Cotton Town - Blackburn with Darwen
 
A Tragedy on Darwen Moors by Harold Heys
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Philip Snowden 1864-1937 by Gerald Schofield
Just Jessica
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Joseph Fielding by Jonathan George Shaw
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Herbert Railton
Illustrious Illustrator
James Morton
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The War
Roger Haydock
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The end of the world
William Wolstenholme
David Johnson
Down Memory Lane
Down Memory Lane-Joyce Walsh
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Down Memory Lane-Geoff Tolley
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Down Memory Lane - Margaret Haworth
Down Memory Lane -John Parkinson
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Down Memory Lane-Ellen Price
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Down Memory Lane - Maureen Garratty
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Down Memory Lane-Linda Rushworth
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Down Memory Lane -Older People's Forum
To the Antarctic with Shackleton
Solario by Harold Heys
Ken Hampshire
Cooartin' i'th hand-loom weyvin' days
A Family Business
Val-De-Ree
Reminiscences from 1879
Neillie Parkinson
Remembering Margaret
A talk with Blackburns Oldest Inhabitant
More Blackburn Memories
The Old School Memories of Bygone Days
Train set memories by William Ferguson
Under Six Sovereigns, Zachariah Smalley
Personal Perspectives
Pot Mansions and iron Swans
sixty two years of mill life
Nellie Maxwell
Memoirs of a very old boy
Schooldays in the 1950s
A Darwener in Strange Lands By Walter Sharples
A Darwener in Strange Lands By Walter Sharples part 2

Alice Beetham
Arthur Birkett
Jubilee Mill
Newspaper Reports
Theres only one girl for me...
You look crammed, what's to do?
She died almost instantly
Birkett found guilty of murder
Souvenir napkins were sold
Alice Beethams Murder by Louise McGarry

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The Murder of Alice Beetham


Alice Beetham
"Guilty!"

The word resounded in the courtroom.

In the silence that followed Mr Justice Bicknell donned the black cap. The chaplain took a step nearer to the accused, Arthur Birkett.

Bicknell spoke those dreadful words:

". . . that you be taken to a place of execution, that you be there hanged by the neck until you are dead, and that your body be buried within the precincts of the prison in which you have been confined before your execution. And may the Lord have mercy on your soul."

"Amen," said the chaplain.

The prisoner was taken to the cell.  He had to be carried.

What dreadful tangle of emotions could have led to this? How could a relationship between a young couple, Alice Beetham and Arthur Birkett, one like thousands of others at the time and countless thousands since then, have ended with one dying on the weft room floor with her throat cut, and the other at the end of a rope at Strangeways?

All that can be gleaned from the newspaper reports is that Alice wanted the relationship to end, so Arthur nipped out of work during the breakfast break, bought a razor, came back and did his best to cut her head off with it.

Is that all there was to it?  Or was it a case of omnipresent evil seizing an opportunity, seizing a weakness in Birkett's mind, just as furiously driven machinery will snatch at carelessly tied hair, or a loose garment?


Introduction
"There's only one girl for me..."
"You look crammed... what's to do?"
"She died almost instantly"
Birkett found guilty of murder
Souvenir napkins were sold

Alice Beetham
Arthur Birkett
Jubilee Mill
Account of the Murder by relation of Alice Beetham: Louise McGarry

Newspaper Reports


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