Online Parish Clerks Retrieved 30 August 2017 a b c d e f Summerscale Kate 2008 The Suspicions of Mr Whicher Or the murder at Road Hill House Bloomsbury ISBN 978 0 7475 8215 1 a b c d e f Nolan 1913 Glimpses into the 19th Century Broadside Ballad Trade No 15 Constance Kent and the Road Murder a b c d e f Davenport Hines 2006 Altick 1970 131 Altick quotes from a letter Dickens wrote to Wilkie Collins at the time of the confession Courtney 2004 Badeley 1865 a b Kyle 2009 Centenarian Dead Sydney Morning Herald 11 April 1944 Retrieved 1 April 2021 Road Hill House Murder PDF Wiltshire Online Parish Clerks OPCs Retrieved 24 August 2017 Conolly Jez Bates David Owain 2015 I m Not Frightened I m Not Frightened Dead of Night Devil s Advocates Liverpool University Press pp 59 70 doi 10 2307 j ctv13842kk 7 Wilkinson Emily Colette A Murder Most Mysterious VQR Retrieved 30 August 2017 Book of the Week The Suspicions of Mr Whicher BBC Radio 4 Programmes Retrieved 19 October 2010 Kate Summerscale Wins U K s 30 000 Pound Samuel Johnson Prize Bloomberg com 15 July 2008Bibliography EditAltick Richard 1970 Victorian Studies in Scarlet Murders and Manners in the Age of Victoria New York Norton ISBN 978 0 393 33624 5 Anon 1984 Australian Gemmologist 15 5 February 155 Anon 2002 Protist Germany 153 4 413 Atlay J B 1897 Famous trials the Road mystery Cornhill Magazine 2 3rd ser 80 94 Badeley E 1865 The Privilege of Religious Confessions in English Courts of Justice Considered in a Letter to a Friend London Butterworths Bridges Y 1954 Saint with Red Hands The Chronicle of a Great Crime London Jarrolds Courtney W P 2004 Badeley Edward Lowth 1803 4 1868 rev G Martin Murphy Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press accessed 22 July 2007 subscription required Davenport Hines R 2006 Kent Constance Emilie 1844 1944 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press online edn accessed 29 August 2007 subscription or UK public library membership required Harrison A J 1997 Savant of the Australian Seas William Saville Kent 1845 1908 and Australian Fisheries Hobart Tasmanian Historical Research Association 2005 Kent Constance 1844 1944 Australian Dictionary of Biography Supplementary Volume Melbourne University Press pp352 353 Hartman M 1977 Victorian Murderesses London Robson Books Ltd pp 94 101 107 12 118 29 ISBN 978 0 86051 343 8 Jesse F T 1924 Murder and its Motives London Harrap pp 74 116 Kyle N J 2009 A Greater Guilt Constance Emilie Kent amp the Road Murder Brisbane Boolarong Press ISBN 978 1 921555 34 3 Nolan R S 1913 The Law of the Seal of Confession Catholic Encyclopaedia Rhode J 1928 The Case of Constance Kent London Geoffrey Bles Roughead W 1966 Classic Crimes 1 Katharine Nairn Deacon Brodie The West Port Murders Madeleine Smith Constance Kent and The Sandyford Mystery London Panther pp 137 70 originally in The Rebel Earl and Other Studies Edinburgh W Green amp Son Limited 1926 as Constance Kent s Conscience A Mid Victorian Mystery p 47 86 Stapleton J W 1861 The Great Crime of 1860 E Marlborough Summerscale Kate 2008 The Suspicions of Mr Whicher Or the murder at Road Hill House Bloomsbury ISBN 978 0 7475 8215 1 Taylor B 1979 Cruelly Murdered Constance Kent and the Killing at Road Hill House London Souvenir Press ISBN 978 0 285 62387 3 Wagner A R amp Dale A 1983 The Wagners of Brighton Phillimore pp 105 118 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a Missing or empty title help Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Constance Kent amp oldid 1155740013, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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