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Mary Ann Cotton

Mary Ann Cotton (née Robson; 31 October 1832 – 24 March 1873) was an English convicted murderer who was executed for poisoning her stepson. Despite her sole conviction for murder, she is believed to have been a serial killer who killed many others including 11 of her 13 children and three of her four husbands for their life insurance policies. Her preferred method of killing was poisoning with arsenic.

Mary Ann Cotton
Cotton, c. 1870
Born
Mary Ann Robson

31 October 1832
Died24 March 1873(1873-03-24) (aged 40)
Durham Gaol, England
Cause of deathHanging
Other namesThe Black Widow
Occupation(s)Dressmaker, nurse, housekeeper
Criminal penaltyDeath by hanging
Details
VictimsAround 21, including 3 of her husbands and 12 children
CountryEngland
WeaponsArsenic
Date apprehended
18 July 1872[citation needed]

Cotton's undoing came after she tried to have the son of her deceased husband sent to a workhouse. When that failed, within days she told parish officials that Charles Edward Cotton had died. Investigations into her behaviour soon showed a pattern of deaths. The body of the stepson was examined and found to contain arsenic. Cotton was convicted of his murder and sentenced to death. She was hanged at Durham Gaol. She did not die on the gallows from breaking of her neck but died by strangulation because the rope was set too short, possibly deliberately.

Early life edit

Mary Ann Robson was born on 31 October 1832 at Low Moorsley,[1] County Durham to Margaret, née Londsdale and Michael Robson, a colliery sinker; and baptised at St Mary's, West Rainton on 11 November. Her sister Margaret was born in 1834 but lived only a few months. Her brother Robert was born in 1835.

When Mary Ann was eight, her parents moved the family to the County Durham village of Murton. At the time of her trial, The Northern Echo published an article containing a description of Mary Ann as given by her childhood Wesleyan Sunday school superintendent at Murton, describing her as "a most exemplary and regular attender", "a girl of innocent disposition and average intelligence", and "distinguished for her particularly clean and tidy appearance."[2]

Soon after the move, Mary Ann's father fell 150 feet (46 m) to his death down a mine shaft at Murton colliery in February 1842. Her father's body was delivered to her mother in a sack bearing the stamp 'Property of the South Hetton Coal Company'. As the miner's cottage they inhabited was tied to Michael's job, the widow and children would have been evicted. In 1843, her mother married George Stott (1816–1895), also a miner. At 16, Mary Ann left home to become a nurse at the nearby village of South Hetton, in the home of Edward Potter, a manager at Murton colliery. After all of the children had been sent to boarding school in Darlington over the next three years, she returned to her stepfather's home and trained as a dressmaker.

Husband 1: William Mowbray edit

In 1852, 20-year-old Mary Ann married colliery labourer William Mowbray at Newcastle upon Tyne register office; they soon moved to South West England. At the time of her trial, there were reports of four or five of their children dying young while they were living away from County Durham. None of these deaths are registered, as although registration was compulsory at the time, the law was not enforced until 1874. The only birth recorded was that of their daughter Margaret Jane, born at St Germans in 1856.

William and Mary Ann moved back to North East England, where William worked as a fireman aboard a steam vessel sailing out of Sunderland, then as a colliery foreman. Another daughter, Isabella, was born in 1858, and Margaret Jane died in 1860. Another daughter, also named Margaret Jane, was born in 1861, and a son, John Robert William, was born in 1863, but died the next year from gastric fever.

William died of an intestinal disorder in January 1865. The lives of William and of their children were insured by the British and Prudential Insurance office and Mary Ann collected a payout of £35 on William's death (equivalent to £4,227 in 2023, about half a year's wages for a manual labourer at the time) and £2 5s for John Robert William.

Husband 2: George Ward edit

Soon after Mowbray's death, Mary Ann moved to Seaham Harbour, County Durham, where she struck up a relationship with Joseph Nattrass. During this time, her 3+12-year-old daughter, the second Margaret Jane, died of typhus fever, leaving her with one child of up to nine she had borne. She returned to Sunderland and took up employment at the Sunderland Infirmary, House of Recovery for the Cure of Contagious Fever, Dispensary and Humane Society. She sent her surviving child, Isabella, to live with her mother.

One of her patients at the infirmary was engineer George Ward. They married at St Peter's Church, Monkwearmouth, on 28 August 1865. Ward continued to suffer ill health and died on 20 October 1866 after a long illness characterised by paralysis and intestinal problems. The cause of death recorded on his death certificate is that of English cholera and typhoid. The attending doctor later gave evidence that Ward had been very ill, yet he had been surprised that his death was so sudden. Once again, Mary Ann collected insurance money in respect of her husband's death.

Husband 3: James Robinson edit

James Robinson was a shipwright at Pallion in Sunderland, whose wife Hannah had recently died. He hired Mary Ann as a housekeeper in November 1866. A month later, when James' baby John died of gastric fever, he turned to his housekeeper for comfort and she became pregnant. Then Mary Ann's mother, living in Seaham Harbour, County Durham, became ill with hepatitis, so Mary Ann immediately went to her. Although the mother began to recover, she also began to complain of stomach pains. She died at age 54 in the spring of 1867, nine days after Mary Ann's arrival. In 1867, Mary Ann's stepfather George Stott married his widowed neighbour, Hannah Paley.

Mary Ann's daughter Isabella Mowbray was brought back to the Robinson household and soon developed severe stomach pains and died, as did two of Robinson's children, Elizabeth and James. All three children were buried in the last week of April and first week of May 1867. Mary Ann received a life-insurance payment of £5 10s 6d for Isabella.

Robinson married Mary Ann at St Michael's, Bishopwearmouth on 11 August 1867. Their first child Margaret Isabella (Mary Isabella on her baptismal record) was born that November, but she became ill and died in February 1868. Their second child George was born on 18 June 1869.

Robinson, meanwhile, had become suspicious of his wife's insistence that he insure his life; he discovered that she had run up debts of £60 behind his back and had stolen more than £50 that she had been expected to bank. Then he found that Mary Ann had been forcing his older children to pawn household valuables. He threw her out, retaining custody of their son George.

Husband 4: Frederick Cotton edit

Mary Ann was desperate and living on the streets until her friend Margaret Cotton introduced her to her brother Frederick, a pitman and recent widower living in Walbottle, Northumberland, who had lost two of his four children. Margaret had acted as substitute mother for the remaining children, Frederick Jr. and Charles, but in late March 1870 she died from an undetermined stomach ailment, leaving Mary Ann to console the grieving Frederick Sr. Soon her twelfth pregnancy was underway.

Cotton and Mary Ann were bigamously married on 17 September 1870 at St Andrew's, Newcastle-Upon-Tyne and their son Robert was born early in 1871. Soon after, Mary Ann learnt that her former lover, Joseph Nattrass, was living 48 kilometres (30 mi) away in the County Durham village of West Auckland, and was no longer married. She rekindled the romance and persuaded her new family to move near him. Cotton died in December of that year, from "gastric fever." Insurance had been effected on his life and those of his sons.

Two lovers edit

After Frederick's death, Nattrass soon became Mary Ann's lodger. She gained employment as nurse to an excise officer recovering from smallpox. Popular cultural sources have called him John Quick-Manning, though there appears to be no trace of a John Quick-Manning in the records of the West Auckland Brewery or the National Archives. The census records, birth, death and marriage records also show no trace of him. However, Richard Quick Mann, a custom and excise man specialising in breweries, has been found in the records; his may be the real name of Mary Ann Cotton's lover. Soon, Mary became pregnant by him with her thirteenth child.

Frederick Jr. died in March 1872 and the infant Robert soon after. Then Nattrass became ill with gastric fever and died just after revising his will in Mary Ann's favour. The insurance policy Mary Ann had taken out on (the still living) Charles' life still awaited collection.

Death of Charles Edward Cotton and inquest edit

Mary Ann's downfall came when a parish official, Thomas Riley, asked her to help nurse a woman who was ill with smallpox. She complained that the last surviving Cotton boy, Charles Edward, was in the way and asked Riley if he could be committed to the workhouse. Riley, who also served as West Auckland's assistant coroner, said she needed to accompany him. She told Riley that the boy was sickly and added: "I won’t be troubled long. He’ll go like all the rest of the Cottons."

Five days later, Mary Ann told Riley that the boy had died. Riley went to the village police and persuaded the doctor to delay writing a death certificate until the circumstances could be investigated.

Mary Ann's first visit after Charles' death was not to the doctor but the insurance office. There, she discovered that no money would be paid out until a death certificate was issued. An inquest was held and the jury returned a verdict of natural causes. Mary Ann claimed to have used arrowroot to relieve his illness and said Riley had made accusations against her because she had rejected his advances.

Then the local newspapers latched on to the story and discovered Mary Ann had moved around northern England and lost three husbands, a lover, a friend, her mother, and 11 children, all of whom had died of stomach fevers.

Arrest edit

Rumour gave rise to suspicion and scientific investigation. Doctor William Byers Kilburn, who had attended Charles, had kept samples, and tests showed they contained arsenic.[3] He told the police, who arrested Mary Ann and procured exhumation of Charles' body. She was charged with his murder, although the trial was delayed until after the delivery in Durham Gaol on 7 January 1873 of her thirteenth and final child, whom she named Margaret Edith Quick-Manning Cotton.

Trial and execution edit

Cotton's trial began at Durham Assizes on 5 March 1873.[4] The delay was caused by a problem in the selection of prosecution counsel. A Mr Aspinwall was first considered but the Attorney General, Sir John Duke Coleridge, whose decision it was, chose his friend and protégé Charles Russell. Russell's appointment over Aspinwall led to a question in the House of Commons. However, it was accepted, and Russell conducted the prosecution. The Cotton case was the first of several famous poisoning cases he would be involved in during his career, including those of Adelaide Bartlett and Florence Maybrick.

The defence in the case was handled by Thomas Campbell Foster, who argued during the trial that Charles had died from inhaling arsenic used as a dye in the green wallpaper of the Cotton home. The doctor testified that there was no other powder on the same shelf in the chemist's shop as the arsenic, only liquid; the chemist himself claimed that there were other powders. Campbell Foster argued that it was possible that the chemist had mistakenly used arsenic powder instead of bismuth powder (used to treat diarrhea), when preparing a bottle for Cotton, because he had been distracted by talking to other people.[citation needed] The jury retired for 90 minutes before returning a guilty verdict.

The Times correspondent reported on 20 March: "After conviction the wretched woman exhibited strong emotion but this gave place in a few hours to her habitual cold, reserved demeanour and while she harbours a strong conviction that the royal clemency will be extended towards her, she staunchly asserts her innocence of the crime that she has been convicted of." Several petitions were presented to the Home Secretary, but to no avail. Mary Ann Cotton was hanged at Durham County Gaol on 24 March 1873 by William Calcraft; she died, not from her neck breaking, but by strangulation caused by the rope being rigged too short, possibly deliberately.[5]

Of Mary Ann's 13 children, only two survived her: Margaret Edith (1873–1954) and her son George from her marriage to James Robinson.

Television and radio drama edit

In 2015 ITV filmed a two-part television drama, Dark Angel,[6] starring Joanne Froggatt as Cotton. The series also featured Alun Armstrong, Jonas Armstrong and Emma Fielding.[7] The first part of the dramatisation was broadcast on 31 October 2016, the second part was broadcast on 7 November.[8] The drama was inspired by the book Mary Ann Cotton: Britain's First Female Serial Killer by David Wilson, a criminologist.[9]

The Mary Ann Cotton case was partly dramatized on an episode of the 2022 BBC Radio podcast series Lucy Worsley's Lady Killers.[10]

Cultural references edit

  • A nursery rhyme concerning Cotton was composed after her hanging on 24 March 1873.[11]

Mary Ann Cotton, she's dead and she's rotten
Lying in bed with her eyes wide open.
Sing, sing, oh what should I sing?
Mary Ann Cotton, she's tied up with string.
Where, where? Up in the air.
Selling black puddings, a penny a pair.

Mary Ann Cotton, she's dead and forgotten,
Lying in bed with her bones all rotten.
Sing, sing, what can I sing?
Mary Ann Cotton, tied up with string.[11]

  • Hardnoise recorded "Serve Tea, then Murder" (1991) as a reference to Cotton, as DJ AJ described in a 2014 interview.[12]
  • The Raveness, an English performance poet from Warwickshire, composed a spoken word piece entitled "Of Rope and Arsenic" about Cotton and featured the nursery rhyme on her album The Raveness (2003). The piece was also published in her poetry anthology, Lavinia: Volume One (2006) – ISBN 9781502313966[citation needed]
  • The band Attrition's 2008 album was entitled All Mine Enemys Whispers – The Story of Mary Ann Cotton.[13]
  • Macabre released a song about Cotton called "Mary Ann" on their Grim Scary Tales (2011) album.
  • The Dead Milkmen released a song about Cotton called "Mary Ann Cotton (The Poisoner's Song)" on their 2014 album Pretty Music for Pretty People.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Mary Ann Cotton | Biography, Murders, Trial, & Execution". Encyclopedia Britannica.
  2. ^ The Northern Echo, 21 March 1873, p. 3
  3. ^ "Dark Angel: How were Mary Ann Cotton's terrible crimes uncovered?". Radio Times.
  4. ^ "Exactly 150 years ago, Mary Ann Cotton faced her final hearing". The Northern Echo. 5 March 2023. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
  5. ^ "Illustrations Page 7". .maryanncotton.co.uk. Retrieved 31 October 2016.
  6. ^ Hodgson, Barbara (26 August 2015). "ITV drama about Durham serial killer Mary Ann Cotton called 'Dark Angel' starts filming". Chronicle Live. Retrieved 9 October 2015.
  7. ^ "Dark Angel". imdb.com. 1 January 2000. Retrieved 31 October 2016 – via IMDb.
  8. ^ Armstrong, Neil (31 October 2016). "Dark Angel: the gruesome true story of Mary Ann Cotton, Britain's first serial killer". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 31 October 2016.
  9. ^ "Joanne Froggatt to star in new ITV drama Dark Angel". ITV Press Centre. Retrieved 1 November 2016.
  10. ^ "BBC Radio 4 - Lady Killers with Lucy Worsley".
  11. ^ a b Flanders (2011), p. 394
  12. ^ . South London Hardcore. 28 May 2014. Archived from the original on 18 February 2015. Retrieved 10 October 2015.
  13. ^ "All Mine Enemys Whispers – The Story of Mary Ann Cotton". Attritionuk.bandcamp.com. Retrieved 10 October 2015.

Further reading edit

  • Appleton, Arthur. Mary Ann Cotton: Her Story and Trial. London: Michael Joseph, 1973. ISBN 0-7181-1184-2
  • Connolly, Martin. Mary Ann Cotton - Dark Angel: Britain's First Female Serial Killer, Pen & Sword Publishing, 2012. ISBN 978-1473876200
  • Flanders, Judith. The Invention of Murder. London: Harper Ress?, 2011. ISBN 978-0-00-724888-9

mary, cotton, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, december, 2010, learn, when, remove, this, message, née, robson,. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations December 2010 Learn how and when to remove this message Mary Ann Cotton nee Robson 31 October 1832 24 March 1873 was an English convicted murderer who was executed for poisoning her stepson Despite her sole conviction for murder she is believed to have been a serial killer who killed many others including 11 of her 13 children and three of her four husbands for their life insurance policies Her preferred method of killing was poisoning with arsenic Mary Ann CottonCotton c 1870BornMary Ann Robson31 October 1832Low Moorsley Houghton le Spring County Durham EnglandDied24 March 1873 1873 03 24 aged 40 Durham Gaol EnglandCause of deathHangingOther namesThe Black WidowOccupation s Dressmaker nurse housekeeperCriminal penaltyDeath by hangingDetailsVictimsAround 21 including 3 of her husbands and 12 childrenCountryEnglandWeaponsArsenicDate apprehended18 July 1872 citation needed Cotton s undoing came after she tried to have the son of her deceased husband sent to a workhouse When that failed within days she told parish officials that Charles Edward Cotton had died Investigations into her behaviour soon showed a pattern of deaths The body of the stepson was examined and found to contain arsenic Cotton was convicted of his murder and sentenced to death She was hanged at Durham Gaol She did not die on the gallows from breaking of her neck but died by strangulation because the rope was set too short possibly deliberately Contents 1 Early life 2 Husband 1 William Mowbray 3 Husband 2 George Ward 4 Husband 3 James Robinson 5 Husband 4 Frederick Cotton 6 Two lovers 7 Death of Charles Edward Cotton and inquest 8 Arrest 9 Trial and execution 10 Television and radio drama 11 Cultural references 12 See also 13 References 14 Further readingEarly life editMary Ann Robson was born on 31 October 1832 at Low Moorsley 1 County Durham to Margaret nee Londsdale and Michael Robson a colliery sinker and baptised at St Mary s West Rainton on 11 November Her sister Margaret was born in 1834 but lived only a few months Her brother Robert was born in 1835 When Mary Ann was eight her parents moved the family to the County Durham village of Murton At the time of her trial The Northern Echo published an article containing a description of Mary Ann as given by her childhood Wesleyan Sunday school superintendent at Murton describing her as a most exemplary and regular attender a girl of innocent disposition and average intelligence and distinguished for her particularly clean and tidy appearance 2 Soon after the move Mary Ann s father fell 150 feet 46 m to his death down a mine shaft at Murton colliery in February 1842 Her father s body was delivered to her mother in a sack bearing the stamp Property of the South Hetton Coal Company As the miner s cottage they inhabited was tied to Michael s job the widow and children would have been evicted In 1843 her mother married George Stott 1816 1895 also a miner At 16 Mary Ann left home to become a nurse at the nearby village of South Hetton in the home of Edward Potter a manager at Murton colliery After all of the children had been sent to boarding school in Darlington over the next three years she returned to her stepfather s home and trained as a dressmaker Husband 1 William Mowbray editIn 1852 20 year old Mary Ann married colliery labourer William Mowbray at Newcastle upon Tyne register office they soon moved to South West England At the time of her trial there were reports of four or five of their children dying young while they were living away from County Durham None of these deaths are registered as although registration was compulsory at the time the law was not enforced until 1874 The only birth recorded was that of their daughter Margaret Jane born at St Germans in 1856 William and Mary Ann moved back to North East England where William worked as a fireman aboard a steam vessel sailing out of Sunderland then as a colliery foreman Another daughter Isabella was born in 1858 and Margaret Jane died in 1860 Another daughter also named Margaret Jane was born in 1861 and a son John Robert William was born in 1863 but died the next year from gastric fever William died of an intestinal disorder in January 1865 The lives of William and of their children were insured by the British and Prudential Insurance office and Mary Ann collected a payout of 35 on William s death equivalent to 4 227 in 2023 about half a year s wages for a manual labourer at the time and 2 5s for John Robert William Husband 2 George Ward editSoon after Mowbray s death Mary Ann moved to Seaham Harbour County Durham where she struck up a relationship with Joseph Nattrass During this time her 3 1 2 year old daughter the second Margaret Jane died of typhus fever leaving her with one child of up to nine she had borne She returned to Sunderland and took up employment at the Sunderland Infirmary House of Recovery for the Cure of Contagious Fever Dispensary and Humane Society She sent her surviving child Isabella to live with her mother One of her patients at the infirmary was engineer George Ward They married at St Peter s Church Monkwearmouth on 28 August 1865 Ward continued to suffer ill health and died on 20 October 1866 after a long illness characterised by paralysis and intestinal problems The cause of death recorded on his death certificate is that of English cholera and typhoid The attending doctor later gave evidence that Ward had been very ill yet he had been surprised that his death was so sudden Once again Mary Ann collected insurance money in respect of her husband s death Husband 3 James Robinson editJames Robinson was a shipwright at Pallion in Sunderland whose wife Hannah had recently died He hired Mary Ann as a housekeeper in November 1866 A month later when James baby John died of gastric fever he turned to his housekeeper for comfort and she became pregnant Then Mary Ann s mother living in Seaham Harbour County Durham became ill with hepatitis so Mary Ann immediately went to her Although the mother began to recover she also began to complain of stomach pains She died at age 54 in the spring of 1867 nine days after Mary Ann s arrival In 1867 Mary Ann s stepfather George Stott married his widowed neighbour Hannah Paley Mary Ann s daughter Isabella Mowbray was brought back to the Robinson household and soon developed severe stomach pains and died as did two of Robinson s children Elizabeth and James All three children were buried in the last week of April and first week of May 1867 Mary Ann received a life insurance payment of 5 10s 6d for Isabella Robinson married Mary Ann at St Michael s Bishopwearmouth on 11 August 1867 Their first child Margaret Isabella Mary Isabella on her baptismal record was born that November but she became ill and died in February 1868 Their second child George was born on 18 June 1869 Robinson meanwhile had become suspicious of his wife s insistence that he insure his life he discovered that she had run up debts of 60 behind his back and had stolen more than 50 that she had been expected to bank Then he found that Mary Ann had been forcing his older children to pawn household valuables He threw her out retaining custody of their son George Husband 4 Frederick Cotton editMary Ann was desperate and living on the streets until her friend Margaret Cotton introduced her to her brother Frederick a pitman and recent widower living in Walbottle Northumberland who had lost two of his four children Margaret had acted as substitute mother for the remaining children Frederick Jr and Charles but in late March 1870 she died from an undetermined stomach ailment leaving Mary Ann to console the grieving Frederick Sr Soon her twelfth pregnancy was underway Cotton and Mary Ann were bigamously married on 17 September 1870 at St Andrew s Newcastle Upon Tyne and their son Robert was born early in 1871 Soon after Mary Ann learnt that her former lover Joseph Nattrass was living 48 kilometres 30 mi away in the County Durham village of West Auckland and was no longer married She rekindled the romance and persuaded her new family to move near him Cotton died in December of that year from gastric fever Insurance had been effected on his life and those of his sons Two lovers editAfter Frederick s death Nattrass soon became Mary Ann s lodger She gained employment as nurse to an excise officer recovering from smallpox Popular cultural sources have called him John Quick Manning though there appears to be no trace of a John Quick Manning in the records of the West Auckland Brewery or the National Archives The census records birth death and marriage records also show no trace of him However Richard Quick Mann a custom and excise man specialising in breweries has been found in the records his may be the real name of Mary Ann Cotton s lover Soon Mary became pregnant by him with her thirteenth child Frederick Jr died in March 1872 and the infant Robert soon after Then Nattrass became ill with gastric fever and died just after revising his will in Mary Ann s favour The insurance policy Mary Ann had taken out on the still living Charles life still awaited collection Death of Charles Edward Cotton and inquest editMary Ann s downfall came when a parish official Thomas Riley asked her to help nurse a woman who was ill with smallpox She complained that the last surviving Cotton boy Charles Edward was in the way and asked Riley if he could be committed to the workhouse Riley who also served as West Auckland s assistant coroner said she needed to accompany him She told Riley that the boy was sickly and added I won t be troubled long He ll go like all the rest of the Cottons Five days later Mary Ann told Riley that the boy had died Riley went to the village police and persuaded the doctor to delay writing a death certificate until the circumstances could be investigated Mary Ann s first visit after Charles death was not to the doctor but the insurance office There she discovered that no money would be paid out until a death certificate was issued An inquest was held and the jury returned a verdict of natural causes Mary Ann claimed to have used arrowroot to relieve his illness and said Riley had made accusations against her because she had rejected his advances Then the local newspapers latched on to the story and discovered Mary Ann had moved around northern England and lost three husbands a lover a friend her mother and 11 children all of whom had died of stomach fevers Arrest editRumour gave rise to suspicion and scientific investigation Doctor William Byers Kilburn who had attended Charles had kept samples and tests showed they contained arsenic 3 He told the police who arrested Mary Ann and procured exhumation of Charles body She was charged with his murder although the trial was delayed until after the delivery in Durham Gaol on 7 January 1873 of her thirteenth and final child whom she named Margaret Edith Quick Manning Cotton Trial and execution editCotton s trial began at Durham Assizes on 5 March 1873 4 The delay was caused by a problem in the selection of prosecution counsel A Mr Aspinwall was first considered but the Attorney General Sir John Duke Coleridge whose decision it was chose his friend and protege Charles Russell Russell s appointment over Aspinwall led to a question in the House of Commons However it was accepted and Russell conducted the prosecution The Cotton case was the first of several famous poisoning cases he would be involved in during his career including those of Adelaide Bartlett and Florence Maybrick The defence in the case was handled by Thomas Campbell Foster who argued during the trial that Charles had died from inhaling arsenic used as a dye in the green wallpaper of the Cotton home The doctor testified that there was no other powder on the same shelf in the chemist s shop as the arsenic only liquid the chemist himself claimed that there were other powders Campbell Foster argued that it was possible that the chemist had mistakenly used arsenic powder instead of bismuth powder used to treat diarrhea when preparing a bottle for Cotton because he had been distracted by talking to other people citation needed The jury retired for 90 minutes before returning a guilty verdict The Times correspondent reported on 20 March After conviction the wretched woman exhibited strong emotion but this gave place in a few hours to her habitual cold reserved demeanour and while she harbours a strong conviction that the royal clemency will be extended towards her she staunchly asserts her innocence of the crime that she has been convicted of Several petitions were presented to the Home Secretary but to no avail Mary Ann Cotton was hanged at Durham County Gaol on 24 March 1873 by William Calcraft she died not from her neck breaking but by strangulation caused by the rope being rigged too short possibly deliberately 5 Of Mary Ann s 13 children only two survived her Margaret Edith 1873 1954 and her son George from her marriage to James Robinson Television and radio drama editIn 2015 ITV filmed a two part television drama Dark Angel 6 starring Joanne Froggatt as Cotton The series also featured Alun Armstrong Jonas Armstrong and Emma Fielding 7 The first part of the dramatisation was broadcast on 31 October 2016 the second part was broadcast on 7 November 8 The drama was inspired by the book Mary Ann Cotton Britain s First Female Serial Killer by David Wilson a criminologist 9 The Mary Ann Cotton case was partly dramatized on an episode of the 2022 BBC Radio podcast series Lucy Worsley s Lady Killers 10 Cultural references editA nursery rhyme concerning Cotton was composed after her hanging on 24 March 1873 11 Mary Ann Cotton she s dead and she s rotten Lying in bed with her eyes wide open Sing sing oh what should I sing Mary Ann Cotton she s tied up with string Where where Up in the air Selling black puddings a penny a pair Mary Ann Cotton she s dead and forgotten Lying in bed with her bones all rotten Sing sing what can I sing Mary Ann Cotton tied up with string 11 Hardnoise recorded Serve Tea then Murder 1991 as a reference to Cotton as DJ AJ described in a 2014 interview 12 The Raveness an English performance poet from Warwickshire composed a spoken word piece entitled Of Rope and Arsenic about Cotton and featured the nursery rhyme on her album The Raveness 2003 The piece was also published in her poetry anthology Lavinia Volume One 2006 ISBN 9781502313966 citation needed The band Attrition s 2008 album was entitled All Mine Enemys Whispers The Story of Mary Ann Cotton 13 Macabre released a song about Cotton called Mary Ann on their Grim Scary Tales 2011 album The Dead Milkmen released a song about Cotton called Mary Ann Cotton The Poisoner s Song on their 2014 album Pretty Music for Pretty People See also editList of serial killers in the United Kingdom Louise Porton British woman who murdered her two childrenReferences edit Mary Ann Cotton Biography Murders Trial amp Execution Encyclopedia Britannica The Northern Echo 21 March 1873 p 3 Dark Angel How were Mary Ann Cotton s terrible crimes uncovered Radio Times Exactly 150 years ago Mary Ann Cotton faced her final hearing The Northern Echo 5 March 2023 Retrieved 11 March 2023 Illustrations Page 7 maryanncotton co uk Retrieved 31 October 2016 Hodgson Barbara 26 August 2015 ITV drama about Durham serial killer Mary Ann Cotton called Dark Angel starts filming Chronicle Live Retrieved 9 October 2015 Dark Angel imdb com 1 January 2000 Retrieved 31 October 2016 via IMDb Armstrong Neil 31 October 2016 Dark Angel the gruesome true story of Mary Ann Cotton Britain s first serial killer The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 31 October 2016 Joanne Froggatt to star in new ITV drama Dark Angel ITV Press Centre Retrieved 1 November 2016 BBC Radio 4 Lady Killers with Lucy Worsley a b Flanders 2011 p 394 Episode 118 DJ AJ from Hardnoise South London Hardcore 28 May 2014 Archived from the original on 18 February 2015 Retrieved 10 October 2015 All Mine Enemys Whispers The Story of Mary Ann Cotton Attritionuk bandcamp com Retrieved 10 October 2015 Further reading editAppleton Arthur Mary Ann Cotton Her Story and Trial London Michael Joseph 1973 ISBN 0 7181 1184 2 Connolly Martin Mary Ann Cotton Dark Angel Britain s First Female Serial Killer Pen amp Sword Publishing 2012 ISBN 978 1473876200 Flanders Judith The Invention of Murder London Harper Ress 2011 ISBN 978 0 00 724888 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mary Ann Cotton amp oldid 1219581261, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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