Description:This historic book may have numerous typos, missing text, images, or index. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. 1861. Not illustrated. Excerpt: ... I asked liberty to go to the nursery, whore the child was considered to be taken from. The nursemaid went up to see if it was convenient. She returned and said it was convenient, and I and my companion went to the nursery. I saw the nurse at the top of the stairs, by the nursery door. I should suppose this was about half-past seven. I asked the nurse to show the cot from which the child was taken, and she pointed to a cot in the nursery. She. turned the clothes back (they were smoother than 1 expected to find them, considering that a child had been said to be taken from the bed). I said, "Do you mean to say this was where it was?" and she said "Yes;" and the clothes were turned back, and there was the mark of where the little boy had lain on the bed, and on the pillow. The clothes turned down included the quilt and the usual clothes in such cases. I said, "Have you lost anything from the nursery besides the child ?" and she hesitated, and said there was a blanket taken from the cot, or drawn from the cot, and that there was nothing else missing. Urch and I went downstairs and searched, leaving the nurse in the room. We searched outside the drawing-room window for foot-tracks, and to see if there had been any violent measures used to get into the house. We could not see any marks of violence there. We wished to go to the cellar, to see if the child was taken there. The cellar door was locked, and we could not go down immediately. I went to search the premises, and met Benger with the child coming across the court, in the direction from the privy. Cross-examined--Mr. Kent could not have got a constable nearer than myself and Urch, but he might have found one nearer than Trowbridge. I did not see Mr. Kent return. I saw some members of the family in the hal...We have made it easy for you to find a PDF Ebooks without any digging. And by having access to our ebooks online or by storing it on your computer, you have convenient answers with The Great Crime of 1860; Being a Summary of the Facts Relating to the Murder Committed at Road, a Critical Review of Its Social and Scientific Aspects. To get started finding The Great Crime of 1860; Being a Summary of the Facts Relating to the Murder Committed at Road, a Critical Review of Its Social and Scientific Aspects, you are right to find our website which has a comprehensive collection of manuals listed. Our library is the biggest of these that have literally hundreds of thousands of different products represented.
Pages
—
Format
PDF, EPUB & Kindle Edition
Publisher
General Books
Release
2012
ISBN
1150513918
The Great Crime of 1860; Being a Summary of the Facts Relating to the Murder Committed at Road, a Critical Review of Its Social and Scientific Aspects
Description: This historic book may have numerous typos, missing text, images, or index. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. 1861. Not illustrated. Excerpt: ... I asked liberty to go to the nursery, whore the child was considered to be taken from. The nursemaid went up to see if it was convenient. She returned and said it was convenient, and I and my companion went to the nursery. I saw the nurse at the top of the stairs, by the nursery door. I should suppose this was about half-past seven. I asked the nurse to show the cot from which the child was taken, and she pointed to a cot in the nursery. She. turned the clothes back (they were smoother than 1 expected to find them, considering that a child had been said to be taken from the bed). I said, "Do you mean to say this was where it was?" and she said "Yes;" and the clothes were turned back, and there was the mark of where the little boy had lain on the bed, and on the pillow. The clothes turned down included the quilt and the usual clothes in such cases. I said, "Have you lost anything from the nursery besides the child ?" and she hesitated, and said there was a blanket taken from the cot, or drawn from the cot, and that there was nothing else missing. Urch and I went downstairs and searched, leaving the nurse in the room. We searched outside the drawing-room window for foot-tracks, and to see if there had been any violent measures used to get into the house. We could not see any marks of violence there. We wished to go to the cellar, to see if the child was taken there. The cellar door was locked, and we could not go down immediately. I went to search the premises, and met Benger with the child coming across the court, in the direction from the privy. Cross-examined--Mr. Kent could not have got a constable nearer than myself and Urch, but he might have found one nearer than Trowbridge. I did not see Mr. Kent return. I saw some members of the family in the hal...We have made it easy for you to find a PDF Ebooks without any digging. And by having access to our ebooks online or by storing it on your computer, you have convenient answers with The Great Crime of 1860; Being a Summary of the Facts Relating to the Murder Committed at Road, a Critical Review of Its Social and Scientific Aspects. To get started finding The Great Crime of 1860; Being a Summary of the Facts Relating to the Murder Committed at Road, a Critical Review of Its Social and Scientific Aspects, you are right to find our website which has a comprehensive collection of manuals listed. Our library is the biggest of these that have literally hundreds of thousands of different products represented.