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Frederick Bailey Deeming

Frederick Bailey Deeming (30 July 1853 – 23 May 1892) was an English-born Australian murderer. He was convicted and executed for the murder of a woman in Melbourne, Australia. He is remembered today because he was suspected by some of being the notorious serial killer Jack the Ripper.

Frederick Bailey Deeming
Born(1853-07-30)30 July 1853
Died23 May 1892(1892-05-23) (aged 38)
Cause of deathExecution by hanging
Criminal statusExecuted
Conviction(s)Murder
Criminal penaltyDeath
Details
Victims6 (4 of them children), possibly others in the Whitechapel murders
Span of crimes
1891–1892
CountryEngland and Australia

Early life and first murders

Deeming was born in Ashby-de-la-Zouch, Leicestershire, England, son of Thomas Deeming, brazier, and his wife Ann (née Bailey).[1] He was a "difficult child" according to writers Maurice Gurvich and Christopher Wray.[2] At 16 years of age, he ran away to sea, and thereafter he began a long career of crime, largely thieving and obtaining money under false pretenses. He was also responsible for the murder of his first wife Marie and his four children at Rainhill, England, on or about 26 July 1891, and a second wife, Emily Mather, at Windsor, Melbourne, on 24 December 1891.

Less than three months elapsed between the discovery of Mather's body in Windsor, Melbourne, in March 1892, and Deeming's execution for her murder in May 1892; a remarkably short time by comparison to modern western legal standards.[3] This was not only due to efficient police work, but also a result of the considerable international media interest the murder attracted. For example, it was an English journalist working for the Melbourne Argus who first approached Mather's mother in Rainhill and delivered the news of her daughter's murder.[nb 1] Another factor was Deeming's behaviour in public, for while he often used different names, he usually drew attention to himself with behaviour variously described as aggressive, ostentatious, ingratiating and overly attentive to women.

Australia in the 1880s

Police investigations after his arrest in 1892[5] revealed that Deeming had moved to Australia in 1882, chiefly working in Sydney, but also working for John Danks, a Melbourne importer of plumbing and gas fitting supplies. His Melbourne employers regarded him as an excellent worker and extended him 200 pounds credit, supposedly to open a business in Rockhampton, Queensland. The money was never repaid.[6] Deeming is known to have worked for a Sydney gasfitter, where he was charged with theft of brass fittings from his employer. Deeming indignantly denied the theft, but the items were found at his home and he was sentenced to six weeks imprisonment. Deeming pretended to faint when the sentence was pronounced.[7] After his release, he continued to work in Sydney as a gasfitter until, in December 1887, he was again committed for trial, now on a charge of fraudulent insolvency. He disappeared from New South Wales while on bail.

Deeming was accompanied by his wife while in Australia, "a typical Welsh lass",[7] Marie (née James). Deeming had married her in Lower Tranmere, England in February 1881 and they had lived briefly at Birkenhead before leaving for Melbourne.[8] His brother Alfred, had married Marie's sister, Martha. By 1886 Deeming and Marie had two Australian-born daughters, Bertha and Marie. In 1888 his brothers Alfred and Walter learned that Deeming and his family were returning to England "with a considerable fortune".[8]

South Africa and return to England

Later police and newspaper research discovered Deeming had been active in Cape Town, South Africa in 1888–1889, but his exact movements at this time are unclear and it appears he returned to Birkenhead, England, at least once. Marie had another child at this time.[nb 2] He was known to have been involved in conducting a Transvaal diamond mine swindle in 1889.[8] His return to England via the steamship Yumna was well remembered by the Captain and passengers because of his ostentatious display of jewellery and money, and his unwanted attention to some of the female passengers.[10]

He had arrived at Hull by November 1889, lodging in the nearby town of Beverley. Here he passed himself off as "a retired sheep farmer" named Harry Lawson from Mount House Farm, Rockhampton, Queensland, living on 1,500 pounds a year.[11] He wooed Helen Matheson, the 21-year-old daughter of his landlady and married her, bigamously, on 18 February 1890.[1] About a month later, after a honeymoon in the south of England, he suddenly disappeared, taking his expensive gifts to Matheson with him. Deeming's wife and extended family had heard of his bigamous marriage to Matheson according to Gurvich and Wray.[8]

Deeming was later found to have then visited Marie and his (now) four children in Birkenhead. He apparently gave Marie several hundred pounds and announced he was leaving for South America. He would send for her and the children once he was settled.[12] Before leaving he conducted another swindle at a jeweler's in Hull. He was arrested for this on arrival at Montevideo and extradited back to England on a charge of "obtaining goods by false pretenses" being sentenced to nine months prison.[12]

Rainhill

On his release from prison in July 1891, Deeming headed to the Liverpool area, settling into a hotel in the village of Rainhill, Merseyside under the name Albert Williams. A mysterious woman (almost certainly his wife Marie) who appeared at the hotel was dismissed as his "sister", visiting before she left for Port Said. Deeming then took a lease on Dinham Villa, a house in Rainhill, supposedly on behalf of a military friend, a certain "Colonel Brookes". However, Deeming himself took up residence at Dinham Villa, while a woman and several children were seen at the house and were again dismissed as merely his "sister and her children" visiting, who had "since returned home".[13] Shortly afterward, Deeming complained that the drains at Dinham Villa were defective, and the kitchen floor needed to be replaced. He closely supervised the work on the floor.

While in Rainhill, Deeming began to court Emily Lydia Mather,[14] the daughter of a widowed local shopkeeper, Mrs. Dove Mather. Mather and Deeming (as Albert Williams) married on 22 September 1891.

Windsor murder

In November 1891, Deeming (still using the name Williams) took Mather to Australia in the German steamship Kaiser Wilhelm II. They arrived in Melbourne on 15 December 1891. Deeming rented a house on Andrew Street in Windsor,[1] a suburb of Melbourne. On 24 December or early on 25 December 1891, he murdered Mather and buried her under the hearthstone of one of the bedrooms, covering the body with cement. He had paid a month's rent in advance, giving the name Mr. Drewn, but almost immediately left the property. The owner, nearby butcher John Stamford, had been happy to rent to the man, because of his air of respectability, and at first, had not even known the man's name.

On 3 March 1892 a prospective tenant of the Windsor house complained of "a disagreeable smell" in the second bedroom.[15] The owner and estate agent later raised the hearthstone to investigate whereupon the smell became so overpowering "they found themselves barely able to breathe".[15] The police were called and Mather's body found. A postmortem conducted on 4 March found that although her skull had been fractured by several blows, the most likely cause of death was that her throat had been cut.[16]

 
19th-century illustration comparing Deeming and 'Jack the Viper' of Whitechapel

Publicity surrounding the gruesome finding of Mather's body was considerable. Within a few days, The Age newspaper had connected the murder to the Whitechapel murders of London:

From the outset a suspicion of insanity is almost suggested and a tinge of the Whitechapel murders is hinted. The body hacked and mangled, the cool manner in which the cementing was carried out, the taking a house etc, the laborious obliteration of all traces of the crime – all these things suggest the malevolence and craft which can scarcely accompany the sane murderer, no matter how callous and brutal.[17]

From clues found at the vacant Andrew Street house and from information provided by local tradespeople, including Stamford and his agent, a local laundress, an ironmonger who sold Deeming cement and several carriers, investigating Victoria Police sergeants William Considine and Henry Cawsey were able to trace the recently arrived Mr. Williams to the Kaiser Wilhelm II. They were then able to interview other passengers, who gave corroborating descriptions of Mr. Williams and Mather. In the weeks at sea, Mather had talked to other passengers of her family at Rainhill, and the connection was now made. Deeming's behaviour as Mr. Williams had also attracted considerable attention during the voyage. Many passengers stated they "detested Williams, [but] all agreed he had treated his wife in a loving and considerate manner".[18] Police now also had a very good description of Mr. Williams, which they circulated to other Australian colonies, but at this stage, his real identity was still unknown.

At an inquest held on 8 March, it was discovered that a man answering Mr. Williams's description had auctioned a variety of household goods, possibly wedding presents, in the city in early January 1892. At this time he was staying at the Cathedral Hotel in Swanston Street, Melbourne, registered as Mr. Duncan. It later transpired that Deeming had also written an affectionate letter (as Albert Williams) to Mather's mother several days after Mather's murder. Deeming had found time to approach Holt's Matrimonial Agency (as Duncan), wishing to meet a young lady with matrimonial intentions.[19] He had also found time to swindle a local Melbourne jeweller.

Capture

In the meantime, on or about 12 January 1892, Deeming had travelled to Sydney, and was now using the name Baron Swanston. During the voyage and in Sydney Deeming met and courted Kate Rounsefell. He told Rounsefell that if she agreed to become his wife, "she would never regret it, and would always congratulate herself on having entered into matrimony with him".[20] After a whirlwind romance, during which Deeming gave Rounsefell several items of what was later shown to be stolen Melbourne jewellery, Rounsefell consented to marry Baron Swanston. Having also agreed to follow him to Western Australia, Rounsefell and Deeming parted company. By means of forged testimonials, Deeming had obtained a position at a mine at Southern Cross.

On 22 January 1892 Baron Swanston departed for Fremantle. Again, Deeming as Baron Swanston made a name for himself on the ship, boasting of his wealth and position in society. He made approaches to Miss Maude Beech, a young woman in the care of her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Wakeley. In this case, Deeming's charm came to nothing. Mr. Wakeley told Swanston; "I may tell you plainly, that I don't believe your stories and I am not in the habit of allowing men of your class to enter my family circle."[21] Once settled at Southern Cross, Deeming maintained a barrage of pleas to Rounsefell, writing on 8 February; "Don't keep me waiting dear. If you love me half as much as I love you, you would not keep me waiting a day".[22] [nb 3]

Police were closing in, however, and following telegrams by Victoria Police to Western Australia, Deeming was arrested at Southern Cross on 12 March 1892. He began by denying he was Deeming but later said "I think I know the party who has been murdered. I don't believe anyone would have the heart to murder a girl like that".[24] Found in his possession at the time of the arrest were a number of Mather's belongings, including her prayer book.[25]

At about the same time Deeming was being returned to Melbourne, news of the discovery of the Rainhill murders in England arrived in Australia.[15]

Rainhill murders

Following publicity surrounding the discovery of Mather's body at Windsor, investigations at Rainhill revealed the decomposing bodies of Marie Deeming and the four children; Bertha (aged 10), Mary (7), Sidney (5) and Leala (18 months) buried beneath the re-concreted floor of Dinham Villa. The throats of most had been cut (Bertha had been strangled). The murder and burials had apparently occurred while Deeming (as Albert Williams) was courting Mather, on or about 26 July 1891.[26] At an inquest held at Rainhill on 18 March 1892, Deeming's brothers identified Marie and gave some accounts of his activities.[27]

The Rainhill murders had gone undetected for eight months. It appears Deeming's brothers and Marie's sister had been led to believe that Marie and the children were in Brighton on a holiday and then assumed they were overseas again. Deeming had made several visits to Birkenhead to reassure Martha that her sister and the children were well.[28] Detection of the murders was also obstructed by Deeming's lease (as Williams) on Dinham Villa, which stipulated that the house should not be sold or relet for six months, because of the imminent arrival of Colonel Brookes and/or Williams' sister. The lease also allowed Williams to resurface the concrete floor.[29]

Trial and execution

Furious demonstrations against Deeming were made on the journey to Perth, and again on the way to Albany. Deeming was tried at Melbourne Supreme Court on 25 April 1892.[30] The prosecution case was conducted by Robert Walsh, Q.C.[31] Alfred Deakin, his counsel (later Prime Minister of Australia), tried to mount a plea of insanity. The defence also questioned the impact of newspaper reporting of Deeming on the jury.

Perhaps wishing to aid the defence of insanity, Deeming also claimed to have caught syphilis in London and to have received visitations from his mother's spirit, which urged his actions. Before the jury retired, Deeming made a "lengthy,... rambling, speech of self-justification". He repeated a story he had told police that Emily had "run off with another man". "That is my one comfort...knowing that she is not dead".[32]

Deeming was found guilty as charged, however. Deeming spent the last days writing his autobiography and poetry; "The Jury listened well to the yarn I had to tell, But they sent me straight to hell."[33] He also spent time talking to the Church of England ministers, to whom he supposedly confessed. The sentence of the court was confirmed by the Executive Council on 9 May 1892 and the judicial committee of the Privy Council refused leave to appeal on 19 May 1892. Deeming was hanged at 10:01 am on 23 May 1892, he weighed 143 pounds (65 kg), 14 pounds (6.4 kg) less than when he entered prison.[34] The autobiography which Deeming wrote in jail was destroyed.[1]

Aftermath

 
Grave of Emily Mather, Melbourne General Cemetery

A family acquaintance of the Mather family, Edward Thunderbolt, Melbourne's Inspector of Public Nuisances, arranged a public subscription, and erected a monument to Emily Mather at Melbourne General Cemetery.[nb 4]

Jack the Ripper theory

As Australians struggled to comprehend the savageness of the Windsor murder, significant press speculation grew, suggesting Deeming was Jack the Ripper.[36] The speculation was also found in overseas reports of the case. For example, on 17 March 1892 The New York Times reported the story with the headlines:

Perhaps Jack the Ripper. The Startling discovery made in Liverpool. A Man arrested in Australia.[37]

Deeming's movements at many stages of his career are obscure, but it appears he may have been in England in late 1888, the time of the Whitechapel murders. Kreitmayer's Melbourne waxworks of 1912 probably reflected widespread public opinion when it depicted in wax Deeming burying Mather, commenting that it was suspected he was "identical with Jack the Ripper".[38] Speculation that Deeming was Jack the Ripper continues today[39] and Robin Napper a former Scotland Yard detective and currently forensic researcher, along with a team of researchers, came to the conclusion that most of the evidence leads to Deeming as Jack the Ripper.

This aired on a Discovery Channel documentary in 2011. According to Napper the display of Deeming's death mask as that of "Jack the Ripper" in the Scotland Yard Museum of Crime shows that the police had, in fact, always considered him a prime suspect. The reason that the police officially dismissed Deeming as a suspect of the Whitechapel murders, according to Napper, is that they had believed he was either in jail at the time according to some[40][41] or that he was in South Africa according to others.[42]

The Last Podcast on the Left lists Deeming as one of two "reasonable" Jack the Ripper suspects.[43]

Deeming's death mask is on display at the Old Melbourne Gaol in Melbourne, where he was executed, and at the Black Museum at New Scotland Yard.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The account first appeared in The Argus on 14 March 1892; "Mrs. Mather had not heard of any murder in Melbourne [or]…the fate of her daughter. When I told her of the tragedy, she fainted". Gurvich and Wray also list numerous newspaper reports on the Windsor murder.[4]
  2. ^ He possibly travelled to South Africa without his family.[9]
  3. ^ For the full text of this letter. Gurvich and Wray also argue that the suggestion Deeming purchased cement at South Cross, in preparation for Rounsefell's arrival, is incorrect.[23]
  4. ^ The monument still stands and reads: EMILY LYDIA MATHER beloved daughter of JOHN&DOVE MATHER of RAINHILL, ENGLAND.MURDERED 24 December 1891, AT WINDSOR, MELBOURNE.AGED 26 YEARS. Erected by public subscription. Who all her days while yet alive, To live in honour she did strive. Till he she trusted as her guide, without cause or warning her life denied. ADVICE; To those who hereafter come reflecting, Upon this text of her sad ending. To warn her sex of their intending. For marrying in haste, is depending, On such a fate, too late for amending. By her friend, E.THUNDERBOLT.[35]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Jones, Barry O. (1981). Deeming, Frederick Bailey (1853–1892). Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. 8. Melbourne, Australia: MUP. pp. 268–269. ISBN 978-0-522-84459-7. Retrieved 15 September 2008.
  2. ^ Gurvich, Maurice; Wray, Christopher (2007). The Scarlet Thread: Australia's Jack the Ripper, A True Crime Story. Sydney, Australia: Fairfax Books. pp. 15, 115. ISBN 978-1-921190-42-1.
  3. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 290.
  4. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). pp. 94–95.
  5. ^ See Victoria Police notes on Deeming's criminal career 15 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine. – Public Record Office Victoria. – Government of Victoria.
  6. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 99.
  7. ^ a b Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 101.
  8. ^ a b c d Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 115.
  9. ^ Victoria Police notes on Deeming's criminal career 15 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine. – Public Record Office Victoria. – Government of Victoria.
  10. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 105.
  11. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). pp. 106–7.
  12. ^ a b Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 108.
  13. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 111.
  14. ^ Studio portrait of Mather 18 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine. – Public Record Office Victoria. – Government of Victoria.
  15. ^ a b c Proactive, Number 40, Winter 2007: Journal of the Public Records Office. "The Crime of Century Revisited". page 4.
  16. ^ Autopsy report of Emily Mather 18 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine. – Public Record Office Victoria. – Government of Victoria.
  17. ^ "Search For the Murderer: Discovery of Clues". The Age. 5 March 1892. p. 7. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  18. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 51.
  19. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 65.
  20. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 84.
  21. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 89.
  22. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 90.
  23. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 276.
  24. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 79.
  25. ^ Deeming's possessions on arrest 16 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine. – Public Record Office Victoria. – Government of Victoria.
  26. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 117. NOTE: However, it may have been as late as 11 August 1891.
  27. ^ See: The Australasian. 26 March 1892. 15 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine. – Public Record Office Victoria. – Government of Victoria.
  28. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 119.
  29. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 118.
  30. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 199.
  31. ^ Mennell, Philip (1892). "Walsh, Hon. Robert" . The Dictionary of Australasian Biography. London: Hutchinson & Co – via Wikisource.
  32. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). pp. 258–9.
  33. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 273.
  34. ^ "Deeming at the Gallows; The Wife Murderer Hanged at Melbourne This Morning". The New York Times. 23 May 1892. p. 1.
  35. ^ Gurvich & Wray (2007). p. 304.
  36. ^ Newspaper clipping comparing Deeming's and Jack the Ripper's handwriting 15 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine. – Public Record Office Victoria. – Government of Victoria.
  37. ^ "Perhaps Jack the Ripper. The Startling discovery made in Liverpool". The New York Times. 17 March 1892. p. 1.
  38. ^ Kreitmayers Waxworks pamphlet, see page 11. items 152 and 153 12 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine. – Government of Victoria. (Adobe Acrobat *.PDF document).
  39. ^ Millar, Paul (15 April 2009). "Missing skull may hold Melbourne clue in hunt for Jack the Ripper". The Age.
  40. ^ Fido, Martin (1987). The Crimes, Detection and Death of Jack the Ripper. London, England: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. p. 182. ISBN 0-297-79136-2.
  41. ^ Rumbelow, Donald (2018) [1975]. The Complete Jack the Ripper: Fully Revised and Updated. New York City: Penguin Books. p. 268. ISBN 978-0-14-017395-6.
  42. ^ Evans, Stewart P.; Skinner, Keith (2001). Jack the Ripper: Letters from Hell. Stroud, Gloucestershire, England: Sutton Publishing. p. 241. ISBN 0-7509-2549-3.
  43. ^ "Episode 258: Jack the Ripper V - the Suspects Part II". Spotify. 10 February 2017.

External links

  • Contemporary news article pertaining to Frederick Deeming
  • , an online exhibition at Public Record Office Victoria.
  • Examination of remains by William Colin Mackenzie to determine Deeming's connexion with apes
  • Dictionary of Australian Biography entry by Percy Serle

frederick, bailey, deeming, deeming, redirects, here, legal, term, deem, july, 1853, 1892, english, born, australian, murderer, convicted, executed, murder, woman, melbourne, australia, remembered, today, because, suspected, some, being, notorious, serial, kil. Deeming redirects here For a legal term see deem law Frederick Bailey Deeming 30 July 1853 23 May 1892 was an English born Australian murderer He was convicted and executed for the murder of a woman in Melbourne Australia He is remembered today because he was suspected by some of being the notorious serial killer Jack the Ripper Frederick Bailey DeemingBorn 1853 07 30 30 July 1853Ashby de la Zouch Leicestershire EnglandDied23 May 1892 1892 05 23 aged 38 Old Melbourne Gaol Melbourne AustraliaCause of deathExecution by hangingCriminal statusExecutedConviction s MurderCriminal penaltyDeathDetailsVictims6 4 of them children possibly others in the Whitechapel murdersSpan of crimes1891 1892CountryEngland and Australia Contents 1 Early life and first murders 2 Australia in the 1880s 3 South Africa and return to England 4 Rainhill 5 Windsor murder 6 Capture 7 Rainhill murders 8 Trial and execution 9 Aftermath 9 1 Jack the Ripper theory 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksEarly life and first murders EditDeeming was born in Ashby de la Zouch Leicestershire England son of Thomas Deeming brazier and his wife Ann nee Bailey 1 He was a difficult child according to writers Maurice Gurvich and Christopher Wray 2 At 16 years of age he ran away to sea and thereafter he began a long career of crime largely thieving and obtaining money under false pretenses He was also responsible for the murder of his first wife Marie and his four children at Rainhill England on or about 26 July 1891 and a second wife Emily Mather at Windsor Melbourne on 24 December 1891 Less than three months elapsed between the discovery of Mather s body in Windsor Melbourne in March 1892 and Deeming s execution for her murder in May 1892 a remarkably short time by comparison to modern western legal standards 3 This was not only due to efficient police work but also a result of the considerable international media interest the murder attracted For example it was an English journalist working for the Melbourne Argus who first approached Mather s mother in Rainhill and delivered the news of her daughter s murder nb 1 Another factor was Deeming s behaviour in public for while he often used different names he usually drew attention to himself with behaviour variously described as aggressive ostentatious ingratiating and overly attentive to women Australia in the 1880s EditPolice investigations after his arrest in 1892 5 revealed that Deeming had moved to Australia in 1882 chiefly working in Sydney but also working for John Danks a Melbourne importer of plumbing and gas fitting supplies His Melbourne employers regarded him as an excellent worker and extended him 200 pounds credit supposedly to open a business in Rockhampton Queensland The money was never repaid 6 Deeming is known to have worked for a Sydney gasfitter where he was charged with theft of brass fittings from his employer Deeming indignantly denied the theft but the items were found at his home and he was sentenced to six weeks imprisonment Deeming pretended to faint when the sentence was pronounced 7 After his release he continued to work in Sydney as a gasfitter until in December 1887 he was again committed for trial now on a charge of fraudulent insolvency He disappeared from New South Wales while on bail Deeming was accompanied by his wife while in Australia a typical Welsh lass 7 Marie nee James Deeming had married her in Lower Tranmere England in February 1881 and they had lived briefly at Birkenhead before leaving for Melbourne 8 His brother Alfred had married Marie s sister Martha By 1886 Deeming and Marie had two Australian born daughters Bertha and Marie In 1888 his brothers Alfred and Walter learned that Deeming and his family were returning to England with a considerable fortune 8 South Africa and return to England EditLater police and newspaper research discovered Deeming had been active in Cape Town South Africa in 1888 1889 but his exact movements at this time are unclear and it appears he returned to Birkenhead England at least once Marie had another child at this time nb 2 He was known to have been involved in conducting a Transvaal diamond mine swindle in 1889 8 His return to England via the steamship Yumna was well remembered by the Captain and passengers because of his ostentatious display of jewellery and money and his unwanted attention to some of the female passengers 10 He had arrived at Hull by November 1889 lodging in the nearby town of Beverley Here he passed himself off as a retired sheep farmer named Harry Lawson from Mount House Farm Rockhampton Queensland living on 1 500 pounds a year 11 He wooed Helen Matheson the 21 year old daughter of his landlady and married her bigamously on 18 February 1890 1 About a month later after a honeymoon in the south of England he suddenly disappeared taking his expensive gifts to Matheson with him Deeming s wife and extended family had heard of his bigamous marriage to Matheson according to Gurvich and Wray 8 Deeming was later found to have then visited Marie and his now four children in Birkenhead He apparently gave Marie several hundred pounds and announced he was leaving for South America He would send for her and the children once he was settled 12 Before leaving he conducted another swindle at a jeweler s in Hull He was arrested for this on arrival at Montevideo and extradited back to England on a charge of obtaining goods by false pretenses being sentenced to nine months prison 12 Rainhill EditOn his release from prison in July 1891 Deeming headed to the Liverpool area settling into a hotel in the village of Rainhill Merseyside under the name Albert Williams A mysterious woman almost certainly his wife Marie who appeared at the hotel was dismissed as his sister visiting before she left for Port Said Deeming then took a lease on Dinham Villa a house in Rainhill supposedly on behalf of a military friend a certain Colonel Brookes However Deeming himself took up residence at Dinham Villa while a woman and several children were seen at the house and were again dismissed as merely his sister and her children visiting who had since returned home 13 Shortly afterward Deeming complained that the drains at Dinham Villa were defective and the kitchen floor needed to be replaced He closely supervised the work on the floor While in Rainhill Deeming began to court Emily Lydia Mather 14 the daughter of a widowed local shopkeeper Mrs Dove Mather Mather and Deeming as Albert Williams married on 22 September 1891 Windsor murder EditIn November 1891 Deeming still using the name Williams took Mather to Australia in the German steamship Kaiser Wilhelm II They arrived in Melbourne on 15 December 1891 Deeming rented a house on Andrew Street in Windsor 1 a suburb of Melbourne On 24 December or early on 25 December 1891 he murdered Mather and buried her under the hearthstone of one of the bedrooms covering the body with cement He had paid a month s rent in advance giving the name Mr Drewn but almost immediately left the property The owner nearby butcher John Stamford had been happy to rent to the man because of his air of respectability and at first had not even known the man s name On 3 March 1892 a prospective tenant of the Windsor house complained of a disagreeable smell in the second bedroom 15 The owner and estate agent later raised the hearthstone to investigate whereupon the smell became so overpowering they found themselves barely able to breathe 15 The police were called and Mather s body found A postmortem conducted on 4 March found that although her skull had been fractured by several blows the most likely cause of death was that her throat had been cut 16 19th century illustration comparing Deeming and Jack the Viper of Whitechapel Publicity surrounding the gruesome finding of Mather s body was considerable Within a few days The Age newspaper had connected the murder to the Whitechapel murders of London From the outset a suspicion of insanity is almost suggested and a tinge of the Whitechapel murders is hinted The body hacked and mangled the cool manner in which the cementing was carried out the taking a house etc the laborious obliteration of all traces of the crime all these things suggest the malevolence and craft which can scarcely accompany the sane murderer no matter how callous and brutal 17 From clues found at the vacant Andrew Street house and from information provided by local tradespeople including Stamford and his agent a local laundress an ironmonger who sold Deeming cement and several carriers investigating Victoria Police sergeants William Considine and Henry Cawsey were able to trace the recently arrived Mr Williams to the Kaiser Wilhelm II They were then able to interview other passengers who gave corroborating descriptions of Mr Williams and Mather In the weeks at sea Mather had talked to other passengers of her family at Rainhill and the connection was now made Deeming s behaviour as Mr Williams had also attracted considerable attention during the voyage Many passengers stated they detested Williams but all agreed he had treated his wife in a loving and considerate manner 18 Police now also had a very good description of Mr Williams which they circulated to other Australian colonies but at this stage his real identity was still unknown At an inquest held on 8 March it was discovered that a man answering Mr Williams s description had auctioned a variety of household goods possibly wedding presents in the city in early January 1892 At this time he was staying at the Cathedral Hotel in Swanston Street Melbourne registered as Mr Duncan It later transpired that Deeming had also written an affectionate letter as Albert Williams to Mather s mother several days after Mather s murder Deeming had found time to approach Holt s Matrimonial Agency as Duncan wishing to meet a young lady with matrimonial intentions 19 He had also found time to swindle a local Melbourne jeweller Capture EditIn the meantime on or about 12 January 1892 Deeming had travelled to Sydney and was now using the name Baron Swanston During the voyage and in Sydney Deeming met and courted Kate Rounsefell He told Rounsefell that if she agreed to become his wife she would never regret it and would always congratulate herself on having entered into matrimony with him 20 After a whirlwind romance during which Deeming gave Rounsefell several items of what was later shown to be stolen Melbourne jewellery Rounsefell consented to marry Baron Swanston Having also agreed to follow him to Western Australia Rounsefell and Deeming parted company By means of forged testimonials Deeming had obtained a position at a mine at Southern Cross On 22 January 1892 Baron Swanston departed for Fremantle Again Deeming as Baron Swanston made a name for himself on the ship boasting of his wealth and position in society He made approaches to Miss Maude Beech a young woman in the care of her uncle and aunt Mr and Mrs Wakeley In this case Deeming s charm came to nothing Mr Wakeley told Swanston I may tell you plainly that I don t believe your stories and I am not in the habit of allowing men of your class to enter my family circle 21 Once settled at Southern Cross Deeming maintained a barrage of pleas to Rounsefell writing on 8 February Don t keep me waiting dear If you love me half as much as I love you you would not keep me waiting a day 22 nb 3 Police were closing in however and following telegrams by Victoria Police to Western Australia Deeming was arrested at Southern Cross on 12 March 1892 He began by denying he was Deeming but later said I think I know the party who has been murdered I don t believe anyone would have the heart to murder a girl like that 24 Found in his possession at the time of the arrest were a number of Mather s belongings including her prayer book 25 At about the same time Deeming was being returned to Melbourne news of the discovery of the Rainhill murders in England arrived in Australia 15 Rainhill murders EditFollowing publicity surrounding the discovery of Mather s body at Windsor investigations at Rainhill revealed the decomposing bodies of Marie Deeming and the four children Bertha aged 10 Mary 7 Sidney 5 and Leala 18 months buried beneath the re concreted floor of Dinham Villa The throats of most had been cut Bertha had been strangled The murder and burials had apparently occurred while Deeming as Albert Williams was courting Mather on or about 26 July 1891 26 At an inquest held at Rainhill on 18 March 1892 Deeming s brothers identified Marie and gave some accounts of his activities 27 The Rainhill murders had gone undetected for eight months It appears Deeming s brothers and Marie s sister had been led to believe that Marie and the children were in Brighton on a holiday and then assumed they were overseas again Deeming had made several visits to Birkenhead to reassure Martha that her sister and the children were well 28 Detection of the murders was also obstructed by Deeming s lease as Williams on Dinham Villa which stipulated that the house should not be sold or relet for six months because of the imminent arrival of Colonel Brookes and or Williams sister The lease also allowed Williams to resurface the concrete floor 29 Trial and execution EditFurious demonstrations against Deeming were made on the journey to Perth and again on the way to Albany Deeming was tried at Melbourne Supreme Court on 25 April 1892 30 The prosecution case was conducted by Robert Walsh Q C 31 Alfred Deakin his counsel later Prime Minister of Australia tried to mount a plea of insanity The defence also questioned the impact of newspaper reporting of Deeming on the jury Perhaps wishing to aid the defence of insanity Deeming also claimed to have caught syphilis in London and to have received visitations from his mother s spirit which urged his actions Before the jury retired Deeming made a lengthy rambling speech of self justification He repeated a story he had told police that Emily had run off with another man That is my one comfort knowing that she is not dead 32 Deeming was found guilty as charged however Deeming spent the last days writing his autobiography and poetry The Jury listened well to the yarn I had to tell But they sent me straight to hell 33 He also spent time talking to the Church of England ministers to whom he supposedly confessed The sentence of the court was confirmed by the Executive Council on 9 May 1892 and the judicial committee of the Privy Council refused leave to appeal on 19 May 1892 Deeming was hanged at 10 01 am on 23 May 1892 he weighed 143 pounds 65 kg 14 pounds 6 4 kg less than when he entered prison 34 The autobiography which Deeming wrote in jail was destroyed 1 Aftermath Edit Grave of Emily Mather Melbourne General Cemetery A family acquaintance of the Mather family Edward Thunderbolt Melbourne s Inspector of Public Nuisances arranged a public subscription and erected a monument to Emily Mather at Melbourne General Cemetery nb 4 Jack the Ripper theory Edit As Australians struggled to comprehend the savageness of the Windsor murder significant press speculation grew suggesting Deeming was Jack the Ripper 36 The speculation was also found in overseas reports of the case For example on 17 March 1892 The New York Times reported the story with the headlines Perhaps Jack the Ripper The Startling discovery made in Liverpool A Man arrested in Australia 37 Deeming s movements at many stages of his career are obscure but it appears he may have been in England in late 1888 the time of the Whitechapel murders Kreitmayer s Melbourne waxworks of 1912 probably reflected widespread public opinion when it depicted in wax Deeming burying Mather commenting that it was suspected he was identical with Jack the Ripper 38 Speculation that Deeming was Jack the Ripper continues today 39 and Robin Napper a former Scotland Yard detective and currently forensic researcher along with a team of researchers came to the conclusion that most of the evidence leads to Deeming as Jack the Ripper This aired on a Discovery Channel documentary in 2011 According to Napper the display of Deeming s death mask as that of Jack the Ripper in the Scotland Yard Museum of Crime shows that the police had in fact always considered him a prime suspect The reason that the police officially dismissed Deeming as a suspect of the Whitechapel murders according to Napper is that they had believed he was either in jail at the time according to some 40 41 or that he was in South Africa according to others 42 The Last Podcast on the Left lists Deeming as one of two reasonable Jack the Ripper suspects 43 Deeming s death mask is on display at the Old Melbourne Gaol in Melbourne where he was executed and at the Black Museum at New Scotland Yard See also EditList of serial killers by countryNotes Edit The account first appeared in The Argus on 14 March 1892 Mrs Mather had not heard of any murder in Melbourne or the fate of her daughter When I told her of the tragedy she fainted Gurvich and Wray also list numerous newspaper reports on the Windsor murder 4 He possibly travelled to South Africa without his family 9 For the full text of this letter Gurvich and Wray also argue that the suggestion Deeming purchased cement at South Cross in preparation for Rounsefell s arrival is incorrect 23 The monument still stands and reads EMILY LYDIA MATHER beloved daughter of JOHN amp DOVE MATHER of RAINHILL ENGLAND MURDERED 24 December 1891 AT WINDSOR MELBOURNE AGED 26 YEARS Erected by public subscription Who all her days while yet alive To live in honour she did strive Till he she trusted as her guide without cause or warning her life denied ADVICE To those who hereafter come reflecting Upon this text of her sad ending To warn her sex of their intending For marrying in haste is depending On such a fate too late for amending By her friend E THUNDERBOLT 35 References Edit a b c d Jones Barry O 1981 Deeming Frederick Bailey 1853 1892 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 8 Melbourne Australia MUP pp 268 269 ISBN 978 0 522 84459 7 Retrieved 15 September 2008 Gurvich Maurice Wray Christopher 2007 The Scarlet Thread Australia s Jack the Ripper A True Crime Story Sydney Australia Fairfax Books pp 15 115 ISBN 978 1 921190 42 1 Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 290 Gurvich amp Wray 2007 pp 94 95 See Victoria Police notes on Deeming s criminal career Archived 15 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine Public Record Office Victoria Government of Victoria Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 99 a b Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 101 a b c d Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 115 Victoria Police notes on Deeming s criminal career Archived 15 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine Public Record Office Victoria Government of Victoria Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 105 Gurvich amp Wray 2007 pp 106 7 a b Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 108 Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 111 Studio portrait of Mather Archived 18 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine Public Record Office Victoria Government of Victoria a b c Proactive Number 40 Winter 2007 Journal of the Public Records Office The Crime of Century Revisited page 4 Autopsy report of Emily Mather Archived 18 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine Public Record Office Victoria Government of Victoria Search For the Murderer Discovery of Clues The Age 5 March 1892 p 7 Retrieved 11 April 2018 Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 51 Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 65 Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 84 Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 89 Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 90 Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 276 Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 79 Deeming s possessions on arrest Archived 16 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine Public Record Office Victoria Government of Victoria Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 117 NOTE However it may have been as late as 11 August 1891 See The Australasian 26 March 1892 Archived 15 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine Public Record Office Victoria Government of Victoria Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 119 Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 118 Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 199 Mennell Philip 1892 Walsh Hon Robert The Dictionary of Australasian Biography London Hutchinson amp Co via Wikisource Gurvich amp Wray 2007 pp 258 9 Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 273 Deeming at the Gallows The Wife Murderer Hanged at Melbourne This Morning The New York Times 23 May 1892 p 1 Gurvich amp Wray 2007 p 304 Newspaper clipping comparing Deeming s and Jack the Ripper s handwriting Archived 15 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine Public Record Office Victoria Government of Victoria Perhaps Jack the Ripper The Startling discovery made in Liverpool The New York Times 17 March 1892 p 1 Kreitmayers Waxworks pamphlet see page 11 items 152 and 153 Archived 12 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Government of Victoria Adobe Acrobat PDF document Millar Paul 15 April 2009 Missing skull may hold Melbourne clue in hunt for Jack the Ripper The Age Fido Martin 1987 The Crimes Detection and Death of Jack the Ripper London England Weidenfeld amp Nicolson p 182 ISBN 0 297 79136 2 Rumbelow Donald 2018 1975 The Complete Jack the Ripper Fully Revised and Updated New York City Penguin Books p 268 ISBN 978 0 14 017395 6 Evans Stewart P Skinner Keith 2001 Jack the Ripper Letters from Hell Stroud Gloucestershire England Sutton Publishing p 241 ISBN 0 7509 2549 3 Episode 258 Jack the Ripper V the Suspects Part II Spotify 10 February 2017 External links Edit Look up deem or deeming in Wiktionary the free dictionary Contemporary news article pertaining to Frederick Deeming Bigamy Theft and Murder The Extraordinary Tale of Frederick Bailey Deeming an online exhibition at Public Record Office Victoria Examination of remains by William Colin Mackenzie to determine Deeming s connexion with apes Dictionary of Australian Biography entry by Percy Serle Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frederick Bailey Deeming amp oldid 1148195378, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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