Abstract
In the early nineteenth century, despite the popularity of low-life narratives such as Pierce Egan’s Life in London or the memoirs of the pick-pocket and swindler James Hardy Vaux, the taste for more traditional forms of criminal biography had waned.1 Nevertheless, late Regency and early Victorian readers’ enthusiasm for deviance was far from dead; rather it had shifted from the life-narratives of robbers and thieves to bloody spectacle. As Rosalind Crone has demonstrated, the Victorians would absorb gruesome, graphic re-enactments of violence into their mainstream print culture.2 However, whilst criminal biography may have been a moribund form, the lives of individual criminals continued to be documented in detail in early-nineteenth-century print culture as well as in the writings of reformers and other investigations into crime and poverty. Parliamentary Select Committees and inquiries into crime and policing proliferated in the early decades of the nineteenth century, with reformers, practitioners and politicians seeking tofind common ground between local and state strategies to deal with what were perceived as the increasing social costs of urbanisation and migration.3 As a result, a number of documents survive that specifically refer to individuals, public houses, police officers and crime events that can be corroborated in conjunction with court records from the Old Bailey and contemporary press reports.
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Notes
J. Marriott (2011), Beyond the Tower: A History of East London (London: Polity Press), pp. 150–73.
H. Mayhew (1851), London Labour and the London Poor, vol. 1 (London: George Woodfall & Son), p. 252.
Standard, 7 August 1837. John Bishop and Thomas Williams were the ‘London Burkers’. S. Wise (2004), The Italian Boy: A Tale of Murder and Body Snatching in 1830s London (London: Metropolitan Books).
Shore, Artful Dodgers, pp. 140–1. See M. J. D. Roberts (2004), Making English Morals: Voluntary Associations and Moral Reform in England, 1787–1886 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), p. 159.
Tobias, Prince of Fences, p. 148. This identification was supported by P. Collins (1962, 1994 edn.), Dickens and Crime (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan), p. 262. In the preface to the third edition, Collins noted that he had been mistaken in this identification, p. xvi.
J. M. L. Drew (2003), Dickens the Journalist (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan), p. 8.
B. M. Wheeler (1993), ‘The Text and Plan of Oliver Twist’, in C. Dickens/F. Kaplan (ed.), Oliver Twist (London: Norton), pp. 525–37.
T. Endelman (2002), The Jews of Britain, 1656 to 2000 (Berkeley: University of California Press), p. 82.
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© 2015 Heather Shore
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Shore, H. (2015). ‘There goes Bill Sheen, the Murderer’: Crime, Kinship and Community in East London, 1827–1852. In: London’s Criminal Underworlds, c. 1720–c. 1930. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137313911_5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137313911_5
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