In the four a.m. darkness of a day in July 1858, Eliza Simpson, a married woman of Keate Street in London, shrieked “Murder.” A labourer in the house she occupied, along with her husband, ran to discover Michael Murphy kicking her with his wooden leg.
“If you come near, you black b….., I will serve you the same,” said Murphy.
As Eliza tried to escape down the stairs, her attacker threw her down from one landing to the next. She died a week later from brain injuries.
Photo by John Thomson via Wikimedia Commons
At the time, Eliza was recovering from a black eye, inflicted in unknown circumstances about five weeks earlier. She had drunk three half-pints of porter on the day of the attack and it was claimed that she was “in the habit of drinking.”
A few days after the attack another woman punched her in the face as she smoked a pipe in the local Spitalfields public house, The White Swan. Next day, she died without the benefit of medical help.
The man with a wooden leg, Michael Murphy, was sentenced to twelve months imprisonment for manslaughter.
What was she doing with Murphy at 4 a.m? Was she a prostitute? Where was her husband, and why was she attacked?
The Old Bailey Online answers none of these intriguing questions.
I’d love to know if anyone can tell me more.