George Henry Lamson

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George Henry Lamson
Born(1852-09-08)8 September 1852
Died28 April 1882(1882-04-28) (aged 29)
Wandsworth Prison, London, U.K.
NationalityAmerican
RelativesRobert Schuyler (grandfather)
AwardsLegion of Honour

George Henry Lamson (8 September 1852 – 28 April 1882) was an American doctor and murderer.[1]

Early life[]

Lamson was born on 8 September 1852. He was the son of Julia Wood Schuyler and Rev. William Orne Lamson (1824–1909), who married in 1850.[1][2]

His maternal grandfather was Robert Schuyler (1798–1855), himself the son of U.S. Representative Philip Jeremiah Schuyler, the brother of Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton and brother-in-law of Alexander Hamilton. His uncle was Robert Sands Schuyler (1830–1895), a prominent New York architect.[1] In 1881, his father was minister of the American community's church in Florence.

Career[]

Lamson fought during the Franco-Prussian War with the French Ambulance Corps during the 1871 siege of Paris, receiving a Legion of Honour for his work.[3]

In his early career he had been a volunteer surgeon in Romania and Serbia, and decorated for his work. He returned to England, married (in 1878) and set up in medical practice in fashionable Bournemouth. Living beyond his means, and with his medical practice faring poorly, the morphine addiction he had acquired during his overseas service came to dominate his life and his financial situation grew desperate, with creditors pressing for payment of bills, cheques bouncing and his bank refusing further credit.[1]

Murder[]

Lamson's wife (née John) was one of five orphaned siblings, who were wards in Chancery and joint inheritors of a family trust fund. One of her brothers, Herbert John, died suddenly in 1879, leaving Mrs Lamson, her married sister Mrs Chapman (living in Shanklin) and her surviving brother, the youngest sibling, Percy Malcolm John. 18-year-old Percy, a hemiplegic, was boarding at Blenheim House School in Wimbledon, where he received a visit on 3 December 1881 from Lamson (allegedly before making a trip to Florence to visit his father, although in reality, Lamson was staying in London, desperately trying to raise credit, pawn possessions or borrow funds). At tea with Percy and the headmaster Mr Bedbrook, Lamson brought a rich Dundee cake, already cut into portions, which the three shared, and also gave Percy a capsule, which he persuaded the lad to swallow, from a batch that were later tested and found to contain the poison aconitine, as recorded in the case history at Old Bailey Online.[3]

Scenes from the trial, wood engraving.

Lamson was tried at The Old Bailey in March 1882 with Montagu Williams acting for his defence: he was found guilty of murdering Percy in order to secure his share of the family trust fund, some £3,000 which Percy would have inherited on coming of age. He had poisoned his victim with aconitine in the cake, a substance which Lamson had learned about from Professor Robert Christison at Edinburgh University. Christison had taught that aconitine was undetectable, but forensic science had improved since Lamson's student days and the poison was easily identified, as well as Lamson's purchase of it from a London pharmacist.[4][5][6]

Lamson's execution was delayed when U.S. President Chester Arthur,[3] wrote to the Home Office, requesting time for Lamson's well-connected family and friends in the United States to send proof of insanity in the doctor's family and in his own life. The evidence was received but failed to secure a reprieve.[1][7]

Lamson was hanged by William Marwood at Wandsworth Prison on 28 April 1882, having admitted his morphine addiction and effectively his guilt of murdering Percy John.[8]

See also[]

References[]

Notes
  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Christoph, Florence A. (1992). Schuyler Genealogy: A Compendium of Sources Pertaining to the Schuyler Families in America Prior to 1800. Friends of Schuyler Mansion. pp. 43, 143, 234. Retrieved 9 February 2018.
  2. ^ Allen, Cameron (2013). The History of the American Pro-Cathedral of the Holy Trinity, Paris (1815-1980). iUniverse. ISBN 9781475937817. Retrieved 9 February 2018.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c Shortly after Lamson's departure, Percy was taken violently ill and died in agonised convulsions that night, raising instant suspicion of Lamson, who had departed for the continent (to Paris, in fact, not Florence). Alarmed by press reports of Percy's death and confident that the aconitine would be undetectable, Lamson voluntarily returned to London and contacted the police to clear his name, considerably surprised to find himself arrest on a murder charge and refused bail as well as the morphine to which he was heavily addicted.Bailey, Stephen (31 August 2010). "The American doctor, war hero, drug addict and murderer who lived among us". Bournemouth Echo. Retrieved 9 July 2011.
  4. ^ Macinnis, Peter (2006). It's true!: you eat poison every day. It's true. 18. Allen & Unwin. pp. 80–81. ISBN 978-1-74114-626-4.
  5. ^ Macinnis, Peter (2005). Poisons: from hemlock to Botox and the killer bean of Calabar. Arcade Publishing. pp. 25–26. ISBN 978-1-55970-761-9.
  6. ^ Parry & Wright (2000) p.103
  7. ^ Lamson, George Henry; Adam, Hargrave Lee (2016). Trial of George Henry Lamson. BiblioBazaar. ISBN 9781355252191. Retrieved 9 February 2018.
  8. ^ Horace Bleackley (1929). The hangmen of England: how they hanged and whom they hanged : the life story of "Jack Ketch" through two centuries. Taylor & Francis. p. 245. ISBN 978-0-7158-1184-9.
Sources
  • Adam, Hargrave L. (1955). "Dr George Lamson". In Hodge, James H. (ed.). Famous Trials 5. Penguin. pp. 161–185.
  • Trestrail, John Harris (2007). Criminal poisoning: investigational guide for law enforcement, toxicologists, forensic scientists, and attorneys. Forensic science and medicine. Humana Press. pp. 9–10. ISBN 978-1-58829-821-8.
  • Parry, Leonard A.; Willard H. Wright (2000). Some Famous Medical Trials. Beard Books. pp. 88–103. ISBN 978-1-58798-031-2.
  • Old Bailey Proceedings Online (accessed 2019-01-26), Trial of George Henry Lamson. (t18820227-367, 27 February 1882).
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