Rev James Macgowan, Master of Academy in Hope St, Liverpool
Rev James Macgowan, Master of Academy in Hope St, Liverpool
My gg grandfather, Rev James Macgowan had an Academy in Hope St, Liverpool prior to immigrating to Adelaide, South Australia in November 1838. According to a book titled “Tales of Liverpool; Murder, Mayhem & Mystery” (1985) by Richard Whittington-Egan. He writes, “Thirty-three bodies were found preserved in salt in a cellar in Liverpool. Two men were found guilty of grave robbing; Rev. James Macgowan and a man called William Gillespie.” The bodies were found to have come from the Parish workhouse graveyard which was adjacent to the school run by Rev. Macgowan, this case was to have occurred in the 1820’s, so, what’s the likelihood of two people with the same name and title living in the same area at the same time? To prove these two Rev. James Macgowan’s are the same person or not I will need some court documents and/or prison records? Can anyone point me in the right direction please (ie) where these kind of records are kept.
Kind Regards,
Roger
Kind Regards,
Roger
Roger
An interesting, if gruesome story!
I have found some press reports on this incident from the Liverpool Mercury and another paper, but nothing yet on the trial. I am sure the regular detectives will be on the case soon. Unfortunately the date of the outrage precedes the censuses, but someone may come up with directory details or, better still, court reports.
Rev James Macgowan seems to have been a regular writer to the editor from Hope Street on various subjects, including one from South Australia, none on the subject of grave robbing.
LATER
I have just found that The Times, 30 Oct 1826, carried an article on the Quarter Sessions in Liverpool, when a true bill was returned against James Donaldson and John Henderson for a misdemeanour in disinterring a number of dead bodies. The bill against William Gillespie was ignored. There was no mention of Rev James Macgowan.
I am sure this will get the sleuths working!
D
An interesting, if gruesome story!
I have found some press reports on this incident from the Liverpool Mercury and another paper, but nothing yet on the trial. I am sure the regular detectives will be on the case soon. Unfortunately the date of the outrage precedes the censuses, but someone may come up with directory details or, better still, court reports.
Rev James Macgowan seems to have been a regular writer to the editor from Hope Street on various subjects, including one from South Australia, none on the subject of grave robbing.
LATER
I have just found that The Times, 30 Oct 1826, carried an article on the Quarter Sessions in Liverpool, when a true bill was returned against James Donaldson and John Henderson for a misdemeanour in disinterring a number of dead bodies. The bill against William Gillespie was ignored. There was no mention of Rev James Macgowan.
I am sure this will get the sleuths working!
D
M. no. 31
Here is some more, found by Googlin, from a website of a prolific local author, Tom Slemen:
The Hope Street Bodysnatchers
The following gruesome incident unfolded many years ago just across the road from the Cambridge pub, in Mulberry Street in Liverpool city centre. Late one foggy night in October 1826, an 11-year-old orphan named Jim Buckles of Egypt Street, pounded on the door of a lodging house. The keeper of the house, a large stocky man named John Macallister, answered the door with a lantern in his hand, wondering who was calling at five minutes after midnight. When he opened the door, little Jim Buckles flew past him and hid under a table, trembling. Outside in the fog, three ghostly shadows came forward, then halted. Seconds later they melted back into the night vapours. The landlord thought he was seeing things, and closed the door to the chilly fog-enshrouded night. Mr Macallister turned around and recognized the orphan boy from the home for destitute children in the area, but he didn't know that the child was a mute. He couldn't speak.
Macallister said: 'What's your game eh?' and he thrust the lantern at the child under the table, who was making noises, trying desperately to speak. His eyes told the landlord that he was terrified.
When Macallister eventually discovered that the boy couldn't talk, he calmed him down and handed him his quill. The boy was surprisingly good at sketching, and he scratched the nib across a torn out page from a ledger. What he drew was very curious. He sketched four open coffins surrounded by what looked like gravestones. Then he drew men with scarves around their faces. They held spades and a lantern, and then little Jimmy drew bodies in shrouds lying about.
This could only mean one thing. Grave robbers, body snatchers, or Resurrection men as they were then called. Had Jimmy caught them red handed as they were digging up corpses Macallister thought. The orphans home was near to the cemetery. Then Macallister recalled seeing the faint shadows in the fog earlier. Had they been the resurrection men in pursuit of Jimmy?
Macallister let the boy stay in a spare room, and the next day, he went to the police, but they didn't take the boy's sketches seriously. He was just an orphan trying to worm his way into Macallister's house, a detective said. On the following night, a heavy October fog rolled in from the Mersey. Macallister was letting out his two cats when he saw a man in a long black coat throttling a boy - it was Jimmy. Macallister shouted and the stranger threw the boy down and ran off, vanishing into the fog. The boy was badly shook up but he recovered, and once again Macallister put him up at the lodging house. The boy could throw no light on the why's and wherefores of the attack.
That same night, three large wooden casks were loaded onto a ship called the Latona. The ship was berthed at George's Dock passage by the pier head, and she was bound to sail for Leith in Scotland in the morning. But the 3 casks started to give off an appalling smell. The suspicious sailors on the Latona opened the casks - and discovered eleven bodies in them. The bodies of men women and children were all naked and packed in salt. The police soon traced the man who had carted the casks to the Latona, and he said a Scottish man had paid him two shillings to transport the large casks from a cellar at Number 8 Hope Street. The police stormed Number 8 Hope Street, where a Reverend MacGowan broke down and admitted that he had rented a cellar to a Mr Henderson, a Scot who said he was a fish oil exporter. In the cellar, the hardboiled policemen felt faint when they saw 22 corpses strewn about the floor. Mass murder was initially suspected, but each corpse bore the tell tale scars of a post mortem examination. In other words, the corpses had been disinterred from the local graveyard in Mulberry Street. The mysterious Mr Henderson managed to evade capture, but his lackeys didn't, and they were identified by little Jimmy Buckles, who had seen them digging up the graves. Each resurrection man served 12 months hard labour after paying a hefty fine. Each corpse would have netted £15 for the grave-robbing outfit. They would have received the money off the Scottish medical schools in return for the corpses, which would have been dissected by medical students studying human anatomy.
The Hope Street Bodysnatchers
The following gruesome incident unfolded many years ago just across the road from the Cambridge pub, in Mulberry Street in Liverpool city centre. Late one foggy night in October 1826, an 11-year-old orphan named Jim Buckles of Egypt Street, pounded on the door of a lodging house. The keeper of the house, a large stocky man named John Macallister, answered the door with a lantern in his hand, wondering who was calling at five minutes after midnight. When he opened the door, little Jim Buckles flew past him and hid under a table, trembling. Outside in the fog, three ghostly shadows came forward, then halted. Seconds later they melted back into the night vapours. The landlord thought he was seeing things, and closed the door to the chilly fog-enshrouded night. Mr Macallister turned around and recognized the orphan boy from the home for destitute children in the area, but he didn't know that the child was a mute. He couldn't speak.
Macallister said: 'What's your game eh?' and he thrust the lantern at the child under the table, who was making noises, trying desperately to speak. His eyes told the landlord that he was terrified.
When Macallister eventually discovered that the boy couldn't talk, he calmed him down and handed him his quill. The boy was surprisingly good at sketching, and he scratched the nib across a torn out page from a ledger. What he drew was very curious. He sketched four open coffins surrounded by what looked like gravestones. Then he drew men with scarves around their faces. They held spades and a lantern, and then little Jimmy drew bodies in shrouds lying about.
This could only mean one thing. Grave robbers, body snatchers, or Resurrection men as they were then called. Had Jimmy caught them red handed as they were digging up corpses Macallister thought. The orphans home was near to the cemetery. Then Macallister recalled seeing the faint shadows in the fog earlier. Had they been the resurrection men in pursuit of Jimmy?
Macallister let the boy stay in a spare room, and the next day, he went to the police, but they didn't take the boy's sketches seriously. He was just an orphan trying to worm his way into Macallister's house, a detective said. On the following night, a heavy October fog rolled in from the Mersey. Macallister was letting out his two cats when he saw a man in a long black coat throttling a boy - it was Jimmy. Macallister shouted and the stranger threw the boy down and ran off, vanishing into the fog. The boy was badly shook up but he recovered, and once again Macallister put him up at the lodging house. The boy could throw no light on the why's and wherefores of the attack.
That same night, three large wooden casks were loaded onto a ship called the Latona. The ship was berthed at George's Dock passage by the pier head, and she was bound to sail for Leith in Scotland in the morning. But the 3 casks started to give off an appalling smell. The suspicious sailors on the Latona opened the casks - and discovered eleven bodies in them. The bodies of men women and children were all naked and packed in salt. The police soon traced the man who had carted the casks to the Latona, and he said a Scottish man had paid him two shillings to transport the large casks from a cellar at Number 8 Hope Street. The police stormed Number 8 Hope Street, where a Reverend MacGowan broke down and admitted that he had rented a cellar to a Mr Henderson, a Scot who said he was a fish oil exporter. In the cellar, the hardboiled policemen felt faint when they saw 22 corpses strewn about the floor. Mass murder was initially suspected, but each corpse bore the tell tale scars of a post mortem examination. In other words, the corpses had been disinterred from the local graveyard in Mulberry Street. The mysterious Mr Henderson managed to evade capture, but his lackeys didn't, and they were identified by little Jimmy Buckles, who had seen them digging up the graves. Each resurrection man served 12 months hard labour after paying a hefty fine. Each corpse would have netted £15 for the grave-robbing outfit. They would have received the money off the Scottish medical schools in return for the corpses, which would have been dissected by medical students studying human anatomy.
M. no. 31
Hi Roger
In Gore's 1821 Directory there was a
Rev James McGowan, teacher 6 Bold Place, academy 30 Seel Street
No sign of a William Gillespie
Hope that helps
Cheers
Erika
Edited Daggers
In Gore's 1821 Directory there was a
Rev James McGowan, teacher 6 Bold Place, academy 30 Seel Street
No sign of a William Gillespie
Hope that helps
Cheers
Erika

Edited Daggers

Last edited by erika on 26 Aug 2011 18:39, edited 1 time in total.
Erika
Membership No. 7633
Living in hopes of finding info on-
Campbell-Liverpool, Scotland
Owen-Liverpool,Wrexham,Shropshire
Griffiths-Liverpool,Cheshire
Breese/Breeze-Llanbrynmair,London
Plumridge-London,Nottingham
I get worse Daggers, I signed a cheque yesterday 1911
Thanks for pointing out the error, I have edited it.
Cheers
Erika

Thanks for pointing out the error, I have edited it.
Cheers
Erika

Erika
Membership No. 7633
Living in hopes of finding info on-
Campbell-Liverpool, Scotland
Owen-Liverpool,Wrexham,Shropshire
Griffiths-Liverpool,Cheshire
Breese/Breeze-Llanbrynmair,London
Plumridge-London,Nottingham
Liverpool Sessions
Thanks guys, That's a great responce. It sounds like the Rev. James Macgowan wasn't a crim after all.
Regards, Roger
Regards, Roger
Fascinating story, thanks for posting Roger.
You never know what turns up with this genie lark!!
Erika..I wish I had a dollar for everytime I've done something like that
I hope good guy McAllister was one of mine...
Tina
You never know what turns up with this genie lark!!
Erika..I wish I had a dollar for everytime I've done something like that

I hope good guy McAllister was one of mine...
Tina
- Tina
Cornthwaite,Milburn,Coll,Gaffney,Pearce,Singleton,Hazlehurst,Cuthbert,Mackintosh,McAllister,Morana, Corfield
Any census/bmd information within this post is Crown Copyright from http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/
1832 Poll Book
James McGowan
School Master, Hope St Liverpool
Tina
James McGowan
School Master, Hope St Liverpool
Tina
- Tina
Cornthwaite,Milburn,Coll,Gaffney,Pearce,Singleton,Hazlehurst,Cuthbert,Mackintosh,McAllister,Morana, Corfield
Any census/bmd information within this post is Crown Copyright from http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/
What an interesting post. Thanks for your great finds everybody.
MaryA
Our Facebook Page
Names - Lunt, Hall, Kent, Ayre, Forshaw, Parle, Lawrenson, Longford, Ennis, Bayley, Russell, Longworth, Baile
Any census info in this post is Crown Copyright, from National Archives
Our Facebook Page
Names - Lunt, Hall, Kent, Ayre, Forshaw, Parle, Lawrenson, Longford, Ennis, Bayley, Russell, Longworth, Baile
Any census info in this post is Crown Copyright, from National Archives