Robert, Nattie and John Fox stayed overnight in the Barking Road police cells and on Thursday morning were taken to the magistrates’ court in Stratford for a preliminary hearing. The courthouse in West Ham Lane had been built eleven years earlier to designs by the architect also responsible for the Stratford town hall, which was next door, and the Barking Road public hall and library. It was a three-storey yellow-brick building, Italianate in style and adorned with Portland stone carvings of the Royal Arms. There was no separate court for young defendants. Though both Robert and Nattie were children – defined by the Children’s Act of 1889 as a boy under fourteen or a girl under sixteen – they were considered criminally responsible if they could tell right from wrong, and would be tried in the same way as adults.
A huge crowd had assembled outside the courthouse. The Sun, a Liberal halfpenny paper, observed that the excitement generated by the recent election in West Ham ‘had given place to an excitement of a very different kind’. The court opened when the district’s stipendiary magistrate, Ernest Baggallay, reached Stratford from his home in Kensington, an affluent neighbourhood near the centre of London. ‘West Ham Police-Court depends for its opening on whether Mr Baggallay has caught his train or not,’ said the radical evening paper the Star. ‘To-day it was half-past eleven before he arrived to deal with public business.’ The police cleared him a path through the crowd.
Baggallay had accepted the position of salaried magistrate for West Ham eight years earlier, after surrendering his seat as Conservative MP for Brixton, south London. He was a slender, moustachioed man of forty-five, neatly turned out, who leant forward pertly in his seat as he heard the cases brought before him. He was sometimes dismissive of witnesses. In Canning Town police court that week, he had listened to two women testify against a neighbour accused of having neglected and beaten three of his children. One woman told the court that the children had come to her starving, saying that their father was giving them no food; the other said that she had heard the father knocking them against the wall. Baggallay was impatient with their testimony. ‘Let us have the doctor’s evidence,’ he suggested. ‘These women do so exaggerate.’ The doctor confirmed that he had treated members of the defendant’s family for bruises and black eyes. An engine driver then testified to having heard the children screaming and begging for mercy. Even after this, Baggallay declined to find against the accused. Despite the passage of the Children’s Act, which made it possible to prosecute a parent for neglect or cruelty and even to remove a child from his or her family, many magistrates were reluctant to intervene in such matters. Corporal punishment was commonplace, and the popular presumption remained that a parent’s authority over a child was close to sacrosanct.
Fox, Nattie and Robert were led into the courtroom together. Fox slouched towards the dock in Mr Coombes’s grey suit, which looked several sizes too large for him. Robert walked in coolly and stood upright in white flannel trousers, brown boots and a blue tennis jacket braided with gold. Nattie also held himself erect, but was so small that he could barely see over the dock’s top rail. He wore knickerbockers and a light tweed jacket. Both boys stood with their hands clasped behind their backs, as they had been taught to do at school. Their father was not present: the older Robert Coombes was halfway across the Atlantic, unaware that his wife was dead and his sons were in court for her murder.
The law barred defendants from testifying, but since Fox, Robert and Nattie had no legal representation they were entitled to question the witnesses that Baggallay called. The first was Alfred Kennedy, forty-eight, the police surgeon who had visited Cave Road on Wednesday. He had run a practice since the 1870s in Balaam Street, and he served as surgeon for the K division of the Metropolitan Police. After the doctor’s evidence about the condition of the corpse, Baggallay turned to Fox and asked: ‘Fox, do you wish to ask the witness any questions?’
Fox stammered softly, ‘All I know is . . .’ and tailed off.
‘Well,’ said Baggallay, ‘you need not make a statement; nothing is said about you by the witness. The same applies to you boys. The witness simply refers to what he found.’ Alfred Kennedy then left the courtroom for the mortuary, where he was due to conduct the post-mortem on Emily Coombes’s body.
Aunt Emily gave her evidence. She said that she had last visited her sister-in-law on Saturday 6 July, and had arranged to see her again two days later. On Monday, she said, she knocked several times at the door of 35 Cave Road but received no reply – this was the first day on which Robert and Nattie were at Lord’s. She related how she had tried the house again the following Monday, when Fox opened the door to her, and how she finally forced her way in on Wednesday, with Mary Jane Burrage, and discovered the crime. When she described how Robert had confessed to her, she broke down in tears, and she sobbed through the rest of her testimony.
Baggallay asked Fox, ‘Do you wish to ask any questions, Fox?’
‘You found me in the parlour,’ Fox said to her.
‘Yes,’ said Baggallay. ‘She says so.’
‘That was the only place I was,’ said Fox.
Aunt Emily was led weeping from the court.
James Robertson took the witness stand and told the court that he had changed a sovereign for Robert on Monday 8 July and that his wife had then paid the rent for 35 Cave Road.
PC Twort gave evidence about the arrest of the boys. Fox asked him: ‘Did I tell you I was sleeping in the parlour?’
‘Yes,’ said Twort.
‘Did I say it was done two and a half days before I came there?’
‘No,’ replied Twort. ‘You said nothing about it.’
Fox did not get a chance to question PS Baulch, as the sergeant fainted in the witness box while describing his visit to Cave Road on Wednesday. He was carried out of the court. Two or three women in the public gallery had already collapsed during the hearing and been removed from the room.
At the conclusion of the evidence, Detective Inspector Mellish asked for the boys and Fox to be remanded in gaol while the investigation continued. He suggested that Robert be examined by the prison’s medical officer. Baggallay said he hardly knew what to do with boys of their age – he had never sent lads so young to prison, but he could see no alternative. He remanded them and Fox to Holloway gaol.
As such a big crowd had assembled outside the court house, Baggallay asked the police to avoid walking Fox and the brothers through the streets in handcuffs, but instead to find a cab to take them to the railway station. Mellish said that he would arrange a conveyance. The boys were both seen laughing as the police hustled them into a horse-drawn cab in West Ham Lane.
The Stratford Express approved of how Ernest Baggallay had protected the boys from being paraded through the district on their way to the station. The magistrate had saved them from becoming a piece of street theatre, shielding them from the ‘vulgar gaze’, the ‘vulgar derision or – still more stinging – vulgar sympathy’ of the public.
At 4.30 that afternoon a street vendor in Northern Road, Plaistow, was selling copies of the Evening News, the right-wing halfpenny paper in which Robert had planned to advertise for a loan. The edition of Thursday 18 July carried reports that the Tories had routed the Liberals and radicals throughout the metropolis in the early stages of the general election: ‘Bravo, London!’ the headline ran. ‘A glorious victory!’ The vendor was calling out to passersby that the issue contained reports of the Coombes hearing. A disgruntled customer notified a passing police constable from the Barking Road station that he had found no mention of the case in his copy of the paper. The constable warned the newspaper salesman to stop defrauding the public, at which the vendor punched the policeman in the eye, knocking him down, and then kicked him repeatedly as he lay on the ground.
Holloway gaol, which lay seven miles west of Stratford, was the city’s main remand prison and the largest such institution in the country. An average of seventy men and boys were admitted each day to be held within its walls until called for trial. The gaol was constructed in the 1850s on the panopticon principle, with a hub radiating out to six wings. From the entrance on Parkhurst Road, it looked like a castle, its central arched gateway flanked by crenellated turrets and statues of stone griffins clutching leg irons and keys. ‘May God preserve the City of London,’ read the foundation stone in the prison wall, ‘and make this place a terror to evil-doers.’
Robert was familiar with stories of crime and punishment. As well as having seen James Canham Read appear before the magistrates in Southend, he had read many penny dreadfuls that featured Cockney villains. In Joe Phoenix’s Unknown; or, Crushing the Crook Combination, the East End criminals dream up ‘dodges’ to acquire ‘a tidy bit of swag’. They then ‘cover their tracks’, ‘lie low’ and if unlucky enough to be caught by ‘bobbies’ or ‘peelers’ are put in ‘bracelets’ and brought before the ‘beak’. They will try to ‘brazen the thing out’ but may end up ‘doing time’ in ‘stone jug’. On no account will they ‘peach’ or ‘split on their pals’.
The police rang the bell at the Holloway entrance. A grate opened in the heavy oak door, an eye peered out, and the iron bolts were drawn back to admit the new prisoners. They were directed to the left, where the 350 men being held on remand were housed in five wings, supervised by forty warders. A single wing to the right accommodated sixty-five female convicts.
New arrivals were taken across a courtyard to the inner entrance of the prison, and into a long passage with reception cells on either side. They waited until summoned by a warder, who informed them of the prison’s rules, then told them to strip to the waist in order to be weighed and measured. A warder cropped the prisoners’ hair, sent them to bathe, bundled up and stored their clothes, and issued them with dark grey uniforms.
Robert, Nattie and John Fox were led through the central hall, beneath a glass roof in a massive iron frame, to individual cells in the three-storey blocks. Each cell measured thirteen by seven foot and was nine foot high, with an asphalt floor, whitewashed walls and a small window. Pinned to one wall were the prison regulations, a copy of the prison timetable and a card detailing the prisoner’s name, number and age. The cells also contained hymn books and copies of the Prayerbook and the Bible. The boys and John Fox took to their pallet beds for the night.
The inquest into Emily Harrison Coombes’s death opened the next day – Friday 19 July – at the Liverpool Arms, a large public house at the southern end of the Barking Road. The coroner was Charles Carne Lewis, sixty-two, who had succeeded his father as coroner for Essex in 1882. The most notorious death he had investigated to date was that of Florence Dennis, the young woman who had been murdered by James Canham Read in Southend the previous summer. His most recent case, which had concluded the day before the Emily Coombes inquest, was an inquiry into a series of deaths at the East Ham sewage works. On 1 July an employee at the sewage pumping station had become dizzy with fumes as he climbed down a ladder into a well; he lost his balance and fell in. One of his workmates descended the ladder to try to help, but collapsed and fell into the pit as the sewer gases overtook him; three more men attempted rescues, and every one fainted and fell. All five drowned in the filth at the bottom of the well. Their deaths were attributed in part to the putrid conditions created by the drought.
Lewis took his place at the head of a big dining table in a bright, square room in the Liverpool Arms. The room was furnished with bronze urns and large-leafed plants, which were reflected in a long gilt-framed mirror on the mantelpiece. The walls were covered with rich paper and hung with oil paintings. Next to Lewis sat his clerk, surrounded by parchments and legal volumes, passages of which were marked off with strips of blue paper. The jury of twelve men sat round the table; their foreman was Joseph Horlock, a forty-nine-year-old master builder who lived opposite the pub. Detective Inspector Mellish and Inspector Gilbert were present on behalf of the police.
The coroner’s inquest and the magistrate’s hearing were to run concurrently: the chief task of the coroner’s court was to establish how Emily Coombes had died, and that of the magistrates’ court to decide who, if anyone, should be charged with causing her death. Yet there was room for overlap and even conflict in their deliberations. If a coroner’s jury found that the cause of death was murder, they could name suspects and order their arrest.
A crowd of about 500 people had assembled outside the Liverpool Arms, and when a closed cab drew up just after 11 a.m. they made a rush at its doors. The police managed to hold back the mob, allowing John Fox and two Holloway warders to enter the pub. Robert and Nattie had been spared the ordeal of attending the inquest because of their youth. Fox was given a seat in the coroner’s court, where he sat for a few moments, his head leaning against the wall, before Lewis announced that he did not intend to examine him and did not consider it advisable that he be present. A member of the jury asked whether Fox should at least be allowed to hear the evidence, and Lewis replied that this was exactly what he did not want. The warders took Fox away. Several hundred people chased the cab that carried him off.
Lewis swore in the jury and called Alfred Kennedy, who had now completed the post-mortem on Emily Coombes’s body.
‘The whole of the brain has been consumed by vermin,’ Dr Kennedy told the coroner and jury, ‘and the right lung nearly destroyed by maggots. Through the base of the heart, which is partly eaten away, there is a clear stab, and one also through the extreme right side. There is a notch on the spine corresponding with this wound.’
The doctor said that Emily Coombes’s bedding and underclothes had been stained with dry blood, which indicated that she had been alive when she was stabbed. ‘There is no doubt,’ he said, ‘that death was instantaneous.’
The jurors were invited to leave the pub for the mortuary on the other side of the Barking Road. They had to make their way through a crowd to enter the building. Emily Coombes’s body was in a double coffin, designed to contain the smell of a corpse and to slow its decomposition. The internal shell, which held the body, was usually filled with melted pitch and sealed shut. The upper part of the shell was fitted with plate glass so that mourners (or, in this case, jurors) could see the face of the dead person. Emily Coombes’s features had been mutilated by maggots. The jurors completed their inspection as quickly as they could.
When the coroner and jury returned to the pub, Lewis called Robert and Nattie’s Aunt Emily to give evidence. She was dressed in deep mourning, with a broad-brimmed black hat sitting horizontally on her high bun of dark hair. Her voice broke as she described the ‘offensive smell’ that assailed her as she entered 35 Cave Road on Wednesday, to find her nephews playing cards and Fox puffing on his pipe. She repeated Robert’s confession to her, quoting him as saying: ‘I kicked about and Ma pushed me. I then got out of bed and stabbed her.’
The coroner pointed out that Robert’s account of the murder was confusing. ‘I don’t quite see,’ said Lewis, ‘how this part of the story tallies with the other part, in which he said the blow was to be struck after Nathaniel’s signal from an adjoining room. It will probably, however, be cleared up later.’
The foreman of the jury asked Aunt Emily if she had not thought it strange that her sister-in-law seemed to have vanished.
‘All through I thought it was strange,’ said Emily, ‘but Mrs Coombes had some funny ways. She would not write for weeks at times.’
After hearing two further witnesses, Lewis adjourned the inquest. It would reconvene in ten days, on 29 July.
Now that the post-mortem and the viewing of Emily Coombes’s corpse were complete, arrangements were swiftly made to inter the body. Emily had paid a couple of pence a week to a burial insurance scheme, as was common practice among working-class people who wished to spare their families the financial burden of an unexpected death. The undertaker, Richard Wortley of 269 Barking Road, was instructed to keep the costs of her funeral low so that her husband could retain some of the pay-out. In the morning of Saturday 20 July, Wortley transferred Emily Coombes’s body to a plain wooden coffin, screwed down the lid and conveyed it by hearse and carriage to the Tower Hamlets and East London Cemetery, three miles west. Bow Cemetery, as it was known locally, had since its establishment in 1841 been the chief burial ground for the poor of East London. A third-class interment here cost about fifteen shillings. By 1895 the cemetery contained more than a quarter of a million bodies, most of them in shared public graves, and had become neglected and overgrown. Many of the headstones had fallen down and were half-covered by weeds and grass.
At 1 p.m. Emily’s body was lowered into a long trench of public graves in a section of the cemetery adjacent to Lockhart Street, where Robert and Nattie’s grandmother Mary Coombes lived. Since the police had kept the details of the funeral a secret, only two or three members of the family were present. Robert and Nattie were not invited to attend. The mourners cast earth on to the coffin and the priest – a Reverend Yates – stood over the grave and read the words of committal.
That day four policemen, led by Inspector Gilbert and Detective-Sergeant Don, went to 35 Cave Road to burn the filthy bedding from the front bedroom. Despite the disinfectants with which the room had been doused three days earlier, both Gilbert and Don reported that the stench was almost unbearable. After their visit, they left a constable at the gate to make sure that sightseers were kept out.
Ever since the discovery of Emily Coombes’s body, local men and women had been visiting Cave Road to see the house and to discuss the case with whoever was passing. West Ham was so full of people, and the people so avid for entertainment, that spontaneous gatherings were commonplace. A few weeks earlier a fourteen-year-old boy had climbed a tree in The Grove, near Stratford Broadway, and started dropping twigs and bits of bark on to the hats of people walking below. He refused to budge when the police ordered him down, and it was reported that nearly 3,000 people turned up to watch the constables remove him from the tree with the aid of a fire ladder. The inhabitants of West Ham looked for their drama, whether comedy or tragedy, in the streets.
The penny paper Lloyd’s Weekly, which had a circulation of more than 750,000, sent an artist and a reporter to Cave Road. The artist sketched the house: the arched doorway and bay window on the ground floor, the two open windows of Emily Coombes’s bedroom above, the low fence and the metal gate bounding the front yard. The journalist interviewed the locals who had gathered nearby. He was told that Robert and Nattie had a very bad reputation, and that their mother had been too lenient with them, ‘always allowing them to have their own way’. Robert was said to have been a constant source of trouble to the school officials: he had frequently been late and had often played truant. Three years earlier, the reporter heard, the brothers had run away to Liverpool to visit an aunt, using money stolen from their mother’s cashbox. The police had been informed but when the boys were found their mother interceded and managed to hush up the affair. Over the past ten days, the Lloyd’s man was told, Robert and Nattie had led a ‘fast’ life in the West End of London, riding about in cabs and watching shows at the theatre.
One neighbour said that Robert was a talented mandolin player. ‘This love of music,’ the Lloyd’s reporter observed, ‘is not infrequent among the bad folk of criminal history.’
Several other journalists turned up to interview the bystanders. The Forest Gate Gazette was informed that Robert had treated his friends to lavish quantities of ginger beer and ice cream in the days after his mother’s death. The News of the World heard that Fox was a ‘semi-lunatic’ and a religious fanatic – the paper ran its report under the headline:
HORROR ON HORROR’S HEAD
THE MOST DREADFUL MURDER OF THE CENTURY
TWO PLAISTOW BOYS SLAY THEIR MOTHER
AND PLAY CARDS BENEATH THE CORPSE WITH A MANIAC
The West Ham Herald was told – also incorrectly – that Nattie had continued to go to school after the killing, and had been found once or twice with tears streaming down his cheeks. When his playmates asked him what was wrong, he said: ‘I am crying about Mother.’ Nattie was said to have told a friend that he wanted to kill himself. The Herald reported that Aunt Emily arrived at 3.30 p.m. on 17 July to find Nattie alone in the house, sobbing as he informed her that his mother was lying dead in her bedroom.
Several of the stories relayed by the newspapermen depicted Nattie as vulnerable, powerless, distraught, and Robert as the insouciant mastermind who took pleasure in the plunder of his mother’s house. These accounts suggested that one boy, at least, had traces of conscience, even if the other was thoroughly bad.
An editorial in Saturday’s edition of the Stratford Express, which had the highest circulation of any West Ham paper, described the murder at Plaistow as ‘the most horrible, the most awful and revolting crime that we have ever been called upon to record. In the wildest dreams of fiction, nothing has ever been depicted which equals in loathsomeness this story of sons playing at cards in a room which the dead body of their murdered mother filled with the stench of corruption.’ The ‘Plaistow Horror’, it said, ‘is a story which must depress all who are longing for the improvement of mankind. It will pain public feeling to an extent which has rarely been equalled. It seems to plunge us back at once into the Dark Ages.’
The newspaper was alluding to the popular belief that the human race was in crisis. ‘We stand now in the midst of a severe mental epidemic, a sort of black death of degeneration and hysteria,’ wrote the Hungarian author Max Nordau in Degeneration, a work of 1892 published in English early in 1895. As evidence, Nordau pointed to the prevalence of madness and criminality among the poor, as well as the publication of decadent literature by such artists as Henrik Ibsen and Oscar Wilde. ‘The day is over,’ he warned, ‘the night draws on.’ Nordau’s tract was much discussed in the British press. Its feverish tone was mocked in some quarters, and its apocalyptic ideas treated with scepticism by many, but its pessimism was commonplace. ‘A wave of unrest is passing over the world,’ warned the British author Hugh E. M. Stutfield in the summer of 1895: ‘Revolt is the order of the day. . . ours may be an age of progress, but it is progress which, if left unchecked, will land us in the hospital or the lunatic asylum.’
Darwin’s theory of evolution was widely accepted by the end of the nineteenth century, but with it had come the possibility that the human organism could develop backwards as well as forwards. The atrophy of the species was attributed to the speed and pressure of modern life – telegrams, railways, big business, a craving for instant pleasure – and to an increasingly urban, industrial environment. ‘The close confines and foul air of our cities are shortening the life of the individual, and raising up a puny and ill-developed race,’ wrote James Cantlie in Degeneration amongst Londoners. ‘It is beyond prophecy to guess even what the rising generation will grow into, what this Empire will become after they have got charge of it.’ In The Time Machine, published in 1895, H. G. Wells imagined a future in which the workers had degenerated into pale, ape-like Morlocks living in darkness underground, toiling on machines to make goods for the frail, decaying Eloi on the Earth’s surface.
The far east of London was the ultimate industrial wilderness. Where the German visitor to Plaistow in 1886 had seen brass bands and fat-cheeked children, most journalists and novelists saw only pinched, degraded lives. An Illustrated London News reporter described West Ham’s lines of ‘little hideous slate-roofed houses of stucco and pale brick. Row follows row, all dreary, all mean.’ The French novelist Emile Zola said that he had never seen such miles of soulless brick and mortar. The English writer Ford Madox Hueffer (later known as Ford Madox Ford) described West Ham as a featureless fog, ‘a vast cloud beneath a cloud as vast’, while Walter Besant saw it as a ‘sea of the working class’: ‘its history is mostly a blank, making no more mark than the breezes of yesterday have made on the waves and waters of the ocean’. It was a city without a centre, said Besant, ‘a city without art or literature, but filled with the appliances of science’. To a passing visitor, he wrote, it seemed a ‘joyless’ region, ‘the City of dreadful Monotony’, ‘a vast city without a heart’.
Many onlookers detected an atavistic horror beneath the blank uniformity of East London. ‘As there is a darkest Africa, is there not also a darkest England?’ asked William Booth, the Methodist preacher who founded the Salvation Army. ‘The stony streets of London, if they could but speak, would tell of tragedies as awful, of ruin as complete, of ravishments as horrible, as if we were in Central Africa; only the ghastly devastation is covered, corpselike, with the artificialities and hypocrisies of modern civilisation.’ The technologically advanced environment seemed, perversely, to be propelling people back to their bestial origins, the factories and machines turning out morons and monsters. The landscape was both futuristic and primeval. Every resident of the district, wrote Hueffer, was ‘conscious of having, as it were at his back, the very green and very black stretches of the Essex marshes’. The American novelist Jack London characterised East Londoners as a ‘people of the machine and the Abyss’.
In The Nether World, a novel of 1889, George Gissing described a railway journey east out of the city. From the train carriage, the passengers see the ‘pest-stricken’ suburbs sweltering in sunshine that ‘served only to reveal the intimacies of abomination’. The train passes ‘above streets swarming with a nameless populace’, stops at stations ‘which it crushes the heart to think should be the destination of any mortal’. At last the train leaves ‘the city of the damned’, carrying its passengers ‘beyond the utmost limits of dread’.