view basket | checkout   Search Site:   Advanced »
True Crime Library True Crimes - MagazinesTrue Crime MagazinesTrue Crime PublicationsTrue Crime Library - Magazines

True Crime Library - Newsletter

BROWSE OUR CRIME ARCHIVE
 All Crime Archives
 Victorian Hangings
 Chronicles of Crime
 Gone But Not Forgotten
 Worldwide Hangings

QUESTIONS & ANSWERS
Jack The Ripper was hanged for his crimes. True or False?
Click here with your answer and win a prize!
CLICK HERE >>
WITH YOUR ANSWER AND WIN THIS BOOK
Send Us Your Crime Question
Got a crime-related question? Chances are the answers are in the True Crime Library! Just enter your details and the question you would like answered below.
CLICK HERE >>

Back issues
Visa
Mastercard
PayPal-Standard-Logo

Gone But Not Forgotten


Search Gone But Not Forgotten:
Show all stories from
Gone But Not Forgotten »


Show all stories from
all sections »


Advanced Search »
Story Date:  Month:  Year:
OR: Show Section:

Gone But Not Forgotten: They say there's no such thing as the perfect murder, but practically every day of the year someone is killed and their killer remains at large. This section of the archive is dedicated to the victims of the UK's unsolved murders of the 20th century...

Gone But Not Forgotten: February

February 10th
10/2/1929
Kate Jackson – Limeslade


Although she was married to a fishmonger, Kate Jackson lived the life of Riley at her bungalow in Limeslade, near Swansea. In 1929, when £4 a week was a working man’s salary, she would spend several pounds on flowers for table decoration in a single day. Her clothes bill was sky-high and she would dispense £1 notes as tips with regal generosity. If any extravagant whim took her, like hiring a car or a motor-launch for the day, she gratified it instantly.
And the cash? It came to her by post regularly every Wednesday – sometimes “a whole bundle of notes,” sometimes only two or three pounds.
“I’m a novelist and a journalist,” she would explain to friends. None of them, not even her husband, had any idea of the real truth. She was in fact an unusually successful blackmailer.
At a court hearing several years earlier, when a man was charged with misappropriation of union funds, it was said that he had handed over a large sum of money to a woman referred to as Madame X. The woman’s name was suppressed at police request in the hope that some restitution would be made by her in return. That was wildly optimistic, for Madame X was Mrs. Kate Jackson.
Her husband Thomas Jackson believed all his wife told him, and accepted the idea that she was a wealthy woman who did a little journalism and so on just for fun.
She was undoubtedly a mystery woman. Objecting to the name of her husband as being too ordinary, she persuaded him to be married in the name of “Captain Ingram.” Occasionally she let it be known that she was the daughter of the Duke of Abercorn. In fact, she was the daughter of a farm labourer named Atkinson.
On Sunday, February 10th, 1929, Kate Jackson went to the cinema with her next-door neighbour. When they came home each went to their own house. Almost immediately the neighbour heard a scream from Kate’s house. She rushed round to the Jacksons’ and saw Kate lying outside her back door. Her husband Thomas, who had just come down from his bedroom, was bending over her.
Kate had been hit violently over the head. She was taken to hospital where, according to a doctor, Thomas Jackson said, “I have been married to her for ten years, and I still don’t know who she is.” Six days later Kate died, and a fortnight after that her husband was charged with her murder.
The evidence was flimsy almost beyond belief, yet the judge’s summing-up was heavily biased against Jackson. As to whether a lurking stranger could have killed Kate the judge said: “There is no evidence of any secret enemy, that is merely surmise or possibility.”
The jury thought differently. They probably figured that there was every possibility of a secret enemy – like, for instance, the man Kate was blackmailing. They found her husband not guilty. For them, not only was the life of Madame X a mystery, so was her death, and so was the name of the man who murdered her.


Next story from:
February »
Previous story from:
February »
Next section from:
Gone But Not Forgotten »
Previous section from:
Gone But Not Forgotten »




Hot off the press

Hot off the press
Sale!!! Buy 4 books for £9.99

Buy Now!


Win a prize

Win a prize
Enter our free prize draw and win this book!
Click here


This week in crime
Week beginning: May 20th

A Certain Disease...

Widow Killed By Lover...

The Mind Of A Beast...

READ THESE STORIES & MORE HERE


True Crime Library, PO Box 735, London SE26 5NQ, UK.   Tel: +44(0) 20 8778 0514   Fax: +44(0) 20 8776 8260  Email: enquiries@truecrimelibrary.com
© True Crime Library 2013
Website by www.catfishcommerce.com
True Crime Home | Buy Crime Books Online | True Crime Magazines | True Crime Library | Victorian Hangings | True Crime Series | True Crime Murders | True Crime DVDs | Worldwide Hangings | True Crime Stories | Crime Publications | True Crime FAQ | About True Crime Library |
sitemap