The burial of William Vellens as depicted in "The Wilds of London" by James Greenwood
The
Coroner for Southwark and the City of London, Sarjeant William Payne, was an unexpectedly youthful man,
just 34, who wore a gold ring on his right hand inscribed with the Latin tag ‘Reverentia
Legum’, revere the law. In 1866, he presided over the inquiry into two unusual
suicides both of which led to the by then controversial verdict of felo-de-se,
self murder. Until 1823 this verdict routinely resulted in the punishment of
the offender by driving a stake through his heart and the burial of his corpse
at a crossroads. It also meant the forfeiture of the suicide’s property to the
crown leaving any dependents destitute. In practice most suicides were judged
to be ‘temporarily insane’ a ruling which left their property and their rights
to a Christian burial intact and only the worst cases, usually involving the
suicide of a murderer or other criminal, were deemed to merit the punishment
meted out to John Williams, the supposed Ratcliffe Highway murderer who killed
himself in Coldbath Fields prison whilst awaiting trial. His corpse was paraded
around the scenes of his crimes in East London accompanied by a silent crowd of
10,000. After being whipped and dropped onto his knees into an open grave at
the crossroads of Canon and Cable Street, a stake was hammered through his back
with the maul he had used to kill his victims. “As the blood stained maul
thudded on the stake,” one commentator noted “the silence of the crowd was at
last broken and the air became hideous with shouts and execrations.” These
quaint practices ended when the 1823 Burial of Suicide Act allowed felo-de-se’s
to be buried in the unconsecrated parts of churchyards and cemeteries, albeit
without any form of religious service and only between the hours of 9pm and
midnight.
On
Thursday 29 March 1866 Sarjeant Payne opened an inquest at the Sussex Hotel,
Bouverie Street, EC4. The hotel also owned the premises next door in which the
body of one William Vellens, had been found two days earlier clutching a razor
and with his head ‘nearly severed.’
Vellens, sometimes also known as Vollance or Voliance, was according to
some accounts a German and by others an Englishman from Newcastle but all
accounts agree that he was by trade a carpenter. He had lately fallen on hard
times and was virtually living in penury. He was generally regarded as man of ‘sullen
and eccentric habits’. It emerged at
the inquest that he was married but he had been living alone in an annexe to
the hotel for about two years prior to his death. Witnesses told the coroner that Vellens was
generally sober and had always paid his rent when in work. He suffered from
asthma and became so short winded that he couldn’t work for more than 15
minutes at a time. Unable to work he pawned his tools and when he had no tools
left he took to begging off friends and acquaintances. He fell behind in his
rent for the tiny garret room he occupied which was barely big enough for a
narrow bed, a small cupboard and a bench.
The arrears coupled with the deceased’s habit of going around the house
firing a large horse pistol led to the landlady serving him notice to quit the
premises. The other boarders became concerned about his state of mind; a month
previous to his suicide they were already so suspicious that he might try to do
away with himself that when they hadn’t seen or heard from him for a few hours
they broke down his door. Vellens reacted by calling the constable and getting
them arrested. This incident coupled with his possession of the horse pistol
made the occupants of the house reluctant to intervene further when he again disappeared
a few weeks later. Eventually a brave soul was dispatched upstairs to knock on
Vellens’ door. He found a note in the
deceased’s handwriting saying "Saturday. Gone, and will not be in until
the afternoon. Leave your address in the bar, please." As this was Tuesday the constable was sent
for and when he was unable to rouse Vellens by knocking he tried to kick the
door open, which proved difficult to do as someone had nailed it shut from the
inside. When they did finally get the door open this was the sight that greeted
them:
The lifeless body
of the man was lying on a form, face upwards, with one leg hanging down, the
head being nearly severed, and the right hand clenching a razor.— The floor was
covered with dry, clotted blood, from which it is supposed that the act was
committed nearly a week since. The arrangements for effecting his own death
must have taken the deceased some time accomplish. A modern bedstead and a form
were the chief articles of furniture in the room, in which was a small cupboard.
The door of the cupboard was found open, with the bedstead placed near it, the
former being fixed alongside. Vellens had employed a hatchet used in his trade,
in which he bored a hole, but finding the leverage not suited to his purpose,
he made another higher up the handle. This he fixed to the bedpost by a screw,
and a piece of strong rope was then procured, to which was attached a heavy
stone. The rope was then thrown over the cupboard door, the end being fastened
on the one side and the stone hanging over the other. He must then have placed
himself on his back on the form, raised the hatchet, and put his head so as to
meet it when it fell. In this position he cut the rope with the razor, and the
stone falling on the hatchet, his death must have been instantaneous.
Belfast Morning
News - Friday 30 March 1866
Sarjeant
Payne summed up for the jury by telling them that this was one of the most determined
cases of suicide which had come under his notice. He remarked that “the
deceased had followed the French idea, and made a guillotine on a small scale.”
As it was obvious that he had committed suicide the only question for the jury
was the state of the deceased’s mind at the time. According to the newspaper
accounts the jury deliberated for only a short time before delivering their
verdict that the act had been committed whilst the deceased was in a sound
state of mind. Sarjeant Payne had no choice but to enter a verdict of felo-de-se
and order a night burial of the body without a religious service. He also
ordered the dismantling and destruction of the homemade guillotine.
The
verdict did not go pass without critical comment. A week later Dr Forbes
Winslow, the eminent psychiatrist and author of the groundbreaking 1840
treatise “Anatomy of Suicide” wrote to the Pall Mall Gazette to express his
repugnance at the finding of the Coroners court. He objected to the finding
that the deceased was of sound mind simply because he had “exhibited great
mechanical skill, self-possession, and ingenuity in the mode by which he
destroyed himself” He went on to point out that “design, method, great
cleverness of a mechanical kind, self-possession, and cunning are constantly
observed among the insane afflicted with suicidal monomania.” The Dublin Medical Press concurred with Dr
Winslow and commented that the “verdict of felo-de-se, under any circumstances,
is a poor and pitiful mode of wreaking vengeance upon the remains of a human
being who has passed beyond the reach of the law, and the only result can to inflict
pain upon the feelings of survivors, who perhaps are sorrowful enough at the
loss of a relative, or, it may be, are already humiliated by the sins or the
misfortunes which led to the melancholy event.”
James Greenwood, the pioneering investigative journalist
who accompanied Vellens to the City of London Cemetery
Forbes
Winslow’s letter to the press had been published in the Pall Mall Gazette
edited by Frederick Greenwood. In a shameless display of nepotism Frank had
employed his younger brother James on the paper and the young investigative
reporter had scored a big hit the previous year when Frederick commissioned him
to spend the night in the Lambeth workhouse and write up the experience. Frederick
published Winslow’s letter because the brothers were already interested in Vellens’
case. James had hastily arranged to accompany the suicide to his burial, which
happened with almost unseemly haste on the day on the inquest. James noted that
the razor Vellens had used to cut the rope which dropped the weighted axe onto
his throat was still in his right hand when the undertaker put him into the
plain box coffin. Vellens final resting place was the City of London Cemetery
in Manor Park where the jury had determined that “he should be flung into a
hole at night-time, with no more ceremony than attends the throwing a dead dog into
a ditch.” James was invited to ride down
to the cemetery on the hearse;
This however, I
declined. It is unpleasant enough in all conscience to make a business jaunt to
a graveyard, but to ride thither on a hearse at night - seated on the black,
shiny roof; and holding on by the stumps that on ordinary occasions support the
funereal plumes, was not to be thought of; especially as the journey was to
Ilford, a dismal country road in part and ten miles from London. So I elected to
go in a vehicle of my own choosing. They took "it" up punctually at
the time appointed - Mr. Beadle and two men of the staff of the contracting
undertaker who undertook the job. The box they put "it" in was
composed of half a dozen unplaned boards scantily smeared with a blackish
pigment and roughly nailed together. It was scarcely of the ordinary coffin
shape even, and being without plate or inscription might have been carted to a
railway with other luggage without exciting particular attention.. ... A pair
of stout horses were attached to the hearse, and whirled it over the stones at
a spanking rate, so that my coachman had some trouble at times in keeping it in
sight - especially as it was so very black-horses, carriage, and men-and the
moonlight but fitful, skulking behind cloud-banks sometimes for as long as two
minutes together. I don't know how Mr. Beadle (being, as before hinted, a
somewhat nervous man) found it on the hearse roof; with the felon's body within
two planks' breadth of him, hurrying along the dark road, with the wind
whistling across the bleak flat country. I know that I found it anything but
satisfactory, and was not at all sorry to hear my man say, "I can see the
Rabbits, sir; the Rabbits is the house where all these black jobs puts up for a
freshener, sir."
The famous gates to the City of London Cemetery and Crematorium on Aldersbrook Road, Manor Park
The
funeral party put up at the Rabbits, the closest pub to the cemetery gates and
apparently patronised by visitors to the cemetery as well as gravediggers and
other employees of the cemetery company. The coffin containing Vellens was left
unceremoniously outside in the rain while the coach driver, beadle and
Greenwood stood at the bar and engaged in banter with a gravedigger in clay
stained corduroy trousers. The gravedigger knew nothing about the night burial
and took some persuading to return to work and get the Lodge Keeper to open
the gates and allow the burial party to pass. Once inside the cemetery;
....at a distance
of more than a half mile from the entry, in the unconsecrated part, a hole was
found. It was fortunate that at this time the moon struggled out of the clouds,
otherwise there might have been some bungling, for, being but an amateur at
felo-de-se burying, Mr. Beadle had forgotten all about the torches. Had it been
pitch dark, with torrents of rain falling, the job would have to have been got
through somehow. As it was, it was got through with neatness and despatch. The
grave-digger was an old hand, and had his ropes about the box in a twinkling,
and held one while the undertaker's men held the other. "Lower," said
the grave-digger, and they lowered, and the box rested on the clay. Then the
grave-digger threw a few shovelsful of earth on the box - enough to cover it -
and replaced the planks over the hole, and we went away.
"Why didn't
they cover him in entirely ?" I asked.
"What for?
We couldn't spare a regular interment a grave all to himself; let alone one
such as him," replied the grave- digger.
"But surely
you won't put another body over his?"
"Surely we
shall," answered the grave-digger. "Not a Christian, you know,"
he hastened to explain -"one of them sects what don't care about being
buried in consecrated ground. Why, what's the odds? He's as good as they are
now anyhow, if he wasn'efore."
And discussing kindred matters, the hearse
bowled out of the cemetery, and once more we put up at the Rabbits, where the
party invited the grave-digger to the social glass and the friendly pipe, and,
the undertaker's men as well as the grave-digger being well versed in
sepulchral lore, quite a jolly hour ensued, when, hey for London! with our
noble work accomplished, and the law's majesty and dignity vindicated.
James
Greenwood’s story “At the earthing of a felo-de-se” was later published in his
book “The Wilds of London” (1874).
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