In the Shadow of the Noose: Mad Earl Ferrers: The Last English Nobleman Hanged for Murder (8 page)

BOOK: In the Shadow of the Noose: Mad Earl Ferrers: The Last English Nobleman Hanged for Murder
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Twenty two years later, it was removed to Staunton Harold to be re-interred in the family vault, as he had wished.

 

 

Epilogue

 

TWO WEEKS AFTER the hanging, Laurence Shirley’s brother, Washington Shirley, a naval officer and keen amateur astronomer, took his seat in the House of Lords as the fifth Earl Ferrers.

During his time in the Tower, the fourth Earl had made a will requesting that £6,000 be raised from the estate and placed in trust for the family of the murdered John Johnson. (To place this in context, using average earnings, £1,000 then is worth more than £1.5 million today.) A further £4,000 in East India Company bonds was allocated to his mistress, Margaret Clifford, and their children. The will was not strictly legal, because it was drawn up after he had been convicted of murder, but it was allowed to stand, and the families were well provided for.

The legacy left to John Johnson’s family enabled them to have a grand headstone made to mark his burial spot in the churchyard of St Mary and St Hardulph, Breedon-on-the-Hill, Leicestershire, which ironically also contains the tombs of 16
th
and 17
th
century members of the Shirley clan.

John Johnson’s Headstone

 

Unfortunately, having stood in all weathers for more than 250 years the headstone has deteriorated at the bottom and the last line of the inscription cannot be deciphered, but the rest reads:

 

Released from the Evils of this frail World

In pious expectation of the reward of his Virtues

JOHN JOHNSON

Departed this Life, Jan: XLXMDCCLX Aged L

He was many years

The esteemed and faithful Servant

of

The Honorable Laurence Shirley Esq.

With unshaken Integrity

He continued in the office of Steward

to

The late Rt Honorable Laurence Earl Ferrers

Till near the fateful period of his Life

Uncorrupted by any views of self interest

No hopes, no fears

Could divert him from the steady pursuit of that path

His duty to God and Man pointed out

He was a worthy example of

The tender Father, the affectionate Husband

The firm and valuable Friend

The sincere and humble Christian

His many excellent Qualities

Rendered him highly Respected

 

According to
Cracroft’s Peerage: The Complete Guide to the British Peerage and Baronetage
, Laurence Shirley may have a lasting and more virtuous legacy in the form of a famous scientist as a great-grandson.

On April 2, 1777, Anna Maria, one of Earl Ferrer’s illegitimate daughters by his mistress Margaret Clifford, married John Lewis Pasteur, a Derbyshire hosier nine years her junior. It has since been claimed that a direct descendent of this union was Louis Pasteur, the famous French scientist and founder of the germ theory of disease. If this is true, although he was the son of a poor tanner Pasteur’s grandmother was Anna Maria – meaning he had aristocratic English blood in his veins. Anna Maria died in 1819, aged 73, just three years before Pasteur was born.

Earl Ferrer’s former wife, the Countess, meanwhile, remarried in 1769, to Lord Frederick Campbell, a prominent politician who could not have been more different to the bullying, thuggish Earl.

The following description of him, from
Posthumous Memoirs of his Own Time,
by N W Wraxhall, describes Lord Campbell when he was in his fifties: ‘His manners, noble, yet soft, dignified, yet devoid of any pride or affectation, conciliated all who approached him.’

The marriage was evidently a happy one, although they had no children. It is said they met when the countess turned to the law to rid herself of the Earl, and Campbell had been her counsel.

Lady Campbell died, aged 70, at her country seat, Combe Bank, in Kent, on July 25
th
1807 – as her late first husband had once threatened, she was burned alive in her bed when a reading lamp fell over and set her nightclothes ablaze.

 

 

Sources

 

Sex and the Gender Revolution
, Volume 1, Randolph Trumbach

Tales of Our Great Families
, Edward Walford

Literary and Miscellaneous Memoirs
, Joseph Cradock

Undertaker of the Mind: John Monro and Mad-Doctoring in Eighteenth-Century
, Jonathan Andrews, Andrew T. Scull

A Complete Collection of State Trials and Proceedings ..., Volume 19
, Thomas Bayly Howell

Cracroft’s Peerage: The Complete Guide to British Peerage and Baronetage

Oxford Dictionary of National Biography

The Newgate Calendar

Passages From the Diaries of Mrs Philip Lybbe Powys of Hardwick House, Oxen
, Caroline Girle Powys

Tarnished Coronets
, Muriel Nelson d’Auvergne

 

 

More from Monday Books

 

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In The Shadow of the Noose
. We hope you enjoyed it. As a small family publishing company, we rely on word-of-mouth recommendations so please tell your friends and relatives about us. You might also like some of our other books. You can find out more information by looking at our website:
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OUR MAN IN ORLANDO

Murder, Mayhem and Madness in the Sunshine State

 

FLORIDA: a land of dazzling white sands, sizzling sun... and utterly incompetent British criminals.

Like the English pensioner who hijacked a helicopter to bust her husband out of Death Row, the Scottish gap year student who robbed a bank and tried to escape on a kid's bike and the unlucky Londoner who kidnapped the wrong guy and wound up serving 1,285 years in jail.

As British consul in our nation’s favourite holiday hotspot, Hugh Hunter has seen them all – murderers, small-time conmen and big-time drug dealers (plus ordinary families whose dream vacations turned to nightmares).

Our Man in Orlando
is his astonishing true story of a decade spent dealing with clueless, witless and hopeless Brits abroad.

 

Our Man in Orlando
was serialised in
The Times
and
The Week
magazine and the book is about to be turned into a major new television drama.

 

DIARY OF AN ON-CALL GIRL

 

PC Bloggs is a serving British police office and
Diary of an On-call Girl
is a true account of her working life.

Diary of an On-Call Girl
was dramatised for
BBC Radio 4
, was serialised in the
Mail on Sunday
and is currently in TV development.

 

The tapes are on, the interview begins, and I ask my standard opening question: ‘Do you understand why you have been arrested?’ Believe it or not, sometimes these words alone can prompt a confused confession.

‘I ain't been arrested,’ says Shimona.

Not exactly a confession.

‘Well, you have, because you’re here.’

‘I was never arrested, though. No-one never put no handcuffs on me.’

I put down my pen. Somehow, I don’t think this is going to be the level of interview for which I need to make notes.

‘You actually don’t need to be handcuffed to be under arrest,’ I say.

‘Yeah, I do. Right, Sonia?’

Sonia nods emphatically. ‘You do need it, me Ma said so.’

In an attempt to steer the interview back on track, I look down at PC Cansat’s statement. ‘Look, it says here, “I then said to Shimona O’Milligan, ‘I am arresting you on suspicion of assault and criminal damage.’ I cautioned her to which she replied, ‘Whatever’.” Does that ring any bells?’

Shimona titters. Then she gets serious again. ‘Does he say he handcuffed me, though? Cos he’s a liar.’

‘No, he says he arrested you.’

‘Well, I wasn’t listening.’

‘This may surprise you,’ I say, ‘but you can be arrested even if you aren’t listening.’

‘No, you can’t. Not if you’re inside a house. I know the law.’

If there is one thing I like more than a gobby teenager, it is a gobby teenager who knows the law.

‘Shimona, you are going to have to take my word for the fact that you were brought here under arrest and you are still under arrest now. Let’s move on.’

‘Whatever.’

 

‘Belle de Jour meets
The Bill
… sarky sarges, missing panda cars and wayward MOPS (members of the public).’ -
The Guardian

‘Part Orwell, part Kafka and part Trisha’ -
The Mail on Sunday

 

SICK NOTES

True Stories from the GP’s Surgery

 

'We wanted to thank you for all you did for mum over the last 14 years,' said Mrs Cobham.

Excitedly, I peered into the plastic bag. Inside was one small loaf of sliced bread.

'Er...' I stammered. 'Well, that's lovely.'

She nodded and smiled. 'It was the least we could do, doctor,' she said.

 

Welcome to the bizarre world of Tony Copperfield, family doctor. He spends his days fending off anxious mums, elderly sex maniacs and hopeless hypochondriacs.

The rest of his time is taken up sparring with colleagues, battling bureaucrats and banging his head against the brick wall of the NHS.

If you've ever wondered what your GP is really thinking - and what's going on behind the scenes at your surgery -
Sick Notes
is for you.

 

'A wonderful book, funny and insightful in equal measure.' - Dr Phil Hammond,
Private Eye
’s MD

'Copperfield is simply fantastic, unbelievably funny and improbably wise’ -
British Medical Journal
.

'A mix of the hilarious, the mundane and the poignant. Dr Copperfield reveals what goes on behind those surgery doors.' -
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