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Siege of Sidney Street

The siege of Sidney Street of January 1911, also known as the Battle of Stepney, was a gunfight in the East End of London between a combined police and army force and two Latvian revolutionaries. The siege was the culmination of a series of events that began in December 1910, with an attempted jewellery robbery at Houndsditch in the City of London by a gang of Latvian immigrants which resulted in the murder of three policemen, the wounding of two others, and the death of George Gardstein, a key member of the Latvian gang.

Winston Churchill (second from left), the then Home Secretary, at the siege

An investigation by the Metropolitan and City of London Police forces identified Gardstein's accomplices, most of whom were arrested within two weeks. The police were informed that the last two members of the gang were hiding at 100 Sidney Street in Stepney. The police evacuated local residents, and on the morning of 3 January a firefight broke out. Armed with inferior weapons, the police sought assistance from the army. The siege lasted for about six hours. Towards the end of the stand-off, the building caught fire; no single cause has been identified. One of the agitators in the building was shot before the fire spread. While the London Fire Brigade were damping down the ruins—in which they found the two bodies—the building collapsed, killing a fireman.

The siege marked the first time the police had requested military assistance in London to deal with an armed stand-off. It was also the first siege in Britain to be caught on camera, as the events were filmed by Pathé News. Some of the footage included images of the Home Secretary, Winston Churchill. His presence caused a political row over the level of his operational involvement. At the trial in May 1911 of those arrested for the Houndsditch jewellery robbery, all but one of the accused were acquitted; the conviction was overturned on appeal. The events were fictionalised in film—in The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934) and The Siege of Sidney Street (1960)—and novels. On the centenary of the events two tower blocks in Sidney Street were named after Peter the Painter, one of the minor members of the gang who was probably not present at either Houndsditch or Sidney Street. The murdered policemen and the fireman who died are commemorated with memorial plaques.

Background edit

Immigration and demographics in London edit

 
1900 map of Jewish East London. Circled on the left of the map is the location of the Houndsditch murders; circled on the right is the location of 100 Sidney Street.
The map is coloured to show the density of Jewish residents in East London: the darker the blue, the higher the Jewish population.[a]

In the 19th century, the Russian Empire was home to about five million Jews, the largest Jewish community at the time. Subjected to religious persecution and violent pogroms, many emigrated and between 1875 and 1914 around 120,000 arrived in the United Kingdom, mostly in England. The influx reached its peak in the late 1890s when large numbers of Jewish immigrants—mostly poor and semi-skilled or unskilled—settled in the East End of London.[2][3] The concentration of Jewish immigrants into some areas was almost 100 per cent of the population, and a study undertaken in 1900 showed that Houndsditch and Whitechapel were both identified as a "well-defined intensely Jewish district".[4]

Some of the expatriates were revolutionaries, many of whom were unable to adapt to life in the politically less oppressive London. The social historian William J. Fishman writes that "the meschuggena (crazy) Anarchists were almost accepted as part of the East End landscape";[5] the terms "socialist" and "anarchist" had been conflated in the British press, who used the terms interchangeably to refer to those with revolutionary beliefs.[6] A leading article in The Times described the Whitechapel area as one that "harbours some of the worst alien anarchists and criminals who seek our too hospitable shore. And these are the men who use the pistol and the knife."[7]

From the turn of the century, gang warfare persisted in the Whitechapel and Aldgate areas of London between groups of Bessarabians and refugees from Odessa; various revolutionary factions were active in the area.[8] The Tottenham Outrage of January 1909, by two revolutionary Russians in London—Paul Helfeld and Jacob Lepidus—was an attempt to rob a payroll van, which left two dead and twenty injured. The event used a tactic often employed by revolutionary groups in Russia: the expropriation or theft of private property to fund radical activities.[9]

The influx of émigrés and the increase of violent crime associated with it, led to popular concerns and comments in the press. The government passed the Aliens Act 1905 in an attempt to reduce immigration. The popular press reflected the opinions of many at the time;[10] a leading article in The Manchester Evening Chronicle supported the bill to bar "the dirty, destitute, diseased, verminous and criminal foreigner who dumps himself on our soil".[11] The journalist Robert Winder, in his examination of migration into Britain, opines that the Act "gave official sanction to xenophobic reflexes which might ... have remained dormant".[12]

Latvian émigré gang edit

Two members of the émigré group involved in the robberies
 
George Gardstein; the photograph was taken post-mortem and issued by the police in their search for information
 
Peter the Painter, as he appeared on the wanted poster issued by the City of London Police

By 1910 Russian émigrés met regularly at the Anarchist Club in Jubilee Street, Stepney.[13] Many of its members were not anarchists, and the club became a meeting and social venue for the Russian émigré diaspora, most of whom were Jewish.[14] The small group of Latvians[b] who became involved in the events at Houndsditch and Sidney Street were not all anarchists—although anarchist literature was later found among their possessions.[16] Most members of the group were revolutionaries who had been radicalised by their involvement in the unsuccessful 1905 revolution in Latvia and its violent suppression. All had left-wing political views and believed the expropriation of private property was a valid practice.[6][17][18]

A leading figure in the group was George Gardstein, whose real name was probably Hartmanis; he also used the aliases Garstin, Poloski, Poolka, Morountzeff, Mourimitz, Maurivitz, Milowitz, Morintz, Morin and Levi.[13][19][20][21] Gardstein, who probably was an anarchist, had been accused of murder and acts of terrorism in Warsaw in 1905 before his arrival in London.[6] Another member of the group, Jacob (or Yakov) Peters, had been an agitator in Russia while in the army and later as a dockyard worker. He had served a term in prison for his activities and had been tortured by the removal of his fingernails.[22] Yourka Dubof was another Russian agitator who had fled to England after being flogged by Cossacks.[23] Fritz Svaars (Latvian: Fricis Svars) was a Latvian who had been arrested by the Russian authorities three times for terrorist offences, but escaped each time. He had travelled through the United States, where he undertook a series of robberies, before arriving in London in June 1910.[6][24]

Another member was "Peter the Painter", a nickname for an man also known as Peter Piaktow (or Piatkov, Pjatkov or Piaktoff); his real name was Janis Zaklis.[19][c] The police suggested he was the ringleader of the gang, although there is no evidence that he was present at Houndsditch or Sidney Street.[25] William (or Joseph) Sokoloff (or Sokolow) was a Latvian who had lived in Latvia and had been arrested in Riga in 1905 for murder and robbery before travelling to London.[6] Another of the group's members was Karl Hoffman—whose real name was Alfred Dzircol—who had been involved in revolutionary and criminal activities for several years, including gun-running. In London he had worked as a decorator.[26] John Rosen—real name John Zelin or Tzelin—came to London in 1909 from Riga and worked as a barber,[27] while another member of the gang was Max Smoller, also known as Joe Levi and "Josepf the Jew". He was wanted in his native Crimea for several jewel robberies.[28] Three women members of the gang, or associates of members of the gang, were among those who faced charges arising from the Houndsditch robbery attempt: Nina Vassileva—who was convicted of a minor offence but was cleared on appeal—Luba Milstein and Rosa Trassjonsky [29].

Policing in the capital edit

Following the Metropolitan Police Act 1829 and the City of London Police Act 1839, the capital was policed by two forces, the Metropolitan Police, who held sway over most of the capital, and the City of London Police, who were responsible for law enforcement within the historic City boundaries.[30][31] The events in Houndsditch in December 1910 fell into the purview of the City of London service, and the subsequent actions at Sidney Street in January 1911 were in the jurisdiction of the Metropolitan force.[32][33] Both services came under the political control of the Home Secretary, who in 1911 was the 36-year-old rising politician Winston Churchill.[30][34]

While on the beat, or in the course of their normal duties, the officers of the City of London and Metropolitan forces were provided with a short wooden truncheon for protection. When they faced armed opponents—as was the case in Sidney Street—the police were issued with Webley and Bull Dog revolvers, shotguns and small-bore rifles fitted with .22 Morris-tube barrels, the last of which were more commonly used on small indoor shooting galleries.[33][35][36]

Houndsditch murders, December 1910 edit

 
Scene of the robbery, showing a group of policemen in Exchange Buildings, which backs onto the Houndsditch frontage of the shop

At the beginning of December 1910 Smoller, using the name Joe Levi, visited Exchange Buildings, a small cul-de-sac that backed onto the properties of Houndsditch. He rented No. 11 Exchange Buildings; a week later Svaars rented number 9 for a month, saying he needed it for storage.[37][38] The gang were unable to rent number 10, which was directly behind their target, 119 Houndsditch, the jeweller's shop owned by Henry Samuel Harris. The safe in the jeweller's was reputed to contain between £20,000 and £30,000 worth of jewellery;[39][40] Harris's son later stated the total was only around £7,000.[41] Over the next two weeks the gang brought in various pieces of necessary equipment, including a 60 foot (18 m) length of India rubber gas hose, a cylinder of compressed gas and a selection of tools, including diamond-tipped drills.[42][43] Some of this equipment had been obtained from the Italian anarchist exile Errico Malatesta, who had a workshop in Islington; he was not aware it was for use in a robbery[44]

With the exception of Gardstein, the identities of the gang members present in Houndsditch on the night of 16 December 1910 have never been confirmed. It is likely that as well as Gardstein, Fritz Svaars and William Sokoloff—the two gunmen who died in the Sidney Street siege—were present, along with Max Smoller and Nina Vassileva.[45] Bernard Porter, writing in the Dictionary of National Biography, considers that Peter the Painter was not at the property that night.[6] Donald Rumbelow, a former policeman who wrote a history of the events, takes a different view. He considers that those present consisted of Gardstein, Smoller, Peters and Dubof, with a second group in case the work needed to continue into the following day, which included among their number Sokolow and Svaars. Rumbelow considers a third group on standby, staying at Hoffman's lodgings, to have comprised Hoffman, Rosen and Osip Federoff, an unemployed locksmith.[46][47] Rumbelow also considers that present at the events—either as lookouts or in unknown capacities—were Peter the Painter and Nina Vassilleva.[46]

On 16 December, working from the small yard behind 11 Exchange Buildings, the gang began to break through the back wall of the shop;[48] number 10 had been unoccupied since 12 December.[49][d] At around 10:00 that evening, returning to his home at 120 Houndsditch, Max Weil heard curious noises coming from his neighbour's property.[50][e] Outside his house Weil found Police Constable Piper on his beat and informed him of the noises. Piper checked at 118 and 121 Houndsditch, where he could hear the noise, which he thought was unusual enough to investigate further. At 11:00 he knocked at the door of 11 Exchange Buildings—the only property with a light on in the back. The door was opened in a furtive manner and Piper became suspicious immediately. So as not to rouse the man's concerns, Piper asked him "is the missus in?" The man answered in broken English that she was out, and the policeman said he would return later.[52][53]

 
Sergeants Tucker and Bentley and Constable Choate, murdered while on duty on 16 December 1910

Piper reported that as he was leaving Exchange Buildings to return to Houndsditch he saw a man acting suspiciously in the shadows of the cul-de-sac. As the policeman approached him, the man walked away; Piper later described him as being approximately 5 feet 7 inches (1.70 m), pale and fair-haired.[54] When Piper reached Houndsditch he saw two policemen from the adjoining beats—constables Woodhams and Walter Choate—who watched 120 Houndsditch and 11 Exchange Buildings while Piper went to the nearby Bishopsgate Police Station to report.[55] By 11:30 seven uniformed and two plain clothes policemen had gathered in the locality, each armed with his wooden truncheon. Sergeant Robert Bentley from Bishopsgate police station knocked at number 11, unaware that Piper had already done so, which alerted the gang. The door was answered by Gardstein, who made no response when Bentley asked if anyone was working there. Bentley asked him to fetch someone who spoke English; Gardstein left the door half-closed and disappeared inside. Bentley entered the hall with Sergeant Bryant and Constable Woodhams; as they could see the bottom of his trouser legs, they soon realised that someone was watching them from the stairs. The police asked the man if they could step into the back of the property, and he agreed. As Bentley moved forward, the back door opened and one of the gang exited, firing from a pistol as he did so; the man on the stairs also began firing. Bentley was shot in the shoulder and the neck—the second round severing his spine. Bryant was shot in the arm and chest and Woodhams was wounded in the leg, which broke his femur; both collapsed.[56][57][58] Although they survived, neither Bryant or Woodhams fully recovered from their injuries.[59]

As the gang exited the property and made to escape up the cul-de-sac, other police intervened. Sergeant Charles Tucker from Bishopsgate police station was hit twice, once in the hip and once in the heart by Peters: he died instantly. Choate grabbed Gardstein and wrestled for his gun, but the Russian managed to shoot him in the leg. Other members of the gang ran to Gardstein's assistance, shooting Choate twelve times in the process, but Gardstein was also wounded; as the policeman collapsed, Gardstein was carried away by his accomplices, who included Peters.[56][60] As these men, aided by an unknown woman, made their escape with Gardstein they were accosted by Isaac Levy, a passer-by, whom they threatened at pistol-point. He was the only witness to the escape who was able to provide firm details; other witnesses confirmed they saw a group of three men and a woman, and thought one of the men was drunk as he was being helped by his friends.[61] The group went to Svaars' and Peter the Painter's lodgings at 59 Grove Street (now Golding Street), off Commercial Road, where Gardstein was tended by two of the gang's associates, Milstein and Trassjonsky.[62] As they left Gardstein on the bed, Peters left his Dreyse pistol under the mattress, either to make it seem the wounded man was the one who had killed Tucker, or to enable him to defend himself against a possible arrest.[63][64]

Type of weapons used by the gang

Other policemen arrived in Houndsditch, and began to attend to the wounded. Tucker's body was put into a taxi and he was taken to the London Hospital (now the Royal London Hospital) in Whitechapel Road. Choate was also taken there, where he was operated on, but he died at 5:30 am on 17 December. Bentley was taken to St Bartholomew's Hospital. He was half-conscious on arrival, but recovered enough to be able to have a conversation with his pregnant wife and answer questions about the events. At 6:45 pm on 17 December his condition worsened, and he died at 7:30.[65][66] The killings of Tucker, Bentley and Choate remain one of the largest multiple murders of police officers carried out in Britain in peacetime.[32][50]

Investigation, 17 December 1910 – 2 January 1911 edit

 
Police finding Gardstein's body, as seen in The Illustrated Police News

The City of London police informed the Metropolitan force, as their protocol demanded, and both services issued revolvers to the detectives involved in the search.[67] The subsequent investigation was challenging for the police because of the cultural differences between the British police and the largely foreign residents of the area covered by the search. The police did not have any Russian, Latvian or Yiddish speakers on the force.[68][69]

In the early hours of the morning of 17 December Milstein and Trassjonsky became increasingly concerned as Gardstein's condition worsened, and they sent for a local doctor, explaining that their patient had been wounded accidentally by a friend.[70] The doctor thought the bullet was still in the chest—it was later found to be touching the right ventricle of the heart. The doctor wanted to take Gardstein to the London Hospital, but he refused; with no other course open to him, the doctor sold them pain medication and left. The Russian was dead by 9:00 that morning.[71] The doctor returned at 11:00 am and found the body. He had not heard of the events at Exchange Buildings the night before, and so reported the death to the coroner, not the police. At midday the coroner reported the death to the local police who, led by Divisional Detective Inspector Frederick Wensley, went to Grove Street and discovered the corpse.[72] Trassjonsky was in the next room when they entered, and she was soon found by the police, hastily burning papers; she was arrested and taken to the police headquarters at Old Jewry.[73] Many of the papers recovered linked the suspects to the East End, particularly to the anarchist groups active in the area.[74] Wensley, who had extensive knowledge of the Whitechapel area, subsequently acted as a liaison officer to the City of London force throughout the investigation.[75]

Gardstein's body was removed to a local mortuary where his face was cleaned, his hair brushed, his eyes opened and his photograph taken. The picture, and descriptions of those who had helped Gardstein escape from Exchange Buildings, were distributed on posters in English and Russian, asking locals for information.[76][77] About 90 detectives vigorously searched the East End, spreading details of those they were looking for. A local landlord, Isaac Gordon, reported one of his lodgers, Nina Vassileva, after she had told him she had been one of the people living at Exchange Buildings. Wensley questioned the woman, finding anarchist publications in her rooms, along with a photograph of Gardstein. Information began to come in from the public and the group's associates: on 18 December Federoff was arrested at home, and on 22 December Dubof and Peters were both captured.[78]

 
Memorial service St Paul's Cathedral for Tucker, Bentley and Choate, 23 December 1910

On 22 December a public memorial service took place for Tucker, Bentley and Choate at St Paul's Cathedral. King George V was represented by Edward Wallington, his Groom in Waiting; also present were Churchill and the Lord Mayor of London.[79][80] The crime had shocked Londoners and the service showed evidence of their feelings. An estimated ten thousand people waited in St Paul's environs, and many local businesses closed as a mark of respect; the nearby London Stock Exchange ceased trading for half an hour to allow traders and staff to watch the procession along Threadneedle Street. After the service, when the coffins were being transported on an eight-mile (13 km) journey to the cemeteries, it was estimated that 750,000 people lined the route, many throwing flowers onto the hearses as they passed.[81][82]

Identity parades were held at Bishopsgate police station on 23 December. Isaac Levy, who had seen the group leaving Exchange Buildings, identified Peters and Dubof as the two he had seen carrying Gardstein. It was also ascertained that Federoff had been witnessed at the events.[83] The following day Federoff, Peters and Dubof all appeared at the Guildhall police court where they were charged with being connected to the murder of the three policemen, and with conspiracy to burgle the jewellery shop. All three pleaded not guilty.[84][85][86]

On 27 December the poster bearing Gardstein's picture was seen by his landlord, who alerted police. Wensley and his colleagues visited the lodgings on Gold Street, Stepney and found knives, a gun, ammunition, false passports and revolutionary publications.[87] Two days later there was another hearing at the Guildhall police court. In addition to Federoff, Peters and Dubof, present in the dock were Milstein and Trassjonsky. With some of the defendants having a low standard of English, interpreters were used throughout the proceedings. At the end of the day the case was adjourned until 6 January 1911.[42][88]

On New Year's Day 1911 the body of Léon Beron, a Russian Jewish immigrant, was found on Clapham Common in South London. He had been badly beaten and two S-shaped cuts, both two inches long, were on his cheeks. The case became connected in the press with the Houndsditch murders and the subsequent events at Sidney Street, although the evidence at the time for the link was scant.[89][90] The historian F G Clarke, in his history of the events, located information from another Latvian who stated that Beron had been killed not because he was one of the informers who had passed on information, but because he was planning to pass the information on, and the act was a pre-emptive one, designed to scare the locals into not informing on the anarchists.[91][92] The police believed that the Clapham Common murder was not connected to the Houndsditch police murders.[93]

The posters of Gardstein proved effective, and late on New Year's Day a member of the public came forward to provide information about Svaars and Sokoloff.[75] The informant told police that the men were hiding at 100 Sidney Street, along with a lodger, Betty Gershon, who was Sokoloff's mistress. The informant was persuaded to visit the property the following day to confirm the two men were still present.[94] A meeting took place on the afternoon of 2 January to decide the next steps. Wensley, high-ranking members of the Metropolitan force and Sir William Nott-Bower, the Commissioner of the City Police, were present.[95]

Events of 3 January edit

 
The Illustrated London News caption reads: "Scots Guards on active service in Sidney Street: Two of the men firing from a bedroom opposite the besieged house."[96]

Just after midnight on 3 January, 200 police officers from the City of London and Metropolitan forces cordoned off the area around 100 Sidney Street. Armed officers were placed at number 111, directly opposite number 100,[97] and throughout the night the residents of the houses on the block were roused and evacuated.[98] Wensley woke the ground floor tenants at number 100 and asked them to fetch Gershon, claiming that she was needed by her sick husband. When Gershon appeared she was grabbed by the police and taken to the City of London police headquarters; the ground floor lodgers also evacuated. Number 100 was now empty of all residents, apart from Svaars and Sokoloff, neither of whom seemed to be aware of the evacuation.[99]

The police's operating procedure—and the law which governed their actions—meant they were unable to open fire without being fired upon first. This, along with the structure of the building, which had a narrow, winding stairwell up which police would have to pass, meant any approach to the gang members was too perilous to attempt. It was decided to wait until dawn before taking any action.[100] At about 7:30 am a policeman knocked on the door of number 100, which elicited no response; stones were then thrown at the window to wake the men. Svaars and Sokoloff appeared at the window and opened fire at the police. A police sergeant was wounded in the chest; he was evacuated under fire across the rooftops and taken to the London Hospital.[101][f] Some members of the police returned fire, but their guns were only effective over shorter ranges, and proved ineffective against the comparatively advanced automatic weapons of Svaars and Sokoloff.[102][103]

By 9:00 am it was apparent that the two gunmen possessed superior weapons and ample ammunition. The police officers in charge on the scene, Superintendent Mulvaney and Chief Superintendent Stark, contacted Assistant Commissioner Major Frederick Wodehouse at Scotland Yard. He telephoned the Home Office and obtained permission from Churchill to bring in a detachment of Scots Guards, who were stationed at the Tower of London.[104][105] It was the first time that the police had requested military assistance in London to deal with an armed siege.[106] Twenty-one volunteer marksmen from the Guards arrived at about 10:00 am and took firing positions at each end of the street and in the houses opposite. The shooting continued without either side gaining any advantage.[33][107]

 
Churchill observing the events at Sidney Street

Churchill arrived on the scene at 11:50 am to observe the incident at first hand;[108] he later reported that he thought the crowd were unwelcoming to him, as he heard people asking "Oo let 'em in?", in reference to the Liberal Party's immigration policy that had allowed the influx from Russia.[109] Churchill's role during the siege is unclear. His biographers, Paul Addison and Roy Jenkins, both consider that he gave no operational commands to the police,[110][111] but a Metropolitan police history of the event states that the events of Sidney Street were "a very rare case of a Home Secretary taking police operational command decisions".[33][g] In a subsequent letter to The Times, Churchill clarified his role while he was present:

I did not interfere in any way with the dispositions made by the police authorities on the spot. I never overruled those authorities nor overrode them. From beginning to end the police had an absolutely free hand. ... I did not send for the Artillery or the Engineers. I was not consulted as to whether they should be sent for.[113]

Shooting between the two sides reached a peak between 12:00 and 12:30 pm, but at 12:50 smoke was seen coming from the building's chimneys and from the second floor windows; it has not been established how the fire was started, whether by accident or design.[114] The fire slowly spread, and by 1:30 it had taken a firm hold and had spread to the other floors. A second detachment of Scots Guards arrived, bringing with them a Maxim machine gun, which was never used.[115] Horse-drawn artillery field guns were also brought from St John's Wood barracks, but again not used.[116] Shortly afterwards Sokoloff put his head out of the window; he was shot by one of the soldiers and he fell back inside.[117] The senior officer of the London Fire Brigade present on the scene sought permission to extinguish the blaze, but was refused. He approached Churchill in order to have the decision overturned, but the Home Secretary approved the police decision.[111][113] Churchill later wrote:

 
Firemen tackle the fire at 100 Sidney Street after the end of the siege

I now intervened to settle this dispute, at one moment quite heated. I told the fire-brigade officer on my authority as Home Secretary that the house was to be allowed to burn down and that he was to stand by in readiness to prevent the conflagration from spreading.[118]

By 2:30 pm the shooting from the house had ceased. One of the detectives present walked close to the wall and pushed the door open, before retreating. Other police officers, and some of the soldiers, came out and waited for the men to exit. None did, and as part of the roof collapsed, it was clear to onlookers that the men were both dead; the fire brigade was allowed to start extinguishing the fire.[119][120] At 2:40 Churchill left the scene, at about the time the Royal Horse Artillery arrived with two 13-pounder field artillery pieces.[121] Sokoloff's body was found soon after the firemen entered. A wall collapsed on a group of five firemen, who were all taken to the London Hospital.[122] One of the men, Superintendent Charles Pearson, had a fractured spine; he died six months later.[123][124] After shoring up the building, the firemen resumed their search; at around 6:30 pm the second body—that of Svaars—was found.[125]

Aftermath edit

 
Detectives inspect the house at 100 Sidney Street at the conclusion of the siege

The siege was captured by Pathé News cameras—one of their earliest stories and the first siege to be captured on film—and it included footage of Churchill.[15][106] When the newsreels were screened in cinemas, Churchill was booed with shouts of "shoot him" from audiences.[126] His presence was controversial to many and the Leader of the Opposition, Arthur Balfour, remarked, "He [Churchill] was, I understand, in military phrase, in what is known as the zone of fire—he and a photographer were both risking valuable lives. I understand what the photographer was doing, but what was the right hon. Gentleman doing? That I neither understood at the time, nor do I understand now."[127][128] Jenkins suggests that he went simply because "he could not resist going to see the fun himself".[129]

An inquest was held in January into the deaths at Houndsditch and Sidney Street. The jury took fifteen minutes to reach the conclusion that the two bodies located were those of Svaars and Sokoloff, that Tucker, Bentley and Choate had been murdered by Gardstein and others during the burglary attempt.[130][131] Rosen was arrested on 2 February at work in Well Street, Hackney,[27] and Hoffman was taken into custody on 15 February.[132] The committal proceedings spread from December 1910—with Milstein and Trassjonsky appearing—to March 1911, and included Hoffman from 15 February. The proceedings consisted of 24 individual hearings. In February Milstein was discharged on the basis that there was insufficient evidence against her; Hoffman, Trassjonsky and Federoff were released in March on the same basis.[133]

The case against the four remaining arrested gang members was heard at the Old Bailey by Mr Justice Grantham in May. Dubof and Peters were accused of Tucker's murder, Dubof, Peters, Rosen and Vassilleva were charged with "feloniously harbouring a felon guilty of murder" and for "conspiring and agreeing together and with others unknown to break and enter the shop of Henry Samuel Harris with intent to steal his goods".[134][135] The case lasted for eleven days;[136] there were problems with the proceedings because of the language difficulties and the chaotic personal lives of the accused.[137] The case resulted in acquittals for all except Vassileva, who was convicted of conspiracy in the burglary and sentenced to two years' imprisonment; her conviction was overturned on appeal.[134][138]

After the high levels of criticism aimed at the Aliens Act, Churchill decided to strengthen the legislation, and proposed the Aliens (Prevention of Crime) Bill under the Ten Minute Rule.[139][140] The MP Josiah C Wedgwood objected, and wrote to Churchill to ask him not to introduce the hard-line measures "You know as well as I do that human life does not matter a rap in comparison with the death of ideas and the betrayal of English traditions."[141] The bill did not become law.[142]

Legacy edit

Contemporary memorials to the members of the police and fire services who were killed.
 
Memorial plaque to the three policemen murdered in Houndsditch
 
Plaque in Sidney Street to Charles Pearson, the fireman who died from his injuries

Bryant and Woodhams were presented with the King's Police Medal for their bravery; Woodhams was still badly injured and had to be carried to the king on a stretcher for the presentation. Both Bryant and Woodhams were also promoted; as they were being invalided out of the force, the promotions ensured they were paid a higher pension. The Lord Mayor of London presented the King's Police Medal to the families of the three murdered policemen. For each child of the murdered policemen, the City of London Corporation gave five shillings a week until they reached the age of fifteen.[143]

The inadequacy of the police's firepower led to criticism in the press, and on 12 January 1911 several alternative weapons were tested. The trials resulted in the Metropolitan Police replacing the Webley revolver with the Webley & Scott .32 calibre MP semi-automatic pistol later that year; the City of London Police adopted the weapon in 1912.[106][144]

The members of the group dispersed after the events. Peter the Painter was never seen or heard from again. It was assumed he left the country, and there were several possible sightings in the years afterwards; none were confirmed.[6][15] Jacob Peters returned to Russia, rose to be deputy head of the Cheka, the Soviet secret police, and was executed in Joseph Stalin's 1938 purge.[145][146] Trassjonsky had a mental breakdown and was confined for a time at Colney Hatch Lunatic Asylum, where she died in 1971.[147][148] Dubof and Federoff disappeared from the records; Vassilleva remained in the East End for the remainder of her life and died at Brick Lane in 1963. Hoffman moved to New York where he lived for many years with Luba Milstein, who had given birth to Fritz Svaars child.[149] Smoller left the country in 1911 and travelled to Paris, after which he disappeared; Milstein later emigrated to the United States.[150][151]

The siege was the inspiration for the final scene in Alfred Hitchcock's original 1934 version of The Man Who Knew Too Much;[152] the story was heavily fictionalised in the 1960 film The Siege of Sidney Street.[153] The novelist Georges Simenon drew on the story for his 1930 Maigret detective novel Pietr-le-Letton (Pietr the Latvian).[154] The siege was also the inspiration for two other novels, The Siege of Sidney Street (1960) by F Oughton and A Death Out of Season (1973) by Emanuel Litvinoff.[155]

In September 2008 Tower Hamlets London Borough Council named two tower blocks in Sidney Street, Peter House and Painter House; Peter the Painter was only involved in a minor capacity in the events and was not present at the siege. The name plaques on the buildings call Peter the Painter an "anti-hero"; the decision angered the Metropolitan Police Federation. A council spokesman said that "There is no evidence that Peter the Painter killed the three policemen, so we knew we were not naming the block after a murderer. ... but he is the name that East Enders associate with the siege and Sidney Street."[156][157] In December 2010, on the centenary of the events at Houndsditch, a memorial plaque for the three murdered policemen was unveiled near the location. Three weeks later, on the anniversary of the siege, a plaque was unveiled in honour of Pearson, the fireman who died because the building collapsed on him.[123][158]

Notes and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The map's legend reads:
    • "Proportion of Jews indicated.
    • Dark blue: 95% to 100%
    • Mid blue: 75% and less than 95%
    • Light blue: 50% and less than 75%
    • Light red: 25% and less than 50%
    • Mid red: 5% and less than 25%
    • Dark red: Less than 5% of Jews"[1]
  2. ^ At the time Latvia was part of the Russian Empire.[15]
  3. ^ He used several other aliases, including Schtern, Straume, Makharov and Dudkin.[6]
  4. ^ Number 10 had been rented by Michail Silisteanu, a Romanian businessman who had offices at the nearby 73 St Mary Axe. To advertise a game he had patented, Silisteanu hired girls to play it in the window of his office; the ensuing crowd of onlookers blocked the pavement and the police made him stop the demonstration. Disgusted by his treatment, Silisteanu left for Paris on 12 December.[49]
  5. ^ The break-in took place on the Jewish Sabbath, which meant the streets were quieter than normal, and the noise created by the gang was more noticeable.[50][51]
  6. ^ The police officer—Sergeant Leeson—made a full recovery.[101]
  7. ^ Subsequent stories that a bullet passed through Churchill's top hat are apocryphal, and no reference to such an occurrence appears in either the official records, or Churchill's accounts of the siege.[112]

References edit

  1. ^ Russell & Lewis 1900.
  2. ^ Scenes of Crime (Television production). ITV. 15 November 2001.
  3. ^ Cohen, Humphries & Mynott 2002, pp. 13–14.
  4. ^ Russell & Lewis 1900, p. xxxviii.
  5. ^ Fishman 2004, pp. 269, 287.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Porter 2011.
  7. ^ "The Police Murders in the City". The Times. 19 December 1910. p. 11.
  8. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 111.
  9. ^ Cesarani, David (27 June 2003). . Times Higher Education. Archived from the original on 7 March 2016.
  10. ^ Rogers 1981, pp. 123–125.
  11. ^ Cohen, Humphries & Mynott 2002, p. 14.
  12. ^ Winder 2005, p. 260.
  13. ^ a b Eddy 1946, p. 12.
  14. ^ Rumbelow 1988, p. 39.
  15. ^ a b c McSmith, Andy (11 December 2010). . The Independent. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.
  16. ^ Shpayer-Makov, Haia (Summer 1988). "Anarchism in British Public Opinion 1880–1914". Victorian Studies. 31 (4): 487–516. JSTOR 3827854.
  17. ^ Moss & Skinner 2015, 3061–64.
  18. ^ Ruff 2019.
  19. ^ a b Rogers 1981, p. 16.
  20. ^ Ruff 2019, p. xiv.
  21. ^ Whitehead 2024, p. 79-81.
  22. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 34–35.
  23. ^ Rumbelow 1988, p. 35.
  24. ^ Rogers 1981, p. 48.
  25. ^ Whitehead 2024, pp. 221–235.
  26. ^ Rumbelow 1988, p. 55.
  27. ^ a b Rogers 1981, pp. 180–181.
  28. ^ Rumbelow 1988, p. 64.
  29. ^ Whitehead 2024, pp. 193–220.
  30. ^ a b (PDF). London Metropolitan Archives. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 March 2016. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  31. ^ . Metropolitan Police Service. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  32. ^ a b . City of London Police. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 5 January 2016.
  33. ^ a b c d . Metropolitan Police Service. Archived from the original on 25 January 2016. Retrieved 5 January 2016.
  34. ^ . The Churchill Centre. Archived from the original on 20 September 2016. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  35. ^ Bloom 2013, p. 271.
  36. ^ Waldren 2012, p. 4.
  37. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 64–65.
  38. ^ Eddy 1946, pp. 13–14.
  39. ^ Stratmann 2010, p. 61.
  40. ^ "The Houndsditch Murders". The Spectator. 24 December 1910. p. 6.
  41. ^ Rogers 1981, p. 45.
  42. ^ a b "Houndsditch Murders: Five Prisoners before the Magistrate". The Manchester Guardian. 30 December 1910. p. 12.
  43. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 77–78.
  44. ^ Whitehead 2024, p. 90.
  45. ^ Whitehead 2024.
  46. ^ a b Rumbelow 1988, pp. 66–67, 81–83.
  47. ^ Rogers 1981, p. 22.
  48. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 147–148.
  49. ^ a b Rumbelow 1988, p. 66.
  50. ^ a b c Berg, Sanchia (13 December 2010). . BBC. Archived from the original on 20 January 2016. Retrieved 26 January 2016.
  51. ^ Bloom 2013, p. 270.
  52. ^ Eddy 1946, pp. 15–16.
  53. ^ Rogers 1981, pp. 26–27.
  54. ^ Rogers 1981, p. 27.
  55. ^ Rumbelow 1988, p. 71.
  56. ^ a b "The Murder of Police in Houndsditch: Prisoners in Court". The Manchester Guardian. 7 January 1911. p. 10.
  57. ^ Eddy 1946, pp. 16–17.
  58. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 72–73.
  59. ^ Eddy 1946, p. 18.
  60. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 73–74.
  61. ^ Rogers 1981, pp. 35–36.
  62. ^ Eddy 1946, pp. 18–19.
  63. ^ Rumbelow 1988, p. 85.
  64. ^ Rogers 1981, pp. 38–39.
  65. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 74–76.
  66. ^ Rogers 1981, pp. 30–31.
  67. ^ Rogers 1981, p. 36.
  68. ^ Bird 2010, p. 3.
  69. ^ Rogers 1981, pp. 36–37.
  70. ^ Eddy 1946, p. 19.
  71. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 95–97.
  72. ^ Wensley 2005, pp. 164–165.
  73. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 100–101.
  74. ^ Rogers 1981, p. 43.
  75. ^ a b Waldren 2013, p. 2.
  76. ^ Rogers 1981, p. 39.
  77. ^ Keily & Hoffbrand 2015, p. 67.
  78. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 107, 112–114.
  79. ^ Rogers 1981, pp. 61–62.
  80. ^ "Honour for Murdered Policemen". Dundee Evening Telegraph. 23 December 1910. p. 1.
  81. ^ "Public Funeral of the Houndsditch Victims". Nottingham Evening Post. 22 December 1910. p. 3.
  82. ^ Rogers 1981, pp. 61–63.
  83. ^ Rogers 1981, p. 67.
  84. ^ "Three Foreigners Charges in Connection with the Houndsditch Crime". The Daily Mirror. 26 December 1910. p. 6.
  85. ^ "The Houndsditch Murders: Three Foreigners in Court". The Observer. 25 December 1910. p. 7.
  86. ^ "The Houndsditch Murders: Three Suspects before the Police Court". The Manchester Guardian. 26 December 1910. p. 7.
  87. ^ Rogers 1981, pp. 72–73.
  88. ^ Rogers 1981, pp. 79–80.
  89. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 203–204.
  90. ^ Porter, Bernard (February 1985). "Review: Will-O'-The Wisp: Peter the Painter and the Anti-Tsarist Terrorists in Britain and Australia". History. 70 (228): 152–53. JSTOR 24415042.
  91. ^ Saunders, David (April 1985). "Review: Clarke, F G: Will-O'-The Wisp: Peter the Painter and the Anti-Tsarist Terrorists in Britain and Australia". The Slavonic and East European Review. 63 (2): 306–07. JSTOR 4209108.
  92. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 204–205.
  93. ^ Whitehead 2024, pp. 177–178.
  94. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 115–118.
  95. ^ Waldren 2013, pp. 3–4.
  96. ^ "Ball-Cartridges in a London Street: Scots Guards in Action". The Illustrated London News. 7 January 1911. p. 6.
  97. ^ Waldren 2013, p. 4.
  98. ^ Rogers 1981, pp. 86–87.
  99. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 127–128.
  100. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 128–129.
  101. ^ a b Eddy 1946, p. 23.
  102. ^ Rogers 1981, p. 94.
  103. ^ Waldren 2013, p. 9.
  104. ^ Rogers 1981, p. 98.
  105. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 132–133.
  106. ^ a b c Keily & Hoffbrand 2015, p. 64.
  107. ^ . The Manchester Guardian. 4 January 1911. p. 7. Archived from the original on 14 May 2016.
  108. ^ Rogers 1981, p. 105.
  109. ^ Rumbelow 1988, p. 135.
  110. ^ Addison 2014.
  111. ^ a b Jenkins 2012, p. 195.
  112. ^ Waldren 2013, p. 11.
  113. ^ a b Churchill, Winston (12 January 1911). "Mr Churchill and the Stepney Siege". The Times. p. 8.
  114. ^ Rogers 1981, pp. 111–112.
  115. ^ Rogers 1981, p. 113.
  116. ^ Whitehead 2024, p. 141.
  117. ^ Moss & Skinner 2015, 3064.
  118. ^ Churchill 1942, p. 59.
  119. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 137–138.
  120. ^ Waldren 2013, p. 13.
  121. ^ Rogers 1981, p. 118.
  122. ^ Eddy 1946, pp. 24–25.
  123. ^ a b . BBC. 16 December 2010. Archived from the original on 26 September 2015.
  124. ^ Waldren 2013, p. 14.
  125. ^ Rogers 1981, p. 120.
  126. ^ Rumbelow 1988, p. 142.
  127. ^ "His Majesty's Most Gracious Speech". Hansard. 21: cols. 44–122. 6 February 1911. from the original on 10 June 2016.
  128. ^ Gilbert 2000, p. 224.
  129. ^ Jenkins 2012, p. 194.
  130. ^ "The Sidney-Street Fight". The Times. 19 January 1911. p. 8.
  131. ^ Rogers 1981, p. 178.
  132. ^ Rumbelow 1988, p. 155.
  133. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 166–172.
  134. ^ a b "Zurka Dubof, Jacob Peters, John Rosen, Nina Vassileva [sic]". Old Bailey. from the original on 2 March 2016. Retrieved 8 February 2016.
  135. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 171–172.
  136. ^ Rogers 1981, p. 191.
  137. ^ Moss & Skinner 2015, 3063.
  138. ^ Rogers 1981, pp. 191–196.
  139. ^ Defries 2014, pp. 35–36.
  140. ^ . The Spectator. 22 April 1911. pp. 1–2. Archived from the original on 15 May 2016.
  141. ^ Mulvey 2010, p. 37.
  142. ^ Rogers 1981, p. 151.
  143. ^ Rumbelow 1988, p. 156.
  144. ^ Waldren 2012, pp. 15–16.
  145. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 194–195.
  146. ^ Bates, Stephen (2 January 2011). . The Guardian. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.
  147. ^ Eddy 1946, pp. 31–32.
  148. ^ Whitehead 2024, pp. 214–221.
  149. ^ Ruff 2019, pp. 171–2.
  150. ^ Rumbelow 1988, pp. 181–183.
  151. ^ Rogers 1981, p. 197.
  152. ^ . Screenonline. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 18 January 2015. Retrieved 9 February 2016.
  153. ^ Burton 2016, p. 389.
  154. ^ Whitehead 2024, p. 259.
  155. ^ Taylor 2012, p. 194.
  156. ^ Cockcroft, Lucy (25 September 2008). . Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 19 March 2016.
  157. ^ Waldren 2012, pp. 17–18.
  158. ^ . BBC. 16 December 2010. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016.

Sources edit

  • Addison, Paul (2014). "Churchill, Sir Winston Leonard Spencer". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/32413. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Bird, Samantha L. (2010). Stepney: Profile of a London Borough from the Outbreak of the First World War to the Festival of Britain, 1914–1951. Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4438-2612-9.
  • Bloom, Clive (2010). Violent London: 2000 Years of Riots, Rebels and Revolts. London: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-27559-1.
  • Bloom, Clive (2013). Victoria's Madmen: Revolution and Alienation. London: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-137-31897-8.
  • Burton, Alan (2016). Historical Dictionary of British Spy Fiction. London: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4422-5587-6.
  • Churchill, Winston (1942). Thoughts and Adventures. London: Macmillan. OCLC 1028252.
  • Cohen, Steve; Humphries, Beth; Mynott, Ed (2002). From Immigration Controls to Welfare Controls. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-25083-2.
  • Defries, Harry (2014). Conservative Party Attitudes to Jews 1900–1950. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-28462-6.
  • Eddy, J P (1946). The Mystery of 'Peter the Painter'. London: Stevens & Sons. OCLC 844864776.
  • Fishman, William J (2004). East End Jewish Radicals 1875–1914. Nottingham: Five Leaves Publications. ISBN 978-0-907123-45-3.
  • Gilbert, Martin (2000). Churchill: A Life. London: Pimlico. ISBN 978-0-7126-6725-8.
  • Jenkins, Roy (2012). Churchill. London: Pan Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-330-47607-2.
  • Keily, Jackie; Hoffbrand, Julia (2015). The Crime Museum Uncovered. London: IB Tauris. ISBN 978-1-78130-041-1.
  • Moss, Alan; Skinner, Keith (2015). Scotland Yard's History of Crime in 100 Objects (Kindle ed.). Stroud, Glos: The History Press. ISBN 978-0-7509-6655-9.
  • Mulvey, Paul (2010). The Political Life of Josiah C Wedgwood: Land, Liberty and Empire, 1872–1943. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 978-0-86193-308-2.
  • Palmer, Alan (2004). The East End: Four Centuries of London Life. London: John Murray. ISBN 978-0-7195-6640-0.
  • Porter, Bernard (2011). "Piatkoff [Piaktow], Peter [nicknamed Peter the Painter]". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/92479. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Rogers, Colin (1981). The Battle of Stepney. London: R Hale. ISBN 978-0-7091-9146-9.
  • Ruff, Philip (2019). A Towering Flame. The life and times of the elusive Latvian anarchist Peter the Painter. London: Breviary Stuff. ISBN 978-0-9929466-8-5.
  • Rumbelow, Donald (1988). The Houndsditch Murders and the Siege of Sidney Street. London: W H Allen. ISBN 978-0-491-03178-3.
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  • Stratmann, Linda (2010). Greater London Murders: 33 True Stories of Revenge, Jealousy, Greed & Lust. Stroud, Glos: The History Press. ISBN 978-0-7524-5124-4.
  • Taylor, Antony (2012). London's Burning: Pulp Fiction, the Politics of Terrorism and the Destruction of the Capital in British Popular Culture, 1840 – 2005. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4411-7156-6.
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  • Wensley, Frederick (2005) [1951]. Forty Years of Scotland Yard: A Record of Lifetime's Service in the Criminal Investigation Department. London: Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4179-8997-3.
  • Whitehead, Andrew (2024). A Devilish Kind of Courage. Anarchists, Aliens and the Siege of Sidney Street. London: Reaktion. ISBN 978-1-78914-844-2.
  • Winder, Robert (2005). Bloody Foreigners. London: Abacus. ISBN 978-0-349-11566-5.

External links edit

51°31′06″N 00°03′19″W / 51.51833°N 0.05528°W / 51.51833; -0.05528

siege, sidney, street, siege, sidney, street, january, 1911, also, known, battle, stepney, gunfight, east, london, between, combined, police, army, force, latvian, revolutionaries, siege, culmination, series, events, that, began, december, 1910, with, attempte. The siege of Sidney Street of January 1911 also known as the Battle of Stepney was a gunfight in the East End of London between a combined police and army force and two Latvian revolutionaries The siege was the culmination of a series of events that began in December 1910 with an attempted jewellery robbery at Houndsditch in the City of London by a gang of Latvian immigrants which resulted in the murder of three policemen the wounding of two others and the death of George Gardstein a key member of the Latvian gang Winston Churchill second from left the then Home Secretary at the siegeAn investigation by the Metropolitan and City of London Police forces identified Gardstein s accomplices most of whom were arrested within two weeks The police were informed that the last two members of the gang were hiding at 100 Sidney Street in Stepney The police evacuated local residents and on the morning of 3 January a firefight broke out Armed with inferior weapons the police sought assistance from the army The siege lasted for about six hours Towards the end of the stand off the building caught fire no single cause has been identified One of the agitators in the building was shot before the fire spread While the London Fire Brigade were damping down the ruins in which they found the two bodies the building collapsed killing a fireman The siege marked the first time the police had requested military assistance in London to deal with an armed stand off It was also the first siege in Britain to be caught on camera as the events were filmed by Pathe News Some of the footage included images of the Home Secretary Winston Churchill His presence caused a political row over the level of his operational involvement At the trial in May 1911 of those arrested for the Houndsditch jewellery robbery all but one of the accused were acquitted the conviction was overturned on appeal The events were fictionalised in film in The Man Who Knew Too Much 1934 and The Siege of Sidney Street 1960 and novels On the centenary of the events two tower blocks in Sidney Street were named after Peter the Painter one of the minor members of the gang who was probably not present at either Houndsditch or Sidney Street The murdered policemen and the fireman who died are commemorated with memorial plaques Contents 1 Background 1 1 Immigration and demographics in London 1 2 Latvian emigre gang 1 3 Policing in the capital 2 Houndsditch murders December 1910 3 Investigation 17 December 1910 2 January 1911 4 Events of 3 January 5 Aftermath 6 Legacy 7 Notes and references 7 1 Notes 7 2 References 7 3 Sources 8 External linksBackground editImmigration and demographics in London edit nbsp 1900 map of Jewish East London Circled on the left of the map is the location of the Houndsditch murders circled on the right is the location of 100 Sidney Street The map is coloured to show the density of Jewish residents in East London the darker the blue the higher the Jewish population a In the 19th century the Russian Empire was home to about five million Jews the largest Jewish community at the time Subjected to religious persecution and violent pogroms many emigrated and between 1875 and 1914 around 120 000 arrived in the United Kingdom mostly in England The influx reached its peak in the late 1890s when large numbers of Jewish immigrants mostly poor and semi skilled or unskilled settled in the East End of London 2 3 The concentration of Jewish immigrants into some areas was almost 100 per cent of the population and a study undertaken in 1900 showed that Houndsditch and Whitechapel were both identified as a well defined intensely Jewish district 4 Some of the expatriates were revolutionaries many of whom were unable to adapt to life in the politically less oppressive London The social historian William J Fishman writes that the meschuggena crazy Anarchists were almost accepted as part of the East End landscape 5 the terms socialist and anarchist had been conflated in the British press who used the terms interchangeably to refer to those with revolutionary beliefs 6 A leading article in The Times described the Whitechapel area as one that harbours some of the worst alien anarchists and criminals who seek our too hospitable shore And these are the men who use the pistol and the knife 7 From the turn of the century gang warfare persisted in the Whitechapel and Aldgate areas of London between groups of Bessarabians and refugees from Odessa various revolutionary factions were active in the area 8 The Tottenham Outrage of January 1909 by two revolutionary Russians in London Paul Helfeld and Jacob Lepidus was an attempt to rob a payroll van which left two dead and twenty injured The event used a tactic often employed by revolutionary groups in Russia the expropriation or theft of private property to fund radical activities 9 The influx of emigres and the increase of violent crime associated with it led to popular concerns and comments in the press The government passed the Aliens Act 1905 in an attempt to reduce immigration The popular press reflected the opinions of many at the time 10 a leading article in The Manchester Evening Chronicle supported the bill to bar the dirty destitute diseased verminous and criminal foreigner who dumps himself on our soil 11 The journalist Robert Winder in his examination of migration into Britain opines that the Act gave official sanction to xenophobic reflexes which might have remained dormant 12 Latvian emigre gang edit Two members of the emigre group involved in the robberies nbsp George Gardstein the photograph was taken post mortem and issued by the police in their search for information nbsp Peter the Painter as he appeared on the wanted poster issued by the City of London Police By 1910 Russian emigres met regularly at the Anarchist Club in Jubilee Street Stepney 13 Many of its members were not anarchists and the club became a meeting and social venue for the Russian emigre diaspora most of whom were Jewish 14 The small group of Latvians b who became involved in the events at Houndsditch and Sidney Street were not all anarchists although anarchist literature was later found among their possessions 16 Most members of the group were revolutionaries who had been radicalised by their involvement in the unsuccessful 1905 revolution in Latvia and its violent suppression All had left wing political views and believed the expropriation of private property was a valid practice 6 17 18 A leading figure in the group was George Gardstein whose real name was probably Hartmanis he also used the aliases Garstin Poloski Poolka Morountzeff Mourimitz Maurivitz Milowitz Morintz Morin and Levi 13 19 20 21 Gardstein who probably was an anarchist had been accused of murder and acts of terrorism in Warsaw in 1905 before his arrival in London 6 Another member of the group Jacob or Yakov Peters had been an agitator in Russia while in the army and later as a dockyard worker He had served a term in prison for his activities and had been tortured by the removal of his fingernails 22 Yourka Dubof was another Russian agitator who had fled to England after being flogged by Cossacks 23 Fritz Svaars Latvian Fricis Svars was a Latvian who had been arrested by the Russian authorities three times for terrorist offences but escaped each time He had travelled through the United States where he undertook a series of robberies before arriving in London in June 1910 6 24 Another member was Peter the Painter a nickname for an man also known as Peter Piaktow or Piatkov Pjatkov or Piaktoff his real name was Janis Zaklis 19 c The police suggested he was the ringleader of the gang although there is no evidence that he was present at Houndsditch or Sidney Street 25 William or Joseph Sokoloff or Sokolow was a Latvian who had lived in Latvia and had been arrested in Riga in 1905 for murder and robbery before travelling to London 6 Another of the group s members was Karl Hoffman whose real name was Alfred Dzircol who had been involved in revolutionary and criminal activities for several years including gun running In London he had worked as a decorator 26 John Rosen real name John Zelin or Tzelin came to London in 1909 from Riga and worked as a barber 27 while another member of the gang was Max Smoller also known as Joe Levi and Josepf the Jew He was wanted in his native Crimea for several jewel robberies 28 Three women members of the gang or associates of members of the gang were among those who faced charges arising from the Houndsditch robbery attempt Nina Vassileva who was convicted of a minor offence but was cleared on appeal Luba Milstein and Rosa Trassjonsky 29 Policing in the capital edit Following the Metropolitan Police Act 1829 and the City of London Police Act 1839 the capital was policed by two forces the Metropolitan Police who held sway over most of the capital and the City of London Police who were responsible for law enforcement within the historic City boundaries 30 31 The events in Houndsditch in December 1910 fell into the purview of the City of London service and the subsequent actions at Sidney Street in January 1911 were in the jurisdiction of the Metropolitan force 32 33 Both services came under the political control of the Home Secretary who in 1911 was the 36 year old rising politician Winston Churchill 30 34 While on the beat or in the course of their normal duties the officers of the City of London and Metropolitan forces were provided with a short wooden truncheon for protection When they faced armed opponents as was the case in Sidney Street the police were issued with Webley and Bull Dog revolvers shotguns and small bore rifles fitted with 22 Morris tube barrels the last of which were more commonly used on small indoor shooting galleries 33 35 36 Houndsditch murders December 1910 edit nbsp Scene of the robbery showing a group of policemen in Exchange Buildings which backs onto the Houndsditch frontage of the shopAt the beginning of December 1910 Smoller using the name Joe Levi visited Exchange Buildings a small cul de sac that backed onto the properties of Houndsditch He rented No 11 Exchange Buildings a week later Svaars rented number 9 for a month saying he needed it for storage 37 38 The gang were unable to rent number 10 which was directly behind their target 119 Houndsditch the jeweller s shop owned by Henry Samuel Harris The safe in the jeweller s was reputed to contain between 20 000 and 30 000 worth of jewellery 39 40 Harris s son later stated the total was only around 7 000 41 Over the next two weeks the gang brought in various pieces of necessary equipment including a 60 foot 18 m length of India rubber gas hose a cylinder of compressed gas and a selection of tools including diamond tipped drills 42 43 Some of this equipment had been obtained from the Italian anarchist exile Errico Malatesta who had a workshop in Islington he was not aware it was for use in a robbery 44 With the exception of Gardstein the identities of the gang members present in Houndsditch on the night of 16 December 1910 have never been confirmed It is likely that as well as Gardstein Fritz Svaars and William Sokoloff the two gunmen who died in the Sidney Street siege were present along with Max Smoller and Nina Vassileva 45 Bernard Porter writing in the Dictionary of National Biography considers that Peter the Painter was not at the property that night 6 Donald Rumbelow a former policeman who wrote a history of the events takes a different view He considers that those present consisted of Gardstein Smoller Peters and Dubof with a second group in case the work needed to continue into the following day which included among their number Sokolow and Svaars Rumbelow considers a third group on standby staying at Hoffman s lodgings to have comprised Hoffman Rosen and Osip Federoff an unemployed locksmith 46 47 Rumbelow also considers that present at the events either as lookouts or in unknown capacities were Peter the Painter and Nina Vassilleva 46 On 16 December working from the small yard behind 11 Exchange Buildings the gang began to break through the back wall of the shop 48 number 10 had been unoccupied since 12 December 49 d At around 10 00 that evening returning to his home at 120 Houndsditch Max Weil heard curious noises coming from his neighbour s property 50 e Outside his house Weil found Police Constable Piper on his beat and informed him of the noises Piper checked at 118 and 121 Houndsditch where he could hear the noise which he thought was unusual enough to investigate further At 11 00 he knocked at the door of 11 Exchange Buildings the only property with a light on in the back The door was opened in a furtive manner and Piper became suspicious immediately So as not to rouse the man s concerns Piper asked him is the missus in The man answered in broken English that she was out and the policeman said he would return later 52 53 nbsp Sergeants Tucker and Bentley and Constable Choate murdered while on duty on 16 December 1910Piper reported that as he was leaving Exchange Buildings to return to Houndsditch he saw a man acting suspiciously in the shadows of the cul de sac As the policeman approached him the man walked away Piper later described him as being approximately 5 feet 7 inches 1 70 m pale and fair haired 54 When Piper reached Houndsditch he saw two policemen from the adjoining beats constables Woodhams and Walter Choate who watched 120 Houndsditch and 11 Exchange Buildings while Piper went to the nearby Bishopsgate Police Station to report 55 By 11 30 seven uniformed and two plain clothes policemen had gathered in the locality each armed with his wooden truncheon Sergeant Robert Bentley from Bishopsgate police station knocked at number 11 unaware that Piper had already done so which alerted the gang The door was answered by Gardstein who made no response when Bentley asked if anyone was working there Bentley asked him to fetch someone who spoke English Gardstein left the door half closed and disappeared inside Bentley entered the hall with Sergeant Bryant and Constable Woodhams as they could see the bottom of his trouser legs they soon realised that someone was watching them from the stairs The police asked the man if they could step into the back of the property and he agreed As Bentley moved forward the back door opened and one of the gang exited firing from a pistol as he did so the man on the stairs also began firing Bentley was shot in the shoulder and the neck the second round severing his spine Bryant was shot in the arm and chest and Woodhams was wounded in the leg which broke his femur both collapsed 56 57 58 Although they survived neither Bryant or Woodhams fully recovered from their injuries 59 As the gang exited the property and made to escape up the cul de sac other police intervened Sergeant Charles Tucker from Bishopsgate police station was hit twice once in the hip and once in the heart by Peters he died instantly Choate grabbed Gardstein and wrestled for his gun but the Russian managed to shoot him in the leg Other members of the gang ran to Gardstein s assistance shooting Choate twelve times in the process but Gardstein was also wounded as the policeman collapsed Gardstein was carried away by his accomplices who included Peters 56 60 As these men aided by an unknown woman made their escape with Gardstein they were accosted by Isaac Levy a passer by whom they threatened at pistol point He was the only witness to the escape who was able to provide firm details other witnesses confirmed they saw a group of three men and a woman and thought one of the men was drunk as he was being helped by his friends 61 The group went to Svaars and Peter the Painter s lodgings at 59 Grove Street now Golding Street off Commercial Road where Gardstein was tended by two of the gang s associates Milstein and Trassjonsky 62 As they left Gardstein on the bed Peters left his Dreyse pistol under the mattress either to make it seem the wounded man was the one who had killed Tucker or to enable him to defend himself against a possible arrest 63 64 Type of weapons used by the gang nbsp Model 1907 Dreyse pistol nbsp Mauser C96 pistol Other policemen arrived in Houndsditch and began to attend to the wounded Tucker s body was put into a taxi and he was taken to the London Hospital now the Royal London Hospital in Whitechapel Road Choate was also taken there where he was operated on but he died at 5 30 am on 17 December Bentley was taken to St Bartholomew s Hospital He was half conscious on arrival but recovered enough to be able to have a conversation with his pregnant wife and answer questions about the events At 6 45 pm on 17 December his condition worsened and he died at 7 30 65 66 The killings of Tucker Bentley and Choate remain one of the largest multiple murders of police officers carried out in Britain in peacetime 32 50 Investigation 17 December 1910 2 January 1911 edit nbsp Police finding Gardstein s body as seen in The Illustrated Police NewsThe City of London police informed the Metropolitan force as their protocol demanded and both services issued revolvers to the detectives involved in the search 67 The subsequent investigation was challenging for the police because of the cultural differences between the British police and the largely foreign residents of the area covered by the search The police did not have any Russian Latvian or Yiddish speakers on the force 68 69 In the early hours of the morning of 17 December Milstein and Trassjonsky became increasingly concerned as Gardstein s condition worsened and they sent for a local doctor explaining that their patient had been wounded accidentally by a friend 70 The doctor thought the bullet was still in the chest it was later found to be touching the right ventricle of the heart The doctor wanted to take Gardstein to the London Hospital but he refused with no other course open to him the doctor sold them pain medication and left The Russian was dead by 9 00 that morning 71 The doctor returned at 11 00 am and found the body He had not heard of the events at Exchange Buildings the night before and so reported the death to the coroner not the police At midday the coroner reported the death to the local police who led by Divisional Detective Inspector Frederick Wensley went to Grove Street and discovered the corpse 72 Trassjonsky was in the next room when they entered and she was soon found by the police hastily burning papers she was arrested and taken to the police headquarters at Old Jewry 73 Many of the papers recovered linked the suspects to the East End particularly to the anarchist groups active in the area 74 Wensley who had extensive knowledge of the Whitechapel area subsequently acted as a liaison officer to the City of London force throughout the investigation 75 Gardstein s body was removed to a local mortuary where his face was cleaned his hair brushed his eyes opened and his photograph taken The picture and descriptions of those who had helped Gardstein escape from Exchange Buildings were distributed on posters in English and Russian asking locals for information 76 77 About 90 detectives vigorously searched the East End spreading details of those they were looking for A local landlord Isaac Gordon reported one of his lodgers Nina Vassileva after she had told him she had been one of the people living at Exchange Buildings Wensley questioned the woman finding anarchist publications in her rooms along with a photograph of Gardstein Information began to come in from the public and the group s associates on 18 December Federoff was arrested at home and on 22 December Dubof and Peters were both captured 78 nbsp Memorial service St Paul s Cathedral for Tucker Bentley and Choate 23 December 1910On 22 December a public memorial service took place for Tucker Bentley and Choate at St Paul s Cathedral King George V was represented by Edward Wallington his Groom in Waiting also present were Churchill and the Lord Mayor of London 79 80 The crime had shocked Londoners and the service showed evidence of their feelings An estimated ten thousand people waited in St Paul s environs and many local businesses closed as a mark of respect the nearby London Stock Exchange ceased trading for half an hour to allow traders and staff to watch the procession along Threadneedle Street After the service when the coffins were being transported on an eight mile 13 km journey to the cemeteries it was estimated that 750 000 people lined the route many throwing flowers onto the hearses as they passed 81 82 Identity parades were held at Bishopsgate police station on 23 December Isaac Levy who had seen the group leaving Exchange Buildings identified Peters and Dubof as the two he had seen carrying Gardstein It was also ascertained that Federoff had been witnessed at the events 83 The following day Federoff Peters and Dubof all appeared at the Guildhall police court where they were charged with being connected to the murder of the three policemen and with conspiracy to burgle the jewellery shop All three pleaded not guilty 84 85 86 On 27 December the poster bearing Gardstein s picture was seen by his landlord who alerted police Wensley and his colleagues visited the lodgings on Gold Street Stepney and found knives a gun ammunition false passports and revolutionary publications 87 Two days later there was another hearing at the Guildhall police court In addition to Federoff Peters and Dubof present in the dock were Milstein and Trassjonsky With some of the defendants having a low standard of English interpreters were used throughout the proceedings At the end of the day the case was adjourned until 6 January 1911 42 88 On New Year s Day 1911 the body of Leon Beron a Russian Jewish immigrant was found on Clapham Common in South London He had been badly beaten and two S shaped cuts both two inches long were on his cheeks The case became connected in the press with the Houndsditch murders and the subsequent events at Sidney Street although the evidence at the time for the link was scant 89 90 The historian F G Clarke in his history of the events located information from another Latvian who stated that Beron had been killed not because he was one of the informers who had passed on information but because he was planning to pass the information on and the act was a pre emptive one designed to scare the locals into not informing on the anarchists 91 92 The police believed that the Clapham Common murder was not connected to the Houndsditch police murders 93 The posters of Gardstein proved effective and late on New Year s Day a member of the public came forward to provide information about Svaars and Sokoloff 75 The informant told police that the men were hiding at 100 Sidney Street along with a lodger Betty Gershon who was Sokoloff s mistress The informant was persuaded to visit the property the following day to confirm the two men were still present 94 A meeting took place on the afternoon of 2 January to decide the next steps Wensley high ranking members of the Metropolitan force and Sir William Nott Bower the Commissioner of the City Police were present 95 Events of 3 January edit nbsp The Illustrated London News caption reads Scots Guards on active service in Sidney Street Two of the men firing from a bedroom opposite the besieged house 96 Just after midnight on 3 January 200 police officers from the City of London and Metropolitan forces cordoned off the area around 100 Sidney Street Armed officers were placed at number 111 directly opposite number 100 97 and throughout the night the residents of the houses on the block were roused and evacuated 98 Wensley woke the ground floor tenants at number 100 and asked them to fetch Gershon claiming that she was needed by her sick husband When Gershon appeared she was grabbed by the police and taken to the City of London police headquarters the ground floor lodgers also evacuated Number 100 was now empty of all residents apart from Svaars and Sokoloff neither of whom seemed to be aware of the evacuation 99 The police s operating procedure and the law which governed their actions meant they were unable to open fire without being fired upon first This along with the structure of the building which had a narrow winding stairwell up which police would have to pass meant any approach to the gang members was too perilous to attempt It was decided to wait until dawn before taking any action 100 At about 7 30 am a policeman knocked on the door of number 100 which elicited no response stones were then thrown at the window to wake the men Svaars and Sokoloff appeared at the window and opened fire at the police A police sergeant was wounded in the chest he was evacuated under fire across the rooftops and taken to the London Hospital 101 f Some members of the police returned fire but their guns were only effective over shorter ranges and proved ineffective against the comparatively advanced automatic weapons of Svaars and Sokoloff 102 103 By 9 00 am it was apparent that the two gunmen possessed superior weapons and ample ammunition The police officers in charge on the scene Superintendent Mulvaney and Chief Superintendent Stark contacted Assistant Commissioner Major Frederick Wodehouse at Scotland Yard He telephoned the Home Office and obtained permission from Churchill to bring in a detachment of Scots Guards who were stationed at the Tower of London 104 105 It was the first time that the police had requested military assistance in London to deal with an armed siege 106 Twenty one volunteer marksmen from the Guards arrived at about 10 00 am and took firing positions at each end of the street and in the houses opposite The shooting continued without either side gaining any advantage 33 107 nbsp Churchill observing the events at Sidney StreetChurchill arrived on the scene at 11 50 am to observe the incident at first hand 108 he later reported that he thought the crowd were unwelcoming to him as he heard people asking Oo let em in in reference to the Liberal Party s immigration policy that had allowed the influx from Russia 109 Churchill s role during the siege is unclear His biographers Paul Addison and Roy Jenkins both consider that he gave no operational commands to the police 110 111 but a Metropolitan police history of the event states that the events of Sidney Street were a very rare case of a Home Secretary taking police operational command decisions 33 g In a subsequent letter to The Times Churchill clarified his role while he was present I did not interfere in any way with the dispositions made by the police authorities on the spot I never overruled those authorities nor overrode them From beginning to end the police had an absolutely free hand I did not send for the Artillery or the Engineers I was not consulted as to whether they should be sent for 113 Shooting between the two sides reached a peak between 12 00 and 12 30 pm but at 12 50 smoke was seen coming from the building s chimneys and from the second floor windows it has not been established how the fire was started whether by accident or design 114 The fire slowly spread and by 1 30 it had taken a firm hold and had spread to the other floors A second detachment of Scots Guards arrived bringing with them a Maxim machine gun which was never used 115 Horse drawn artillery field guns were also brought from St John s Wood barracks but again not used 116 Shortly afterwards Sokoloff put his head out of the window he was shot by one of the soldiers and he fell back inside 117 The senior officer of the London Fire Brigade present on the scene sought permission to extinguish the blaze but was refused He approached Churchill in order to have the decision overturned but the Home Secretary approved the police decision 111 113 Churchill later wrote nbsp Firemen tackle the fire at 100 Sidney Street after the end of the siegeI now intervened to settle this dispute at one moment quite heated I told the fire brigade officer on my authority as Home Secretary that the house was to be allowed to burn down and that he was to stand by in readiness to prevent the conflagration from spreading 118 By 2 30 pm the shooting from the house had ceased One of the detectives present walked close to the wall and pushed the door open before retreating Other police officers and some of the soldiers came out and waited for the men to exit None did and as part of the roof collapsed it was clear to onlookers that the men were both dead the fire brigade was allowed to start extinguishing the fire 119 120 At 2 40 Churchill left the scene at about the time the Royal Horse Artillery arrived with two 13 pounder field artillery pieces 121 Sokoloff s body was found soon after the firemen entered A wall collapsed on a group of five firemen who were all taken to the London Hospital 122 One of the men Superintendent Charles Pearson had a fractured spine he died six months later 123 124 After shoring up the building the firemen resumed their search at around 6 30 pm the second body that of Svaars was found 125 Aftermath edit nbsp Detectives inspect the house at 100 Sidney Street at the conclusion of the siegeThe siege was captured by Pathe News cameras one of their earliest stories and the first siege to be captured on film and it included footage of Churchill 15 106 When the newsreels were screened in cinemas Churchill was booed with shouts of shoot him from audiences 126 His presence was controversial to many and the Leader of the Opposition Arthur Balfour remarked He Churchill was I understand in military phrase in what is known as the zone of fire he and a photographer were both risking valuable lives I understand what the photographer was doing but what was the right hon Gentleman doing That I neither understood at the time nor do I understand now 127 128 Jenkins suggests that he went simply because he could not resist going to see the fun himself 129 An inquest was held in January into the deaths at Houndsditch and Sidney Street The jury took fifteen minutes to reach the conclusion that the two bodies located were those of Svaars and Sokoloff that Tucker Bentley and Choate had been murdered by Gardstein and others during the burglary attempt 130 131 Rosen was arrested on 2 February at work in Well Street Hackney 27 and Hoffman was taken into custody on 15 February 132 The committal proceedings spread from December 1910 with Milstein and Trassjonsky appearing to March 1911 and included Hoffman from 15 February The proceedings consisted of 24 individual hearings In February Milstein was discharged on the basis that there was insufficient evidence against her Hoffman Trassjonsky and Federoff were released in March on the same basis 133 The case against the four remaining arrested gang members was heard at the Old Bailey by Mr Justice Grantham in May Dubof and Peters were accused of Tucker s murder Dubof Peters Rosen and Vassilleva were charged with feloniously harbouring a felon guilty of murder and for conspiring and agreeing together and with others unknown to break and enter the shop of Henry Samuel Harris with intent to steal his goods 134 135 The case lasted for eleven days 136 there were problems with the proceedings because of the language difficulties and the chaotic personal lives of the accused 137 The case resulted in acquittals for all except Vassileva who was convicted of conspiracy in the burglary and sentenced to two years imprisonment her conviction was overturned on appeal 134 138 After the high levels of criticism aimed at the Aliens Act Churchill decided to strengthen the legislation and proposed the Aliens Prevention of Crime Bill under the Ten Minute Rule 139 140 The MP Josiah C Wedgwood objected and wrote to Churchill to ask him not to introduce the hard line measures You know as well as I do that human life does not matter a rap in comparison with the death of ideas and the betrayal of English traditions 141 The bill did not become law 142 Legacy editContemporary memorials to the members of the police and fire services who were killed nbsp Memorial plaque to the three policemen murdered in Houndsditch nbsp Plaque in Sidney Street to Charles Pearson the fireman who died from his injuries Bryant and Woodhams were presented with the King s Police Medal for their bravery Woodhams was still badly injured and had to be carried to the king on a stretcher for the presentation Both Bryant and Woodhams were also promoted as they were being invalided out of the force the promotions ensured they were paid a higher pension The Lord Mayor of London presented the King s Police Medal to the families of the three murdered policemen For each child of the murdered policemen the City of London Corporation gave five shillings a week until they reached the age of fifteen 143 The inadequacy of the police s firepower led to criticism in the press and on 12 January 1911 several alternative weapons were tested The trials resulted in the Metropolitan Police replacing the Webley revolver with the Webley amp Scott 32 calibre MP semi automatic pistol later that year the City of London Police adopted the weapon in 1912 106 144 The members of the group dispersed after the events Peter the Painter was never seen or heard from again It was assumed he left the country and there were several possible sightings in the years afterwards none were confirmed 6 15 Jacob Peters returned to Russia rose to be deputy head of the Cheka the Soviet secret police and was executed in Joseph Stalin s 1938 purge 145 146 Trassjonsky had a mental breakdown and was confined for a time at Colney Hatch Lunatic Asylum where she died in 1971 147 148 Dubof and Federoff disappeared from the records Vassilleva remained in the East End for the remainder of her life and died at Brick Lane in 1963 Hoffman moved to New York where he lived for many years with Luba Milstein who had given birth to Fritz Svaars child 149 Smoller left the country in 1911 and travelled to Paris after which he disappeared Milstein later emigrated to the United States 150 151 The siege was the inspiration for the final scene in Alfred Hitchcock s original 1934 version of The Man Who Knew Too Much 152 the story was heavily fictionalised in the 1960 film The Siege of Sidney Street 153 The novelist Georges Simenon drew on the story for his 1930 Maigret detective novel Pietr le Letton Pietr the Latvian 154 The siege was also the inspiration for two other novels The Siege of Sidney Street 1960 by F Oughton and A Death Out of Season 1973 by Emanuel Litvinoff 155 In September 2008 Tower Hamlets London Borough Council named two tower blocks in Sidney Street Peter House and Painter House Peter the Painter was only involved in a minor capacity in the events and was not present at the siege The name plaques on the buildings call Peter the Painter an anti hero the decision angered the Metropolitan Police Federation A council spokesman said that There is no evidence that Peter the Painter killed the three policemen so we knew we were not naming the block after a murderer but he is the name that East Enders associate with the siege and Sidney Street 156 157 In December 2010 on the centenary of the events at Houndsditch a memorial plaque for the three murdered policemen was unveiled near the location Three weeks later on the anniversary of the siege a plaque was unveiled in honour of Pearson the fireman who died because the building collapsed on him 123 158 Notes and references editNotes edit The map s legend reads Proportion of Jews indicated Dark blue 95 to 100 Mid blue 75 and less than 95 Light blue 50 and less than 75 Light red 25 and less than 50 Mid red 5 and less than 25 Dark red Less than 5 of Jews 1 At the time Latvia was part of the Russian Empire 15 He used several other aliases including Schtern Straume Makharov and Dudkin 6 Number 10 had been rented by Michail Silisteanu a Romanian businessman who had offices at the nearby 73 St Mary Axe To advertise a game he had patented Silisteanu hired girls to play it in the window of his office the ensuing crowd of onlookers blocked the pavement and the police made him stop the demonstration Disgusted by his treatment Silisteanu left for Paris on 12 December 49 The break in took place on the Jewish Sabbath which meant the streets were quieter than normal and the noise created by the gang was more noticeable 50 51 The police officer Sergeant Leeson made a full recovery 101 Subsequent stories that a bullet passed through Churchill s top hat are apocryphal and no reference to such an occurrence appears in either the official records or Churchill s accounts of the siege 112 References edit Russell amp Lewis 1900 Scenes of Crime Television production ITV 15 November 2001 Cohen Humphries amp Mynott 2002 pp 13 14 Russell amp Lewis 1900 p xxxviii Fishman 2004 pp 269 287 a b c d e f g h Porter 2011 The Police Murders in the City The Times 19 December 1910 p 11 Palmer 2004 p 111 Cesarani David 27 June 2003 Face Has Changed but Fear Remains Times Higher Education Archived from the original on 7 March 2016 Rogers 1981 pp 123 125 Cohen Humphries amp Mynott 2002 p 14 Winder 2005 p 260 a b Eddy 1946 p 12 Rumbelow 1988 p 39 a b c McSmith Andy 11 December 2010 Siege of Sidney Street How the Dramatic Stand Off Changed British Police Politics and the Media Forever The Independent Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Shpayer Makov Haia Summer 1988 Anarchism in British Public Opinion 1880 1914 Victorian Studies 31 4 487 516 JSTOR 3827854 Moss amp Skinner 2015 3061 64 Ruff 2019 a b Rogers 1981 p 16 Ruff 2019 p xiv Whitehead 2024 p 79 81 Rumbelow 1988 pp 34 35 Rumbelow 1988 p 35 Rogers 1981 p 48 Whitehead 2024 pp 221 235 Rumbelow 1988 p 55 a b Rogers 1981 pp 180 181 Rumbelow 1988 p 64 Whitehead 2024 pp 193 220 a b Information Leaflet Number 43 Records of City of London Police Officers PDF London Metropolitan Archives Archived from the original PDF on 7 March 2016 Retrieved 15 January 2016 Historical Organisation of the Met Metropolitan Police Service Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 15 January 2016 a b Houndsditch Murders City of London Police Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 5 January 2016 a b c d The Siege of Sidney Street Metropolitan Police Service Archived from the original on 25 January 2016 Retrieved 5 January 2016 Winter 1910 1911 Age 36 The Siege of Sidney Street The Churchill Centre Archived from the original on 20 September 2016 Retrieved 15 January 2016 Bloom 2013 p 271 Waldren 2012 p 4 Rumbelow 1988 pp 64 65 Eddy 1946 pp 13 14 Stratmann 2010 p 61 The Houndsditch Murders The Spectator 24 December 1910 p 6 Rogers 1981 p 45 a b Houndsditch Murders Five Prisoners before the Magistrate The Manchester Guardian 30 December 1910 p 12 Rumbelow 1988 pp 77 78 Whitehead 2024 p 90 Whitehead 2024 a b Rumbelow 1988 pp 66 67 81 83 Rogers 1981 p 22 Palmer 2004 pp 147 148 a b Rumbelow 1988 p 66 a b c Berg Sanchia 13 December 2010 Sidney St The Siege That Shook Britain BBC Archived from the original on 20 January 2016 Retrieved 26 January 2016 Bloom 2013 p 270 Eddy 1946 pp 15 16 Rogers 1981 pp 26 27 Rogers 1981 p 27 Rumbelow 1988 p 71 a b The Murder of Police in Houndsditch Prisoners in Court The Manchester Guardian 7 January 1911 p 10 Eddy 1946 pp 16 17 Rumbelow 1988 pp 72 73 Eddy 1946 p 18 Rumbelow 1988 pp 73 74 Rogers 1981 pp 35 36 Eddy 1946 pp 18 19 Rumbelow 1988 p 85 Rogers 1981 pp 38 39 Rumbelow 1988 pp 74 76 Rogers 1981 pp 30 31 Rogers 1981 p 36 Bird 2010 p 3 Rogers 1981 pp 36 37 Eddy 1946 p 19 Rumbelow 1988 pp 95 97 Wensley 2005 pp 164 165 Rumbelow 1988 pp 100 101 Rogers 1981 p 43 a b Waldren 2013 p 2 Rogers 1981 p 39 Keily amp Hoffbrand 2015 p 67 Rumbelow 1988 pp 107 112 114 Rogers 1981 pp 61 62 Honour for Murdered Policemen Dundee Evening Telegraph 23 December 1910 p 1 Public Funeral of the Houndsditch Victims Nottingham Evening Post 22 December 1910 p 3 Rogers 1981 pp 61 63 Rogers 1981 p 67 Three Foreigners Charges in Connection with the Houndsditch Crime The Daily Mirror 26 December 1910 p 6 The Houndsditch Murders Three Foreigners in Court The Observer 25 December 1910 p 7 The Houndsditch Murders Three Suspects before the Police Court The Manchester Guardian 26 December 1910 p 7 Rogers 1981 pp 72 73 Rogers 1981 pp 79 80 Rumbelow 1988 pp 203 204 Porter Bernard February 1985 Review Will O The Wisp Peter the Painter and the Anti Tsarist Terrorists in Britain and Australia History 70 228 152 53 JSTOR 24415042 Saunders David April 1985 Review Clarke F G Will O The Wisp Peter the Painter and the Anti Tsarist Terrorists in Britain and Australia The Slavonic and East European Review 63 2 306 07 JSTOR 4209108 Rumbelow 1988 pp 204 205 Whitehead 2024 pp 177 178 Rumbelow 1988 pp 115 118 Waldren 2013 pp 3 4 Ball Cartridges in a London Street Scots Guards in Action The Illustrated London News 7 January 1911 p 6 Waldren 2013 p 4 Rogers 1981 pp 86 87 Rumbelow 1988 pp 127 128 Rumbelow 1988 pp 128 129 a b Eddy 1946 p 23 Rogers 1981 p 94 Waldren 2013 p 9 Rogers 1981 p 98 Rumbelow 1988 pp 132 133 a b c Keily amp Hoffbrand 2015 p 64 Murderers Siege in London The Manchester Guardian 4 January 1911 p 7 Archived from the original on 14 May 2016 Rogers 1981 p 105 Rumbelow 1988 p 135 Addison 2014 a b Jenkins 2012 p 195 Waldren 2013 p 11 a b Churchill Winston 12 January 1911 Mr Churchill and the Stepney Siege The Times p 8 Rogers 1981 pp 111 112 Rogers 1981 p 113 Whitehead 2024 p 141 Moss amp Skinner 2015 3064 Churchill 1942 p 59 Rumbelow 1988 pp 137 138 Waldren 2013 p 13 Rogers 1981 p 118 Eddy 1946 pp 24 25 a b Sidney Street Murdered Police Trio Honoured by Memorial BBC 16 December 2010 Archived from the original on 26 September 2015 Waldren 2013 p 14 Rogers 1981 p 120 Rumbelow 1988 p 142 His Majesty s Most Gracious Speech Hansard 21 cols 44 122 6 February 1911 Archived from the original on 10 June 2016 Gilbert 2000 p 224 Jenkins 2012 p 194 The Sidney Street Fight The Times 19 January 1911 p 8 Rogers 1981 p 178 Rumbelow 1988 p 155 Rumbelow 1988 pp 166 172 a b Zurka Dubof Jacob Peters John Rosen Nina Vassileva sic Old Bailey Archived from the original on 2 March 2016 Retrieved 8 February 2016 Rumbelow 1988 pp 171 172 Rogers 1981 p 191 Moss amp Skinner 2015 3063 Rogers 1981 pp 191 196 Defries 2014 pp 35 36 News of the Week The Spectator 22 April 1911 pp 1 2 Archived from the original on 15 May 2016 Mulvey 2010 p 37 Rogers 1981 p 151 Rumbelow 1988 p 156 Waldren 2012 pp 15 16 Rumbelow 1988 pp 194 195 Bates Stephen 2 January 2011 Sidney Street Siege Resonates Even 100 Years On The Guardian Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Eddy 1946 pp 31 32 Whitehead 2024 pp 214 221 Ruff 2019 pp 171 2 Rumbelow 1988 pp 181 183 Rogers 1981 p 197 Man Who Knew Too Much The 1934 Screenonline British Film Institute Archived from the original on 18 January 2015 Retrieved 9 February 2016 Burton 2016 p 389 Whitehead 2024 p 259 Taylor 2012 p 194 Cockcroft Lucy 25 September 2008 Tower Blocks Named after Notorious Criminal Linked to Police Killings Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 19 March 2016 Waldren 2012 pp 17 18 Memorial for Murdered Houndsditch Officers BBC 16 December 2010 Archived from the original on 6 March 2016 Sources edit Addison Paul 2014 Churchill Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 32413 Subscription or UK public library membership required Bird Samantha L 2010 Stepney Profile of a London Borough from the Outbreak of the First World War to the Festival of Britain 1914 1951 Newcastle upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 978 1 4438 2612 9 Bloom Clive 2010 Violent London 2000 Years of Riots Rebels and Revolts London Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 27559 1 Bloom Clive 2013 Victoria s Madmen Revolution and Alienation London Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 31897 8 Burton Alan 2016 Historical Dictionary of British Spy Fiction London Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4422 5587 6 Churchill Winston 1942 Thoughts and Adventures London Macmillan OCLC 1028252 Cohen Steve Humphries Beth Mynott Ed 2002 From Immigration Controls to Welfare Controls London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 25083 2 Defries Harry 2014 Conservative Party Attitudes to Jews 1900 1950 London Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 28462 6 Eddy J P 1946 The Mystery of Peter the Painter London Stevens amp Sons OCLC 844864776 Fishman William J 2004 East End Jewish Radicals 1875 1914 Nottingham Five Leaves Publications ISBN 978 0 907123 45 3 Gilbert Martin 2000 Churchill A Life London Pimlico ISBN 978 0 7126 6725 8 Jenkins Roy 2012 Churchill London Pan Macmillan ISBN 978 0 330 47607 2 Keily Jackie Hoffbrand Julia 2015 The Crime Museum Uncovered London IB Tauris ISBN 978 1 78130 041 1 Moss Alan Skinner Keith 2015 Scotland Yard s History of Crime in 100 Objects Kindle ed Stroud Glos The History Press ISBN 978 0 7509 6655 9 Mulvey Paul 2010 The Political Life of Josiah C Wedgwood Land Liberty and Empire 1872 1943 Woodbridge Suffolk Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 978 0 86193 308 2 Palmer Alan 2004 The East End Four Centuries of London Life London John Murray ISBN 978 0 7195 6640 0 Porter Bernard 2011 Piatkoff Piaktow Peter nicknamed Peter the Painter Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 92479 Subscription or UK public library membership required Rogers Colin 1981 The Battle of Stepney London R Hale ISBN 978 0 7091 9146 9 Ruff Philip 2019 A Towering Flame The life and times of the elusive Latvian anarchist Peter the Painter London Breviary Stuff ISBN 978 0 9929466 8 5 Rumbelow Donald 1988 The Houndsditch Murders and the Siege of Sidney Street London W H Allen ISBN 978 0 491 03178 3 Russell Charles Lewis H S 1900 The Jew in London A Study of Racial Character and Present Day Conditions London T Fisher Unwin OCLC 162217108 Stratmann Linda 2010 Greater London Murders 33 True Stories of Revenge Jealousy Greed amp Lust Stroud Glos The History Press ISBN 978 0 7524 5124 4 Taylor Antony 2012 London s Burning Pulp Fiction the Politics of Terrorism and the Destruction of the Capital in British Popular Culture 1840 2005 London Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 4411 7156 6 Waldren Mike August 2012 Policing and Firearms Timeline PDF Police Firearms Officers Association Archived from the original PDF on 11 October 2016 Retrieved 30 January 2016 Waldren Mike July 2013 The Siege of Sidney Street PDF Police Firearms Officers Association Archived from the original PDF on 23 March 2016 Retrieved 30 January 2016 Wensley Frederick 2005 1951 Forty Years of Scotland Yard A Record of Lifetime s Service in the Criminal Investigation Department London Kessinger Publishing ISBN 978 1 4179 8997 3 Whitehead Andrew 2024 A Devilish Kind of Courage Anarchists Aliens and the Siege of Sidney Street London Reaktion ISBN 978 1 78914 844 2 Winder Robert 2005 Bloody Foreigners London Abacus ISBN 978 0 349 11566 5 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Siege of Sidney Street Siege of Sidney Street at Pathe News Newsreels and documentaries on YouTube Siege of Sidney Street at Huntley Film Archives Witness History Siege of Sidney Street on BBC World Service 51 31 06 N 00 03 19 W 51 51833 N 0 05528 W 51 51833 0 05528 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Siege of Sidney Street amp oldid 1207309695, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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